04.20.67

20
Jubilee Appeal ·-,The ANCHOR River, !M.<fJJSSo q Tllullrsday, April 20, 1961 $4.00 per Year V'@O. 11 No. 6 © 1967 The Anchor PRlel!' lCc Special Gifts Open The twenty-fifth Catholic "Charities Appeal assumes lilIiQ momentum this week. Activity will be the r.ule in every MI.ect of the JL967 effort for charity. Next Monday' the. contacting for funds will get underway in the' Gifts section. From April 24 1Jl) May 3 a large corps of W'Ol"kers will contact profes- .ional people business and the Diocese. MtU17 of the workers will be IIOmpleti ng their twenty-fifth velll' of sel'vice in the Appeal. JIw. many instances, . these same and women will also active- IV participate in the parish phase <Jf Appeal. The Lay Advisory Committee CJll the Charities Appeal estab- Rashed a norm of twenty:"'five <lonnars iii honor of the twenty- Jl'ive ycars of service rendered community by the Appeal. lln a small brochure which will be distributed with the c'ontrib- the Committee speUs out the need for, this Rising 'costs and fixed btoomc arc the cau!!.es ebat necessitate the raising of the oorm; .., Representatives of the Cltll,l'Hy Appeal agencies will tape two 1)I"0grams for viewil\g.on WTEV's Il:Qmmunity Show, next· week. l1Qther John F. CrOnin, Pi rector St. Vinccnt's Home, Fall.River and Mr'. John .E. Kane, Chairman' <Ii Ute Camp Committee, for thee Dominican Work Invites Controversy Dangers LONDON Cr.W)-The controversy created an ·edi.:. oolrial in an English Dominican 'magazine that ac<:used' the @lurch of being "corr.upt" was inevitable because of the JI)lt'imary task of the. D6minican Order, said the order's E11- lJ'l.ish provinciaI._ The COl'l'UI)-" toon charge was made by Fr. H b er ert McCabe, O.P. in the Febl'uary issue of the mag. t!2!ine, New Blackfriars. lIn the magazine's April issue, tlhe provincial, Father Ian Hislop, OJ?, said that the aim of Father McCabe's editorial was to show that they did not need = = 5 § I = i 5 Q Yf j7 = j7 i § .. , ,. .. Catholic Boy's Day. Camp, Naz-" iU'eth Day Camp and St. Vincent , de Paul Health C;:anip' will ap- pear. on the program' momlllg at 8. They will . the work at St. Vincent sand the Camps sponsored by. the ppeal. Chairman, Raylnond U. Kelti- her,.i!\ on the start of. the Special Gifts Section of the. ,Appeal, said: "This a sig.., week. E:0r. the twenty- fi'fth year, our industrious team of solicitors will contact friends ,of Charities throughout the Community.. A quarter of II centu'ry of service to the, com- murHty will be used as' a means' of' increasiIig the. 9uaritity and the, size of contributions. "To accomplish the goals of the Appeal, we must cOnstantly in- cl'Case OUI' resources. The .great-, est resource we have 'is a gener- ous community. This has seen us through twenty-fiye ·glorious years of charity. We areconfi- dent that. it will provide 'well for today and the future. "I wish. all of my fellow workers for. charity good con- .. tributions and speedy returns." ' to follow Father Charles out of the Church. Father Davis had announced on December. 20 that he waS leaving the Church over his "concel'll for at the ex- pense of truth." He was inarried Feb, 4, The provincial said that Father McCabe, who was dis- missed as editor of New Black- fdars, after his controversial editol'ial appeared, tried to show that the Church, although "holy with the holiness of Chrst, is, as a visible institution, in need of pUI·ification .. " The primary task of the Dominican Order, Father Hislop said, is the theological analysis of contemporary experience. "This is simply thinking about our anxieties and preoccupations in the light of revelation. It DEDICATION, :QEVOTION, THE CHARITY OF CHRIST:' 1.'he annual diocesan Cath- Charities Appeal will. be th.i s year 7 through May 17. Directing the " drive to are, left to right, Auxiliary Bishop JameS! J., ·Raymopd U. Attleboro, lay Bishop Connolly and Rt. Rev. ,}Isgr. T:, COlH.Hdme, djocesan director of .the ·Propagation of the·.Faith, who iSl also the dIrector of the annual Catholic Charities Appeal. ' . ' . ' .' ·u S •.• lJ ishops - Forge Ahead To Implement Council . The bishops the U.S.: illll three cooperative activity dealing with reports and expl;essing their individual wishes and de- cisiuns by vote, d'iscuss'ed a wide ,of topics that will pl'Ove 'important for the American Church. . , haviI)g :voted. for their rep'resentatives :to the ROnlan' Bishops' Synod" for September . agreeing 1,l,.at all bishops will henceforth meet twice a year and the NCCB Administra.:. tiye COlnmittee, 'four times 31 year, the bishops 'aiso spoke to the faithful concerning,: HERESY ,The Church in the U.S. maY' have some, doctrinal problems but the bishops do 'not think hel;esy is one of them. They did not resent the "private" of Cardinal .OCtaviani"':"as other hiemrchies did-but they instead returned a "private" but opti- mistic answer. , '''We find ri<> heresy in this country," a press-spokesman for, the bishops stated, "We are con- cel'lled somewhat about some ex- aggerations here and there which people with the bestintentioris and great 'enthusiasm are trying Schedule 'CCD -Renewal To Iks For April 26 The Evening of Christian Renewal sponsored by the Diocesan Confraternity of Christian Doctrine originally schedu led for March 15 and postponed because of a major snowstorm has been re- scheduled for Wednesday eve- ning, April 26 at 7:30, Rev. Joseph L, Powers, Diocesan di- rector, has announced. The Fall River meeting will be held at Mount St. Mary Acad- emy with James Kelleher of unless some form .'of...federal aid program to non-public schools is 'established." Fr. O'Neill made the· as'sertion after a panel disCllS$ion on "Federal A.id to :ffiducation'" at Adas Synagogue ,in . Fall River. :' " The enrollment .in diocesan schools, the superi,ntendent said, has leveled off in the last two years. If Federal aid is not forth- coming then highElr parochial school tuitions must be increased to meet the rising cost of educa- tion and such an action will be- come too burdensome for many parents to bear. Federal aid to non-public schools is an educational and not a . religious question, Father O'Neill said. The superintendent main- tained that the Federal govern- ment must be realistic when you \:Iring to light the fact that 6.7 million young people are ed- ucated in non-public schools. "When we talk about the overall welfare of American children," he declared, "we can· not neglect one-seventh of the student population." He said that parents who choose to send their children to to promote. for. the welfare of the Canonical Affairs Church. But at the same time, 'Since the .Yaiican conditionecll we feel there.is nothing cal being taught in this country." It was stated· for' certairi that "it (Cardinal Octaviani's "letter) was not directed at the U.S. This was "8 general ietter in response to-'rumblings' heard throughout the world." ,The U.S. bishops an- swer was ail'· ;'a benign ,', Diocesan Sch-ool Head Aff.irms 'A:id 'Needed 'Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, supe;intendent of Diocesan schools, has pr!3dieted, that the pa'rochial school system 'as it now exists begin togo out of business within 10 years permission' for Saturday substi.- of Sunday Mass where III Shortage of pl'iests exists on the ap.proval of the regional confer- ence ·of bishops, the U. S. gave itS 'appi'oval for any bishop·who thought this co.ndith _1 to exist in his diocese to go ahead and ask: and then receive thi8 permission. Turn to :Page Six support the increased costs OIt public education. Father O'Neill said those whet fear that aid to private schools will wreck the public school system are 'naive. Public schools, he. said, are too well established and private schools provide III desirable diversity in education. He argued that non-public schools provide a definite public . purpose and have a tradition in education of the poor. "If the American people find! in their hearts that the non- public schools serve a purpose," he' said; "they will find a way to enable these schools to exist." Adult St. Mary's . lRiv<e1l' A[Plsoil. 30 [P./M. you are DlOfr sSG your parisU, now. BJMlllllIIlItIlIIlIIIIIllIIIIlIllIllUIIIIlUIUl1l11l!W!!!!!';? Turn to Page-Fifteell) Turn to Page Fifteen non-public schools must still "'iii)::.:::H:': ...,::::,:.:.:....:::::: .... :::,,,.. ::L, ....:r: ..... .. ::....... "':_ ..;0

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.ional people business and 1Jl) May 3 a large corps of 'Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, supe;intendent of Diocesan schools, has pr!3dieted, that the pa'rochial school system 'as it now exists "w~ll begin togo out of business within 10 years ~ unless some form .'of...federal aid program to non-public i schools is 'established." Fr. O'Neill made the· as'sertion after a panel disCllS$ion on "Federal A.id to :ffiducation'" 'A~ter haviI)g :voted. for their ~ Gifts section. From April 24 I ~ i 5 5 § § '

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 04.20.67

Jubilee Appeal

middot-The ANCHOR

1F(gJ~O River MltfJJSSoq Tllullrsday April 20 1961

$400 per YearVO 11 No ~ 6 copy 1967 The Anchor PRlel lCc

Special Gifts Open

The twenty-fifth Catholic Charities Appeal assumes lilIiQ momentum this week Activity will be the rule in every MIect of the JL967 effort for charity Next Monday the ~al contacting for funds will get underway in the Speci~l Gifts section From April 24 1Jl) May 3 a large corps of WOlkers will contact professhyional people business and ~stry throu~hout the Diocese MtU17 of the workers will be IIOmpleti ng their twenty-fifth velll of selvice in the Appeal JIw many instances these same ~ and women will also active-IV participate in the parish phase ltJf t~ Appeal

The Lay Advisory Committee CJll the Charities Appeal estab-Rashed a norm of twentyfive ltlonnars iii honor of the twentyshyJlive ycars of service rendered ~ ~e community by the Appeal

lln a small brochure which will be distributed with the contribshy~iolt cards~ the Committee speUs out the need for this ft1R~reasc Rising costs and fixed btoomc arc the d~minant caues ebat necessitate the raising of the oorm

Representatives of the CltlllHy Appeal agencies will tape two 1)I0grams for viewilgon WTEVs IlQmmunity Show nextmiddot week l1Qther John F CrOnin Pirector ~ St Vinccnts Home FallRiver and Mr John E Kane Chairman ltIi Ute Camp Committee for thee

Dominican Work Invites Controversy Dangers

LONDON CrW)-The controversy created b~r an middotedi oolrial in an English Dominican magazine that acltused the lurch of being corrupt was inevitable because of the JI)ltimary task of the D6minican Order said the orders E11shylJlish provinciaI_The COllUI)- toon charge was made by Fr H b

er ert McCabe OP in the Febluary issue of the mag t2ine New Blackfriars

lIn the magazines April issue tlhe provincial Father Ian Hislop OJ said that the aim of Father McCabes editorial was to show ~holics that they did not need

~1II1l1l1l1ll1ll1l1ll1l1l11ll1l1l1ll1l1ll1ll1ll1l1l1l1ll1l1ll1l = = ~ ~ 5 sect

I~ = ~

i5 Q ~ MpoundYf j7 = ~ j7

i sect

~ ~

Catholic Boys Day Camp Naz- iUeth Day Camp and St Vincent de Paul Health Canip will apshypear on the program M~nday momlllg at 8 They will ~lSCUSS the work at St Vincent sand ~ the Camps sponsored by the

ppeal Chairman Raylnond U Kelti shy

heri commenti~g on the start of the Special Gifts Section of the Appeal said This ~s a sig nifican~ week E0r the twentyshyfifth year our industrious team of solicitors will contact friends

of ~at~olic Charities throughout the Community A quarter of II

century of service to the comshymurHty will be used as a means of increasiIig the 9uaritity and the size of contributions

To accomplish the goals of the Appeal we must cOnstantly inshyclCase OUI resources The great- est resource we have is a genershyous community This has seen us through twenty-fiye middotglorious years of charity We areconfishydent that it will provide well for today and the future

I wish all of my fellow workers for charity good con- tributions and speedy returns

to follow Father Charles Da~is out of the Church

Father Davis had announced on December 20 that he waS leaving the Church over his concelll for author~ty at the exshypense of truth He was inarried Feb 4

The provincial said that Father McCabe who was disshymissed as editor of New Blackshyfdars after his controversial editolial appeared tried to show that the Church although holy with the holiness of Chrst is as a visible institution in need of pUImiddotification

The primary task of the Dominican Order Father Hislop said is the theological analysis of contemporary experience This is simply thinking about our anxieties and preoccupations in the light of revelation It

DEDICATION QEVOTION THE CHARITY OF CHRIST 1he annual diocesan Cathshyoli~ Charities Appeal will be ~eld this year ~rorn)vIay 7 through May 17 Directing the

drive ~or fU1d~ to ~eet ev~r~mcreasmgneedsare left to right Auxiliary Bishop JameS J Gerr~rd middotRaymopd U ~~lliherof Attleboro lay c~ajrman Bishop Connolly and Rt Rev

Isgr Ra~mond T COlHHdme djocesan director of the middotPropagation of themiddotFaith who iSl also the dIrector of the annual Catholic Charities Appeal

middotu S bullbull lJishops-Forge Ahead

To Implement Council The bishops ~f the US illll

three d~ys o~intensivea~d cooperative activity dealing with reports and explessing their individual wishes and deshycisiuns by vote discussed a wide ral~ge of topics that will plOve

important for the American Church A~ter haviI)g voted for their

representatives to the ROnlan Bishops Synod for September ar~d agreeing 1lat all bishops will henceforth meet twice a year and the NCCB Administra tiye COlnmittee four times 31

year the bishops aiso spoke to the faithful concerning

HERESY The Church in the US maY

have some doctrinal problems but the bishops do not think helesy is one of them They did not resent the private ~nqiIIY of Cardinal OCtavianias other hiemrchies did-but they instead returned a private but opti shymistic answer

We find riltgt heresy in this country a press-spokesman for the bishops stated We are conshycellled somewhat about some exshyaggerations here and there which people with the bestintentioris and great enthusiasm are trying

Schedule CCD -Renewal To Iks For April 26

The Evening of Christian Renewal sponsored by the Diocesan Confraternity of Christian Doctrine originally s c h e d u led for March 15 and postponed because of a major snowstorm has been reshyscheduled for Wednesday eveshyning April 26 at 730 Rev Joseph L Powers Diocesan dishyrector has announced

The Fall River meeting will be held at Mount St Mary Acadshyemy with James Kelleher of

unless some form offederal aid program to non-public schools is established Fr ONeill made themiddot assertion after a panel disCllS$ion on Federal Aid to ffiducation at Adas I~rael Synagogue in Fall River

The enrollment in diocesan schools the superintendent said has leveled off in the last two years If Federal aid is not forthshycoming then highElr parochial school tuitions must be increased to meet the rising cost of educashytion and such an action will beshycome too burdensome for many parents to bear

Federal aid to non-public schools is an educational and not a religious question Father ONeill said

The superintendent mainshytained that the Federal governshyment must be realistic when you Iring to light the fact that 67 million young people are edshyucated in non-public schools

When we talk about the overall welfare of American children he declared we canmiddot not neglect one-seventh of the student population

He said that parents who choose to send their children to

to promote for the welfare of the Canonical Affairs Church But at the same time Since the Yaiican conditionecll we feel thereis nothing hereti~ cal being taught in this country

It was statedmiddot for certairi that it (Cardinal Octavianis letter) was not directed at the US This was 8 general ietter in response to-rumblings heard throughout the world The US bishops anshyswer was cill~racterized ailmiddot a benign reac~iol

Diocesan Sch-ool Head Affirms Aid Needed

Rev Patrick J ONeill supeintendent of Diocesan schools has pr3dieted that the parochial school system as it now exists w~ll begin togo out of business within 10 years

permission for Saturday substishy~ution of Sunday Mass where III

Shortage of pliests exists on the approval of the regional confershyence middotof bishops the U S gave itS appioval for any bishopmiddotwho thought this condith _1 to exist in his diocese to go ahead and ask and then receive thi8 permission

Turn to Page Six

support the increased costs OIt public education

Father ONeill said those whet fear that aid to private schools will wreck the public school system are naive Public schools he said are too well established and private schools provide III

desirable diversity in education He argued that non-public

schools provide a definite public purpose and have a tradition in education of the poor

If the American people find in their hearts that the nonshypublic schools serve a purpose he said they will find a way to enable these schools to exist

CKG~ET(~(tnurgw~middot~~Ll

Adult COIl1l~irmatccn

St Marys COJyampnedl~d

Fa~~ lRivlte1l

S~ndav A[Plsoil 30 ~ [PM

~ you are DlOfr lCon~irmedl sSG your parisU pries~ now

BJMlllllIIlItIlIIlIIIIIllIIIIlIllIllUIIIIlUIUl1l11lW Turn to Page-Fifteell) Turn to Page Fifteen non-public schools must still iii)HLr _bull0

--

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 Hub ArchdiocCs Schools to UsePr~~(O]tes P~edS1~dC~1fho~~ TV System

BOSTON CNC)-The A~loyaty in Wor~d W(JJr l diocese of Boston has sign~

WASHINGTON (NC-We affirm in this hour of a contract with a nationa~ stress and trial our most sacred and sincere loyalty and known Philadelphia elect~ patriotism toward our country our government and our iC eorporation for the const~

tion of an educational televisiGliiflag This was the message presented by James Cardinal system which will transmit pro=shyGibbons of Baltimore to ed the Chaplains Aid Associashy grams to 300 archdioces8fi

President Woodrow Wilson tion schools from the 50-story PnIoo on April 18 1917--50 years He proposed a plan to unify dentia1 building in downtooo ag()-while the archbishops the Catholic war work It reshy Boston

ceived the approval of Cardinal Msgr Walter L Flaherty healof the country were meeting at of the archdiocesan radio aOOGibbons and Cardinals OConshyCatholic University of America television apostolate will be hinell and FarleyThe pledge was made by the

Each archbishop and bishop charge of the new modern ecl1Qountrys hierarchy in behalf of cational projectwas invited to send one clergyshythe clergy and laity just 12 days

man and one laymen to a meetshyafter Congress had declared that REV W A SULLIVAN REV R W McCARTHYmiddoting at Catholic Universitya state of war existed between bull I bull 1Washington held on August Uthe United States and Imperial and 12 1917 Germany It was the first such

Representatives from 68 dioshy Dio(e~aJ1 Council of WOlmen Meetpledge offered by any religious

ceses 27 national organizations CHURCH FUNDSmiddot TRUSTSmiddotbody in the nation In FeU liver Saturday May 6and members of the CatholicAll True Americans PENSIONS -ORGANIZATIONSPress Association-US delegatesOur people as ever will rise Mrs Michael J McMahon Musical selections will be preshyas one man to serve the nation -attended the historic confershy chairman of the annual convenshy sented by the Cathedral Boys CORPORATEmiddot PERSONAL

encethe pledge said We are all true tion of the Diocesan Council of Choir under the direction of Rev Americans ready as our age our Unify Activities Catholic Women to be held this William Campbell SAVINGS ability and our conditions per- The delegates resolved to de year at Mount St Mary Acadshy Msgr Walsh will then speak mit to do whatever is in us to vise a plan of organization emy Fall ~iver on Saturday followed by the convention keyshy As of January 1st do for the preservation the throughout the United States to May 6 announced today the noter Dr Paul van K Thomson

progress and triumph of our promote the spiritual aQd mate- days program and the names of Closing the annual meeting will beloved country rial welfare of the U S troops those in charge of arrangements be an address by Bishop Conshy NEW HIGH RATEThe President of Uae United at home and abroad and to Registration and a coffee hour nolly The program will conclude States replied (April 27) to Car- study and coordinate unify and beginning at 9 will precede a at 330 tUnal Gibbons The very re- put into operation all Catholic - business lession set for 10 Parking facilities will be markable resolutions adopted by activitiesincidental to the war oclock available at St Marys Cathedral the archbishops of the United After months of planning the Father McCarthy schoolyard A shuttle service will States at their annual meeting archbishops in November 1917 ~ available to Mount St MaryRev Raymond W McCarthyin the Catholic Unhersity on constituted themselves the Nashy PerAcademydirector of the Family Life BushyApril 18 warms iny helut tional Catholic War Council and reau and moderator of Fall River Yeeshylind makes me very proud indeed appointed four bishops as their District I of the DCCW will bethat men of such large influence Administrative Committee with host moderator Meeting to Hear should act in so large a sense of Bishop Peter J Muldoon of Bishop Connolly will be cele-patriotism and so admirable 1I Rockford Illmiddotchairman _ brant of a noon Mass Assisting Rev~ R C Doddsspirit of devotion to our com- Father (later Monsignor) John the bishop will be Rt Rev Msgrmon country J Burke CSP chairman of its Rev RobertC Dodds wiD 011Thomas F Walsh Diocesan andPraises K of ltD Committee on Special War Ac- Attleboro district moderator and be the guest speaker at the

In another letter of acknowl- tivities also served as general Rt Rev Msgr John J Hayes ~eeting of the Greater Fanedgement the President termed secretary until his death in INVESTMENTmoderator of the New Bedford River Clerical Associationmost enheartening a resolution October 1936 District Lector will be Rev

passed by the directors of the Awarded Medal scheduled for Friday April 28 SAVINGSJames F Lyons moderator of at 12 noon at the QuequechanKnights of Columbus meeting The NCWC was recognized the Taunton District Club Fall Riverin Washington April 114 whicb by the United States government aRTIFICAYESMrs Anthony Geary Diocesan Mr Dodds is a member of thereaffirmert the patriotic devo- as the official agency of Catholic corresponding secretary will National Council of Churchestion of the 400000 members of activity and one of the interdeshy $1000 Multiples held lwsere as asthis order in this count1ry- to our publicity secretary Unity Committee and hi~topic bullnominational Committee Of Sev- Six Months or Longerwell as co-chairman of the will be ~Ecumenismirl therepublic and its laws and en welfare organizations authorshy luncheon with Mrs ViIlcent A United States bullpledging their continued and izedto function in the war efshy Dividends paid twice yeoJipCoady Fall River District presshy

unconditional support of tbe fort and in the reconstruction Clergy planning to attend areidentTickets are available for NO Notice Required forPresident and the Congress of period after hostilities ceased requestedto make reservati6na the luncheon from Mrs Alfredthis nation in their determina- with Rev AIden R Burhoe Withdrawal

tion to protect its honor and its Officially recognizing the War Almeida and Mrs Raymond A Vicar iit the Church of Our Couneilswork the gov~mment Poisson in the Fall River area Savior Somerset and ecretiiry e Dividends not subject ideals of humanity and right awarded the U S Distinguished Miss Helen McCoy New BedfordThe extent to which the coun- of the Flill River Asso~iatioq Mass Income Tax Service Medal to Monsignor area Mrs James Williamstrys 20 million Catholics were Burke in 1919 The deadline is WednesdayTaunton area Mrs George-committeed by theirleaders to Alth h C th l d April 26 arid the secretarY-mayoug a 0 les comprISe Whalen Attleboro area and REGULAR

the cause of their country dur- only 17 per cent of the war-time be reached at 678-9663 orMrs James Quirk Cape and I678-6193 ing World War I is evident by population nearly one million

jIslands Final date for reserva- SAVINGS file history of the emergency served in the U S armed forces tions is Monday May 1walgttime organization the Na- Deaths totaled 22552 Catholics Now EarnRev Walter A Sullivan Diocshy Necrologytional Catholic War Council The including 12438 overseas deaths

esan director of youth will modshypredecessor of the National Cath- A total of 1026 Catholic cbap- APRIL 28olic Welfare Conference it erate a panel discussion to be 1Decame in 1967 the U S Catholic lams serveel on active dlty featured at the morning session Rev Stanislaus J Goyette

1959 Pastor St Louis de FranceConference Boys ChGir SwanseaHistoric ConfereD4lC Mass Ordo The afternoon session will APRIL 30With the entrance of the FRIDAY -St Anselm Bishop convene at 2 Msgr Walsh will Rev David F Sheedy 1930United States into World War I deliver the opening prayer folshyConfessor and Doctor of the Past-gtr St John Evangelist At- there was no Catholic agency Church iII Class White Mass lowed by a message from the tleboro through which Catholics could Proper Glory no Creed Prefshy retiring president Mrs James A Rev John A Hurley 1900contribute to the war effort as ace of Easter OBrien Jr Pastor St Mary No Attle~oroCatholics Sensirig the immedishySATURDAY-SS Soter and Calshy MAY 1I ate need for such a center was You may save any amous Popes and Martyrs III Class Rev Francis J Quinn 1882Father Jobn J Burke CSP of Alumni CampaignRed Mass Proper Glory no Founder Immaculate Conception any time when you have Cll

New York editor of the Catholic World who in June 1917 found- Creed Preface of Easter Diocesan alumni of Stonehill No Easton Founder Sacred Regular Savings Account 0IcI0

Per

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FORTY HOURS DEVOTION

- April 23-0ur Lady 01 Fati shyma New Bedforcll

St Michael Ocean Grove

April aQ-Holy Ghost Attleshyboro

St Joseph NewBedford

THE ANCHOR

SUNDAY-JV Sunday after Easshy College North Easton active in Heart Fall River Fashioned Pass Book f1exibilltJater II Class White Mass the institutions Alumni Annual MAY Z

Proper Glory Creed Preface Giving campaign are George A Rt Rev M P Leonidas Larl- SAVE BY MAILof Easter Allen Jr North Easton chairshy viere 1963 Pastor St Je8ll MONDAY - St Fidelis of Sigshy man Leonard- Walsh Jr Taunshy Baptiste Fall River Margaret Panos Fall River all ton regional director Frederick

Mass Proper Glory no Creed Kelley T Norton Henry Perra Preface of Easter am Evelyn Rice Taunton Mrs

TUESDAY--St Mar)~ Evangelshy Margaret Panos Fall River all 1st II Class Red Mass Proper _ area chairmen Glory 2nd Prayer Rogations Creed Preface of Apostles Guild fer BlindWEDNESDAY-SS Cletus and Marceninus Popes and Marshy The New Bedford Catholic tyrs III Class Red Mass Guild for the Blind will hold Proper Glory no Creed its regular meeting tonight Preface of Easter April 20 at 8 in the Knights of

THURSDAY-St Peter Caniilius Columbus Hall Pleasant Street second Class Postage Paid at Iall River Confessor and Doctor of the New BedfordMass Published every Thursday at 410

t1lghland Avenuet Fall River Mass 02722 Church III Class White Mass The New Bedford Catholkl lIy the CaUlollc lTess 01 tile Dlocell8 01- Fall ~roper Glory no Creed Womells Club will be the bOllt

Alver SUDscriptlon price by llllIiI PG6tpakl$400 per ear Preface otEaster elub

BLUE RIBBON LAUNDRY

273 CENTRAL AVE~

992-6216

NEW BEDFORD-

We provide Postage-Paid enveJ

opes for convenience Specify type of account

~ Iortll Main Straet 8 A R IiPlIII ~

3 rHE ANLHOR-Cathonc Efforts Violet Leonard of Taunton First Woman Thurs April 20 1967

Towards Unity Teacher at Bridgewater Rehab Ce~teJr Sees Ukrainian Sile~t S~edy By JI)oJrltthy Eastman WASHINGTON (NC) shy Rite ExtinctionThe Massachusetts maximum security prison for juvenile offenders is 8 gloomy place llewspapers front-page covshy to visit even on a sparkling Spring day But t~e grey stone walls that surround the ~ge of the American bishshy Near in CO1oda

ancient Bridgewater institution are hiding a secret bull a very pleasant secret as a matshy-Ps guidelines for Catholicshy TORONTO (NC) - A voshyliampwish relations once again joshy ter of fact Inside those forbidding walls are 85 youthful offenders who are guided and

cations authority warnedltUsed public attention on the cared for by a remarkable 1fOntinued Catholic involvement here that the Ukrainianteam of counsellors and ~ inter-Church and interreli shy Church in Oanada is threatshyteachers They have created Iirous affairs ened with extinction if parentsfor the boys an ideal atmo-Occasionally sensational usushy do not seriously take into conshyQDy silent Catholic efforts at sphere designed to bring about sideration the fostering of vocashy

-~hieving Christian unity and their rehabilitation into society tions among their own children ~erreligious cooperation are A fairly recent addition to that

Father Joseph Denischuk~ing on constantly Marked by team is Miss Violet Leonard a

CSSR vocations director forresident and native of Taunton[eontinual conferences but rare Ukrainian-rite Catholics in Canshywhere she is a member of Stannouncements the movement ada says there now are 190000towards unity has more to it Marys Parish Last September

Ukrainian Catholics in Canaclattihan usually meets the eye Miss Leonard became the first

being served by four Bishopswoman ever to teach at the venshyBetween now and the end of 268 priests 218 Sisters 26 Brothshyrtane Catholic participants and erable institution

ers and six members of secular ~servers will be taking part in The channing young teacher

institutes ~zens of minor ecumenical acshy with the ~parkling brown eyes is

The Ukrainian rite has four$vities and a handful of major part of the pleasant surprise a

Sees with a total of 565 parishes~ents Only a few of these will visitor gets after stepping inside

and missions in Canada Morebve immediate results Most of the walls Her office like the

than 80 per cent of the priestsitbem wont make the papers But rest of the interior of the buildshy

are more than 40 years of age~y will all be important ing is gaily painted and abloom

with only one-third Canadianwith many colorful works of artDoctrinal Questions born Father Denischuk saidSo far this year the boys have The supply of European priestsSome of these will be initial read and discussed Blackboard

is almost exhausted and the supshyJireps taken by representatives Jungle Catcher in the Rye ~ different churches and tradishy ply of newly ordained priestsand Lord of the Flies They ~ns to sound out the possibility falls far short of the expectedsaw the movie Blackboard

~ further discussion Others will results he said Only one UkraishyJungle and decided that they1ll2 second third or fourth meetshy nian-rite Catholic priest hasliked the book better ~gs meetings that will probe been- ordained in the past yearBearing in mind that these are(sectJeep into doctrinal questions while nine priests have died he boys who have most likely neverMiting and dividing churches addedread a book from cover to cover

API-il opens with a meeting beshy The vocational director isbefore in their lives - thIs is tween representatives of the - touring parishes in eastern CanshyquHe an achievement So many

ada to recruit young men toCatliolic Church and the Amershy of them have acquired a real k~ n Baptist Convention This enter St Vladimir College inlove for reading Miss Leonardmeeting on Monday April 3 the Roblin only Ukrainian Catholicsays They come up here to thelClrst between the two groups mino) seminary in Canada andreading room every chance they

also to interest girls in religious~ll be chaired by Bishop Joseph have shyvocations During the past twoGreen of Reno Nev in De Witt Judging from its success at the

lilIich It will establish guidelines years he has talked with 3000Bridgewater institution Hookedf])r future discussions youths and children and intershyon Books seems to be a program

viewed 250 prospective seminashyThree days later April 6-9 that has lived up to its provacashyrians and nunsCatholic and Lutheran delegates tive title

will meet in New York for their A larger part of the boys daysfourth meeting Conversations are spent in other types of learnshythere at the headquarters of the Maranists Meeting

ing situations including woodshybutheran Church in America magazines and current books society that range from car theft DAYTON (NC)-The 18th anshyworking upholstery lessons~ill probe more deeply into These are their textbooks from to murder _ nual National Association ofbookbinding music and art lesshyquestions of Eucharistic sacri shy which they earn modern history Hopefully most of them will Marianist Organizations convenshysonsiIice earlier studied in Septemshy geography and reading improye- leave here to become successfUl tion will be held here in Ohio When a boy first enters the inshy~r 1966 ment and useful members of society -May 6 and 7 at the University stltution he is given no privishy

Meet Wftth Orthodox These boys dont ordinarily Miss Leonard says of Dayton

ViOLET LEONAlR)lJl

leges allowed no personal posshyOn April 19 Catholic ecumenishy sessions in his bare cell As he respond well to books Theyve As you leave the prison you

m leaders from around the progresses in his rehabiiitation flunked out or dropped out of know you will not soon forget school and society These are the the faces of those boys behindiJiFOrld will travel to Rome for lie gradually earns more privishy

f1 10-day plenary meeting of the leges more responsibility until kids whove always hated the bleak walls They -were ~ticans Secretariat for Promotshy the cell of a boy who is near the schoo happy faces hopeful faces ing Christian Unity This secreshy tlm~ for his parole inay resem1lle So all the more remarkable is Faces of boys you would be

the progress that Miss Leonard prcmd to call your sons Youtariat is the Churchs official the room of any teenage boy body for supervising and guiding pictures on the walls materials and her two fellow teachers have pray that when the boys leave

made this year in their new pro- those walls they will findin theraquoelations between Catholicism for his hobbies phonographs 81ld other Christian Churches and record collectii)]ls gram The program is called outside world some of the Chrisshy

Back in the United States St What about discipline probshy Hooked on Books It was orig- tian love they will need so much IOhns University in Collegeville lems I have had none says imited at the Industrial School to help them make their adjust

fo Boys and has worked with mentMinn will be the scene of the Miss Leonard And as you walk great success wherever its been~xt major meeting a dialogue through the halls and observe tried fraquoetween Catholics and Presbyshy the boys busy at their work you

terians This fifth meeting April are struck by the friendly coshy Part of the reason for this reshy STONEHILL36-28 will investigate the probshy operative attitude of the boys markable state of affairs is what ems of mixed marriage who give Miss Leonard a cheery she calls reciprocal respect

May will open with a Worcesshy greeting wherever she goes I respect them and care for Summer Session~r meeting with delegates of the All the paintings and the them and they know this and figtrthodox Church Discussion at respect me in return JUNE 26 - AUG sculpture have been done by the ~e May 5 conference will center boys she says with obvious The) have grown up getting

ATTLEBOROS Leading Garden Center

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COLLEGE

Evening Classes 4 630 - 915

UNDIRGRADUAYIE COURSES00 concrete proposals drawn up so little respect from societypride And they maintain the by joint Catholic-Orthodox theoshy institution themselves they do Sometimes I think that they llilQeDlaquolID Arts bull Bus Admin (i) Science reg Math logical task forces Their threeshy all the cleaning cooking laundry dont think of the walls as proshy

Write Director of Summer Sessionraquoart inquiry investigated - tecting society from them theyand most of the maintenance think of the walls as protectingwork STONEHIU COLlLIEGIE

Greek Church Again Her new job is quite a change them from society which has N Easton Mass 02356hurt themfur Miss eonard who had preshyHits Birth Control viously taught fourth grade for The major problem each boy

CHICAGO (NC)-The Greek four years at Notre Dame School has when he- first comes to the ~rthodox Church is still opposed in Fall River institution is an almost complete 1raquo artificial birth control ac- ][ve always wanted to work lack of self contro So while at lording to 0rthodox Bishop Me~ in special education she says the institution he receives psyshyIetios of Chicago My job here is like being a chiatric help with this problem

The Bishop said the Churchs mother father counselor to that has led to crimes against Gtand against contraception is these boys-whatever the relashy~iterated in a statement by the tionship thats needed Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of It is only recently that school North and South America in the attendance became compulsory 1967 official Orthodox Yearbook for the boys at the Bridgewater

institution They must now spend ne hour aday in school ButEducation Chair tbis school in no way resembles

NEW YORK (NC) - A new 11 conventional one on the outshycbalamp to be occupied by an aushy side thority in urban education has be boys come eight at a time been established at the Fordham to her office for an hour a day lJnjversity school of education to read and dicsuss newspapers

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 4 Jewish leader Desc~o~reg~ Visit

Dregml~es C~th~oltr S~h~~s Watliu ~[flfinal CINCINNATI (NC)- A~~~HD[[reg~ mJ [g)regWD~OWreg Cincinnati attorney and Aushy

gustin Cardinal Bea SJTORONTO (NC)-Catholics who have gone to Cathshypresident of the Vatican See- olic schools do better economically than those who went retariat for Promoting Christian

either partly to the public schools or entirely so Peter H Unity found in their very conshyRossi middotdireetor- of the National Opinion Research Center at versation a sign of the progreSB Chicago told separate (Cathshy of Christian - Jewish relations

cation he dealt -with two comshy when they met recently in Romeolic) school trustees of Onshy mon objections to Catholic Simon Lazarus Jr of Cincinshytario at their annual banquet schools First do Catholic nati a leader in the local andschools prepare their graduatesin Toronto national American Jewish Comshy

Declaring that American as well as other schools for getshy mittee was one of a small groupting along in economic achieveshyCatholic schools are a success of members of the committeement and secondly ~do CathshyRossi co-author of the Greeleyshy who met and talked with the carshyolicsehools playa divisive roleRossi Report said that American dinal laSt month in Rome whilein American society as -some ofCatholic schools have managed theymiddot were on a three-week studytheir critics maintainto maintain themselves and grow mission to Mediterranean counshy

Declaring that Catholics doat least in proportion to the inshy tries with the committee crease in Catholic population and better economically with their

Lazarus who was tremenshyCatholic education backgrouoothey do produce noticeable efshy ilously encouraged by his visithe said Apparently there werefects in their graduates along the with Cardinal Bea said in ansome qualities of the Catholiclines that follow the emphases interview here that he told theschools which either fosteredstressed by the organization cardinal about increasing Chrisshyeconomic success - perhaps theObjections tian-Jewish dialogue in the U Skinds of work habits instilled bySpeaking on the social conseshy Cardinal Bea in turn told ofthe vaunted better discipline ofquences of Catholic schoOI edushy projects that were going on inCatholic schools~or the religious other parts of the world includshyvalues of Catholicism in this hisshying the study and revision oftorical period had effects similar textbooks to take out passagesThe tc the values of Protestantism in harmful to the Jewsthe early period of the Reforshy

mation Saintly ManParish Parade Divisiveness The fact that we are here toshyROSLINDALE CONFIRMATION Rev Richard Johnshy

gether the cardinal told theSS PETER AND PAUL On the question of ilivisiveshy son hands the chalice to ~l member- of the confirmation group is living proof of theFALL RIVER ness Rossi said the evidence class at Sacred Heart Chllrch Roslindale where the Holy progress that is being made andseems clearly against supportingR gistration for grade one in such an allegation Eucharist was administered under both species of bread of the spirit thats behind it

the parish school ill bc held Twenty years ago a meetingVlikeIn general he noted no signifi shy and wine Bishop Jeremiah F Minihan Auxiliary Bishop Sunday April 23 after the 8 9 this probably wouldnt havecant difference)n anti-Negro10 and 11 oclock Masses of the middotBoston Archdiocese confirmed the class of 275 in happenedanti-Semitic or anti-ProtestantBoy Scouts will go to Expo Boston suburban parish NC Photo attitudes between Cahtolic schoolmiddot Urging Christians and Jews67 Montreal in August Their

Catholics an public school Cathshy to work together on social asmothers are assisting in fundshyolics was perceived Indeed well as religious questions Carshyraising activitic and announce

a cake sale after all Masses there was some evidence that dinal Bea commended coopershythe Catholic graduates of greatershy ation among Christians and Jews

-Retirement Plon Sunday April 23 The troop comshy

educational attainment were less even in areas where they disshymittee will have a musical vari shy Bridgeport Bishop Curtis Announces Programlikely to evidence prejudicial at shy agree like federal aid and supshyety show in the hall Sunday titudes of all sorts than those of port of text books for privateApril 30 to raise money for theshy For Priests on Connecticut Diocesesimilar educational attainment shy schoolstrip who had gone to public schools BRIDGEPORT (NC) - Bishop Retirement prior to age 70 but Lazarus who described CardishyThe omcns Club will have

Catholic schooling did not hold Walter W Curtis of Bridgeport after age 65 may be requested nal Bea as a saintly man saida rummage sale in the church back Catholics from participatshy has announced a retirement proshy by priests through a diocesan that if all religious leadershall Thursday and Friday April ing in public life he added gram for priests of the Bridgeshy personnel committee which will could exude the same feeling27 and 28 and hold its installashy

port Diocese Retroactive to Jan make its recommendation to the and understanding that Cardinaltion banquet at Dighton Rock 1 last it provides that bishop regarding acceptance or Bea did the worldmiddot would be11a~or Tuesday May 9

Men of the parish have organshy ~p~$ lP~nJffillaquoY All priests subniit their resigshy non-acceptance of the request much better ized a CYO athletic advisory nations by the age of 75 either On reaching 70 priests are exshy The cardinal is a great human council and plan a baseball team ~~reg] tri)_ lLte voluntarily or at the request of pected to resign any official poshy being he said and he ought

proper authority t) be a saint along with Popethis season Chairman is Milton sition they may hold in the dishyVATICAN CITY (NC)-Love The age for voluntary retireshy JohnM Kozak sccretary William F is the keynote in the primacy of ocese to allow younger priests to

ment is 70 yearsPatten coach Robert A Fredshy take over the activities of these ermiddot~lc Their next mecting is at offices

Peter and his successors in the guidance and service of the

10 Sunday morning April 30 Christian people Pope Paul VI Leaders UII1 Alabama Priests on retirement will conshyCommittees have been formed told thousands assembled in St tinue to possess faculties and willto plan the Summer parish picnic Peters during a general audience Blast Gov Wallace be free to give assistance in passhyto be held Sunday July 30 at Taking his theme from March toral work in parishes and otherUIbans Grove Tiverton - MOBILE (NC)-More than 40029s Gospel in which Christ asks Church instihitions if their

Alabama citizens here haveSTJEAN THE BAPTISTE Peter Do you love me more health penuits

signed a statement expressingALL RIVER than these do- the Pope stressed

dismay at Gov LUIleer Walshy A home for retired priests T~1C Council of Catholic Women the significance of the question

laces recent speech calling for now being constructed is sched- I will sponsor a pilgrimagetn La He wa3 asking the Apostle

stmiddot~te defiance of federal court uled for completion in 1968 and 1 Salette Shrinc Attleboro on Sunshy the first confessor of faith in ordered school desegregation Vill be open to all retired priests == ~ day April 23 A bus will leave the divine Messianic niis~ion of the school yard at 1 and return Christ for that complementing Among the signers were many bullbull at 5 Catholic clergymen Religiouscharacteristic which makes faith

Mrs Thomas Tache chairman and lay leaders including represhylive and work that is love and lVIIS Oscar Phenix co-chairshy charity sentatives of the Society of Jesus ir - BISIALONS man head the ticket committee the Josephite Fathers the SistersThe Pope continued The

of Loretto and the Dominican s~ primacy of Peter in the guidanceMARGARET Sisters i GARAGEand service of the Christian peoshyBUZZARDS BAY

ple was to be a pastoral primacy The statement appeared as A ~A whist party will be sponshy bullNote to Our Fellow Citizens insored at 8 Saturday night April a primacy of love -0 pray

beloved sons that all may undershy an advertisement in the Mobile22 at the school hall Main Street stand this prodigious divine Registerb~ the SS Margmet-Mary Guild design Maintaining that racism is the

HOLY NAME underlying issue in the controshyFALL RIVER versy the statements described

First communicants will hold Benedictine Oblates

24-Hour Wreltker Service

653 Washington Street Fairhaven 994-5058

the states dual school system as rehearsals at 315 Monday aftershy Oblates of St Benedict will unjust and unequal and in- bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull noon April 24 and Thursday hold a chapter meeting Saturshy sited other citizens to joi n the afternoon April 27 at the parish day afternoon April 29 at Portsshy signers in working for justiceschool mouth Priory R I beginning now

at 4 with Mass Dinner willbe ST FRANCIS XAVIER served at 6 Reservations ~ may HYANNIS be made with the Priory or by

Mrs Kenneth B Clarke a calling Mrs Frank S Moriarty licensed grapho-analyst will be Fall River 672-1439 the guest speaker at tonights meeting of the Womens Guild ICheduled for 8 in the IQwC1 Coyle Penny Sale ehureh hall - -he Mothers Chlb of Coyle

The nominating committee High Schoo Taunton will sponshywill present a slate of officers sor a penny sale on Vednesday 101 the 1967-68 year at this meetshy night April 26 at 8 at Coyle in~ High

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GULF HmiddotILlmiddot DAIRY so DARTMOUTH MASS

THE ANCHOR-Dlocete of Fait R1yener-1h Apr 20 bull

~

~flt

1 I

FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF HYACINTH CIRCLE Participatshying in the Golden Jubilee Celebration of the Daughters of Isabella-Hya-~

einth Circle--New Bedford were left Miss Mary E Foley regent and Mrs Richard H Walsh supreme regent of St Louis~ Mo at the cake cutshyting ceremony Center seated Miss Lydia Pacheco past regent and Mrs

Emile J Monfils chairman of decorations standing Mrs Richard H Manning vice-regent and Mrs Antone J Morris past regent Right -Mrs John B Lowney first regent seated in front of Miss Evelyn Henshydricks first guide left and Mrs Emmet Almond past regent The Circle has a membership of 500

Cardsna Cushing Emphas~es Need For Inv~vement

BOSTON (NC) - Om atechisms must be transshybted into real human conshyeern Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston asserted here

Cardinal Cushing said Christ did not make the rhetorical proshynouncements in response to peoples need but rather helped them by action Christians must take similar risks to wipe out the IJOcial evils of the 20th century be decl~red

For the Christian this social ftnvolvement consists not only in the desire for material well shybeing which we share with all humanitarians but also in the psychological hunger for more shybeing in mans thirst for the fullness of undying love in the final estabiishment of all things in the love of God the cardinal said

Cardinal Cushing said that the message of Easter is hope He asserted that fear is prevalent in our society-fear of nuclear deshytJtruction of our fellow men of the future of non-acceptance in a conformist society This fear be said is kindled by the conshytinued expansion of communism JiJi the various sectors of the a1obe

Christian lImperative

The cardinal warned While some satisfaction can be obtained jjn diminishing the degree of (Chill in the Cold War let no one be so mesmerizec as to think nIl is well and secure Let no one of us be duped into accepting war as peace

Cardinal Cushing said Chrisshytians have not always seen their Christian responsibility because of complacency or fear of inshyvolvement~ He added The Fathers of Vatican II have made it clear that for the Church and the Christian involvement is not only not to be feared-involveshyment is the Christian imperashytive

New Bedfords Hyacinth Circle lsabellas Mark Fifty Years of Community Service

By Patricia Francis Hyacinth Circle Daughters of Isabella of New Bedford marked its golden anniversary

Sunday morning at the 11 oclock Mass at Holy Name Church and a dinner that followed at the New Bedford Hotel Guests of honor were Mrs Anna C Walsh of Florisant Mo supreme regent members of the area clergy and charter members of the circle

Organized April 15 1917 at a meeting at Duff Han Hyacinth Circle began its half century of charitable work with a charter membership of 335 women Today it has a membership of approximately 500

In 1934 the drcle sponsored establishment of the first Junior C I N E 1 dmiddott

Irc e III ew ng an WI h acharter class of 125 young women from 10 to 20

Through the years members of the circle have participated in national and local charitable works including raising funds for he Queen Isabella FoundashytionFund of $100000 donated to te National Catholic School of Social Service affiliated with Catholic University in Washingshyton

Two area women were among those awarded fellowships to the school Mrs Mary Lou (Cleary) Nally formerly of New Bedford and now residing in Jeffersonshyville Pa and Mrs Jeanette (Mulvey) Mahoney of Arlington fOmel1y of Fairhaven Following erection of the Rose

Hawthorne Lathrop Home in Fall River for treatment of canshycer patients members of the circle adopted the work of proshyviding surgical dressings and other hosryital needs They also work closely with the Catholic Welfare Bureau One of the cirshycps pet projects was help for the White Sisters until they left New Bedford in 1965

First regent of Hyacinth Cirshycle was Mrs Helen E Lowney who contacted all charter memshybers before the anniversary celebration inducing many of those able to attend to join in the birthday party

Secoud regent was the late

Mrs Caroline ~ Manning of New Bedford who remained active in the DlUghters of Isashybella until her death She served as national regent

The late Rt Rev Henry J Noon of St James Church was the first of three chaplains who have provided spiritual direction for members of Hyacinth Circle Second chaplain was the Rt Rev Msgr Timothy B Sweeney of Holy Name Church and current chaplain is the Rt Revt Msgr John J Hayes also of Holy Name

ror many years Hyacinth Cirshycle held its meetings in the hall at the Knights of Columbus building at Pleasant and Camp bell Streets Then in the mid 1940s the Most Rev James E Cassidy gave the circle use of a house at 11 Robeson Street which ~eassince served as its headquarshy

Plans for the anniversary obshy

a SYSTEMAnC5 50 01 bull 10 vear SAVINGS

96 monthly deposits requirelll

~ INVESTMENT5 0001 bull fO year SAVINGS

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Bank By Mail We Pay The Postage

IISOUTH YARMOUTH HVANNIS

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servance were ~ade by a l~rge committee that included Miss Mary E Foley regent Mrs Anshytone Morris ticket chairman and Mrs Mary P Quinn a charshyter member

Miss Ellen Gaughan read a history of the circle which she had written an entertainment was provided by Nancy Howard Debruyn of Milton who offeredselections from Sound of Music

Hear Bishop NASHVILU (NC) - Bishop

Joseph A Durick is the first Catholic clergyman to address a state convention of the Episcopal Church Women of Tennessee

St Johns to Open New School in 68

JAMAICA (NC) - St Johns University here in New York state will establish ilschool of general studies in September1968

It will consist of three divishysions each with a separate facshyulty and assistant dean

The new school will offer It

part-time program leading to D

bachelors degree a two-year asshysociate degree program and am adult continuing education proshygram

Now Many Wear

FALSE TEETH With More Comfort

FASTEETH t pleasant alkaline powder holds false teeth firmer To eat and talk In more comfort justsprinkle a little FASTEETH on yourplates No gummy gooey taste 0shyteellng Cllecks denture breath Denshytures that fit are essentIal to health see your dentist regularly Get FASTEETH at all droll counteru

Play an extra set of tennis

i ~ ( lt

o ~~lt onthe II ~

energy you get from

3 slices of Sunbeam Bread

6 THE ANCHOR-Di~c~se of Fail Riv~r-Thurs Ap~ 20 1961 - ~ 1middotmiddot 1 ~ --~ ~ bull bull - ~~

Reports Mean What There will undoubtedly be more than the usual furor over the release by the National Oatholi~ Reporter of a text of majority and minority reports submitted to PopeshyPaul on the matter of birth control It will be well to reshymember what these reports are and what they are supshyposed to do

Members of the Papal Commission on Birth Control were asked by the Pope to study the whole matter from every possible point of view and to submit their findings to him so that in the light of this work and in the light of the medical issues involved he might make moral judgeshyments and pronouncements on these matters The studies would then be expected to contain every possible aspect of the birth control problem with every kind of argument both for and against every type of method of birth cOntrol This is fundamental to any kind of reshysearch paper All sides of every aspect are discussed argushyments strong and weak are brought out to bolster each

aspect and then the whole is presented for thought and prayer and decision

This indeed is what the Papal Commission has done For a reader to take this or that argument and from

it to mak~ his own deductions is unwise and a misuse of what the Commission has done For a reader to take what the Reporter has printed and to assume that this is the whole story is to come to conclusions on partial evidence

The Reporters release of these texts will be seen by many as an act of freedom the willingness for all matters -to be discussed openly and before the entire world It is hoped that the Reporter has gone a step further even and has indicated to its readers what these texts really IPean how they are to be understood and the purpose of research papers of this type Most people are neither philosophers nor scientists nor theologians Philosophical concepts socioshylogical and scientific ideas theologizing about issues-all this cannot be simply thrown at people with the expec~tion that there will be no confusionTo think this way would pe naive

It is never enough simply to issue reports Two questions should always be asked in the wake of reports---are they accurate and what do they mean Or-to put it quite inelegailtly-Sez you and So What

Auschwitz Mem(jrial Attempts to slant or rewrite history should alw~ys be

met with vigorous and serious protest On Sunday a monshyument was dedicated in Poland to the memory of the four million persons who met death in the gas chambers of the infamous Auschwitz death camp This act of unspeakable barbarity should live forever in the memory of man

But the -dedication ceremony Sunday made scarce menshytion of the fact that the overwhelming preponderance of thos~ killed were put to death only and precisely because they were Jews The only reference to this martyrdom of the Jews was made in French by the president of the Intershy

nationa1 Auschwitz Committee and his remarks were not translated into Polish

The chief speaker Polands Premier gave greetings to the Jews who had come to pay tribute to their dead but glossed over the ordeal of the Jews which still hangs heavy On the consciences of those who call this a civilized world

It remained for individuals and groups after the formal eeremonies to offer prayers for the Jews who died because they were Jews and for no other reason

Men the world over should add their prayers for these ~agic victims and should pray too that time will not erase either the blrbarity of the deed or the reason-s for it

rhe ANCHOR OffiCIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAILL ~QVER

410 Highland Avenue

ublished weekly by The Catholi~ Press of the Diocese of Fall River Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER ~ost Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

~ ~

tbfs In the U So Universal eashyonical nonns will be given bv the Vatican and U S norms jr$ be established by the NCCD

It was suggested that trained CCD laymen be permitted to dIlt part-time ministry as a step tilshyward this establishment

Missions A comniission of seven bishopa

will guide coordinating effon among mission appeals for finalilot cial support and personnel

Religious Needs Regarding fund solicitations hi1

religious communities t)te bis~

ops felt the problem is very comshyplicated and voted an ad hOC joint committee be formed further study

Justice-Peace The bishops formed a natio~

counterpart of the Vatican COJDoo mission on World Justice-Peaee

It was described as a broad c0shyoperative program ofeducatiOlil designed to arouse collaboratioO with other religious groups in an

ecumenical kind of project to make this affluent nation of oUDI more aware of the tremend01lilll needs of developing nations

Vietnam The Justice-Peace Commissiou

vIas obviously interested JDj such topics as Vietnam and musti face them as moral dilemmas ~

[D) 0 rL 11 A IL J our time it was notedWD~lflJ~ tr[FtOl -~rn1 e(1~ A spokesman mentioned greali

Lr Continued from Page One

On mixed marriages the formof the promises as used in the Madison Diocese was recomshymended for general use throughshyout the U S It states We sol emnly promise that all children who may be born of our marshy

riage will be baptized in theCatholic Church and carefully~eared in the knowledge and practice of the Catholic religion We are both aware that our marshyriage contract will remain biJid

ing until death We promise not to hinder each other in the pracUce of religion

On previous censorship the bishops wish prior approval be required for the actual texts Of Sacred Scripture books of prayer or devotion liturgical or ceremorial books textbooks used in religious eliucation programs especially in the primary and secondary levels that prior apshyproval not-be required on books or articles dealing with Scripshy

ture theology canon law eccleshysiastical history and like subshy

jectsIf dangerous tea~hings are

found a warning in pastoral tone should be issued

Coordination A Cominittee onPalitoral Reshy

should correspond more closely have asked the VatIcan to rele shysearch and Practice was founded shy to what is usually found in the them from these provisionshwhic WIll coordinate the follow- American system of education COD

ing committees Liturgy Ecu- f f menism Canonical Affairs and ~ur years 0 high school four The CCD has been and wiD Doctrine 0 college four of theology that continue primarily as a religiouB

seminaries on the high school Liturgy and college levels take accredi- educational program on the

Four possible texts ofthe Eng- tation steps all seminariestake parochial level reported BishoP lish Canon of the Mass were Greco to the hierarchy He alsO given By a vote of C to 1 one cond~l~t self-study in the ligbt of announced that the complete text ~xt was given approval of genshyeral tenor A definite text is expected by June of this yjar

~etirement For bishops it wasmoved that

a retiring bishop be permitted to reside in his diocese that suit~ able sustenance be provided him (especially medical and hospital care) and that the N~B do so

if a particular diocese cannot that r permanent commLJion is needed to oyersee this that the pr~visions for retirement extend to all bishops-auxiliaries titushylar etC-and not only residential bishops

For prirsts that various beneshyfit plans be reviewed so as to ready a national plan of care and benefits for retired priests

Priests One of the first functions of

the Committee on Pastoral Reshysearch and Practices will be to study in depth the role amI life of the priest in American society It should consider priestly forshymatioD income distribution

i2J concern among the bishops abou~ seminary studies parish strue- Vietnam citing their statemellli ture celibacy the mission needs last November that no serioWl of Latin America and the thkd Christian can absolve himseril

world from being concerned with tb18 As fa- as celibacy is concerned question but added I sense

the NCCB unanimously rea1- great reluctance among the bis~ firmed clearly and strongly the ops to take a stand either crill shyexplicit teaching of the Vatican cizing or endorsing various as-Council on the current and ira- pects of the prosecution of the ditional observance of clerical war

celibacy Pastoral Councils To rumors that a Catholic The bishops are in search far

priest can leave the Chufth II sample constitutIon for pap marry and in a few years obtaID 10ral councils which will clead permission from Rome for lay distinguish it from the diocesaD Catholic standing a spokesman eonsultors and the priests seDshyfor the bishops answered ates

This is a policy the JJoJv Twenty-four topics were pre-Father controls Any priest who sented which might profitably be engages in this is engaging in ma~ers of study ranging frOlia spiritual Russian roulette Be adult education to vocations has no guarantee any dispensa- National Parishes tion will be given to him in tile It was shown that accordingfuture

A survey of the distribution Pope Pauls Ecclesiae Sanctae a and utilization of priests in the bishop has the rigllt to suppresS

national parishes-those estabshyU S is being prepared bythe lished for special ethnic groups Center for Applied Research in T R C h

the ~postolate (CARA) Nothing he oman urIa oweveJl definite could be presented since bid the bishops not use this rIght

because of concordats WIth go~only 63 per cent of the dioceses shyhave responded so far ernments or the physical or

moral rights of persons involved Priestly Formation without first referring to tho

Eight general recommenda- Holy See tions were made for all semina- Since these conditions do ~ ries the seminary structure apply t0 the U S the blsh shy~

c~nci Ibear documents that provJ- of the new edition of the CeD SIons made for a system of Bible will be published in earlYcommunication between the litoshydet body and the administrative 1968 mong the scholars preshyand teaChing faculties so that paring translations are five dieshystudents may present their views tingUishec Protestant memberS regarding the seminary program Newman for faculty consideration that It was recommended thai seminary advisory boards of priests in Newman work be enshyqualified members of clergy and couraged to secure advanced laity apart from seminary per- academic degrees especially m sonnel be encouraged that a theology that the high rate otl BA degree or its equivalent be turnover among Newman priests an entrance requirement for a be curtailed that part-time theoloID seminary that eccel- chaplains be made full time siastical studies begin with a where possible that more priests course so students lerceive the be assigned to the Newman meaning order and pastoral end Apostolate for the growing numshyof their studies ber of Catholics attending col-

The bishops also encouraged lege and university that the amalgamation where seminaries bishops re-emphasize the growshycannot maintain a suitable pro- ing importance of the Newmali gram due to size unsatisfactory Apostolate facilities inadequate faculty fi- New Dioceses nancing and similar programs The committee on presen~

Deacons names for new bishops will a- It was recognized that there deal regularly with the questi_

will be permanent order of of diocesan boundaries and tile deacons established and that the establishment of new dioceses

_NCCB will be empowered 10 do Turn to Pll4Ie SeVeD

7 Diocesan Sc~oots Students Reap Honors Aplenty as Senior Year Enters Into Final Phase

Honors aplenty are being garne~d by Diocesan students among them Andrea Trczinski a senior at Tauntons Bishop Cassidy High whos been selected as one of 15 New England students to participate in the 1967 Youth Science Congress jointly sponsored by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the National Science Teachers Association

In the course of the two and a half day congress now in progshyress at the NASA Electronics Research Center in Boston Anshydrea like the other participants will present a 15 minute oral

report of the project which gained her inclusion in the

event

Duck Fond The presentations say conshy

gress officials are not comPetishytive but will give listening scishyentists and teachers the opporshytunity to evalute them and offer guidance to the students

Andreas project is an arehaeshyological and geological investigashytion of an early American potshytery works The Duck Pond Site It has already won her many awards in state and reshygional science fairs

Students from Stang and from St Anthony and Holy Family high schools in New Bedford were participants in an essay eontest sponsored by the New Bedford Serra Club on The Role of the Priest and Nun in the Christian Community

First place winner was Cidhshyerine Giammalvo of Stang and cliiIdren at st Josephs Home to mnners-up were Mary Black a~ outing Sunda) while NBSers also of Stang and Michael at Mt St Marys have elected Tames of St Anthony Stang their officers for next year inshyalso won a plaque for baving the eluding Martha Nugent presi- most entrants in the contest dent Judith Doolan vice-presi-

At Stang theyre congratu- dent Susan Bernier s~cretary lating Cynthia Curry named to Diane Berger treasurer represent ber school on an area -Speed reading is the word at department stores teen fashion Sacred Hearts Fall River where board Mt St Mary Academys some 30 students are devoting representative to the same board th~ hours eery Saturday is Elaine Chaves The lucky gals mo~ing to a reading improve will receive modeling instruc- ment course Reading power tiona in connection withmiddot their ~ed and word study are em- appointments and will also be phasized in the 10 week course given the clothes they model which began April 1 Again at Stang word has Also at SHA varsity and jayshyreached the office that John vee teams in volleyball and basshyGolenski a 65 grad and now s ketball honored Mrs GeGrge Be sophomore has received a Snyder their coach at a surprise grant for Summer study in dinner Well they might since

EuroSePbe hi A ta Mrs Snyder has led them to olani PB coop nees Narry League championships in

Still very much in the newa ~t~ sports are notices of college scholar-middotmiddot Honoi lroviJiclai ships and acceptances At Doshyminican Academy Fall River Jesus-Mary students honored Elarne Fisette has been accepted the Mother Provincial of the lReshyat Southern Conn State College ligiousf Jes~s-Mary at ~ eer-middot powet supplied to them occupied Briana Doherty Linda Guill Diane Giasson at SMTI and Sue emony mcludmg ~e readmg of the bishops The NCCB will furshy mette and Mary Wynne Gagnon at Bryant while Jerome lIl~ ad~ress by PaulIne Dumas ther study the matter

Mancini has received a full tul- s~hool preSident the presenta- Oth b t h h th b h f f1 er su Jec s w IC e is shytion grant from St Annesmiddot~os- tion 0 owers anll gIfts and a ops treated were communica- pitaI School of Nursing ana a pe~orrnance by the g~et C~U tions between the bishops and

padial grant from the Utlion OccasIOn was the Provmcial smiddot tmiddott tmiddotmiddotmiddot f p hi 1 bullbull t t d Colle Ins 1 u IOns 0 Ig er earnshyosplmiddottal dItto annua VISit 0 heaca emy 1 middotmiddotmiddottmiddotiUmiddot S h n J bullbull Ilg In bullbulle c anges In pershy Receiving annual renewable ChristIan Youth Movement mission middotformiddot the alienation of

Scholarships at Jesus middotlVlary m~mbe~ of Prevost and JM~ churchproperty increased edushy J

Academy Fall River are Su- Wlll VISIt Nazareth Hall thiS cation onthe threats of abortionshyianne Lagarde awarded a $2300middotmiddot month and will also sJonsor a cooperation with the YMCA ami grant from Fordham University cake sale Sunday AprIl 30 A YWCA better coordination with and Yvonne L Berger recipient vigil service is set for Monday ihe usce celebration of the ()f three grants from Northeast- em University totaling $2180 Suzanne previously received a $2500 scholarship from Northshye~tern ~nd Yvonne is a semishyfinalist In the Rhode Island State Scholarship Program

Prevost reports that Gerry Ferris has been accepted at Bridgewater State College and Cassidy notes that Rita Donnelly has received a full scholarshiJ) fto Johnson and Wales Business School

Chess Tournamenamp Prevost students arent giving

their gray matter a rest this vacation week In progress is a schoolwide chess tou~ament

IIDd the winner will receive a tro~nv

On the agenda at Cassidy is a Junior College Day slated for Thursday April 27 a Couples Dance Saturday April 29 and a father-daughter night Wednesshyday May 3

lPRan lltetJreat

Mt St Mary students will helli a taUt by Rev Bernard Sullivan Friday April 28 in preparation for the retreat theyll be making the first three days ox May Also to speak at Mount on the same day is Mother Mary Martha Assistant General of the Sisters of St Joan of Arc whose topic will be vocations The Sisters of St Joan of Arc care for rectories bishops houses and seminaries

Still in the vocation line Sister Mary LaSalette of the Mount faculty will attend a meeting at Bristol Community College Wednesday April 26 Subject Vocations

Dominican Academy students will enjoy their senior prom Frishyday June 9 at the Hearthstone restaurant and congratulations are in order for DAs student council moderator Sister Mary Agnes who has been offered a

graduate assistantship at the University of Wisconsin Prevost members of the Nashy

tional Honor Society treated

April 24 and members will hold Year orFaith in connection with their year-end banquet Saturday the 1900th anniversary of the June 3 _ martyrdom of Ss Peter and Paul

Prevost debaters are preparing celebration of Communications for the JFK tournament to be Day May 7 held at Cassidy in May Thus far the Prevost team has chalked up an 8-5 record

(ASA BLANCA Just Across The

Coggeshall St Bridge Fairhaven Mass

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STEAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

MOTHER PARKERS famous for OLD FASHIONED DOUGHNUTS

QUALITY and baked by your Sunbeam Baker SERVICE

CONTESTS WINNElRS Winners of New Bedford Serra Club essay contest on roles of priest nun in Christian community are from left runners-up Mary Black Stang High and Michael James St Anthony High and first prize winner Catherine Giammalvo Stang High Stang also won plaque for having most entrants in contest

Parent-Teacher Night is sched- duties for many of the Cassidy uled for Tuesday April 25 at students meanS more time to JMA and will feature as a profit byvarlous e~ucational opshyspeaker Dr Betty-Anne Metz of portunities At the Mass State

Bristol County Community Col- Science Fair Friday April 21 lege through Sunday April 23 Cheryl

And Prevost students are anti- McCaffrey top winner in the cipating a dance Friday April school SCience Fair and chosen 28 at St Annes Audit6rium The one of the 25 representatives Torquays will play from the Fall River Regional

This isNational Library Week will repr~sent Cassidy High toshyand mixt week is Secretaries gether WIth Pamela Candee Week so maybe everyone should The Massachusetts Youth Cit shyreld a book about secretaries izenship Conference at Bndg~shyAt any rjlte Cassidy Future Sec- water sc~eduled ~or tod~y ~Ill retaries of America will tour a attract the follOWIng 10 JUnIors North Dighton plant and visit chosen as representatives Donna Wheaton College Also pn their Cole M~y Fenton Kathl~en agenda isa reception on Sunday Hanna Eb~beth Laffan Paulme and aluncheon next Wednesday Lecuyer

Cassidy Go Despite Vaeatlon Also Carolyn McCaffrey Joshy anne Orchekowski Margarita

Free time from regular class Procopio Anne Marie Sullivan and Donna White The subject of this years Conference is ValuesU SmiddotmiddotBishopmiddots in a Changing World

Continued frQm Page Six At EmmailUel College Friday hiterdiocesan Offices April 21 three of Cassidys lanshy

An extended discussion on guage students will compete in sueD agencies might be best the annual French Contest for strUctured and adequate manshy High School Students They are

fHE ANCHORshylhun April 20 1967

Labor Statement Wins Approval

SAN ANTONIO (NC) Farm labor leaders hailed the Catholic bishops of Texas for issuing a statement supshyporting the right of farm workshyers to form unions and urging national legislation to protec~ this right

Spokesmen of farm associashytions responded that they do no~

oppose field workers joining unions but withheld comment pending a study of the bishops pronouncement

The bishops declared that among the basic rights of a human person is the right of freely founding associations or unions for working people and that all should have the right of freely taking part in the activities of these unions without risk of reprisal

The statement was issued at the conclusion of a two-day meeting of the board of directors of the Texas Catholic Confershyence It was approved by the bishops of the 10 Texas dioceses

Farm workers in the Rio Grande City area of south Texas have been on strike since last June and their efforts had been endorsed previously by Archshybisho Robert E Lucey of Sam Antonio and Bishop Humberto Medeiros of Brownsville

Leading the praise for the bishops was Cesar Chavez of Delano Calif national director ofthe United Farm Workers Organizing Committee whose Local No2 is striking in Rio Grande City

Chavez termed the statement very powerful and very charshyitable lle said he thinks the declaration is an answer to the prayers of thousands and thoushysands of farm workers in the Southwest asking that their Church and Church leaders stand with them in their struggle to ~ure social -justice as ennunshyciated toy the popes in the many encyclicals~

DEBROSS OIL co

Heating Oils and Burners

365 NORTH FRONT STREET NEW BEDFORD

992-5534

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 Medical Gr9uP Inducts Nun

Spring Cleaning Reveals WASHINGTON (NC) - The first nun was inducted as a fel shylow of the American College ClI Obsttricians and Gynecologists at its 15th annual clinical here

Hoards of Yardgoods lBy Mary Tinley Daly The honor went to SiBtel

Spring housecleaning is like a great white light revealshy Miriam Paul Klaus of the Me~

ing all Its not just dust in the bedsprings and radiators cal Mission Sisters who have headquarters in Philadelphi~the great unwashed slats of Venetian blinds gummy glasses dlJring the coJeges session~stashed away on an upper shelf finding of borrowed books Sister Miriam Paul was nlaquolI

too long unreturned These are what i call honest misshytakes chores you dont mind having household help help you with like doing floors walls windows rugs furniture

This is orthodox Spring cleaning such as every housewife can t a c k 1e have done with and point to with pride No the nuisances at least at our house are the secret sins jobs weve really anticipatshyed getting at one of these days but the llPecific day never seems to come And nobody but nobody can help in this department

Moms Hobby Shll)p For instance theres the used

furniture corner of the attic sOmetimes laughingly referredto as Moms Hobby Shop Theres the dresser bench Mom b going to cane when and if Mom learns how to cane an art supposed to be lotS of fun There ure two perlectly good boudoir chairs or iiI be perfectly good when theyre recovered And the little stand picked up at uuction waiting patiently to be antiqued when and if Mom learns how to antique another touted fun hobby bull

What the good-natured ribbers of Moms Hobby Shop dont know is that another secret cache of to-be-dones awaits in one corner of the basement the touch of a little hand pktures to be framed along with a framshying kit which any child can master another kit of clear plastic resin ideal for embedshyding coins flowers leaves rocks shells pictures novelties jewshyelry So far efforts have reshysulted in the embedding of one penny askew and far from ornashymental Theres also ever~thing

you need to wire a lamp everyshything but the skill that is

A strong-minded woman would become a Jill of all trades masshy1er skills necessary and do away with the jobs one at a time or else give away all t1e maIdngs ~~t then a str~))~gmil)d~ woman probably wouldnt have gotten

intothisfixin the first place With springcleani~goncoming

lik~ the inevitable tinie and taxes we decided to dean around the undones in attic and

basement facl up to legitimate eatchiills like the ~drponlClos~ etsbull

Dougherty High Band Wins Festival Honor

WASHINGTON (NC)-In this middot ease to the victors it was a mix- ture of cherry blpssoms and roses

The members of the Cardinal Dougherty High School Band of

Phiiadelphia marched ltYff with first place honors in the band

middot eompetitlon at the annual Cherry Blossom Festival _parade -an event which attracts tens of

middotthousands of visitors annually 10 the nations capital

The vIctory was nothing new to the bandsmen - and girls They won first prize two years ago and last March 17 won middotfirst prize in New Yorks St Patricks Day paralaquoe

present to receive the honor PelshyThere not in one not in two but in every closet we were sonally She is stationed at the

communitys Holy Family Heampfaced with the nemesis a box or pital in Dacca East Pakistan a bag or apile of yardgoods

The college accepts as fello~Forgotten IItems physicians who specialize in obshyThe sewing center has been stetrics and gynecology and aregoing pretty full tilt at our house judged competent and ethical byrecently what with a bedroom their colleagues Sister Miriamwhere we can set up the mashy Paul took the written examinashychine the ironing board sew tions for the American Boardseveral hours every day walk of Obstetrics and Gynecology iQout shut the door and come back Pakistan in 1965middot and the oralto undisturbed work the followshy examination in Chicago in Apriling day 1966

Matter of fact we thought She is a native of Viennasmugly we were getting all

Allstria a naturalized U S citi shysewed up tents and jumpers zen and a convert to the Cathoshyand miniskirts for the young

suits skirts hats for the more NO ATTLEBORO ART WINNERS Pauline Lemieux lic Faith from Judaism She joined the Medical Mission Sisshyconservative first grade William Midon eighth grade Cecile Parent ters in 1957 after completing herWe even felt no compunction sixth grade were the leading artists in the contest conshy medical education at the Univerin indulging a long-standing ducted in Sacred Heart School No Attleboro sity of Louisville Ky and herhabit of visiting a yardgoods residency at Barnes Generalcenter quite often picking up an Hospital in St Louis She haGirresistible bargain in cloth seshy

~spent six years at the sisteplecting a pattern and actually hoods hospitals in Pakistaneompleting garments

The sewing room Markie~ Sister Mary Luke Gray an- erstwhile bedroom was in reshy o~her Medical Mission physician markably good shape as a proshy has also passed _the AniericaD duction center and could eVeR IMAGE-MAKING Board of 0bstl~tricsand Gyne suffer the pangs of Spring houseshy

In this ever-changing worldcleaning with mere picking up of scraps setting 10 rights and a horough cleaning

But those unearthed forgotshyten treasures in the other closshyets Why there was enough mashyterial here to keep Us chained 10 that sewing machine as was Proshymetheus to his rock

Now what had we intended 10 do with that short length of pink flannel Oh yes wed picked it up for the proverbial song at a visit to a mill in South Caroshylina would have it until the folshylowing spring and make a coat for Mary Daly Brennan (Mary is now nine years old and this pink bit wouldnt even make a coat for her little sister) MUs~ lin broadcloth velvet tweedshyyou name it we have it -

Out into the clear with every item from every box bag and pile

Io more saving no more stashing away no more visits 10 remnant counters

The Head of the House paying one of his rare visits to our sew- ing center viewed the miniature mill-end display

By the way he asked hows about putting a new pocket in these trousers And sOme shirt buttons that have popped

OK First t~ings first

Baltirnor~ Nun to Head C()lIeg~ Advisory Unit

PITTSBURGH (NC) -Sister M Cleophas Costello of Balti shymore will serve as chairman of the newly formed Commission on Higher Education of the Fedshyeration of the Sisters of Mercy

The commission will serve in an advisory capacity in mat~ers concerning the 15 colleges opershyated by the order The federashytion numbers 15000 nUDll throughout the United states Canada and Lat~n America

New President LOS ANGELEE (NC)-5ister

Cecilia Louise Moore will beshycome president of Mount St Marys College here in Califorshynia ~)D Aug 15 next succeeding Sister Mary Rebecca who haS headed the womens liberal aris college since 1961

where what is in one moment is obsolete the next there is nothing more changeable than

the image of the ideal woman This image that stamps itself on the minds of millions causes fashion design- ers to change styles and forces females alI over the world to rush to the beauty facshytories to be turned out as its carbon copies is created in many ways Sometimes it starts with a particular model that hits the publics fancy or a cinema star that reaches her audience or even as in the case of Mrs Kennedy with the rise and public acclaim of a woman associated with politics

However whatever the reason or manner or time that creates an idol of this woman 8Jl idol she is at least until someone else more exciting comes along ~ cpallenge her place

This phenomenon of one womshyan or tyPe of woman leading alI others is nothing new Im sure there has been an ideal type of beauty since Neanderthal man dragged his mate by her long thick tresses into his cave (eer- tainly no short-haired eave girl wOuld have shone m prehistoric times)

Charles Dana Gibson pPOVided the image of the goddess of the

Protestants to Speck At Catholic Retreats

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - At least one Protestant minister Or layman ~ill appear as guest

speaker at retreats held in the San Antonio area during the coming year an archdiocesan committtee OIl lay ecumenism has decided

The ecUmenical aspects of the retreat program win carry over into a 1967 Ecumenical Diashylogue scheduled for June 29 UI July 1 at St J~ephs retreat bouse here Selected ministers

priest Sisters Brothers and laity will be speakers

cology examinations and win 1900s with heavenly sketches of return to Pakistan to continue a dark haired question mark her practice coiffured beauty with Ii lOng 11gt

graceful swanlike neck Immediateiy all fashion-con-

csious females of that day rushed out to the local emporiums to purchase henna rinses and rats (the hair peces of the 90s) to puff out their skimpy pompashydOlUS

The tWihkling 20s had no sooner been born than the It Girl Clara Bow caused the daughters of the aforementioned females to toss away their rats head for the nearest barber and expose their ears as well as their knees

Not a decade later these knees were encased in satin lounging pajamas and the ears hidden under the marcelled curls that Jean Harlow sported

And such has been the tide of fashion everchanging and generally influenced by circumshystances from the short skirts of the material-rationed war years through the New Look that welcomed the advent of peace

TOdays Qlieen

What of our present fashion Queen Who is the woman ofshythe 60s who isthe darii~goft~ fashion press and fashion de- signers oddly enough in this age of affluencemiddot it seems that the female wile outshines an others is ~ long-legged wideshyeyed British model who looks like an ad for Care packages and answers to the improbable name of Twiggy ~sley ~ornby (the name on

Twiggys birth certificate) is a 11 year old pathetically thin ex- schoolgirl who has been sky- rocketed to fame and fortune through the efforts of her Sven laquoali -her manager

Her waif-like face shining Jrom the cOvers of hundreds of magazines haS inspired young females everywhere ie nmtfgt their hairdress~rs ~ ) g~miR eut paint theirmiddot lower lashes_ like those of a kewpie don and push away t~at dessert pla1e Twiggy is apparently the JleW

idol of the fashion world - at l~ast until next season

9 Nows RightTime to Plant Peas for Early Enjoyment

By J~ aridlfan1ynRoderiek It is a eustom in New England to serve salmon and peas

00 the Fourth of July Years back this was the time when thresh salmon showed up Jin New England fish markets and Jllative peas could be found ~t the corner store Now we have frozen peas year round and amp Imon may be had throug~- ~t most of the year Thll3 lm-as taken the special delight (iJlJt of native foods but we can G1tfll appreciate fresh vegetabtea limd fish made much morepaia-~ oble by being put on a tablel 3

day or so after it is caught If you want fresh peas fortne

~ourth of July you can sow your creed about the third week of llIlay We prefer ours a little ear_I ~er and so we get the seeci ~lanted by the second or third week in April 00 that the planta will be well on their way before ~e cold weather is gone and (he warm weather arrives By QlllIll reckoning the peas we planted last week will be ready ~ the second week of June

Peas are simple to grow and Ililave nO special difficulties They Ilteed sun moisture and good s6il A row of peas may be planted fulna matter of 10 minutes ahd OOten forgotten until it ia tiine

Th k Si te h d th IIS wee s rae c ass act out the sacrainent to go along with their lesson in the religious Workbqok My daughter came homedelirious with joy because she was chosen to bring in the baby

We unearthed a doll that we ilelt was closest to newborn baby size and Grandma helped by finding the baptismal garments that were stored in her house and by dressing the fortunate stand-in while she explained to Meryl and Melissa that this was the same dress that they wore when they became members of the Church

In fact the children were awed as I further explained that actually four children had used these baptismal garments Meryl ~gan making plans immediateshyly Ann Marie is going to be the father (this in our all-girl ochool) Wendy is the godmother and Karen is going to be the ptiest because her new little

~r pickinlt b~othe was christened Sunday Jrirst tum the soil over to il a~d she knows jllst what to do

ilepth of about six inches or ~ Innoeent DIscussion and break up the clods Make ~ Even Melissa got into the act twrrow about an inch deep~~tl as she proceeded to spiel off m drop the peas into the furrow list of names that she thought iellst an inch and a half a~a~lt t~~ dfl~lshould be given Meryl eovel the furrow water ~~~ si~ e~pIiil1edto her that salt would ~ack a~d wait In 50 days or so dlependmg on the varIety of seed ~u ~se the peas wi1l be ready faj plckmg and ~atmg

Plant Anywhere )peas may be planted in rows

lMlt they may also be planted aishylllillost anywh~re they will get the IgtUUn I planted two little roWlJ ~tween some raspberry bushes raquolaquolother row in front of a flowe ~ where my wife will be able 00 get to them and still another JIlandful of seed in a foundation ~ianting in front of the house

This latter may seem to be goshyl1mg a little too far but by the ~me the annuals a~e in bloom le peas will have been con~

d oome the plants pulled up and DO one will be the wiser

The point is that one does not Thlave to make a big project out ~ growing a packet of seeds mnce half the pleasure is to be

flound in doing a minimum of work while reaping deliciolw nesults

In the Kitchen Most middot0f the books which conshy 1 thltOOJlI emse ves with heading

lIUr children in the right direc_ (tioqas living thinking Chrlsshyllians recommend that middotthebestW4yOOle Sacrament of Baptism is to Ilaye them attend an actual cer+ ~ony This is quite true as we

~rvotlCnced when Jason WM lgtavtized and Meryl and Melis Were allowed to attend

We were fortunate in that the l)lliest who performed the cereshyIlllOny was a personal friend who _plained clearly to the childreUll _actly wha~ he was doing rOIl liIUre this made a lasting impres-Ilion but I also feel that theii IlIIllnds were on the celebratiollll

be Pllt on the dolls tongue to preserve her from the sins of the Yorld and to give her III

atlste for wisdom It was delightful to hear them

discussing the sacrament in such inn~cent and childlike ways and yet witlt understanding that demonstrated wisdom far beyond their years The following incishyde~~ occurred at about the time this was happening and demon- strates the feeling of some chishydrep arid the naive wisdom they possess For two or three days last week Joe had seen a female rabbit in the yard and he had pointed it out to the children

th t itsayIng a appeared ready to have a litter Sure enough the rabbit did have a litter under the mulch around one of the rose bushes The children were thrilled but

f un ortunately a neighbors dog found the litter and killed the tiny newborn rabbits When

~~~~JIiCheese Gingerbread l3~ounee package ere a JllIl

cheese l cup molasses 2 eggs

1 cups sifted all-purpose ftOtllfi teaspoon baking soda

1 teaspoons baking powdeR 1 teaspoon cinnamon

OOnat was to take place at home 1 teaspoon ginger smd on all the people who were t~aspoon cloves ltllllming to help them celebrate 1-8 teasp~n salt

llhis in itself wasnt bad as it IIgt boiling water lB alsoimportant that they ~al- 1) Beat the cream cheese urim koo th~t a baptism is aiQytul Ce- ~BOft andfluftly then gradually llWliori which should be shared beatit the molasses Ytdh others butwith the confu- 2~ Beat- in the eggs one at Cl

CATHOLIC WOMEN HONOR BISHOP Welcoming Most Rev James L Connolly to the Annual Bishops Night Sponsored by the New BedfordCathoJic Womens Club are Mrs John W Glenn left president and Mrs Daniel F Dwyer first vice-president

Receiver Takes Over FHA Starts Foreclos~te lProcee~ings

Against Retirem~rjfttoriu~ MOUNT ANGEL (NC) - A

oourt-appointed receiver hall taken over operation of Mount Angel Towers a $34 million reshytirement home completed scarceshyy more than a year ago

The receiver-Portland attorshyney John R Fawt Jr - was named less than a month after the Federal Housing Administrashytion announced that it was start shying foreclosure proceedings against the home here in Oregon

Mount Angel Towers built on Beven acres of land donated to it

Sch001 Honors Chaplain

Killed in Vietnam PLEIKU (NC)-A new wing

has been added to St Pauls

School here in memory of Father (Maj) William J Barragy of the Dubuque archdiocese who was

killed in a helicopter crash inVietnam May 4 1966

A brass plaque on the office wall states Rev William J

Melissa appeared on -the scene Barragy (Major U S Army)boni October 13 1923ordained

she said realistically New life May 22 1948 dled In VIetnamI k p un and its all over Just May 4 1966 like Jesus born at Christmas

The new wing has five classshy dead at Easter rooms all on the ground floor

Last year when my oldest St Pauls is in the charge of the to teachyoungstersabout daitghier received the sacrament I Sisters ofSt Paul de Chartres

of tfie HolyEucharist for the first who alsohave anorphahge near tim~~ wil celebrated With a fam the iichoOtmiddot Thereare 1000 Viet ililgtru~ch Ali lt~~ everyon~ namese children receiving pri seeffied to enjoy was warm mar an -secondary educatmiddot10n i~

a bullbull ging~tbread the schOOL

by theilelghobririg Mount Angel Benedictine Abbey was billed on its completion in 1965 as the nations first Catholic retirement home

it was not the most prosperous however and by JIeb 7 when the mortgage-holder assigned the mortgage to FHA which had inshysured it the 207-unit six-story building had only 80 residents in 61 apartments

Appointment of a receiver was the first step in FHAs machinery toward eventual sale of the propshy~rty to another private operator

The home will be run as beshyfore according to the FHA Portshyland office until it can be sold to a suitable organization to maintain its operation as housing for senior citizens

FHAs office in Washington said Mount Angel Towers was one of about 20 such projectsshynot all Catholic - which had failed since 1960 when FHA mortgage insurance became available to them More than 200 have been built

llHE ANCHOR-Thurs April 20 1967

Sisters Assume Pasroral Duties

AKRON (NC)-Priests visit flBl administer the sacraments bu~

day by day the ordinary passhytoral duties are performed bsr nuns in Brazilian parishesmiddot il1l Natal and Salvador administered by the Daughters of Divine Charity

Their duties which includ~ the distribution of Holy Comshymunion were described here bV Mother M Fidelis Weninger who worked in Brazil for 21 years prior to her election in 1965 as mother general of th0 community

The Daughters of Divine Charity she said care for those parishes just as though they were priests Of course we cant administer the sacraments but we handle everything elseshysuch as pre-marriage instructionD and parish visitations

Permission for the nuns t distribute Communion was obshytained from Pope Paul vr through Bishop Eugenio de Araujo Sales apastolic adminisshytrator of Sao Salvador de Bahia she explained

Sister Mother Fidelis ordeli has been working in Brazil sincia 1919 and now has 460 nuns there aUexcept 18 of whom are Brashyzilians

The order has 1900 membero serVing in 10 countries throug~shyout the world with headquartern

in Vienna Mother Fidelis U1 completing a five-month visiia tion of the orders 37 convents in the United States

Greater Boston Sister Gets Fulbright Award

MEDFORD (NC) - SistCll Madeline Marie Nevins a gradushyate student at Tufts University has been awarded a Fulbright Fellowship to study medievaD French literature at the Univershysity of Paris France

The Mass Sister of St Josep~

will complete her doctoral wor at Tufts after her year abroad

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Schedules Convocation 1 bull

On Council Documents WILMINGTON (NC)- A dayshy

llong session of lectures and disshyICUssions on the Wilmington dioshyease and the post-council er81 will be conducted here

Some 600 clergy and laity are ~From anOlde English recipe - expected to attend the meeting

which is being sponsored by a Plumper rounderp bullarollp of ~concerned Catholics illl th~Wg~ing~on piocese fuller muffins~

batter is smooth 5) Gently stir in the boiling

Dn of the party it was difficul Um~~ water bull ascertain just how much the7 3) s~tt tltgether the flour bak- 6) Pourinto a greased 7 by ~ learned With this in mincll Ang ooda baking powdei ~ H pan Sunbeam English Muffins ~ were delighted when 1ft andspice~ f) Bake in a 350 oven 40 to lIound that Meryl was studying 41) Add the dry ingredients te 45 mlhutes] add about cup Olf Baked by your Sunbeam Baker _tism in 8daoo1 l1he cheese mixtu-l0 GUlring watilll Jl3iBins but this is optionaL

-

bullbull

HAPPINESS IS FAMILY REUNION A weekly radio reunion is Sula Spanish Honduras L~ft Barton Albert ham radio operator middot)liIl

enjoyed by Mr and Mrs Bernard Sullivan Holy Name parish Fall River Swansea connects the Sullivans with their daughter Right InSart Pedro

with their daughter Sister Anne Marie RSM missioned to San Pedro Sula Jack Gaffney performs the same service for Sister Anne Marie

Monastery VisitsSt~esses Serio~smiddot Ham Oplr~t~rs Arrangemiddot We~k~yRadiQ C1tat~ ChmiddoturchSituatilon CRAWFORDSVILLE (NC)C bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbull bull bull bullbull bull

bull bull 0In East -Germany BERLINmiddot (NC)-Christiari

ehurches in communist-ruled lEast Germa~y are suff(~ring from government harrassshymentand restrictions a Luthershy1m bishop told the eastern sec-

For Fa11 RiverParents Missionary Sistet Dr Eric Dean chairman of the religion and philosophy departshy

ments at Wabash College here Thursdays the most important day in the week to Mr and Mrs Bernard Sullivan in middotIndiana plans extended visits

of Holy NameparishFall River Its the day they talk to their daughter Sister Anne to severalmiddot Benedictine monas- shyMarie RSM assigned since last August to missi)n work middotin San Pedro Sula Spanish teries this year The visits Wt)ll

H h kl

onduras T emiddot wee y db

conversatIon is arrange y two h d

am ra W)

operators Jack Gaffshy be financed by a Carnegie gran~

receivedmiddot through the GreatLak~ ney in San Pedro Sula and Colleges Association Harton Albert of Swansea was on retreat However arshy with Sister from their livjng

tion oflt the synod of Germanys It came about tl)rough 3 rangements were made on the middotroommiddot ~eceptiori is excep~nt Protestant Church Council sPot for the first of the weekly noted Mrs Sullivan fully 88 middot~iiJbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbulliIbullbullbull_

The clergyman Bishop Fried- series of coincidences that conv~sations good as a local telephoriecallmiddot bull III rich Wilhem krummachet of Mrs SuliivaIi ascribesld the The luck extended to a fellow Another beneficiary ofthmiddot 11I11I J B ~ East Geimany said that SChool iuck6f the Irish and had its religious of Sister Anne Marie weekly radio reunion is REvmiddot bull ii ~~ld~~a~I~~V~~ti~~~~bel~~~~~~ ~t~~A~~~n~a~~nC~~i~~~~~~~ ~~~~~i~o~Sre~~~~r~~~~~~i~~~d~~~~~=~tOfS~tat~~~ ILUMBER CO beliefs 1 - $140 teleph~rie bill talkinllto ly appointment ~nd asked Mrs Mariesbrother bull bull

Lut~eranBish~~ ~~t Fr~liz th~~o~~~~g~~~riotin~~ri li~~tmiddote~r$Ullivan t if hSheWtohUld ~ewla~t a FOImiddotwonderlnmiddotg friends of the 11I 5middot0middot Dortmoutmiddothmiddot ~harf of Berlin chairman of th~ ~~SSl1g~ 0 er JTIQ er ar a Fall River Sister be it notedltGe~man Protestant C h u r c hmiddot rlidlO o~erator middotwho darra~ge a mmu~e slud MrAI~~rt r0rt~7 that she has middotexercisedmiddotthe name- and yan~ismiddot Council made similar charges at connectlOnmiddot for you said a WIth he got the PrOVIdence ~e western section of the synod frleId and someone else sug- Jlother on the phone and gave

I rgested Mr Albert middotwhom the h th of b IfoBejause the Eastmiddotmiddot lterman ~ r bull er e surpnsl e~ Ie as t t t t t b Sullivans- had )mown _for

some bull

she heard her daughter s vOICeIrovernmen res riC s col ac s e- t b th d th ht f ~ E t G -P t t ts Ime u a neVlr Qug omiddot J I don t even have to go tomiddotbullween as elman ro es in _ bl If and those in the West middotthe Protmiddot =~ a ~OsSI e channe omiddot cmmu ~wansea to talk said Mrs SII~ - t t d h ld t mcatlOnwIttISpamshHO1QQras livan Mr Albert can oConnec~

flS an syno was e middotmmiddot wo llec- S l middotmiddotmiddott d M tons one in west Berliri and the T~e ul Iv~ns VISI e r~ AI~ th E tB j berts t)oIle to talk over th~ e er ~ear as er m possibility of contacting-Sister

Catholics face similar pr()b- Anne Marie~ While they were raquoems because of a divi~~d G~r- th~re he demonsthitelt hi~ equip- ~an~ The East Gelman govern- ment fishing bull around the- airshyinen~ ~has prevented thej)ishops wavesmiddot and picking up an ama-middot ~here ~ om attending meetings o~ teur in -rexas

~he G~rman Bishops Conference To his feliow ham he menshyheld iiJ the West tioned that he was looking for

Join in Praytr an operator in Spanish HOlldurasmiddot BiShop Krummacher said at

the synod that iii the preslmtmiddot criss the Protestant churches must use evelY opportunity to join with Catholics in prayer Catholics and Pwtestants he llaid are bound together b~ the word of the Lord and a common Ilesponsibility

The bisho~ said Protestants in East Germany have made every effort to obtain relief fwm antishyJeligious discrimination but govshyernment authorities have reshyjacted all appeals for action

He said such refusals of the East Gelman regime to end the assaults on religion is partmiddot of communist strategy and planshy

ming To further their objectives he said the comTIunists will pelshymstip indoctrinating children in 1lheir ideology while interfering with the consciences and rights _ tJ children and their parenti

And the next voice wemiddot heard recounted Mrs Sullivan still sounding amazed was a man saying This is Sal Pedro Sula Spanish Honduras

Not only was Jack Gaffney th r operator from Honduras in te same city as Sister Anne Marie but it developed that he lived across the street from her

convent a~d had me~ her o~ sevshyeral occaSlOns- He ImmedIately offered to r~n across ~he s~reet and prmg Sister to hiS mlcro-middot phone lgtut it turned out that sie

Wins Festival Piize NEW YOEK (NC) - The

Search produced by Father Peytons Family Theater has received an award at Monte Carlo in the annual television

competition sponsored by the International Catholic Radio and TV Association

hiS radiO eq~llPrne~t to the tel~ phone and the Sulhvans can chat

Permit Experiment In bullShared Time P9RTLAND (NC)The Port-middot ~~nd school board has approvedai shared time experiment iii -Which children from a parochial ~chool in North Portland will attend classes part time in a nearby public school -

The experi~ent will inv~lve at first only physical education classes and will extend for only two middotyears

Children fro m Immaculate Heart parish elementary schoolwill be allowed to attend gym classes in Eliot school in the Qregon corrlmunity

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Bishop Medeiros Urges Justice ~ For Workers

BROWNSVILLE (NO) ~ Bishop Humbertltgt S Medeishyros of B~wn8ville whose diocese has been the scene of lPl 10-month strike by migrant farm laborers has told farm owners to meet their demands for highe) pay and bettei living eonditions

In a pastoral letter to all Cathshyolics in the diocese-most of the population - released today the bishop said

The present plight of the mishygrant farm workers of America is a constant reproach to our way of life

lFor 1lJse of Ail

They do not ask for charity They demand what is theirs by natural right When the affluent farmers pay a just wage to the migrant workers when they make it possible for him to supshyport himself and his family in frugal comfort and to provide education for the whole family they are not making a gift of their possessions to the farm worker they are simply handilg over to him what is his for they had arrogated to themselves what had becn given in common for Ute use of all

Migrant workers in the Rio Grande vaIiey surrounding Brownsville have been strikihg the larger farms for nearly a year in an attempt to get higher wages and better living condi- tions Their action supported by thc United Farm WorkersOr- ganizing Committee followed the limited success encountered by UFWOC laborers in Califomias lrape vineyards

Precarious Existence

But the Rio Grande workers have encountcred little successshyIllthough a recently organized boycott of produce has received growing support among the states food chains

Bishop Medeilos quoted libshyerally from both Pope John XXIII and Pope Paul VIs recent encyClical On the Development of Peoples in establishing the right of farm workers to adecent Jiving

But be also took note of the plight of Amcricas farmers themselvell who live out a preshylaquoarious existence unless they constitute large enterprises sllch as corporations 01 cooperashyiives

He urged both farmers and workers to organize in their own interest

Natural Ri~ht

Given the natiol~lr and even

aioll of Agricultule ald of fa~m workClS and of manyfarm own- ers in purticular it is urgent that they be aware of thei~ right

~~~o~~o~~~~C~~~i~II~~~~h I~~~~~ of development Which in the words of Pope Priul VI signifies ]lgte~cc

We know that every man hAS a basic natural right to form and join wOIkers unions which conshytribute to economic progress by dcfending his ights he said But thc circumstances of the times the world over indicate that for the common good it is also thc duty for both migrant farm workers and for farmers to form associations

The United States he said has bull duty to its miglant laborers llnd farmers which it must fulfill by passing apPlopliate legislashytion and using other suitable and dcmocratic means of assistance so that not only our tables but thc tables of the world may be blessed with the abundance of the fruits of the earth

lLO~AIJ INTEREST NIl IUSlHIOPS MEETING Disshy W Va Bishop Connolly Bishop Humberto IS Medeiros

cussing topics between sessions are Lawrence Cardinal Brownsville Tex and Bishop Joseph Brunini NatchezshySh~han Baltimore Bishop Joseph H Hodges Whe~]jng Jackson Miss

Churches Shore Latin America Failures

LutheranSees Stumbling Blocks Ahead SPJlINGFIELD (NC) -- The

Roman Catholic and Protestant churches have both failed in the past in Latin America and both face severe stumbli6g blocks in the future a Lutheran layman from Argentina said here

Dr Leopolydo Juan Niilus of Buenos Aires director of the Argentine Department of the River Plate Centre of Christian Studies discussed the Church in Latin America at a meeting of the Lutheran World Federations

Commission on Stewardship and Evangelism

He warned the group that in

too mlIlyquarters the Roman Cath~Ii~ Church has been the main whipping boy for the Latin AmeJican backwaldness~ and there hllS been too much selfshy

Some of the things atheist marxists are doingin our conti shynent should by heritage be added have bee) done by Christians

Looking toward the future Dr Niilus said there are very seshy

were stumbling blocks ahead for our Roman Catholic brethren also

Inseparable Unity They are he said being

hysterically requested by the supporters of the status quo tobecome their defenders once

again The Roman Church failed whenLatin America waS strug- glingJor its independence n may-all of us mayfail now

wheniHs struggling for its eco- lIlomic Independence Dr Niilus said that all

complacency and self-righteous- qhurdiesin Latin America roust ness about the positive role

quickly recognize that study and commitment as an insepshyarable unity is their most urshygent task if they are to play an effective role in the future of Latin America

They must study be said ~both political and economic isshysuell amplnd their theological imshy

Cancer Study lLOST UIS (NC)-The insti shy

lute Ior J)lolecular virology at St LOUiS University here in Misshy

bull souri has b~en awarded a $265shy

101 gJant from the National Canshyeer Instilute of the U S Departshyment of Health Jducation and Welf~re whic~ will enable reshysearchers to look for viral speshyeitic genetic material in himiavl elmcer

plicAtions and must be comshymitted to providing adequate pastoral CAre to those involvel in political and economic action

Pho~ClJI Archbishop Wons Sourin Medal

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Arc~

bishop John J Krol of Philadelshyphia bas received the annual Sourin Award of thc ] 17-yearshyold Catholic Philopatrian LiteJ1shyary Institute

The presentation marked the first time the award has beelll made to a member of the hieJ1shyarchy ]t is ordinarily given w a distinguished Catholic layman The Archbishop was cited 100 confident and courageous leadshyers~jP

played by the Protegttants in Latiq American social andeco N~w Music nomiltdeve~opment 1 PURCHAS~ (NC)-The Pius

Protestants be said have a X School of Litlllgical Music of share and~ responsibility in the Manhattanville College of the WHITE SPA creation of seriougt structural Sacred Heal1 here received maladjustments - both economic $20000 in grants from Charl~ and moral~ in Latin America ~nd Arthur Morgan Of New

York and John Morgan oi Most of the things our pro-Rockville Centre N Y to stimushy

gressive Roman Catholic bret~shy iae new music for the new BANQUETS bull WEDIl)~NG5imiddot P~RTIESilltc~national deprc~sed middotcondi-middot ie are doing today i~Latin m~rgy

America shouldbyheritage he -COMMUNION BREAKfASTSai~ have beel~~~nepygtrotes tants [ 11M3 PLEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

JEFFREY E SULLIVAN 993-778GFer~ Dome

MEMPHIS (NC)~Bi~tiopJoshySishopo~~~ed

550 Locust Street seph A Durick apostolic admin lFall River Mass istrator of the Nashville diocese received the first annual Human 672-2391 Relations Award from the Memshy Iltose E Sullivan CONVENIENT BANKINGphis Catholic Human Relations

Jeglrey E SullivallCouncil He was cited for his WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMSstands on human dignity and

at theequal job opportunities He reshycently instituted Project Equalshyity in Tennessee SlADES FERRY TRUST COMPANY

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-11lun Apr 20 1961 12 - )

Irish Emigronts Concern B~hops inmiddot Pgstoral

DUBLIN (NC)-Thespiritual and social needs of Irish 0trtifirants and the importance of preparing them for their new life in other countries were major concerns of the

Irish hierarchy at its meeti~g here in- Maynooth In a pas~ toFal on emigration it wasmiddotmiddot pointed out that while de- parture of Irish people foigt residence in other cuiitries is on the decline those who do leave ~can be an enormous force formiddotgoodmiddotin the lands they go to if they have the right ideals and motLves and abilities properly developed

Without these the pastoral adds the alien enironment in which they find themselves may presen~ serious dangers to the spiritual and moral wenfare ~

the weaker ones Education and religious formashy

tion of young people by the bullbull schools and by the clergy coopshy

erating with teachers were cited as most effective contriilgtutiona

to the formation of those likely to emigrate

Among recommendations made in the pastoral for properly pi-eshyparing potential emigrants for livingin other lands were

Young people should be enshycouraied to remain in schooias long as they can benefit from H

Emphasis on the virtue of tem perance

The utilization of youth club activities (discussion clubs and

guiles) to help young members to acquire healthy and natural

sOcial graces and habits The aid of priests in helping

the young people to grow up to

confident maturity Counse by priests on expected

problems of housing suitable

I

REV ALBERT F SHOVELTON

Priest to Spe(l]llc At Seminar

Rev Albert E fShovelton dishy

rector of Sl Mary Home New Bedford will speak as a represhy

sentative of the Diocesan Comshy employment dangersmiddot to health Unity atNClline Committe~ longhours of work in other the75th anniversary celebration

countries advanced atrange- at Holy Trinity LutheranTo SurveyCU mentS with Catholic welfaeChurchNorth Easton Thursday agencies in countries 9f their April 27

CHIltAGO (NC) - The board choice and the provision of in Father Shoveltons talk ~iU of trusteesof the Catholic Uni-formlltion concerning facilities be part of aseroinar middotHe wili be versity of America Washing- abroad for emigrantS preceded by Rev Dr Nils Ehtenshyton D9middot his est~blished it ne~ ~he h6ldin~ Of Irisit~nhlli~middot 8~rom Boston University School survey and ogtlectlODs ~()mmlttee lft llt1rge centers lt ~ Theology whose subject will headed br ~ St ~OU~1l1(ly~a~ Aparishnewsletter s~nt be Ecun1eni~m in Protestant to study ~he funct~op and plaOl th I fmiddot h middotmiddotf g Perspective Today f th Cmiddotth li U -Of Of Dl0n y rom omemiddot 10 Or1ll1O ~ a 0 r ~vterslY~ lt the emigrants bfuricti6ns inFathel ShovElltons suoject will m~nqa ~r~o ern a hoh~ - the local parishes at Chri~tmaiJbe ~EcumeJ1ismin Roman Cllthshy

laCatton on middota national scale d thO t f th h oljc PerspectiveToday A dis-Th middottt an 0 er lmes 0 e yearw en JJ

e cozpml ee~~made up U4 they mightmiddot possibly be home~uss)n period will follow SIX laymen and four archbIshops ) The audience will be comshyall of whom ar~ pr~sent trustees _ prised of the Lutheran parisa o~ the u~lverslty Formatu~n at Southern PrOVince cmgregation the townspeople ~he conrrutteewasannounce by ~ _ the towns clergy and the stll~ FrancII Cardinal Spellman of Favors DIGcoraate ~ dents at Holy Cross Fathenl New york ch~rman of the MIAMI CNC)Bishops of the Seminary Catholic Urnverslty board province of Atlanta have giyen Pastor of Holy Trjnity is Rev

The appointment of the com- p~sts in the six-ctiocese area Kenneth E Bjorklund

nlission for Christian

SAVE DOLLARS

with the MERCHANlS

84EconomOO

Auto Loan Pian

mittee came against a backshyground of reports that the U S bishops might transfer its Ionshytrol of CatJlolic University to 11 group of laymen The univershysitys rector Bishop William J McDonald has denied the middotreshyports but the chairman of the

new commi~ee Dr Ca~roU Hochwalt SaId the commIttee has been given the widest posshysible mandate from which nothshying will be excluded Our assignment Dr Hochshy

walt saidis the most farshyreaching one possible We are to take a reaiistic look at every aspec~ of the university all it has developed under its original directive since 1889 and at its potential for the forseeable

gt futule It is obviously the trusshyteef desire to leave no qtiestfon unanswered which may aftect the unfyersityas anational-hlsti tution 1its ~aculty students ~d

permission to hear confessions in the entire province and they have also asked the National Brothers VOuDlltee~ Conference of Catholic BishoPs As firefilllhters

to consider restoring the perma- nent diaconate in dioceses that want it

The two decisions were ~~_ nounced after the Bishops held their annual meeting in Miami

Archbls~OP P~ul J Hallman of A~lanta SaId l~ IS cus~omary ~or prtests t~ receIve theIr faculties from theIr own dl~cese and they h~ve been restncted o use wlthn that diocese EffectlVelmshy

II NORTHBROOK (NC) - Four

of the 34 men in the Northbrook volunteer fire department here are religious Brothers They are assigned to the national headshyquarters of the Society ofmiddot the Divine Word at nearby Techny Ill

The Brothrs are on call any time the Northbrook first stashytion standby has two or less men on duty for all general

the Cliurcli and the nation ift ~ J llmohgihemthejt haVe fouglU serves~ ( I i) middotClosingmiddotMeasure middotisome 50fires lti

j middot5T PAUL (NC)4AbilLban

Dedicate Monment ~ing ~l)e sale pf spe~iti~mtr 0ROURKtr chandise on Sundays has heen ~

To adFe Serra middot houses bullbull FunealHomepassed b)-both of the j

medl~telY all pne~ts In good alaons and for any fire or emershystandmg may nw he~r the con- gency when additional personnel fesslOns of Iemtents 10 the A- are needed Their volunteering la~ta archdIOcese ~nd th~ 41- was approved by the superiors oces~ of Sva~nah Charleston andmiddot the seminary bought them II ~alelgh MIami and St Augus- veh~C1e to expedite transportmshy

tine tion when they answer a fire ~ ca~I

Solons pass Sun JI n y The Brothers estaimat~ that

S_CRAMENTO (NC) dDme MinrElsota legislatureGov~aJ monument of Padre runipero old LeVander of Minnesota was Serra OFMwassolemnly ded- exPected to sign it into law icated on the grounds of tille The legislation forbids the sale State Capitol here Saturday OIl Sundays and six holidays

The formal ceremonies were (New Years Day Memorial Day qonducted by officials of the Independence Day Labor Day state alld by officers of the Nll- Thapksgiving and Christmas) of tive Sf ns and Daughters of the cameras musical instruments Golden West The project haa phonographs and tape recorders been sponsored by the California radios and television sets jewel-State Legislature and the fra- ry clocks and watches furs terrial ~ orders who provided furni~ure and other home furshymatching funds to finance its nishings including appliances executi~n middotmiddotmiddotAlso wearing apparel ()all

S7J ~c~nd St~~ef

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MICHAEL J McMAHON Licensed Funeral Director Regisfered Embalmer

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Father Noel F Moholy OFMkinds including footwear lug- 469 LOCUST STREIE1T vice postulator for the canorlizashy gage lawnmowers and 9ther tion of Ithe Franciscan friar who outdvor machinery and equipshy FAU RIVER MASS bas been hailed as Californias ment hardware and tools paints 672-3381 First Citizen and Greatest Pio-Illeer W3 the principal speakeII at the ded~cation

varnishes wallpaper and re-middot lated tools lumber and other buildine materials and supplies

Wilfred e~

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James IE

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Suburban Parishes Should H~lp Save City Parishes

WASHINGTON (NC)-Archbishop Patrick A YBoy1e of Washington appealed here to ~ubJrbanCatholic parisbes to come to the aid of poverty-stricken parishes in the inner city At least 10 Catholic parishes in the inner city need financial help to continue to ismiddotmiddoth d d - ize t II h told C Has ave ecrease s exlS e a ommumon though the schools have contimshy

breakfast of the St Vincent ued to operate at fun capacity de Paul Society and the Whll~ parish income has faUellil only way we can give it iI off school costs have risen ~ through our suburban parishes cause of increased salaries em-

Suburban parishes are hard ployment of lay teachers and pressed themselves he said with higher maintenance costs for most of them deepiy in debt 00- older buildings cause of new constru~tion and expansion Nevertheless they must inaiJpirit of true charity share their resources with our poor parishes

The archbishop said that one of the reasons flr the poor fi shynancial condition of the inner city parishes was the cost of operating their schools but said emphatically that none of these schools would be given up

If we didnt have to support our schools Archbishop OBoyle said nearly all Of our parishes couldmiddot take care of their basic needs But we are not going to giv~ up any of our schools as long as we can get Ii dime to support them

Not mentioning which parish was concerned he stated thatmiddot one middotitmner city parish received $54000 from archdiocesan funds las~ year

Msgr Thomas W Lyons Arch diocesanmiddot Director of Educatiot1 said th~t before the whije middotmigramiddot tionmiddot to the suburbs CathoUa constituted about 22 per cent 01 the Washington Population The Negr~ who replaced the whitea are only about JO per cent Cathshyolic The result is that the par

Parochial school tuiti6n which averages about $4 a month haa not kept pace with costs Msgr Lyons explained

The St Vincent de Paul Soclshyety-here recently announced a twinning program in whicb sOlue of the more affluent parshyishes adopt inner city parisheo and provide for their needs

Offers Folk Mass For Vocations

HOUSTON (NC)-Bishop John L Morkowsky of Galveston- Houston offered a special foUt MaSs for youth on World Day oL Pr~yer for Vocations at Sacred Heart co-cathedral here

Father William Steele diocshyesan vocation director said the folk Mass is being offered to atshytract the young people middotThemiddot homily duringmiddot the Mass dealt with vocations

Contemporarymiddot folk musiC composed by Ray Repp nation ally known folk song writer was played during the Mass Guitar aceompaniment was proshyvided by seminarians from St MaryoS Seminary here

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Cardinal Cushing Sees Decrease In Seminaries

BOSTON (NC)-The numshyber of Catholic seminaries in the United States will deshycrease because of the diffi shyculty of obtaining top-flight scholars to staH them Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston preshydicted here

Addressing the New England Conference of the Catholic Hosshypital Association the cardinal told some 680 nuns priests and

laymen that schools of theology both Catholic and Protestant will become more closely identi shyfied with the great colleges and universities of this country a system not unlike that of Oxford in England

Sharing the platform with Archbishop Cushing was Bishop Fulton J Sheen of Rochester N Y who urged Catholic hosshypitals to go outside their own walls to bring social and medical help to the poor

Go out into the slums he said Give two or three hours a day visiting poor families for healing and counseling

He also suggested that Cathoshylic hospitals in this country adopt hospitals in poor counshytries

In A Rut We can certainly afford to

have someone put up a hut in the poor world We have the spirit but we have gotten into a rut the bishop said

Bishop Sheen told the confershyence the hallmark of a Catholic hospital is that we serve each patient as we would serve Christ

Cardinal Cushing also preshydicted that rising costs of care of the sick will induce the fedshyeral government to become more closely identified in hosshypital administration

I was told he added that in some hospitals the cost of a bed per day is almost $100 There must be a ceiling somewhere

Salons to Study Divorce Laws

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey State Assembly has unanimously approved a resolushytion to establish a commission to study the states divorce laws The measure already passed by the Senate is expected to be signed quickly by Gov Richard J Hughes

Thp commission described by Governor Hughes as an effort to strengthen marriage has al shyready encountered the opposishytion of -the Monitor the Trenton laquoiocesan newspaper But the bIShOps of the states three other Oatholic dioceses have reserved comment -

Boih Governor Hughes and the commissions sponsor Sen Jereshymiah F OConnor are Catholics And while Senator OConnor would like to see the commission recommend liberalization of the states di~orce law - desertion adultery and extreme cruelty are the only grounds at present-he would also like other changes made

Among them are a- family eourt which would serve as

counseling agency as well as divorce court lengthening of the present three-day waiting period as a1 obstacle to quick marriages and anr a warning to young PershySODS of the seriousness of marshyriqe

Senate Election PROVIDENCE (NC)-Sixteen

members of the 26-member senshyate of priests for the Providence dJocese have been elected in the first part of the senates twoshyatage elections

REV PATRICK 3 ONEILL

NCIEA Appoints Fr ONeiU

Rev Patrick J ONeill Supershyintendent of Schools in the Dioshycese of Fall River has been apshypointed by the Superintendents Department of the National Catholic Educational Association to serve as a member of the nashytional committee concerning tbe shygrowth and development of diocshyesan and parish school boards

This committee under the chairman Rt Rev Msgr ONeill DAmour will serv() as an adshyvisory unit It will gather and distribute information concernshying the development growth and function of school boards

Father ONeill made an extenshysive study of functioning school boards throughout the country His work in organizing our Diocshyesan Board of Education and working with it during the past year has been commended

Newman Chaplains School at IHCJJlvOlId

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Newman Chaplains Asshysociation has added a second training school for priests and Sisters entering Newman work It will be conducted at Harvard University

As in past years a school will be held at the University of Colshyorado in Boulder Dates for both schools are June 113 to July 2

The Newman Chaplains School prepares priests and nuns asshysigned to the secular campus The faculty has been chosen on the basis of experience in the Newman apostolate and speciali shyzation in theology -philosophy script~reand counseliJ)g _

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 13

Family Care Program forO Children The Paul A Dever State by the psychologists and pre-placement visits with the

School Taunton under the sponsorship of the Departshyment of Mental Health has recently begun a Family Care Program in an attempt tomiddot proshyvide some of its children with the experience of family life

screened by the social workers have all been approved by the schools physicians for the proshygram

These children are ready and able to enter into the commushynity said Dr John L Smalldon superintendent of the Dever

child to the prospective foster parents to determine the comshypatibility of the youngster with the family Once settled within the family the child will also be periodically visited by a schooi social worker to assist in the adjustment The youngsters

The program is initially seekshying to place approximately 20 selected youngsters in homes in

school Provides Funds

This program with its emphashy

would attend special educatiOD classes in public schoolll throughout the South Shore

the South Shore area These chidren have been selected for their advanced capacities for edshyucation and training and their abilities to adjust to a home enshyvironment

These children reconmmended

sis on the advantages of the proper fa mil y environment seeks through a gradual process to assimilate the child within the community

The Social Service Department at the Dever School will conduct

The Department of Mental Health which sponsorsmiddot similar Family Care Programs in sevshyeral other schools in the state is providing funds for the supshyport of the children

What do you do when you live on a Take a good look at your everyday very small island with over three and a - surroundings You are apart of the 20 half million people-say Hong Kong of theworlds populati~nthat has access Move to the suburbs But what if the to 80 of the worlds food That means suburb is Red China The only answer that the other 80 of the world must be is this-and rbe hundreds of thousands content with the remaining ~O Of who crowd these house- boats are lucky course you can read this and say So Ovlaquo half die people of the world ani But You cannot say to someone who taorneless-and most live in Asia is hungry come tomorrow We must

When we hear that three-fourths ol act today because tomorrow may be too cbe human race lives inpoverty or below late (pope Paul VI) Feed the man the subsist~ level these are the peo- dying of hunger if you have not fed pie we are talking about Do we know him you have killed h1m (Vatican II) what it feels like to subsist to know no Dear Monsignor OMeara 1 am attachshyother feeling but that of hunger It is ing my gilt 0 $__ to help right the impossible or we could never spend over imbalance in our world Please use it so 100 billion dollars annually on arma- that a missionary can feed the starving ments while 10000 die each day from name---------- shyyenJldernouri8bment address _~____

THE HOLYFATHER~S

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THE ANCHOR~Diocese ofFa River-Thursbull Apr 20 19M

middotSocial Revolutmiddotion Is Needed In latin America Lands

From Social Revohitiiolll iin the New Latin America Edited by John 3 Considine MM

The possibility of orientating regional planning toward an overall solution of the pressing problems that concern more than one Latin nation could well engage Christian initiative writes Rene Atero The most typical example of this kind he sa)s concerns Social Revolution in Latin-~ershythe region of the Andean ica Most Rev Mark GMcshyMountains where peasants Grath CSC says Barbara numbering more than five Ward widely read Catholic

million live in thee different economist begins her book enshyltcountries possessing basically titled The Rich Nations and the

Poor Nations with the flat stateshy similar pro b- ment I suppose we are all lems Our asso- aware of the fact that we live in ciation with na- the most catastrophically revolushy~ional orgariiza- tionary age that men have ever

tions concerned fced middotmiddotwith deyelop- Social Revolution ment planning Vice-President Hubert Humshyin no way im- phrey who honored this meeting plies the im- with his presence last year proper subordi- writes in a recent issue of Forshynation of enti- eign Affairs Although the obshytie sund e r servation that Latin America is Church s p 0 n- in the midst of a political ecoshysorship to less effectual accom- nomic and social revolution has plishment under the state become a commonplace it is

On the contrary it is a ques- true tion of becoming involved in a The influential Chilean magashynew front in which Christian zine Mensaje published by the action is not only indispensable Jesuit Fathers dedicated an enshybut will be most efficacious in tire issue in December of 1962 to helping to enlist sectors of Latin the theme Revolution in Latin American society of top impor- America and followed this up

middottance for national dEvelopment withmiddot another special issue in With reference to the actual bctober 1963 on Revolutionary implementation of plans through Reforms in Latin America

well elaborated projectS we Early in 1964 the Civilta Catshyshould make certain that iden- tolica published in Rome by the tification and recognition as an Jesuits carried a critique of important part of the national these two issues of Mensaje by effort are given to current Father Jarlot which questioned Church activities already oper- the prudence of using the terio ating numerous projects of social revolution in a Christian conshydevelopment throughout the text pointing out that itia ltcontinent loaded with Marxist overtones

For example with regard to Not only does it signify rapid education we should lteall atten- c structural changes Father Jarlot tion to the fact that there aremiddot in asserts but also connotes vioshy

lence and some measure of hate Latin America about 5000 pri- and class warfare He would vate ed~cational insttutions pre- prefer the term evolution pared to share in current eduea- tional programs throughout the Social Revolution oontinent Mr Humphrey in the article

The private univemities andmiddot already mentioned asks the eenters of technical training inmiddot question Is it appropriate te the fields of agriculture labor define Alliance (for Progress) and cooperatives couY-a double policy as favoring social revolll shythe potential for plofessional tion - or should this word be and technical trainin1 if they avoided in favor of evolution 01 would participate on D national some other expression basis ir serving the more press- He anwers Evolution if ing needs of society carefully examined proves to be

Broad Horizons inadequate for it implies an un-We must work also in the pres- conscious non-deliberate change

ervation of the progress which that is slow and gradual has been achieved in the areas- What is required is conscious of social welfare now b~ing em- rapid change in the socioshyphasized (housing education economic structure a process public health) Lay groups such that can correctly and precisely as Catholic Action in different be called a revolutionmiddot If used spheres _ Legion of Mary St not as a slogan but in itS precise Vincent de Paul Carita3-which sense the policy of peaceful s0shy

up to now have directed their -cial and economic revolution is efforts mainly towards religion agtcorrect~haracterizatio~ofmiddot il~

t hid limce policy d If t middot an we are ac IVlless ou eJmiddot We should not hesitaietoi pand theIr programs a11d focus d tf l th t m some of their work on ilrojects I e~ I y o~rse ~es WI I ~i planned by specialists J JatmAmencaiJust ~ Presldcnt

This would permit the cltanel ~ohnson ~ssoclated hunseU WIth it in hIS war on poverty I~ng of theIr ~eal t~elr ~rga~l~a- throughout the world whenhe gtcent

tIOn and theIr splnt of saCrIfIce tl k d Iffit b bull recen y remar e a peaceshyas power u resources 0 e put f lItmiddot th i5 at the disposal of society Among u re~bo u IOn ~n ese areas such works surely programs of ~mossl Ie a VIolent revolutIon

IS mevltable community improvement will be especially attractive to tlhese lay groups

Thus the Church might con- sider putting its knowledge and resources to more effective use in preparing programs and projshyects for adaptation to national and regional needs

They should select carefully those with the capacity to fulfill so that they may obtain financing from national or international sources to complement their own eontributions thus enlarging the scope of their activities

In a study of The Church and

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Theres muchthat$ new at Firat National these days~ bullbull and this sign atthe meat oaeels one of the most exoltlng~

But- dont tlhlnk~ for a moment~ FIRST CHOICE MEAT I merely a n~w name If yo havntshopped our meat case Oa~ely youre In for happy 8urprlse~

Weve always enjoyed a great reputation formiddotmeat have always sold the pIck of oholce meats as Ih$p~cted and graded by the USDepartment of Agrloulture (USDA)

But now with our YouCome First policy our meat casel have taken on ~ new look

Our finicky p~IIQy~t~~reotlng oniy the ohoicest of the

oholce c has beoome believe It middotor not evet1lmiddotmol-e-flnlokye The trlmnilng and outtlng leoloser and mQre~a~e(ld ~ e bull to etJlv~ you th0 gie~tGstm~at vaYu9middotand most flavorful meats In lF~r2~ National hIS~O[y OLill oounters are the cieanes~ and our butohers mor~ eager than ever to lend you aweloomemiddotrneal tpia8lnlng Idea~

tiuohs gre~~ InQwsplrlt demanded a great new name II

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USDA graded and Inspeoted bull ann thel very plok of the oholce eaoh and every cut the best yoo oan buy~ Arnothefr way we provemiddot

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Arguments For Celibacy Outweigh Those Against

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Arguments urging that the requirement of eeHbacy of priests be set aside as an obshystacle to increasing vooationsare not sufficient Archbi-shop Gabriel Garribe pro-prefect of the Congregation of Semishynaries and Universities told a pressconfelence here My personal answer is that the arguments for celibacy cd the clergy are stronger than those against it He said he beshylieved there should be a firm affirmation in this respect and that it would maintain celibacy in the Latin Church

By doing so he said the quality ofpriesUy candidates will grow and through the quaUy of its priests the Church will harvest an increase in the quantity of candidates

The drop in the number of vocations the Archbishop stated Is due in part at least to the new attitude of todays youth and therefore requires changes_ in the traditional seminary formation

The prelate told the press that todays youth is much more fully aware of the whole world and far more sensitive to its problems than in the past Those responsible for seminary training must realize the importance of education and be capable of understanding the new generashytion of admiring them and of discovering for them the mission of the Church

StatistiCs Given Archbishop Garrone not e d

tj~at although there has been a falilng off in vocations generally there have been some surprising exceptions He singled out 1be

Dominican Work Continued from Page One

means that the approach will be intellectual rather than devoshytional and the emphasis win rest on accuracy on the truth of a statement rather than on whether it is opportune

In performing such a task mistakes 1n the form of partisan statements ~ld ill-balanced reshymarks are sometimes inevitable Father Hislop said

He affirmed the Dominicans loyalty to the Church but noted that it is often difficult for a vanguard intellectual group to express itself in terms that win not be misunderstood by the majority of Catholics

CCD Talks Continued from Page One

Tauntol as the speaker Mrs Mary Fuller of Buzzards

Bay will speak at the meetiDll in Bishop Stang High School North Dartmouth

At Bishop CasSidy High School Taunton the speaker will be Edward McDonagh-Of North Attleboro

Thomas Flangheddy of Taunshyton will address the meeting at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

The Cape area meeting will be held at Holy Trinity West Hallshywich with Miss Patricia llIIakle as speaker

Seek More funds WASHINGTON (NC) -Two

members of Marylands congresshysional delegation have introshyduced a bill which would make the government spend $75 milshylion annually for birth eontrol aid in the U ~ by 1973 The bin introduced by Sen Joseph Ty ings and Rep Samuel Freidel would propose $20 million the fkst year rising to $75 million bIV the fifth )ear Sta1e and loeal governments would provide _ edditiODal $25 mDJiclID br )87J

extraordinary development of vocations in Mexicp and in Yugoslavia and the stable continuity of recruitment in Poland

Among the statistics provided at the conference were the fact that the latest Church figures count 234000 Diocesan priests and 168000 Religious priests There are in addition 166400 Religious who are not ordained priests

One of the most heartening things in the vocational world picture it was pointed out hasshybeen the increase of priestly vocations in Africa Asia and Oceania

The growth of the local clergy has been a phenomenon of the last 40 years Today in Africa and Asia approximately 500 orshydinations take place every year

~regregampfsect ~ITOW(QJtfreg

$e~~ Aod WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep

Clement J Zablocki of Wisconshysin has introduced a proposal to correct U a defense education gap in American schools

Zablockis bill wo~ld amend the National Defense Education Act (NDEA) to provide federal grants for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment which could be used by children and teachers In parochial and private schools

In a statement on themiddot flOor Of the House of Representatives Zablocki pointed to inequities In

the present NDEA progra~ which Congress passed In 1958 to strengthen instruction in scishyence mathematics foreign lanshyguages and related subjects

An important provision of the act Zablocki said is Title III which provides matching grants to public schools for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment Non-public schools now are eligible only for loans for that purpose

Under Zablockis bill public authorities could obtain federal funds to buy laboratory and other special equipment which eould then be provided for use in non-public schools

In order to comply with matching provisions of the NDEA the non-public schools or groups of such schools would be required to prove they had spent an equal amount thenr selves for such eqUipment from private funds

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FALL RIVER AUXllLhARY AT MEETING Bishop Gerrard Auxiliary lBishop of the Diocese of Fall River is pictured at one of the sessions of the Spring meeting of the Bishops of theU Sheld in Ohicago NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 h A priI 20T urs 1967

Say~ ~Q~~OIP No SIQ7(~ ~ lovell

KANSAS CITY (NC) - The new role of a Bishop in the era of renewal has been spelled out here by Bishop Charles H Helmshysing of Kansas City-St Joseph

In addition to the age-old role of teacher Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop today must read stud) and apply the teachings of the Second Vatican Council the Gosshypels expressed to meet the needs of the modern world In short Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop must be a slave of love to serve as Christ served mankind

Bishop Helmsil1g spoke at the consecration of Auxiliary Bishop Joseph V Sullivan 45 of Kansas City-St Joseph

Bishop Sullivan is the fir~

native of this Missouri city eleshyvated to the hierarchy He was ordained to the priesthood June 1 1946 has served as chancellor of the diocese since 1957 and was named Bishop by Pope Paul VI last month

MarltqJ MregGGreg TJ~ ~~i MILWAUKEE (NC)-ALuthshy

eran scholar will teach Lutheran theology to graduate students at Marquette University here start shying next September Dr Kenneth G Hagen assistant professor of religion at Concordia College Moorhead MinJl will be the Marquet~e theology departmentu first full-time visiting scholra unshyder a grant from the Louis Calshyder Foundation in New York

-THREE LOCATIONS bull youre lookIng for the best in banking se~lce come 011J in to The NationalBank With the opening of our Stafford Square Office were now nearer to even more of you rOll the Greater Fall River area and each of our offices has Just aboUt every service you could want for yourself andl your family We mean M when we say were your FuID lervice BankPft

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t6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~n River-Thurs~ Apr 201967

Friend~2 [iJescribes Stru~g~ For QM~gtLy in T~~regwo~~~

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Rennedy When Fred W Friendly resigned from the Columbia

Broadcasting System in 1966 he ended a 16-year association with that network His trials in broadcast journalism are tbe subject of his new book Due To Circumstances Beyond Our Control Control bull Managements obligation is toRandom House $695 457 protect the interests of these Madison Avenue New York stockho~ders

NY 10022) But this volume But Mr Friendly is concprned is far more than a personal about the other stockholders memoir It is the story of th~ the 195 million citizens who

grant CBS and the other broadshybattle a losing casters the franchise to use theirbattle of course air for quality in

FCC Gutlesscommercial tel shyOne might naively expect that

~vision The the Federal Communications

main point is Commission would effectivelythat the story is here told by an insider Mr Friendlys middotfame criginally gprang from his close associashytion with the late Edward R Murrow He was Murrows partner in the prepashyntion of such pioneering and still unparalleled series as Se~ lil Now and CBS Reports

After Murrow left CBS and wentmiddot into governm()nt service Mr Friendly became president

of CBS news He resigned that ~sition because of a clispute conshycerning the broadcasting of Senshyate hearings on the Vietnam war

Many ancient or recent conshyfilets over broadcasting policy are rehearsed in this hook There fta for example a detailed acshy~unt of the hassies concerning Murrows TV _program dealing with Senator McCarthy before McCarthys downfall as the reshyault of the hearings in the Spring of 1954

There are briefer accounts of other skirmishes Thflse are all interesting and instructive But the value of the book lies not so much in these reminiscences as fin Mr Friendlys knowledgeable analysis of the process whereby television has retreated more and more from public service and become a purveyor of junk and garbage littering the American Iiving room and worse the American mind with trash

Geared to Prcfit Many factors account for this

perversion The principal one is greed Television is geared to private profit not puqUc service lLast years whopping profits will not suffice this year There must be sizable increase

This is to satisfy stockholders Mr Friendly asked William Paley chairman of the board Why do we have to make more money every year The reply was We have many small shareholders across the country and within the companybullbullbullbull

Subcommittee Sets Hearings on Smut

WASHINGTON (NC) -The House Select Subcommittee on Education is holding hearings beginning today on a bill to esshytablish a National Commissionmiddot on Noxious and Obscene Matters and Materials

Subcomllittee chairman Domishynick Daniels of New Jersey is sponsor of thc bill which would provide for a 16-member panel to study the problem of obscenity and recoqunend means Clf dealing with it

On the same day that the hearshyings were announced two other congressmen Arnold Olsen of Montana and Glenn Cunningham of Nebraska introduced bills to curb the mailing of obscene matshyter Olsens bill has bpoundlen enshydorsed by the Post Office Deshy~artment

protect the interests of the other 195 milion But Mr Friendly on the basis of close observation has -no kind words and no reshyspect for the FCC For all pur- poses the agency is toothless and gutless

To make even more money for the shareholders every possible penny has to be wrung out of the advertising medium which television now essentially is This consideration governs proshygramming

It might be supposed that even if prime time at night must eco- ~

nomically go chiefly to programshyming which brings in the maxishymum advertising dollar there is ample opportunity for public service broadcasting in the dayshytime hours But no pienty of money is to be made from dayshytime advertising

Endless Re-runs Three soap companJes alone

spend $290 million a year on television advertising and a lot of this is directed at housewives during the daytime And the programming dictated by this advertising comprisesmostly old old movies and endless re-runs of stupid situation comedies

Huge profits (are) being realshyized from the use of the miracle of television as a transmission belt for retread serials soap opshyeras game shows and the like The yield from the detergent deodorant bleach or food advershytisers who possess the daytime schedule (whose annualexpendishytures (are) some $130000000 ) is the principal reason why no serious progtamming can be sustained for any length of time during these hours

l3y serious programming is meant such things as crittcal UN debates (for example on Vietnam) vital congressional hearings the Popes visit to the UN Churchills funeral etc) Some of these have in fact got on the air and even for a conshysiderable period oftime b~t alshyways there is a major bitter battle involved

Educational TV What may not be realized is

the power of the local station n is by no means meekly subshymissive to the network It largely gqes its own way and its wayis in search of the utmost in profits

It is this fact for example which accounts for the nonshyexistence of a good solid repre~ sentative late-evening news broadcast over the nekwork The local station prefers to put on its own scrappy superficial travesty of a news program beshycause it can get-in an excessively large number of profitable comshymercials

Perhaps there is some hope in the field of educational televishy

sion Mr Friendly is now enshygaged in exploring that possibil shyity For our sake may he be successful At any rate we must thank him for reminding us of our tolerance of the criminial misuse Qf the air waves

H E A 0 S UNIVlERSliJIY New president of St Bonashyventure University St Bonashyventure N Y is the Very Rev Reginald A Redlon

OFM formerly of St Franshycis College Rye Beach N H The university Is operated by the Holy_ Name province of the Order of Friars Minor NC Photo

Issues GlLIidelimiddotnes For IEcumenism

LITTLE ROCK (NC) - Ecushymenical guidelines dealing prinshycipally with the conduct of Catholics at Protestant functions have been issued by Bishop Alshybert L Fletcher of Lttle Rock

Composed of the diocesan ecumenical commission the gUidelines specify that Catholics may attend Protestant church services participate in the singshying and common prayer but may not act as a reader or officer of such services

The rules permit Catholics to serye in wedding parties at mar- riages in Protestant churches providing the service does not involve a Catholic or a divorceci person Attendance at baccalaushyreate services in a church or elsewhere is permitted

Under the rules Catholics may not act as sponsors at Protestantmiddot baptisms Oi confirmation nat Jlarticipate in intercommunion services The guidelines encour- age Protestant attendance at Catholic services

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Misunderstandingmiddot Faced In Ecumenical Meeting

Roman Catholic and Lutheran theologians agreed here after their fourth meeting that many misunderstandings had been overcome on the Sacrament of the Lords SuppeR -Holy Eucharist-but that further examination is necesshysary The doctrinal consulshy to the concrete worship life o1Ztation held at the headquartshy the Church ers of the Lutheran Church In a prepared statement reshyin America was the fourth leased ft the conclusion of the in a series sponsored by the closed meeting the group noted Bishops Committee for Ecumenshy that in contrat to topics disshyism and Interreligious Affairs cussed at the first two meetings of the NCCB and the USA Nashy -the Nicene Creed and Baptismtional Committee of the Luthershy -there have been historically an Wotld Federation serious disagreements between

Main themes discussed at the the confessions concerning the three-day meeting were the Eucharist Lords Supper as a sacrifice the All participants the stateshymanner of Christs presence in ment added agreed that many the Sacrament the import of the misunderstandings had beellll concept of transubstantiation overcome as a result of the latest and the relation of these issues meeting

HOW TDCURE LEPERS

THIi HilLY FATHERS MIBSIDNAID TD THI ORIIlNTAL CHURCH

THE PILLS

ARE CHEAPER

THAN PENNY CANDY

THESE

ARE THII

YOU

A LEPER IN~

Dear Itoklm

IPlesll0 li9tum coupon

with your t9fferlng

IIBATHaLiU

patient for a year

C Strfngless glftlil of $100 $50 $25 $11S $10 $5 $2 Bet the Sisters buy what they need

IiJ $850 equals 10000 Dapsone tablets

IlJ $1 a month ($12 a yeer) gives you membershyehlp un our Damlen Club for lepers

---~~---~~-------shy CO INCLOSIm PIJlA8Ul FIND $~======_

1J1OR==========~=-=-==-

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For our eIght edlcal Sisters In P1rappancode south India today is just a normal day Doctors bags In hand they are out In the villages eKmiddot amlnlng everyone for leprosybullbullbullbull Leprosy can be cured If diagnosed early says Sister Elizashybeth a surgeon Better yet Itcan be prevented In this case an ounce of prevention is worthten pounds of cure bullbullbull The cure is cheaper than penny nely Only $850 buys 10000 Dapsone _ mIracle tablets enough for 43 lepers for a yeerl bullbullbull The effort In Pirappancode islnternashytional German Catholics built the 25middotbed ho pital (1St Johns) French Catholics gave a workshop (for therapy) and an American friend of ours has pledged a convent and chapel Now the Sisters need medicinps a $200 microscope a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for treating children especially In farmiddotflung villages Will you help them Monsignor Nolan will acshyknowledge your gifts promptly and the Slste win pray for you aware you are helping them cure lepers as Christ did -

WHAT YOU CAN DO IJ $5000 gives the Sisters a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for fighting leprosy at Ita source (A sign on the side will featu re the name ofyour favorite saint and your name ifyou wish)

IJ $1500wlll give theSlster-surgeon an ope Instable Shes ustng akitchen table now

WOULDc $575 buys a whirlpool beth $100 a sterilizer

NEED C $300 pays In full ~or the two-year training 01 IF a native Slsternurse She will write to you

YOU WERI C $240 ($5 a Week) takes care of bull fuMmiddottlme

~IlAII IA8T WlILflARIi ASBDelATIGN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN PresIdent

MSGR JOHN G NOLAN Natlonal8ecretaIJ Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc S30 Madison Avenuemiddot New York NY 1001 T~one 212yUkOft 6-5840

rHf ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Apr 20 196717

CATHOLIC (HAR~l~~S AP~EAL SILVER JUBILEE YEAR

MAY 7-17

What does it mean to you The opportunity to raise your sights to the level of a $2500 Jubilee Gift

An act of aratitude for 25 years of Charitable Seice

Bishop Connollys love for exceptionoillhiidren cannot be

described in words-but this picture D5 beyond description

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THE ANCHORshy~18 Top East C~ast College Hoopsters middotPlay )Sees SociaI EquityThurs April 20 1967

Still Lagging Anglicalfj)~ ~teview At I(ennedy Center For P C Alumni In Spain Antii Cali~~i~ By Patricia Francis MALAGA (NC) - Spain

was taken to task for lagging1562 C~~lireglf A full house crowd saw some o( the East Coasts top collegIate basketball players behind many other countriesLONDON (NC) _ The demonstrate last week how basketball should be played Occasion was the 8th annual hi the development of a

ehurch of England has set Scholarship Basketball Game sponsored by the Providence College Alumni Club of New just Christian social and ecoshyup a permanent commission Bedford at Kennedy Youth Center in New Bedford Initiated in 1959 to - raise nomic life at the 26th Spanish C1)n Christian Docbine with tis first task to consider recastshying or replacing that churchs historic charter of the Thirtyshy~Hne Articles of Religion which

are strongly anti-Catholic In tOne

They are regarded by many as o stumbling block to Christian ~ity The articles drawn up in 1562

for the avoiding of diversities $pound opinions and for the establishshyhtg of consent touching truereli shygion must be publicly accepted py the clergy at ordination

They have become a matter of ~increasing objection lind some

Anglican clergymen now feel talat they should not be called Upon to subscribe to doctrinal definitions which reflect views formed in the 16th oentury aarship is a $2400 one paid at the time of extreme and bitter reli- rate of $600 a year to the winner gious controversy Next award will be made in

The articles denounce the 1970 TheRevEdwardC Duffy eurohurch of Rome as erroneous in chairman of- the scholarship matters of faith and declare games and recruiter of the among other things that theplaye~s who participate emphashyBishop of Rome hath no jurisdic- sizes the scholarship is open middotto tion in this -realm of Englandany deserving boy who has been Some prominent Anglican clergymen have blal1led the sharp declfnein ordination canshy

Qlidates on a reluctance to subshy~ribe to this document

Consider Advis( The new commission was apshy

pointed by Anglican Archbishops Michael Ramsey of Canterbury and Donald Coggan of York It consists of 17 members most of them theological professors repshyzesenting different schools of thought in the Anglican Church

Anglican Bishop Iar Ramsey of Durham is chairman The commissions general terms of reference say that it is

to consider and advise upon doctrinal questions submitted to it from time to time by the archshybishops and to plan when deshyslrable the investigation of

I ~uestions by other groups Its first task will be to conshy

sider the place of the Thirty- lege University of Rhode Island Nine Articles in the Anglican St Josephs of Philadelphia Bosshy

tradition and the question of ton College and Holy Cross subscription and assentto them There were Bill Blair Jim

Benedict Bob Kavolski and Bill Lasher of PC Mike FitzgeraldReligious Influence (of Mattapoisett) Henry Carey

In US on Wan~ -7- NEW YORK (NC)-Although

a majority of all Americans exshypressed the belief that 11eligion is losing its influence in the

United States in the latest Gallup Poll Catholics declined to-give majority assent to the opinion

The national survey showed tilat 57 per cent of all Americans in 1967 believe religion is losing its influence Only 14 per cent expressed this opinion in 1957

Among Protestants 60 per cent In 1967 compared with L7 per eent in 1957 said religion was losing its influence Forty-eight

per-cent of Catholics agreed in the latest survey compared with Beven per cent in 1957

Get Federal Funds PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A

Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyect under the auspices of Philashydelppia Archbishop John J Krols Commjssion on Economic Oppi)rtunity Programs hlils reshyceived $267980 from the federal government It was one of 74 Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyects in 30 states approved by Secretary of Labor W Willard Wirtz

accepted as a freshman at Provshyidence College regardless of the high school he attended

Primary Method William F Doyle president of

the NE Bedford club says the games are the alumnis primary method of raising money for the schoJarship fund

Since it was first held the game has attracted a following of avid fans-who help swell the scholshyarship treasury

Father Duffy feels it is the top post-season game in New England arid cites as proof the fact that his long time friend Bob Cousy Hoiy Cross All- Anierican and Boston Celtic great played in it himself two years ago It was his last game

Players who participated in this years money-for-scholarshyships game-all college seniors

represented Providence Colshy

scholarship funds for deserv- ing gr~duates of area high

schools the game profits enabled presentation of the first Edward J Tucker Memorial Scholarship of $2000 to Clifford Marr of New Bedford in 1962 Marr a graduate of Holy Family High was graduated from Provishydence College in 1966 and curshyrently is an Army lieutenant on duty in Korea

The second scholarship---named for the late 1r Tucker of Fairshyhaven a Providence College

graduate and one of the charter members of the New Bedford club--was awarded last year to Michael Doherty of New Bedshyford also a Holy Family gradushyate

Currently the four-year scholshy

Steve Chubin and Bob Boehm of the U of RI Richie Murphy and Greg Hochstein of Holy Cross John Austin and Ed Hock- enbury of Boston College and

f~nll lHoMsnln1~ fLaw Olhoc City EI1il(Jlcts

SPRIfiGFIELD (NC) - By unanimous vote of its five city commissioners this city has enshyacted a fair housing ordinance

The ordinance the third of its kind in OhiO becomes effecshytive May 3 Considerably strongshyer than the fair housing legisia- tion enacted by the Ohio Legisshylature in 1965 it outlaws disshycrimination in the sale or rental of any housing excepting only dwellings for members of reli shygious organizations or housing established for one sex only

Springfields new ordinance came as the res~lt of an improved climate of racial harmony The citys mayor Robert C Henry is a Negro whose performance of his duties has won wide reshyspect In recent years an Urban League has been launched and has made considerable progress A Human Relations Commission is functioning

PROVIDENCE COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP In atshytendance at PC Scholarship Fund Basketball Game in New Bedford were William Doyle presidentof the PC Club of New Bedford and Michael Doherty present scholarship recipient

Billy Oakes Marty Ford and Tom Duff of st Josephs the nations fifth-ranked_ team

Sees lay Teachers

Form Asso~iataon CLEVELAND (NC)-Groundshy

work for a diocesan lay teachers asso~iation was laid at a meeting of representatives of 21 diocesan high schools here

shy Patrick Bruening teacher at St Josephs high school and temshyporary chairman of the new unit said the association is an organshyization of professional people seekint professional growth

He added Only after we have proven ourselves as professionshyals with a professional attitude

about our job can we ask for and hope to get professional consideration I

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lhe players enjoyed demonshystrating th~ir proficiency The fans enjoyed watching the demonstration ~ and the scholar shipfund of the Providence Colshylege Alumni Club of New Bedshy~ord teaped tbebenef~il ~fboth

~ Population Control WASHINGTON (NC) - U s

Sen J W Fulbright of Arkansas has asked for aCongressional appropdation of $150 million for increased population coritior asshysistanCe to developIng countries

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Social Week here Angel Cardinal Herrera y

Oria former archbishop of Mashylaga in a letter to the Social Week sessions deplored what he called a deficiency of Catholic influence in Spanish public lilfe declaring that Spain a Catholic nation was far from being a model of social justice

No Dialogue Earlier Auxiliary Bishop Rashy

fael Gonzalez Moralejo of Valenshycia ecclesiastical moderator of the SocialWeek sounded a simshyilar note declaring that where there is no dialogue between citizens and their government there is no democracy and such a society cannot call itself Christian

Cardinal Herrera said that ahead of Spain are nations who

have learned how to organize their natioJlallif~ according to the norms of justice which are the daughters of consciElnce Sweden has progressed in the social and pOlitlclll o~der to such an extent that the ~ope

could state that its public ~n~ishy tutions are in harmonywith the teachings of the Seco~dVatican Council he said

1[Jpper ~Iasses Cardinal Herrera lirged the

upper classes of -the countryto contribute toward the formation of a sound and realistic public opinion by which religious conshycepts would be applied to the economic and social life of Spain

It is necessary he said to diminish the differences in classes to work toward Unity not only in the economic order but also in i~ the education and

c~vic department

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Car

Georgell Cluh Olf to Good Start mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Apr 20 1967

Taunton High Is Surprise In County Diamond loop former FltrrJDD Riweff CYOer on Scholagslvop ltltIt PIl1Jf$~ns

By PETE~ BARTEK Norton High Coach

Coach BiD Georges Taunton High diamond aggreg~

tion is the early season surprise in the Bristol County schoolboy league now in ita second week of the eampaign The pennant race appeam ~ be developing into one of the most exciting in many years Five clubs are battling of Ule better area clubs year fOIl the coveted flag And after year

Coach Harold (Chet) Haneshywhile action is fast and fm-shywichs Bishop Feehan High teamiOWl in the BCL the eight N3rshyof Attleboro has tucked awayragansett League teams are early season wins over Northgetting I e Q d y Attleboro and New Bedford Voshy

lor the chamshy cational The latter two will pionship race m probably fight it out fornext-toshytheir COmpetishy the-last place in the final standshytion Delayed ing as they seek to avoid theboth by rain and cellar Ii old weather The two top contests on nextCOaches h a v e Mondays BCL card will seebeen reminding Coyle playing Durfelte at Alumnitheir charges of Field in Fall River while Taunshythe pitfalls of ton journeys to North Dartmoutheareless loose to clash with stang Two northernplay and also Peter eounty rivals Attleboro andthe IOOmmission Bartek Feehan meet at the formers of Deedless errors which ean field next Monday when North relegatea club to an early Deeshy Attleboro travels to New Bedshyond diviaion berth from which it ford to take 0111 Vocatlonal win be bard to emerge as 1M Nury Contests oompetition progresses Meanwhile the Narragansett

Chausse and JlaJkut loop is comple~ing its first week The Herring City Orange and of play Its still a little early to

Black pulled the big surprise of make 8 judgment as to how thebe young season when it held clubs will stand at the end of thethe always strong Dullfee High

lI~mpaign team of Fall River to a 2-2 tie in Four Narry tilts are on tap for11 innings The prognosticators next Tuesdaybad been writing off the Georgeshy Coach Jack McCartys Caseeoached clan solely because they High Cardinals of Swansea willfelt Taunton would be unable to face Coach Jack Harts DimanJeplace Artmiddot Koska lost by gradshy Vocational team in Fall River uation in what looms as one of the

But Scott Chawrse impressed most interesting early seasonin his confrontation with the Fan games Coach Doug Baxendales River Hilltoppelll aDd now the Msgr Prevost High team of Fall same pundits who had relegated River will be at Dighton to meet Taunton to a lowly apot 8re the Coach Eddie Texeiras D - ~ first to admit that things will be Regionals Coach Ed Bibeau will much more pleasant for the lead his W~port High aggr~gashyTauntonians this Spring tion to Seekonk to middotvh( with

Stro~ Coyle Offense Coach Roger Hills charges The Admittedly an the doubting fourth Narry contest next Tuesshy

Thomases were not convinced day will see Coach Jack Brenshyon the basis of a single performshy nans Holy Family High teain of ance So Joe Majkut and Chausse New Bedford meeting Coach Jim Ulen eombined to throw a no-hit Sullivans Somersetmiddot High teamwin over Coach Dick Joyces at the latters field Attleboro High team Even the

Lanllers Ready most skeptical then conceded that Taunton must be reckoned On Ca~ Cod n nip-~pd~tuck

in the flag race battle is going on in that areas While Taunton High has heeD eon1erence schedule Four conshy

eGualling the early season attenshy tests are listed for the Capeway tion unexpected results have eircuit next Monday They are eccurred in several other diashy Oldmiddot Rochester (Mattapoisett) mond eontests Attleboro which at Barnstable Bourne at Wareshydid DOt seem destined lor gfeat bam Dartmouth middotat Dennis-Yarshythings this Spring provided the mouth and Fairhaven vs Lawshyfirst surprise w~en it toppled rence High at Falmouth Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Norton High in the Clover Stang High of North Dartmouth Valley Conference plays its first

Taunton then proved its mettle league game at home against when it defeated surprising Millis next Monday The Purple Attleboro Hickey has talent at - and White Lancers travel to Stang but his problem has heeD Medfield next Wednesday tv properly align his best playem Apparently they were not in the Score Governmentright spots when they went down to defeat at the hands of Coach On Lab~r Problems Jim Burns Msgr Coyle High

BUENOS AIRES (NC) -TwonJne of Taunton which has Catholic organizations have isshycwuted its way to two one~sided sued a joint manifesto criticizingviet(lries Coyles strength is in thlte Argentine government sayshyits offensive attack but it also ing it has failed to protect workshy

has a capable defense and pitch ers basic rightsJng staff to make a real run for Issued by the Catholic Youngthe BCL crown Workers (JOC) and Catholic _ Feehans Auspicious Start Action Workers Movement

Durfee while it may have been (MOAC) the statement alsotemporarily halted by Taunton called upon the bishops to be enpects to be among the leaders aware of the needs and goals of before the end of the week The young workers and the labor Hilltoppers looked good in winshy class and to be brave in ltexshy

double-header from Pil-shyning a pressing the Churchs doctrine grim High of Rhode Island last as applied to real-life situations weekend CoachJoe Lewis feelsmiddot It said that the government his boys can now maintain the which calls itself Christian but momentum they have generated is anything but Christian has in the non-league affairs It goes nothing to do with the Gospelalmost without saying that one or Christs teachings or with the off-day is not going to thwart Churchs doctrines as defined by the Hilltopperll wbo produce ODe the Second Vatican Councit

By JOE MIRANDA A Parsons College senior JRobshy

eli Bonalewicz of Fall River is -nearIng the end of a most sucshycessful college career both athshyletically and academically

Bob is attending Parsons in Fairfield Iowa on a baseball scholarship and has started bis third season as the colleges first strong catcher

neans List Student A Physical Education major

Bob has a minor in History and during the last marking period was named to the Deans List at Parsons -

A member of St PatrIcks Parshyish Bonny is a 1963 graduate of Durfee High School where he participated in football basketshyball and baseball

The son of Mr and Mrs Mathew Bonalewicz of 50 Chapshylin Street he is oile of five chil shydren ald has not yet decided upon a vocation

Bonny has two older brotherll a lieutenant and Mathew Jr II

staff sergeant both in the Air Force and stationed ubroad Bob also has two sisters Kathleen II student at Durfee High and Ma) Ann a grammar school pupil

Has f80 Average Bonalewicz recently returned

from a Southern baseball trip end gained excellent commendashytions from his coach Duane Banks for his performance as the Wildcats won 11 of 13 games

The Fall River player batted 430 belted three homers had nine runs-batted-in and seltlred 10 during Parsons first 13 games

Bonalewicz a 22-year-old 175shyJ)ound 5-8 giant enjoys playing baseball and so does his coach who scheduled 89 games last seashyson to set a ollegiate record fur the most games played in one year

Ankle IBjUlY

With the former Durfee backshystop handling the brunt of the catching duties until a knee inshyjury forced him to the sidelines Parsons won 72 lost 15 and twice finished in ti~d games called beshyca~se of darkness

The former St Patricks star in the CYO baseball program started poory this season finshyis middotng off the Southern trip with an ankle sprain but entering this week the ankle was in good shape and Bonny expected to take his regular spot behind the plate

Federal Agency Has Inter-Faith Advisors

WASHINGTON (NC)- A Catholic priest a Methodist minshyister and a Jewish rabbi have been appointed religious advishyBors to the United States Inforshymation Agency here

Msgr George G Higgins clIishyrector of the Social Action Deshypartment U S Catholic Confershyence the Rev Edward G Cu-middot roll superintendent of the Washshyington Northwest District ol the Methodist Baltimore Conference and Rabbi Richard G Hirsch dishyrector of the Relgious Action Center Union of American Heshybrew Congregations have been named to the USIA advisory panel

Officials of the agency noted that while it has had religious advisors since its inception this marks the first time an interfaith panel had been established

The purpose of the panel offi shycials said is to assure that the agencys handling of religious matters serves the best intlterest of the nation and its dlveraity of faiths

Bonalewicz also played for St Patricks T)iocesan championship team and for the Fall River Mershychants in the Newport Sunse~ League

As a senior at DUrfee Bonny was awarded the 1963 George Kaplan Memorial Trophy as the Hilltoppers best senior basketshyball player

His hustle and determination while performing for Durfee at Bostcm Garden during the anshynual Eastern Massachusetts Tecb tournament gained him the reshyspect and admiration of all that witnessed his efforts

Bonalewicz recently completed a practice teaching tour in an Iowa Junior High School and while tere coached the eighth grade team to a league chamshypionship

Earlier in the college year Bob_ was a member of the Parsons intramural flag football progmiddotam and received a trophy for his performan J

Despite the heavy bnsebaU schedule Bob has manged to keep hi grades above average and after the Fall semestershyshowed his prowess in the classshyroom by being named to the Deans List for the second time

DeMatha Winner In Hoop Tourney

WASHINGTON (NC) - DeshyMatha High of suburban Hyattsshyville Md scored an upset cliff shyhanger victory to cop the 12th national high sChool basketballl tournament sponsored by thE local Knights of Columbus J017 the fifth straight time

DeMatha avenged two regula17 season defeats by Mackin High Washington Catholic League

champ with its last minute 70-68 victory Mount Carmel of Chiengo took

third place with a 47-45 overshytime win over DePaul Acndemy of Chicago Northeast Cnthrt1ie of Philadelphia took fifth pIhce with a 77-74 win over St Petertl

B(~ BONALEWICZ of New Brunswick N J Catheshydral High of Trenton NJ Inpound

The oung catcher has been Dwight School of New York alslaquo) long known for his bullet like participated tlnrowlr arm and gained conshy Aubrey Nash DeMatha junloY siderable praise from opponents wall named the tournnmentl in 111gh school amateur and colshy most valuable player lege eompetitions for his savvy A 5-11 junior John Somogyftbehind the plate set three tournament records-shy

Three-Letter Man 40 field goals 108 points in threE Bonalewicz played football for games and 43 points in one game Don MontIe basketb~ll for Tom and tied another record ll-forshyKaram and baseball for middotJoe 11 from the foul line Lewis while at Durfee and also performed for Lewis Chathammiddot team in the Cape Cod League

The Fall Riverite cannot get FAIRHAVENenough baseball according to his mother Mrs Bonalewicz recalls LUMBER a game at Alumni Field when

COMPANYDurfee bested a Venezuelan team sponsored by the Peoplesshyto-Peoples program Bob was inshy Complete linejured and taken -to the hospital Mrs Bonalewicz remembers Building Materials then came back to finish the game hitting a home run to win I SPRING ST FAIRHAVENmiddotit for the Hilltoppers He wall voted the outstanding player in 993-2611the gameo

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THEANCHOR()ioltese of Fan ~tv~r-Thurs ApO 1967 ~ ~ middot-middotmiddotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ middot20

AT BISEIOPS CONFERENCE Facilities for offering Mass were provided by the Archdiocese of Chicago when 230 U S bishops met in semi-annual conference In left photo nine othel prelates concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Joseph TRyan of Anchorage Alaska In right

photo are Archbishop John F Dearde~ of Detroit at left president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and at right Archbishop Johl1l F Cody of Chicago conference host Bishops Connolly and Gerrard attended from the Fall River Diocese NC Photos

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--

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 Hub ArchdiocCs Schools to UsePr~~(O]tes P~edS1~dC~1fho~~ TV System

BOSTON CNC)-The A~loyaty in Wor~d W(JJr l diocese of Boston has sign~

WASHINGTON (NC-We affirm in this hour of a contract with a nationa~ stress and trial our most sacred and sincere loyalty and known Philadelphia elect~ patriotism toward our country our government and our iC eorporation for the const~

tion of an educational televisiGliiflag This was the message presented by James Cardinal system which will transmit pro=shyGibbons of Baltimore to ed the Chaplains Aid Associashy grams to 300 archdioces8fi

President Woodrow Wilson tion schools from the 50-story PnIoo on April 18 1917--50 years He proposed a plan to unify dentia1 building in downtooo ag()-while the archbishops the Catholic war work It reshy Boston

ceived the approval of Cardinal Msgr Walter L Flaherty healof the country were meeting at of the archdiocesan radio aOOGibbons and Cardinals OConshyCatholic University of America television apostolate will be hinell and FarleyThe pledge was made by the

Each archbishop and bishop charge of the new modern ecl1Qountrys hierarchy in behalf of cational projectwas invited to send one clergyshythe clergy and laity just 12 days

man and one laymen to a meetshyafter Congress had declared that REV W A SULLIVAN REV R W McCARTHYmiddoting at Catholic Universitya state of war existed between bull I bull 1Washington held on August Uthe United States and Imperial and 12 1917 Germany It was the first such

Representatives from 68 dioshy Dio(e~aJ1 Council of WOlmen Meetpledge offered by any religious

ceses 27 national organizations CHURCH FUNDSmiddot TRUSTSmiddotbody in the nation In FeU liver Saturday May 6and members of the CatholicAll True Americans PENSIONS -ORGANIZATIONSPress Association-US delegatesOur people as ever will rise Mrs Michael J McMahon Musical selections will be preshyas one man to serve the nation -attended the historic confershy chairman of the annual convenshy sented by the Cathedral Boys CORPORATEmiddot PERSONAL

encethe pledge said We are all true tion of the Diocesan Council of Choir under the direction of Rev Americans ready as our age our Unify Activities Catholic Women to be held this William Campbell SAVINGS ability and our conditions per- The delegates resolved to de year at Mount St Mary Acadshy Msgr Walsh will then speak mit to do whatever is in us to vise a plan of organization emy Fall ~iver on Saturday followed by the convention keyshy As of January 1st do for the preservation the throughout the United States to May 6 announced today the noter Dr Paul van K Thomson

progress and triumph of our promote the spiritual aQd mate- days program and the names of Closing the annual meeting will beloved country rial welfare of the U S troops those in charge of arrangements be an address by Bishop Conshy NEW HIGH RATEThe President of Uae United at home and abroad and to Registration and a coffee hour nolly The program will conclude States replied (April 27) to Car- study and coordinate unify and beginning at 9 will precede a at 330 tUnal Gibbons The very re- put into operation all Catholic - business lession set for 10 Parking facilities will be markable resolutions adopted by activitiesincidental to the war oclock available at St Marys Cathedral the archbishops of the United After months of planning the Father McCarthy schoolyard A shuttle service will States at their annual meeting archbishops in November 1917 ~ available to Mount St MaryRev Raymond W McCarthyin the Catholic Unhersity on constituted themselves the Nashy PerAcademydirector of the Family Life BushyApril 18 warms iny helut tional Catholic War Council and reau and moderator of Fall River Yeeshylind makes me very proud indeed appointed four bishops as their District I of the DCCW will bethat men of such large influence Administrative Committee with host moderator Meeting to Hear should act in so large a sense of Bishop Peter J Muldoon of Bishop Connolly will be cele-patriotism and so admirable 1I Rockford Illmiddotchairman _ brant of a noon Mass Assisting Rev~ R C Doddsspirit of devotion to our com- Father (later Monsignor) John the bishop will be Rt Rev Msgrmon country J Burke CSP chairman of its Rev RobertC Dodds wiD 011Thomas F Walsh Diocesan andPraises K of ltD Committee on Special War Ac- Attleboro district moderator and be the guest speaker at the

In another letter of acknowl- tivities also served as general Rt Rev Msgr John J Hayes ~eeting of the Greater Fanedgement the President termed secretary until his death in INVESTMENTmoderator of the New Bedford River Clerical Associationmost enheartening a resolution October 1936 District Lector will be Rev

passed by the directors of the Awarded Medal scheduled for Friday April 28 SAVINGSJames F Lyons moderator of at 12 noon at the QuequechanKnights of Columbus meeting The NCWC was recognized the Taunton District Club Fall Riverin Washington April 114 whicb by the United States government aRTIFICAYESMrs Anthony Geary Diocesan Mr Dodds is a member of thereaffirmert the patriotic devo- as the official agency of Catholic corresponding secretary will National Council of Churchestion of the 400000 members of activity and one of the interdeshy $1000 Multiples held lwsere as asthis order in this count1ry- to our publicity secretary Unity Committee and hi~topic bullnominational Committee Of Sev- Six Months or Longerwell as co-chairman of the will be ~Ecumenismirl therepublic and its laws and en welfare organizations authorshy luncheon with Mrs ViIlcent A United States bullpledging their continued and izedto function in the war efshy Dividends paid twice yeoJipCoady Fall River District presshy

unconditional support of tbe fort and in the reconstruction Clergy planning to attend areidentTickets are available for NO Notice Required forPresident and the Congress of period after hostilities ceased requestedto make reservati6na the luncheon from Mrs Alfredthis nation in their determina- with Rev AIden R Burhoe Withdrawal

tion to protect its honor and its Officially recognizing the War Almeida and Mrs Raymond A Vicar iit the Church of Our Couneilswork the gov~mment Poisson in the Fall River area Savior Somerset and ecretiiry e Dividends not subject ideals of humanity and right awarded the U S Distinguished Miss Helen McCoy New BedfordThe extent to which the coun- of the Flill River Asso~iatioq Mass Income Tax Service Medal to Monsignor area Mrs James Williamstrys 20 million Catholics were Burke in 1919 The deadline is WednesdayTaunton area Mrs George-committeed by theirleaders to Alth h C th l d April 26 arid the secretarY-mayoug a 0 les comprISe Whalen Attleboro area and REGULAR

the cause of their country dur- only 17 per cent of the war-time be reached at 678-9663 orMrs James Quirk Cape and I678-6193 ing World War I is evident by population nearly one million

jIslands Final date for reserva- SAVINGS file history of the emergency served in the U S armed forces tions is Monday May 1walgttime organization the Na- Deaths totaled 22552 Catholics Now EarnRev Walter A Sullivan Diocshy Necrologytional Catholic War Council The including 12438 overseas deaths

esan director of youth will modshypredecessor of the National Cath- A total of 1026 Catholic cbap- APRIL 28olic Welfare Conference it erate a panel discussion to be 1Decame in 1967 the U S Catholic lams serveel on active dlty featured at the morning session Rev Stanislaus J Goyette

1959 Pastor St Louis de FranceConference Boys ChGir SwanseaHistoric ConfereD4lC Mass Ordo The afternoon session will APRIL 30With the entrance of the FRIDAY -St Anselm Bishop convene at 2 Msgr Walsh will Rev David F Sheedy 1930United States into World War I deliver the opening prayer folshyConfessor and Doctor of the Past-gtr St John Evangelist At- there was no Catholic agency Church iII Class White Mass lowed by a message from the tleboro through which Catholics could Proper Glory no Creed Prefshy retiring president Mrs James A Rev John A Hurley 1900contribute to the war effort as ace of Easter OBrien Jr Pastor St Mary No Attle~oroCatholics Sensirig the immedishySATURDAY-SS Soter and Calshy MAY 1I ate need for such a center was You may save any amous Popes and Martyrs III Class Rev Francis J Quinn 1882Father Jobn J Burke CSP of Alumni CampaignRed Mass Proper Glory no Founder Immaculate Conception any time when you have Cll

New York editor of the Catholic World who in June 1917 found- Creed Preface of Easter Diocesan alumni of Stonehill No Easton Founder Sacred Regular Savings Account 0IcI0

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SUNDAY-JV Sunday after Easshy College North Easton active in Heart Fall River Fashioned Pass Book f1exibilltJater II Class White Mass the institutions Alumni Annual MAY Z

Proper Glory Creed Preface Giving campaign are George A Rt Rev M P Leonidas Larl- SAVE BY MAILof Easter Allen Jr North Easton chairshy viere 1963 Pastor St Je8ll MONDAY - St Fidelis of Sigshy man Leonard- Walsh Jr Taunshy Baptiste Fall River Margaret Panos Fall River all ton regional director Frederick

Mass Proper Glory no Creed Kelley T Norton Henry Perra Preface of Easter am Evelyn Rice Taunton Mrs

TUESDAY--St Mar)~ Evangelshy Margaret Panos Fall River all 1st II Class Red Mass Proper _ area chairmen Glory 2nd Prayer Rogations Creed Preface of Apostles Guild fer BlindWEDNESDAY-SS Cletus and Marceninus Popes and Marshy The New Bedford Catholic tyrs III Class Red Mass Guild for the Blind will hold Proper Glory no Creed its regular meeting tonight Preface of Easter April 20 at 8 in the Knights of

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3 rHE ANLHOR-Cathonc Efforts Violet Leonard of Taunton First Woman Thurs April 20 1967

Towards Unity Teacher at Bridgewater Rehab Ce~teJr Sees Ukrainian Sile~t S~edy By JI)oJrltthy Eastman WASHINGTON (NC) shy Rite ExtinctionThe Massachusetts maximum security prison for juvenile offenders is 8 gloomy place llewspapers front-page covshy to visit even on a sparkling Spring day But t~e grey stone walls that surround the ~ge of the American bishshy Near in CO1oda

ancient Bridgewater institution are hiding a secret bull a very pleasant secret as a matshy-Ps guidelines for Catholicshy TORONTO (NC) - A voshyliampwish relations once again joshy ter of fact Inside those forbidding walls are 85 youthful offenders who are guided and

cations authority warnedltUsed public attention on the cared for by a remarkable 1fOntinued Catholic involvement here that the Ukrainianteam of counsellors and ~ inter-Church and interreli shy Church in Oanada is threatshyteachers They have created Iirous affairs ened with extinction if parentsfor the boys an ideal atmo-Occasionally sensational usushy do not seriously take into conshyQDy silent Catholic efforts at sphere designed to bring about sideration the fostering of vocashy

-~hieving Christian unity and their rehabilitation into society tions among their own children ~erreligious cooperation are A fairly recent addition to that

Father Joseph Denischuk~ing on constantly Marked by team is Miss Violet Leonard a

CSSR vocations director forresident and native of Taunton[eontinual conferences but rare Ukrainian-rite Catholics in Canshywhere she is a member of Stannouncements the movement ada says there now are 190000towards unity has more to it Marys Parish Last September

Ukrainian Catholics in Canaclattihan usually meets the eye Miss Leonard became the first

being served by four Bishopswoman ever to teach at the venshyBetween now and the end of 268 priests 218 Sisters 26 Brothshyrtane Catholic participants and erable institution

ers and six members of secular ~servers will be taking part in The channing young teacher

institutes ~zens of minor ecumenical acshy with the ~parkling brown eyes is

The Ukrainian rite has four$vities and a handful of major part of the pleasant surprise a

Sees with a total of 565 parishes~ents Only a few of these will visitor gets after stepping inside

and missions in Canada Morebve immediate results Most of the walls Her office like the

than 80 per cent of the priestsitbem wont make the papers But rest of the interior of the buildshy

are more than 40 years of age~y will all be important ing is gaily painted and abloom

with only one-third Canadianwith many colorful works of artDoctrinal Questions born Father Denischuk saidSo far this year the boys have The supply of European priestsSome of these will be initial read and discussed Blackboard

is almost exhausted and the supshyJireps taken by representatives Jungle Catcher in the Rye ~ different churches and tradishy ply of newly ordained priestsand Lord of the Flies They ~ns to sound out the possibility falls far short of the expectedsaw the movie Blackboard

~ further discussion Others will results he said Only one UkraishyJungle and decided that they1ll2 second third or fourth meetshy nian-rite Catholic priest hasliked the book better ~gs meetings that will probe been- ordained in the past yearBearing in mind that these are(sectJeep into doctrinal questions while nine priests have died he boys who have most likely neverMiting and dividing churches addedread a book from cover to cover

API-il opens with a meeting beshy The vocational director isbefore in their lives - thIs is tween representatives of the - touring parishes in eastern CanshyquHe an achievement So many

ada to recruit young men toCatliolic Church and the Amershy of them have acquired a real k~ n Baptist Convention This enter St Vladimir College inlove for reading Miss Leonardmeeting on Monday April 3 the Roblin only Ukrainian Catholicsays They come up here to thelClrst between the two groups mino) seminary in Canada andreading room every chance they

also to interest girls in religious~ll be chaired by Bishop Joseph have shyvocations During the past twoGreen of Reno Nev in De Witt Judging from its success at the

lilIich It will establish guidelines years he has talked with 3000Bridgewater institution Hookedf])r future discussions youths and children and intershyon Books seems to be a program

viewed 250 prospective seminashyThree days later April 6-9 that has lived up to its provacashyrians and nunsCatholic and Lutheran delegates tive title

will meet in New York for their A larger part of the boys daysfourth meeting Conversations are spent in other types of learnshythere at the headquarters of the Maranists Meeting

ing situations including woodshybutheran Church in America magazines and current books society that range from car theft DAYTON (NC)-The 18th anshyworking upholstery lessons~ill probe more deeply into These are their textbooks from to murder _ nual National Association ofbookbinding music and art lesshyquestions of Eucharistic sacri shy which they earn modern history Hopefully most of them will Marianist Organizations convenshysonsiIice earlier studied in Septemshy geography and reading improye- leave here to become successfUl tion will be held here in Ohio When a boy first enters the inshy~r 1966 ment and useful members of society -May 6 and 7 at the University stltution he is given no privishy

Meet Wftth Orthodox These boys dont ordinarily Miss Leonard says of Dayton

ViOLET LEONAlR)lJl

leges allowed no personal posshyOn April 19 Catholic ecumenishy sessions in his bare cell As he respond well to books Theyve As you leave the prison you

m leaders from around the progresses in his rehabiiitation flunked out or dropped out of know you will not soon forget school and society These are the the faces of those boys behindiJiFOrld will travel to Rome for lie gradually earns more privishy

f1 10-day plenary meeting of the leges more responsibility until kids whove always hated the bleak walls They -were ~ticans Secretariat for Promotshy the cell of a boy who is near the schoo happy faces hopeful faces ing Christian Unity This secreshy tlm~ for his parole inay resem1lle So all the more remarkable is Faces of boys you would be

the progress that Miss Leonard prcmd to call your sons Youtariat is the Churchs official the room of any teenage boy body for supervising and guiding pictures on the walls materials and her two fellow teachers have pray that when the boys leave

made this year in their new pro- those walls they will findin theraquoelations between Catholicism for his hobbies phonographs 81ld other Christian Churches and record collectii)]ls gram The program is called outside world some of the Chrisshy

Back in the United States St What about discipline probshy Hooked on Books It was orig- tian love they will need so much IOhns University in Collegeville lems I have had none says imited at the Industrial School to help them make their adjust

fo Boys and has worked with mentMinn will be the scene of the Miss Leonard And as you walk great success wherever its been~xt major meeting a dialogue through the halls and observe tried fraquoetween Catholics and Presbyshy the boys busy at their work you

terians This fifth meeting April are struck by the friendly coshy Part of the reason for this reshy STONEHILL36-28 will investigate the probshy operative attitude of the boys markable state of affairs is what ems of mixed marriage who give Miss Leonard a cheery she calls reciprocal respect

May will open with a Worcesshy greeting wherever she goes I respect them and care for Summer Session~r meeting with delegates of the All the paintings and the them and they know this and figtrthodox Church Discussion at respect me in return JUNE 26 - AUG sculpture have been done by the ~e May 5 conference will center boys she says with obvious The) have grown up getting

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UNDIRGRADUAYIE COURSES00 concrete proposals drawn up so little respect from societypride And they maintain the by joint Catholic-Orthodox theoshy institution themselves they do Sometimes I think that they llilQeDlaquolID Arts bull Bus Admin (i) Science reg Math logical task forces Their threeshy all the cleaning cooking laundry dont think of the walls as proshy

Write Director of Summer Sessionraquoart inquiry investigated - tecting society from them theyand most of the maintenance think of the walls as protectingwork STONEHIU COLlLIEGIE

Greek Church Again Her new job is quite a change them from society which has N Easton Mass 02356hurt themfur Miss eonard who had preshyHits Birth Control viously taught fourth grade for The major problem each boy

CHICAGO (NC)-The Greek four years at Notre Dame School has when he- first comes to the ~rthodox Church is still opposed in Fall River institution is an almost complete 1raquo artificial birth control ac- ][ve always wanted to work lack of self contro So while at lording to 0rthodox Bishop Me~ in special education she says the institution he receives psyshyIetios of Chicago My job here is like being a chiatric help with this problem

The Bishop said the Churchs mother father counselor to that has led to crimes against Gtand against contraception is these boys-whatever the relashy~iterated in a statement by the tionship thats needed Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of It is only recently that school North and South America in the attendance became compulsory 1967 official Orthodox Yearbook for the boys at the Bridgewater

institution They must now spend ne hour aday in school ButEducation Chair tbis school in no way resembles

NEW YORK (NC) - A new 11 conventional one on the outshycbalamp to be occupied by an aushy side thority in urban education has be boys come eight at a time been established at the Fordham to her office for an hour a day lJnjversity school of education to read and dicsuss newspapers

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 4 Jewish leader Desc~o~reg~ Visit

Dregml~es C~th~oltr S~h~~s Watliu ~[flfinal CINCINNATI (NC)- A~~~HD[[reg~ mJ [g)regWD~OWreg Cincinnati attorney and Aushy

gustin Cardinal Bea SJTORONTO (NC)-Catholics who have gone to Cathshypresident of the Vatican See- olic schools do better economically than those who went retariat for Promoting Christian

either partly to the public schools or entirely so Peter H Unity found in their very conshyRossi middotdireetor- of the National Opinion Research Center at versation a sign of the progreSB Chicago told separate (Cathshy of Christian - Jewish relations

cation he dealt -with two comshy when they met recently in Romeolic) school trustees of Onshy mon objections to Catholic Simon Lazarus Jr of Cincinshytario at their annual banquet schools First do Catholic nati a leader in the local andschools prepare their graduatesin Toronto national American Jewish Comshy

Declaring that American as well as other schools for getshy mittee was one of a small groupting along in economic achieveshyCatholic schools are a success of members of the committeement and secondly ~do CathshyRossi co-author of the Greeleyshy who met and talked with the carshyolicsehools playa divisive roleRossi Report said that American dinal laSt month in Rome whilein American society as -some ofCatholic schools have managed theymiddot were on a three-week studytheir critics maintainto maintain themselves and grow mission to Mediterranean counshy

Declaring that Catholics doat least in proportion to the inshy tries with the committee crease in Catholic population and better economically with their

Lazarus who was tremenshyCatholic education backgrouoothey do produce noticeable efshy ilously encouraged by his visithe said Apparently there werefects in their graduates along the with Cardinal Bea said in ansome qualities of the Catholiclines that follow the emphases interview here that he told theschools which either fosteredstressed by the organization cardinal about increasing Chrisshyeconomic success - perhaps theObjections tian-Jewish dialogue in the U Skinds of work habits instilled bySpeaking on the social conseshy Cardinal Bea in turn told ofthe vaunted better discipline ofquences of Catholic schoOI edushy projects that were going on inCatholic schools~or the religious other parts of the world includshyvalues of Catholicism in this hisshying the study and revision oftorical period had effects similar textbooks to take out passagesThe tc the values of Protestantism in harmful to the Jewsthe early period of the Reforshy

mation Saintly ManParish Parade Divisiveness The fact that we are here toshyROSLINDALE CONFIRMATION Rev Richard Johnshy

gether the cardinal told theSS PETER AND PAUL On the question of ilivisiveshy son hands the chalice to ~l member- of the confirmation group is living proof of theFALL RIVER ness Rossi said the evidence class at Sacred Heart Chllrch Roslindale where the Holy progress that is being made andseems clearly against supportingR gistration for grade one in such an allegation Eucharist was administered under both species of bread of the spirit thats behind it

the parish school ill bc held Twenty years ago a meetingVlikeIn general he noted no signifi shy and wine Bishop Jeremiah F Minihan Auxiliary Bishop Sunday April 23 after the 8 9 this probably wouldnt havecant difference)n anti-Negro10 and 11 oclock Masses of the middotBoston Archdiocese confirmed the class of 275 in happenedanti-Semitic or anti-ProtestantBoy Scouts will go to Expo Boston suburban parish NC Photo attitudes between Cahtolic schoolmiddot Urging Christians and Jews67 Montreal in August Their

Catholics an public school Cathshy to work together on social asmothers are assisting in fundshyolics was perceived Indeed well as religious questions Carshyraising activitic and announce

a cake sale after all Masses there was some evidence that dinal Bea commended coopershythe Catholic graduates of greatershy ation among Christians and Jews

-Retirement Plon Sunday April 23 The troop comshy

educational attainment were less even in areas where they disshymittee will have a musical vari shy Bridgeport Bishop Curtis Announces Programlikely to evidence prejudicial at shy agree like federal aid and supshyety show in the hall Sunday titudes of all sorts than those of port of text books for privateApril 30 to raise money for theshy For Priests on Connecticut Diocesesimilar educational attainment shy schoolstrip who had gone to public schools BRIDGEPORT (NC) - Bishop Retirement prior to age 70 but Lazarus who described CardishyThe omcns Club will have

Catholic schooling did not hold Walter W Curtis of Bridgeport after age 65 may be requested nal Bea as a saintly man saida rummage sale in the church back Catholics from participatshy has announced a retirement proshy by priests through a diocesan that if all religious leadershall Thursday and Friday April ing in public life he added gram for priests of the Bridgeshy personnel committee which will could exude the same feeling27 and 28 and hold its installashy

port Diocese Retroactive to Jan make its recommendation to the and understanding that Cardinaltion banquet at Dighton Rock 1 last it provides that bishop regarding acceptance or Bea did the worldmiddot would be11a~or Tuesday May 9

Men of the parish have organshy ~p~$ lP~nJffillaquoY All priests subniit their resigshy non-acceptance of the request much better ized a CYO athletic advisory nations by the age of 75 either On reaching 70 priests are exshy The cardinal is a great human council and plan a baseball team ~~reg] tri)_ lLte voluntarily or at the request of pected to resign any official poshy being he said and he ought

proper authority t) be a saint along with Popethis season Chairman is Milton sition they may hold in the dishyVATICAN CITY (NC)-Love The age for voluntary retireshy JohnM Kozak sccretary William F is the keynote in the primacy of ocese to allow younger priests to

ment is 70 yearsPatten coach Robert A Fredshy take over the activities of these ermiddot~lc Their next mecting is at offices

Peter and his successors in the guidance and service of the

10 Sunday morning April 30 Christian people Pope Paul VI Leaders UII1 Alabama Priests on retirement will conshyCommittees have been formed told thousands assembled in St tinue to possess faculties and willto plan the Summer parish picnic Peters during a general audience Blast Gov Wallace be free to give assistance in passhyto be held Sunday July 30 at Taking his theme from March toral work in parishes and otherUIbans Grove Tiverton - MOBILE (NC)-More than 40029s Gospel in which Christ asks Church instihitions if their

Alabama citizens here haveSTJEAN THE BAPTISTE Peter Do you love me more health penuits

signed a statement expressingALL RIVER than these do- the Pope stressed

dismay at Gov LUIleer Walshy A home for retired priests T~1C Council of Catholic Women the significance of the question

laces recent speech calling for now being constructed is sched- I will sponsor a pilgrimagetn La He wa3 asking the Apostle

stmiddot~te defiance of federal court uled for completion in 1968 and 1 Salette Shrinc Attleboro on Sunshy the first confessor of faith in ordered school desegregation Vill be open to all retired priests == ~ day April 23 A bus will leave the divine Messianic niis~ion of the school yard at 1 and return Christ for that complementing Among the signers were many bullbull at 5 Catholic clergymen Religiouscharacteristic which makes faith

Mrs Thomas Tache chairman and lay leaders including represhylive and work that is love and lVIIS Oscar Phenix co-chairshy charity sentatives of the Society of Jesus ir - BISIALONS man head the ticket committee the Josephite Fathers the SistersThe Pope continued The

of Loretto and the Dominican s~ primacy of Peter in the guidanceMARGARET Sisters i GARAGEand service of the Christian peoshyBUZZARDS BAY

ple was to be a pastoral primacy The statement appeared as A ~A whist party will be sponshy bullNote to Our Fellow Citizens insored at 8 Saturday night April a primacy of love -0 pray

beloved sons that all may undershy an advertisement in the Mobile22 at the school hall Main Street stand this prodigious divine Registerb~ the SS Margmet-Mary Guild design Maintaining that racism is the

HOLY NAME underlying issue in the controshyFALL RIVER versy the statements described

First communicants will hold Benedictine Oblates

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the states dual school system as rehearsals at 315 Monday aftershy Oblates of St Benedict will unjust and unequal and in- bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull noon April 24 and Thursday hold a chapter meeting Saturshy sited other citizens to joi n the afternoon April 27 at the parish day afternoon April 29 at Portsshy signers in working for justiceschool mouth Priory R I beginning now

at 4 with Mass Dinner willbe ST FRANCIS XAVIER served at 6 Reservations ~ may HYANNIS be made with the Priory or by

Mrs Kenneth B Clarke a calling Mrs Frank S Moriarty licensed grapho-analyst will be Fall River 672-1439 the guest speaker at tonights meeting of the Womens Guild ICheduled for 8 in the IQwC1 Coyle Penny Sale ehureh hall - -he Mothers Chlb of Coyle

The nominating committee High Schoo Taunton will sponshywill present a slate of officers sor a penny sale on Vednesday 101 the 1967-68 year at this meetshy night April 26 at 8 at Coyle in~ High

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THE ANCHOR-Dlocete of Fait R1yener-1h Apr 20 bull

~

~flt

1 I

FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF HYACINTH CIRCLE Participatshying in the Golden Jubilee Celebration of the Daughters of Isabella-Hya-~

einth Circle--New Bedford were left Miss Mary E Foley regent and Mrs Richard H Walsh supreme regent of St Louis~ Mo at the cake cutshyting ceremony Center seated Miss Lydia Pacheco past regent and Mrs

Emile J Monfils chairman of decorations standing Mrs Richard H Manning vice-regent and Mrs Antone J Morris past regent Right -Mrs John B Lowney first regent seated in front of Miss Evelyn Henshydricks first guide left and Mrs Emmet Almond past regent The Circle has a membership of 500

Cardsna Cushing Emphas~es Need For Inv~vement

BOSTON (NC) - Om atechisms must be transshybted into real human conshyeern Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston asserted here

Cardinal Cushing said Christ did not make the rhetorical proshynouncements in response to peoples need but rather helped them by action Christians must take similar risks to wipe out the IJOcial evils of the 20th century be decl~red

For the Christian this social ftnvolvement consists not only in the desire for material well shybeing which we share with all humanitarians but also in the psychological hunger for more shybeing in mans thirst for the fullness of undying love in the final estabiishment of all things in the love of God the cardinal said

Cardinal Cushing said that the message of Easter is hope He asserted that fear is prevalent in our society-fear of nuclear deshytJtruction of our fellow men of the future of non-acceptance in a conformist society This fear be said is kindled by the conshytinued expansion of communism JiJi the various sectors of the a1obe

Christian lImperative

The cardinal warned While some satisfaction can be obtained jjn diminishing the degree of (Chill in the Cold War let no one be so mesmerizec as to think nIl is well and secure Let no one of us be duped into accepting war as peace

Cardinal Cushing said Chrisshytians have not always seen their Christian responsibility because of complacency or fear of inshyvolvement~ He added The Fathers of Vatican II have made it clear that for the Church and the Christian involvement is not only not to be feared-involveshyment is the Christian imperashytive

New Bedfords Hyacinth Circle lsabellas Mark Fifty Years of Community Service

By Patricia Francis Hyacinth Circle Daughters of Isabella of New Bedford marked its golden anniversary

Sunday morning at the 11 oclock Mass at Holy Name Church and a dinner that followed at the New Bedford Hotel Guests of honor were Mrs Anna C Walsh of Florisant Mo supreme regent members of the area clergy and charter members of the circle

Organized April 15 1917 at a meeting at Duff Han Hyacinth Circle began its half century of charitable work with a charter membership of 335 women Today it has a membership of approximately 500

In 1934 the drcle sponsored establishment of the first Junior C I N E 1 dmiddott

Irc e III ew ng an WI h acharter class of 125 young women from 10 to 20

Through the years members of the circle have participated in national and local charitable works including raising funds for he Queen Isabella FoundashytionFund of $100000 donated to te National Catholic School of Social Service affiliated with Catholic University in Washingshyton

Two area women were among those awarded fellowships to the school Mrs Mary Lou (Cleary) Nally formerly of New Bedford and now residing in Jeffersonshyville Pa and Mrs Jeanette (Mulvey) Mahoney of Arlington fOmel1y of Fairhaven Following erection of the Rose

Hawthorne Lathrop Home in Fall River for treatment of canshycer patients members of the circle adopted the work of proshyviding surgical dressings and other hosryital needs They also work closely with the Catholic Welfare Bureau One of the cirshycps pet projects was help for the White Sisters until they left New Bedford in 1965

First regent of Hyacinth Cirshycle was Mrs Helen E Lowney who contacted all charter memshybers before the anniversary celebration inducing many of those able to attend to join in the birthday party

Secoud regent was the late

Mrs Caroline ~ Manning of New Bedford who remained active in the DlUghters of Isashybella until her death She served as national regent

The late Rt Rev Henry J Noon of St James Church was the first of three chaplains who have provided spiritual direction for members of Hyacinth Circle Second chaplain was the Rt Rev Msgr Timothy B Sweeney of Holy Name Church and current chaplain is the Rt Revt Msgr John J Hayes also of Holy Name

ror many years Hyacinth Cirshycle held its meetings in the hall at the Knights of Columbus building at Pleasant and Camp bell Streets Then in the mid 1940s the Most Rev James E Cassidy gave the circle use of a house at 11 Robeson Street which ~eassince served as its headquarshy

Plans for the anniversary obshy

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servance were ~ade by a l~rge committee that included Miss Mary E Foley regent Mrs Anshytone Morris ticket chairman and Mrs Mary P Quinn a charshyter member

Miss Ellen Gaughan read a history of the circle which she had written an entertainment was provided by Nancy Howard Debruyn of Milton who offeredselections from Sound of Music

Hear Bishop NASHVILU (NC) - Bishop

Joseph A Durick is the first Catholic clergyman to address a state convention of the Episcopal Church Women of Tennessee

St Johns to Open New School in 68

JAMAICA (NC) - St Johns University here in New York state will establish ilschool of general studies in September1968

It will consist of three divishysions each with a separate facshyulty and assistant dean

The new school will offer It

part-time program leading to D

bachelors degree a two-year asshysociate degree program and am adult continuing education proshygram

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3 slices of Sunbeam Bread

6 THE ANCHOR-Di~c~se of Fail Riv~r-Thurs Ap~ 20 1961 - ~ 1middotmiddot 1 ~ --~ ~ bull bull - ~~

Reports Mean What There will undoubtedly be more than the usual furor over the release by the National Oatholi~ Reporter of a text of majority and minority reports submitted to PopeshyPaul on the matter of birth control It will be well to reshymember what these reports are and what they are supshyposed to do

Members of the Papal Commission on Birth Control were asked by the Pope to study the whole matter from every possible point of view and to submit their findings to him so that in the light of this work and in the light of the medical issues involved he might make moral judgeshyments and pronouncements on these matters The studies would then be expected to contain every possible aspect of the birth control problem with every kind of argument both for and against every type of method of birth cOntrol This is fundamental to any kind of reshysearch paper All sides of every aspect are discussed argushyments strong and weak are brought out to bolster each

aspect and then the whole is presented for thought and prayer and decision

This indeed is what the Papal Commission has done For a reader to take this or that argument and from

it to mak~ his own deductions is unwise and a misuse of what the Commission has done For a reader to take what the Reporter has printed and to assume that this is the whole story is to come to conclusions on partial evidence

The Reporters release of these texts will be seen by many as an act of freedom the willingness for all matters -to be discussed openly and before the entire world It is hoped that the Reporter has gone a step further even and has indicated to its readers what these texts really IPean how they are to be understood and the purpose of research papers of this type Most people are neither philosophers nor scientists nor theologians Philosophical concepts socioshylogical and scientific ideas theologizing about issues-all this cannot be simply thrown at people with the expec~tion that there will be no confusionTo think this way would pe naive

It is never enough simply to issue reports Two questions should always be asked in the wake of reports---are they accurate and what do they mean Or-to put it quite inelegailtly-Sez you and So What

Auschwitz Mem(jrial Attempts to slant or rewrite history should alw~ys be

met with vigorous and serious protest On Sunday a monshyument was dedicated in Poland to the memory of the four million persons who met death in the gas chambers of the infamous Auschwitz death camp This act of unspeakable barbarity should live forever in the memory of man

But the -dedication ceremony Sunday made scarce menshytion of the fact that the overwhelming preponderance of thos~ killed were put to death only and precisely because they were Jews The only reference to this martyrdom of the Jews was made in French by the president of the Intershy

nationa1 Auschwitz Committee and his remarks were not translated into Polish

The chief speaker Polands Premier gave greetings to the Jews who had come to pay tribute to their dead but glossed over the ordeal of the Jews which still hangs heavy On the consciences of those who call this a civilized world

It remained for individuals and groups after the formal eeremonies to offer prayers for the Jews who died because they were Jews and for no other reason

Men the world over should add their prayers for these ~agic victims and should pray too that time will not erase either the blrbarity of the deed or the reason-s for it

rhe ANCHOR OffiCIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAILL ~QVER

410 Highland Avenue

ublished weekly by The Catholi~ Press of the Diocese of Fall River Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER ~ost Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

~ ~

tbfs In the U So Universal eashyonical nonns will be given bv the Vatican and U S norms jr$ be established by the NCCD

It was suggested that trained CCD laymen be permitted to dIlt part-time ministry as a step tilshyward this establishment

Missions A comniission of seven bishopa

will guide coordinating effon among mission appeals for finalilot cial support and personnel

Religious Needs Regarding fund solicitations hi1

religious communities t)te bis~

ops felt the problem is very comshyplicated and voted an ad hOC joint committee be formed further study

Justice-Peace The bishops formed a natio~

counterpart of the Vatican COJDoo mission on World Justice-Peaee

It was described as a broad c0shyoperative program ofeducatiOlil designed to arouse collaboratioO with other religious groups in an

ecumenical kind of project to make this affluent nation of oUDI more aware of the tremend01lilll needs of developing nations

Vietnam The Justice-Peace Commissiou

vIas obviously interested JDj such topics as Vietnam and musti face them as moral dilemmas ~

[D) 0 rL 11 A IL J our time it was notedWD~lflJ~ tr[FtOl -~rn1 e(1~ A spokesman mentioned greali

Lr Continued from Page One

On mixed marriages the formof the promises as used in the Madison Diocese was recomshymended for general use throughshyout the U S It states We sol emnly promise that all children who may be born of our marshy

riage will be baptized in theCatholic Church and carefully~eared in the knowledge and practice of the Catholic religion We are both aware that our marshyriage contract will remain biJid

ing until death We promise not to hinder each other in the pracUce of religion

On previous censorship the bishops wish prior approval be required for the actual texts Of Sacred Scripture books of prayer or devotion liturgical or ceremorial books textbooks used in religious eliucation programs especially in the primary and secondary levels that prior apshyproval not-be required on books or articles dealing with Scripshy

ture theology canon law eccleshysiastical history and like subshy

jectsIf dangerous tea~hings are

found a warning in pastoral tone should be issued

Coordination A Cominittee onPalitoral Reshy

should correspond more closely have asked the VatIcan to rele shysearch and Practice was founded shy to what is usually found in the them from these provisionshwhic WIll coordinate the follow- American system of education COD

ing committees Liturgy Ecu- f f menism Canonical Affairs and ~ur years 0 high school four The CCD has been and wiD Doctrine 0 college four of theology that continue primarily as a religiouB

seminaries on the high school Liturgy and college levels take accredi- educational program on the

Four possible texts ofthe Eng- tation steps all seminariestake parochial level reported BishoP lish Canon of the Mass were Greco to the hierarchy He alsO given By a vote of C to 1 one cond~l~t self-study in the ligbt of announced that the complete text ~xt was given approval of genshyeral tenor A definite text is expected by June of this yjar

~etirement For bishops it wasmoved that

a retiring bishop be permitted to reside in his diocese that suit~ able sustenance be provided him (especially medical and hospital care) and that the N~B do so

if a particular diocese cannot that r permanent commLJion is needed to oyersee this that the pr~visions for retirement extend to all bishops-auxiliaries titushylar etC-and not only residential bishops

For prirsts that various beneshyfit plans be reviewed so as to ready a national plan of care and benefits for retired priests

Priests One of the first functions of

the Committee on Pastoral Reshysearch and Practices will be to study in depth the role amI life of the priest in American society It should consider priestly forshymatioD income distribution

i2J concern among the bishops abou~ seminary studies parish strue- Vietnam citing their statemellli ture celibacy the mission needs last November that no serioWl of Latin America and the thkd Christian can absolve himseril

world from being concerned with tb18 As fa- as celibacy is concerned question but added I sense

the NCCB unanimously rea1- great reluctance among the bis~ firmed clearly and strongly the ops to take a stand either crill shyexplicit teaching of the Vatican cizing or endorsing various as-Council on the current and ira- pects of the prosecution of the ditional observance of clerical war

celibacy Pastoral Councils To rumors that a Catholic The bishops are in search far

priest can leave the Chufth II sample constitutIon for pap marry and in a few years obtaID 10ral councils which will clead permission from Rome for lay distinguish it from the diocesaD Catholic standing a spokesman eonsultors and the priests seDshyfor the bishops answered ates

This is a policy the JJoJv Twenty-four topics were pre-Father controls Any priest who sented which might profitably be engages in this is engaging in ma~ers of study ranging frOlia spiritual Russian roulette Be adult education to vocations has no guarantee any dispensa- National Parishes tion will be given to him in tile It was shown that accordingfuture

A survey of the distribution Pope Pauls Ecclesiae Sanctae a and utilization of priests in the bishop has the rigllt to suppresS

national parishes-those estabshyU S is being prepared bythe lished for special ethnic groups Center for Applied Research in T R C h

the ~postolate (CARA) Nothing he oman urIa oweveJl definite could be presented since bid the bishops not use this rIght

because of concordats WIth go~only 63 per cent of the dioceses shyhave responded so far ernments or the physical or

moral rights of persons involved Priestly Formation without first referring to tho

Eight general recommenda- Holy See tions were made for all semina- Since these conditions do ~ ries the seminary structure apply t0 the U S the blsh shy~

c~nci Ibear documents that provJ- of the new edition of the CeD SIons made for a system of Bible will be published in earlYcommunication between the litoshydet body and the administrative 1968 mong the scholars preshyand teaChing faculties so that paring translations are five dieshystudents may present their views tingUishec Protestant memberS regarding the seminary program Newman for faculty consideration that It was recommended thai seminary advisory boards of priests in Newman work be enshyqualified members of clergy and couraged to secure advanced laity apart from seminary per- academic degrees especially m sonnel be encouraged that a theology that the high rate otl BA degree or its equivalent be turnover among Newman priests an entrance requirement for a be curtailed that part-time theoloID seminary that eccel- chaplains be made full time siastical studies begin with a where possible that more priests course so students lerceive the be assigned to the Newman meaning order and pastoral end Apostolate for the growing numshyof their studies ber of Catholics attending col-

The bishops also encouraged lege and university that the amalgamation where seminaries bishops re-emphasize the growshycannot maintain a suitable pro- ing importance of the Newmali gram due to size unsatisfactory Apostolate facilities inadequate faculty fi- New Dioceses nancing and similar programs The committee on presen~

Deacons names for new bishops will a- It was recognized that there deal regularly with the questi_

will be permanent order of of diocesan boundaries and tile deacons established and that the establishment of new dioceses

_NCCB will be empowered 10 do Turn to Pll4Ie SeVeD

7 Diocesan Sc~oots Students Reap Honors Aplenty as Senior Year Enters Into Final Phase

Honors aplenty are being garne~d by Diocesan students among them Andrea Trczinski a senior at Tauntons Bishop Cassidy High whos been selected as one of 15 New England students to participate in the 1967 Youth Science Congress jointly sponsored by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the National Science Teachers Association

In the course of the two and a half day congress now in progshyress at the NASA Electronics Research Center in Boston Anshydrea like the other participants will present a 15 minute oral

report of the project which gained her inclusion in the

event

Duck Fond The presentations say conshy

gress officials are not comPetishytive but will give listening scishyentists and teachers the opporshytunity to evalute them and offer guidance to the students

Andreas project is an arehaeshyological and geological investigashytion of an early American potshytery works The Duck Pond Site It has already won her many awards in state and reshygional science fairs

Students from Stang and from St Anthony and Holy Family high schools in New Bedford were participants in an essay eontest sponsored by the New Bedford Serra Club on The Role of the Priest and Nun in the Christian Community

First place winner was Cidhshyerine Giammalvo of Stang and cliiIdren at st Josephs Home to mnners-up were Mary Black a~ outing Sunda) while NBSers also of Stang and Michael at Mt St Marys have elected Tames of St Anthony Stang their officers for next year inshyalso won a plaque for baving the eluding Martha Nugent presi- most entrants in the contest dent Judith Doolan vice-presi-

At Stang theyre congratu- dent Susan Bernier s~cretary lating Cynthia Curry named to Diane Berger treasurer represent ber school on an area -Speed reading is the word at department stores teen fashion Sacred Hearts Fall River where board Mt St Mary Academys some 30 students are devoting representative to the same board th~ hours eery Saturday is Elaine Chaves The lucky gals mo~ing to a reading improve will receive modeling instruc- ment course Reading power tiona in connection withmiddot their ~ed and word study are em- appointments and will also be phasized in the 10 week course given the clothes they model which began April 1 Again at Stang word has Also at SHA varsity and jayshyreached the office that John vee teams in volleyball and basshyGolenski a 65 grad and now s ketball honored Mrs GeGrge Be sophomore has received a Snyder their coach at a surprise grant for Summer study in dinner Well they might since

EuroSePbe hi A ta Mrs Snyder has led them to olani PB coop nees Narry League championships in

Still very much in the newa ~t~ sports are notices of college scholar-middotmiddot Honoi lroviJiclai ships and acceptances At Doshyminican Academy Fall River Jesus-Mary students honored Elarne Fisette has been accepted the Mother Provincial of the lReshyat Southern Conn State College ligiousf Jes~s-Mary at ~ eer-middot powet supplied to them occupied Briana Doherty Linda Guill Diane Giasson at SMTI and Sue emony mcludmg ~e readmg of the bishops The NCCB will furshy mette and Mary Wynne Gagnon at Bryant while Jerome lIl~ ad~ress by PaulIne Dumas ther study the matter

Mancini has received a full tul- s~hool preSident the presenta- Oth b t h h th b h f f1 er su Jec s w IC e is shytion grant from St Annesmiddot~os- tion 0 owers anll gIfts and a ops treated were communica- pitaI School of Nursing ana a pe~orrnance by the g~et C~U tions between the bishops and

padial grant from the Utlion OccasIOn was the Provmcial smiddot tmiddott tmiddotmiddotmiddot f p hi 1 bullbull t t d Colle Ins 1 u IOns 0 Ig er earnshyosplmiddottal dItto annua VISit 0 heaca emy 1 middotmiddotmiddottmiddotiUmiddot S h n J bullbull Ilg In bullbulle c anges In pershy Receiving annual renewable ChristIan Youth Movement mission middotformiddot the alienation of

Scholarships at Jesus middotlVlary m~mbe~ of Prevost and JM~ churchproperty increased edushy J

Academy Fall River are Su- Wlll VISIt Nazareth Hall thiS cation onthe threats of abortionshyianne Lagarde awarded a $2300middotmiddot month and will also sJonsor a cooperation with the YMCA ami grant from Fordham University cake sale Sunday AprIl 30 A YWCA better coordination with and Yvonne L Berger recipient vigil service is set for Monday ihe usce celebration of the ()f three grants from Northeast- em University totaling $2180 Suzanne previously received a $2500 scholarship from Northshye~tern ~nd Yvonne is a semishyfinalist In the Rhode Island State Scholarship Program

Prevost reports that Gerry Ferris has been accepted at Bridgewater State College and Cassidy notes that Rita Donnelly has received a full scholarshiJ) fto Johnson and Wales Business School

Chess Tournamenamp Prevost students arent giving

their gray matter a rest this vacation week In progress is a schoolwide chess tou~ament

IIDd the winner will receive a tro~nv

On the agenda at Cassidy is a Junior College Day slated for Thursday April 27 a Couples Dance Saturday April 29 and a father-daughter night Wednesshyday May 3

lPRan lltetJreat

Mt St Mary students will helli a taUt by Rev Bernard Sullivan Friday April 28 in preparation for the retreat theyll be making the first three days ox May Also to speak at Mount on the same day is Mother Mary Martha Assistant General of the Sisters of St Joan of Arc whose topic will be vocations The Sisters of St Joan of Arc care for rectories bishops houses and seminaries

Still in the vocation line Sister Mary LaSalette of the Mount faculty will attend a meeting at Bristol Community College Wednesday April 26 Subject Vocations

Dominican Academy students will enjoy their senior prom Frishyday June 9 at the Hearthstone restaurant and congratulations are in order for DAs student council moderator Sister Mary Agnes who has been offered a

graduate assistantship at the University of Wisconsin Prevost members of the Nashy

tional Honor Society treated

April 24 and members will hold Year orFaith in connection with their year-end banquet Saturday the 1900th anniversary of the June 3 _ martyrdom of Ss Peter and Paul

Prevost debaters are preparing celebration of Communications for the JFK tournament to be Day May 7 held at Cassidy in May Thus far the Prevost team has chalked up an 8-5 record

(ASA BLANCA Just Across The

Coggeshall St Bridge Fairhaven Mass

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

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MOTHER PARKERS famous for OLD FASHIONED DOUGHNUTS

QUALITY and baked by your Sunbeam Baker SERVICE

CONTESTS WINNElRS Winners of New Bedford Serra Club essay contest on roles of priest nun in Christian community are from left runners-up Mary Black Stang High and Michael James St Anthony High and first prize winner Catherine Giammalvo Stang High Stang also won plaque for having most entrants in contest

Parent-Teacher Night is sched- duties for many of the Cassidy uled for Tuesday April 25 at students meanS more time to JMA and will feature as a profit byvarlous e~ucational opshyspeaker Dr Betty-Anne Metz of portunities At the Mass State

Bristol County Community Col- Science Fair Friday April 21 lege through Sunday April 23 Cheryl

And Prevost students are anti- McCaffrey top winner in the cipating a dance Friday April school SCience Fair and chosen 28 at St Annes Audit6rium The one of the 25 representatives Torquays will play from the Fall River Regional

This isNational Library Week will repr~sent Cassidy High toshyand mixt week is Secretaries gether WIth Pamela Candee Week so maybe everyone should The Massachusetts Youth Cit shyreld a book about secretaries izenship Conference at Bndg~shyAt any rjlte Cassidy Future Sec- water sc~eduled ~or tod~y ~Ill retaries of America will tour a attract the follOWIng 10 JUnIors North Dighton plant and visit chosen as representatives Donna Wheaton College Also pn their Cole M~y Fenton Kathl~en agenda isa reception on Sunday Hanna Eb~beth Laffan Paulme and aluncheon next Wednesday Lecuyer

Cassidy Go Despite Vaeatlon Also Carolyn McCaffrey Joshy anne Orchekowski Margarita

Free time from regular class Procopio Anne Marie Sullivan and Donna White The subject of this years Conference is ValuesU SmiddotmiddotBishopmiddots in a Changing World

Continued frQm Page Six At EmmailUel College Friday hiterdiocesan Offices April 21 three of Cassidys lanshy

An extended discussion on guage students will compete in sueD agencies might be best the annual French Contest for strUctured and adequate manshy High School Students They are

fHE ANCHORshylhun April 20 1967

Labor Statement Wins Approval

SAN ANTONIO (NC) Farm labor leaders hailed the Catholic bishops of Texas for issuing a statement supshyporting the right of farm workshyers to form unions and urging national legislation to protec~ this right

Spokesmen of farm associashytions responded that they do no~

oppose field workers joining unions but withheld comment pending a study of the bishops pronouncement

The bishops declared that among the basic rights of a human person is the right of freely founding associations or unions for working people and that all should have the right of freely taking part in the activities of these unions without risk of reprisal

The statement was issued at the conclusion of a two-day meeting of the board of directors of the Texas Catholic Confershyence It was approved by the bishops of the 10 Texas dioceses

Farm workers in the Rio Grande City area of south Texas have been on strike since last June and their efforts had been endorsed previously by Archshybisho Robert E Lucey of Sam Antonio and Bishop Humberto Medeiros of Brownsville

Leading the praise for the bishops was Cesar Chavez of Delano Calif national director ofthe United Farm Workers Organizing Committee whose Local No2 is striking in Rio Grande City

Chavez termed the statement very powerful and very charshyitable lle said he thinks the declaration is an answer to the prayers of thousands and thoushysands of farm workers in the Southwest asking that their Church and Church leaders stand with them in their struggle to ~ure social -justice as ennunshyciated toy the popes in the many encyclicals~

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8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 Medical Gr9uP Inducts Nun

Spring Cleaning Reveals WASHINGTON (NC) - The first nun was inducted as a fel shylow of the American College ClI Obsttricians and Gynecologists at its 15th annual clinical here

Hoards of Yardgoods lBy Mary Tinley Daly The honor went to SiBtel

Spring housecleaning is like a great white light revealshy Miriam Paul Klaus of the Me~

ing all Its not just dust in the bedsprings and radiators cal Mission Sisters who have headquarters in Philadelphi~the great unwashed slats of Venetian blinds gummy glasses dlJring the coJeges session~stashed away on an upper shelf finding of borrowed books Sister Miriam Paul was nlaquolI

too long unreturned These are what i call honest misshytakes chores you dont mind having household help help you with like doing floors walls windows rugs furniture

This is orthodox Spring cleaning such as every housewife can t a c k 1e have done with and point to with pride No the nuisances at least at our house are the secret sins jobs weve really anticipatshyed getting at one of these days but the llPecific day never seems to come And nobody but nobody can help in this department

Moms Hobby Shll)p For instance theres the used

furniture corner of the attic sOmetimes laughingly referredto as Moms Hobby Shop Theres the dresser bench Mom b going to cane when and if Mom learns how to cane an art supposed to be lotS of fun There ure two perlectly good boudoir chairs or iiI be perfectly good when theyre recovered And the little stand picked up at uuction waiting patiently to be antiqued when and if Mom learns how to antique another touted fun hobby bull

What the good-natured ribbers of Moms Hobby Shop dont know is that another secret cache of to-be-dones awaits in one corner of the basement the touch of a little hand pktures to be framed along with a framshying kit which any child can master another kit of clear plastic resin ideal for embedshyding coins flowers leaves rocks shells pictures novelties jewshyelry So far efforts have reshysulted in the embedding of one penny askew and far from ornashymental Theres also ever~thing

you need to wire a lamp everyshything but the skill that is

A strong-minded woman would become a Jill of all trades masshy1er skills necessary and do away with the jobs one at a time or else give away all t1e maIdngs ~~t then a str~))~gmil)d~ woman probably wouldnt have gotten

intothisfixin the first place With springcleani~goncoming

lik~ the inevitable tinie and taxes we decided to dean around the undones in attic and

basement facl up to legitimate eatchiills like the ~drponlClos~ etsbull

Dougherty High Band Wins Festival Honor

WASHINGTON (NC)-In this middot ease to the victors it was a mix- ture of cherry blpssoms and roses

The members of the Cardinal Dougherty High School Band of

Phiiadelphia marched ltYff with first place honors in the band

middot eompetitlon at the annual Cherry Blossom Festival _parade -an event which attracts tens of

middotthousands of visitors annually 10 the nations capital

The vIctory was nothing new to the bandsmen - and girls They won first prize two years ago and last March 17 won middotfirst prize in New Yorks St Patricks Day paralaquoe

present to receive the honor PelshyThere not in one not in two but in every closet we were sonally She is stationed at the

communitys Holy Family Heampfaced with the nemesis a box or pital in Dacca East Pakistan a bag or apile of yardgoods

The college accepts as fello~Forgotten IItems physicians who specialize in obshyThe sewing center has been stetrics and gynecology and aregoing pretty full tilt at our house judged competent and ethical byrecently what with a bedroom their colleagues Sister Miriamwhere we can set up the mashy Paul took the written examinashychine the ironing board sew tions for the American Boardseveral hours every day walk of Obstetrics and Gynecology iQout shut the door and come back Pakistan in 1965middot and the oralto undisturbed work the followshy examination in Chicago in Apriling day 1966

Matter of fact we thought She is a native of Viennasmugly we were getting all

Allstria a naturalized U S citi shysewed up tents and jumpers zen and a convert to the Cathoshyand miniskirts for the young

suits skirts hats for the more NO ATTLEBORO ART WINNERS Pauline Lemieux lic Faith from Judaism She joined the Medical Mission Sisshyconservative first grade William Midon eighth grade Cecile Parent ters in 1957 after completing herWe even felt no compunction sixth grade were the leading artists in the contest conshy medical education at the Univerin indulging a long-standing ducted in Sacred Heart School No Attleboro sity of Louisville Ky and herhabit of visiting a yardgoods residency at Barnes Generalcenter quite often picking up an Hospital in St Louis She haGirresistible bargain in cloth seshy

~spent six years at the sisteplecting a pattern and actually hoods hospitals in Pakistaneompleting garments

The sewing room Markie~ Sister Mary Luke Gray an- erstwhile bedroom was in reshy o~her Medical Mission physician markably good shape as a proshy has also passed _the AniericaD duction center and could eVeR IMAGE-MAKING Board of 0bstl~tricsand Gyne suffer the pangs of Spring houseshy

In this ever-changing worldcleaning with mere picking up of scraps setting 10 rights and a horough cleaning

But those unearthed forgotshyten treasures in the other closshyets Why there was enough mashyterial here to keep Us chained 10 that sewing machine as was Proshymetheus to his rock

Now what had we intended 10 do with that short length of pink flannel Oh yes wed picked it up for the proverbial song at a visit to a mill in South Caroshylina would have it until the folshylowing spring and make a coat for Mary Daly Brennan (Mary is now nine years old and this pink bit wouldnt even make a coat for her little sister) MUs~ lin broadcloth velvet tweedshyyou name it we have it -

Out into the clear with every item from every box bag and pile

Io more saving no more stashing away no more visits 10 remnant counters

The Head of the House paying one of his rare visits to our sew- ing center viewed the miniature mill-end display

By the way he asked hows about putting a new pocket in these trousers And sOme shirt buttons that have popped

OK First t~ings first

Baltirnor~ Nun to Head C()lIeg~ Advisory Unit

PITTSBURGH (NC) -Sister M Cleophas Costello of Balti shymore will serve as chairman of the newly formed Commission on Higher Education of the Fedshyeration of the Sisters of Mercy

The commission will serve in an advisory capacity in mat~ers concerning the 15 colleges opershyated by the order The federashytion numbers 15000 nUDll throughout the United states Canada and Lat~n America

New President LOS ANGELEE (NC)-5ister

Cecilia Louise Moore will beshycome president of Mount St Marys College here in Califorshynia ~)D Aug 15 next succeeding Sister Mary Rebecca who haS headed the womens liberal aris college since 1961

where what is in one moment is obsolete the next there is nothing more changeable than

the image of the ideal woman This image that stamps itself on the minds of millions causes fashion design- ers to change styles and forces females alI over the world to rush to the beauty facshytories to be turned out as its carbon copies is created in many ways Sometimes it starts with a particular model that hits the publics fancy or a cinema star that reaches her audience or even as in the case of Mrs Kennedy with the rise and public acclaim of a woman associated with politics

However whatever the reason or manner or time that creates an idol of this woman 8Jl idol she is at least until someone else more exciting comes along ~ cpallenge her place

This phenomenon of one womshyan or tyPe of woman leading alI others is nothing new Im sure there has been an ideal type of beauty since Neanderthal man dragged his mate by her long thick tresses into his cave (eer- tainly no short-haired eave girl wOuld have shone m prehistoric times)

Charles Dana Gibson pPOVided the image of the goddess of the

Protestants to Speck At Catholic Retreats

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - At least one Protestant minister Or layman ~ill appear as guest

speaker at retreats held in the San Antonio area during the coming year an archdiocesan committtee OIl lay ecumenism has decided

The ecUmenical aspects of the retreat program win carry over into a 1967 Ecumenical Diashylogue scheduled for June 29 UI July 1 at St J~ephs retreat bouse here Selected ministers

priest Sisters Brothers and laity will be speakers

cology examinations and win 1900s with heavenly sketches of return to Pakistan to continue a dark haired question mark her practice coiffured beauty with Ii lOng 11gt

graceful swanlike neck Immediateiy all fashion-con-

csious females of that day rushed out to the local emporiums to purchase henna rinses and rats (the hair peces of the 90s) to puff out their skimpy pompashydOlUS

The tWihkling 20s had no sooner been born than the It Girl Clara Bow caused the daughters of the aforementioned females to toss away their rats head for the nearest barber and expose their ears as well as their knees

Not a decade later these knees were encased in satin lounging pajamas and the ears hidden under the marcelled curls that Jean Harlow sported

And such has been the tide of fashion everchanging and generally influenced by circumshystances from the short skirts of the material-rationed war years through the New Look that welcomed the advent of peace

TOdays Qlieen

What of our present fashion Queen Who is the woman ofshythe 60s who isthe darii~goft~ fashion press and fashion de- signers oddly enough in this age of affluencemiddot it seems that the female wile outshines an others is ~ long-legged wideshyeyed British model who looks like an ad for Care packages and answers to the improbable name of Twiggy ~sley ~ornby (the name on

Twiggys birth certificate) is a 11 year old pathetically thin ex- schoolgirl who has been sky- rocketed to fame and fortune through the efforts of her Sven laquoali -her manager

Her waif-like face shining Jrom the cOvers of hundreds of magazines haS inspired young females everywhere ie nmtfgt their hairdress~rs ~ ) g~miR eut paint theirmiddot lower lashes_ like those of a kewpie don and push away t~at dessert pla1e Twiggy is apparently the JleW

idol of the fashion world - at l~ast until next season

9 Nows RightTime to Plant Peas for Early Enjoyment

By J~ aridlfan1ynRoderiek It is a eustom in New England to serve salmon and peas

00 the Fourth of July Years back this was the time when thresh salmon showed up Jin New England fish markets and Jllative peas could be found ~t the corner store Now we have frozen peas year round and amp Imon may be had throug~- ~t most of the year Thll3 lm-as taken the special delight (iJlJt of native foods but we can G1tfll appreciate fresh vegetabtea limd fish made much morepaia-~ oble by being put on a tablel 3

day or so after it is caught If you want fresh peas fortne

~ourth of July you can sow your creed about the third week of llIlay We prefer ours a little ear_I ~er and so we get the seeci ~lanted by the second or third week in April 00 that the planta will be well on their way before ~e cold weather is gone and (he warm weather arrives By QlllIll reckoning the peas we planted last week will be ready ~ the second week of June

Peas are simple to grow and Ililave nO special difficulties They Ilteed sun moisture and good s6il A row of peas may be planted fulna matter of 10 minutes ahd OOten forgotten until it ia tiine

Th k Si te h d th IIS wee s rae c ass act out the sacrainent to go along with their lesson in the religious Workbqok My daughter came homedelirious with joy because she was chosen to bring in the baby

We unearthed a doll that we ilelt was closest to newborn baby size and Grandma helped by finding the baptismal garments that were stored in her house and by dressing the fortunate stand-in while she explained to Meryl and Melissa that this was the same dress that they wore when they became members of the Church

In fact the children were awed as I further explained that actually four children had used these baptismal garments Meryl ~gan making plans immediateshyly Ann Marie is going to be the father (this in our all-girl ochool) Wendy is the godmother and Karen is going to be the ptiest because her new little

~r pickinlt b~othe was christened Sunday Jrirst tum the soil over to il a~d she knows jllst what to do

ilepth of about six inches or ~ Innoeent DIscussion and break up the clods Make ~ Even Melissa got into the act twrrow about an inch deep~~tl as she proceeded to spiel off m drop the peas into the furrow list of names that she thought iellst an inch and a half a~a~lt t~~ dfl~lshould be given Meryl eovel the furrow water ~~~ si~ e~pIiil1edto her that salt would ~ack a~d wait In 50 days or so dlependmg on the varIety of seed ~u ~se the peas wi1l be ready faj plckmg and ~atmg

Plant Anywhere )peas may be planted in rows

lMlt they may also be planted aishylllillost anywh~re they will get the IgtUUn I planted two little roWlJ ~tween some raspberry bushes raquolaquolother row in front of a flowe ~ where my wife will be able 00 get to them and still another JIlandful of seed in a foundation ~ianting in front of the house

This latter may seem to be goshyl1mg a little too far but by the ~me the annuals a~e in bloom le peas will have been con~

d oome the plants pulled up and DO one will be the wiser

The point is that one does not Thlave to make a big project out ~ growing a packet of seeds mnce half the pleasure is to be

flound in doing a minimum of work while reaping deliciolw nesults

In the Kitchen Most middot0f the books which conshy 1 thltOOJlI emse ves with heading

lIUr children in the right direc_ (tioqas living thinking Chrlsshyllians recommend that middotthebestW4yOOle Sacrament of Baptism is to Ilaye them attend an actual cer+ ~ony This is quite true as we

~rvotlCnced when Jason WM lgtavtized and Meryl and Melis Were allowed to attend

We were fortunate in that the l)lliest who performed the cereshyIlllOny was a personal friend who _plained clearly to the childreUll _actly wha~ he was doing rOIl liIUre this made a lasting impres-Ilion but I also feel that theii IlIIllnds were on the celebratiollll

be Pllt on the dolls tongue to preserve her from the sins of the Yorld and to give her III

atlste for wisdom It was delightful to hear them

discussing the sacrament in such inn~cent and childlike ways and yet witlt understanding that demonstrated wisdom far beyond their years The following incishyde~~ occurred at about the time this was happening and demon- strates the feeling of some chishydrep arid the naive wisdom they possess For two or three days last week Joe had seen a female rabbit in the yard and he had pointed it out to the children

th t itsayIng a appeared ready to have a litter Sure enough the rabbit did have a litter under the mulch around one of the rose bushes The children were thrilled but

f un ortunately a neighbors dog found the litter and killed the tiny newborn rabbits When

~~~~JIiCheese Gingerbread l3~ounee package ere a JllIl

cheese l cup molasses 2 eggs

1 cups sifted all-purpose ftOtllfi teaspoon baking soda

1 teaspoons baking powdeR 1 teaspoon cinnamon

OOnat was to take place at home 1 teaspoon ginger smd on all the people who were t~aspoon cloves ltllllming to help them celebrate 1-8 teasp~n salt

llhis in itself wasnt bad as it IIgt boiling water lB alsoimportant that they ~al- 1) Beat the cream cheese urim koo th~t a baptism is aiQytul Ce- ~BOft andfluftly then gradually llWliori which should be shared beatit the molasses Ytdh others butwith the confu- 2~ Beat- in the eggs one at Cl

CATHOLIC WOMEN HONOR BISHOP Welcoming Most Rev James L Connolly to the Annual Bishops Night Sponsored by the New BedfordCathoJic Womens Club are Mrs John W Glenn left president and Mrs Daniel F Dwyer first vice-president

Receiver Takes Over FHA Starts Foreclos~te lProcee~ings

Against Retirem~rjfttoriu~ MOUNT ANGEL (NC) - A

oourt-appointed receiver hall taken over operation of Mount Angel Towers a $34 million reshytirement home completed scarceshyy more than a year ago

The receiver-Portland attorshyney John R Fawt Jr - was named less than a month after the Federal Housing Administrashytion announced that it was start shying foreclosure proceedings against the home here in Oregon

Mount Angel Towers built on Beven acres of land donated to it

Sch001 Honors Chaplain

Killed in Vietnam PLEIKU (NC)-A new wing

has been added to St Pauls

School here in memory of Father (Maj) William J Barragy of the Dubuque archdiocese who was

killed in a helicopter crash inVietnam May 4 1966

A brass plaque on the office wall states Rev William J

Melissa appeared on -the scene Barragy (Major U S Army)boni October 13 1923ordained

she said realistically New life May 22 1948 dled In VIetnamI k p un and its all over Just May 4 1966 like Jesus born at Christmas

The new wing has five classshy dead at Easter rooms all on the ground floor

Last year when my oldest St Pauls is in the charge of the to teachyoungstersabout daitghier received the sacrament I Sisters ofSt Paul de Chartres

of tfie HolyEucharist for the first who alsohave anorphahge near tim~~ wil celebrated With a fam the iichoOtmiddot Thereare 1000 Viet ililgtru~ch Ali lt~~ everyon~ namese children receiving pri seeffied to enjoy was warm mar an -secondary educatmiddot10n i~

a bullbull ging~tbread the schOOL

by theilelghobririg Mount Angel Benedictine Abbey was billed on its completion in 1965 as the nations first Catholic retirement home

it was not the most prosperous however and by JIeb 7 when the mortgage-holder assigned the mortgage to FHA which had inshysured it the 207-unit six-story building had only 80 residents in 61 apartments

Appointment of a receiver was the first step in FHAs machinery toward eventual sale of the propshy~rty to another private operator

The home will be run as beshyfore according to the FHA Portshyland office until it can be sold to a suitable organization to maintain its operation as housing for senior citizens

FHAs office in Washington said Mount Angel Towers was one of about 20 such projectsshynot all Catholic - which had failed since 1960 when FHA mortgage insurance became available to them More than 200 have been built

llHE ANCHOR-Thurs April 20 1967

Sisters Assume Pasroral Duties

AKRON (NC)-Priests visit flBl administer the sacraments bu~

day by day the ordinary passhytoral duties are performed bsr nuns in Brazilian parishesmiddot il1l Natal and Salvador administered by the Daughters of Divine Charity

Their duties which includ~ the distribution of Holy Comshymunion were described here bV Mother M Fidelis Weninger who worked in Brazil for 21 years prior to her election in 1965 as mother general of th0 community

The Daughters of Divine Charity she said care for those parishes just as though they were priests Of course we cant administer the sacraments but we handle everything elseshysuch as pre-marriage instructionD and parish visitations

Permission for the nuns t distribute Communion was obshytained from Pope Paul vr through Bishop Eugenio de Araujo Sales apastolic adminisshytrator of Sao Salvador de Bahia she explained

Sister Mother Fidelis ordeli has been working in Brazil sincia 1919 and now has 460 nuns there aUexcept 18 of whom are Brashyzilians

The order has 1900 membero serVing in 10 countries throug~shyout the world with headquartern

in Vienna Mother Fidelis U1 completing a five-month visiia tion of the orders 37 convents in the United States

Greater Boston Sister Gets Fulbright Award

MEDFORD (NC) - SistCll Madeline Marie Nevins a gradushyate student at Tufts University has been awarded a Fulbright Fellowship to study medievaD French literature at the Univershysity of Paris France

The Mass Sister of St Josep~

will complete her doctoral wor at Tufts after her year abroad

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Schedules Convocation 1 bull

On Council Documents WILMINGTON (NC)- A dayshy

llong session of lectures and disshyICUssions on the Wilmington dioshyease and the post-council er81 will be conducted here

Some 600 clergy and laity are ~From anOlde English recipe - expected to attend the meeting

which is being sponsored by a Plumper rounderp bullarollp of ~concerned Catholics illl th~Wg~ing~on piocese fuller muffins~

batter is smooth 5) Gently stir in the boiling

Dn of the party it was difficul Um~~ water bull ascertain just how much the7 3) s~tt tltgether the flour bak- 6) Pourinto a greased 7 by ~ learned With this in mincll Ang ooda baking powdei ~ H pan Sunbeam English Muffins ~ were delighted when 1ft andspice~ f) Bake in a 350 oven 40 to lIound that Meryl was studying 41) Add the dry ingredients te 45 mlhutes] add about cup Olf Baked by your Sunbeam Baker _tism in 8daoo1 l1he cheese mixtu-l0 GUlring watilll Jl3iBins but this is optionaL

-

bullbull

HAPPINESS IS FAMILY REUNION A weekly radio reunion is Sula Spanish Honduras L~ft Barton Albert ham radio operator middot)liIl

enjoyed by Mr and Mrs Bernard Sullivan Holy Name parish Fall River Swansea connects the Sullivans with their daughter Right InSart Pedro

with their daughter Sister Anne Marie RSM missioned to San Pedro Sula Jack Gaffney performs the same service for Sister Anne Marie

Monastery VisitsSt~esses Serio~smiddot Ham Oplr~t~rs Arrangemiddot We~k~yRadiQ C1tat~ ChmiddoturchSituatilon CRAWFORDSVILLE (NC)C bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbull bull bull bullbull bull

bull bull 0In East -Germany BERLINmiddot (NC)-Christiari

ehurches in communist-ruled lEast Germa~y are suff(~ring from government harrassshymentand restrictions a Luthershy1m bishop told the eastern sec-

For Fa11 RiverParents Missionary Sistet Dr Eric Dean chairman of the religion and philosophy departshy

ments at Wabash College here Thursdays the most important day in the week to Mr and Mrs Bernard Sullivan in middotIndiana plans extended visits

of Holy NameparishFall River Its the day they talk to their daughter Sister Anne to severalmiddot Benedictine monas- shyMarie RSM assigned since last August to missi)n work middotin San Pedro Sula Spanish teries this year The visits Wt)ll

H h kl

onduras T emiddot wee y db

conversatIon is arrange y two h d

am ra W)

operators Jack Gaffshy be financed by a Carnegie gran~

receivedmiddot through the GreatLak~ ney in San Pedro Sula and Colleges Association Harton Albert of Swansea was on retreat However arshy with Sister from their livjng

tion oflt the synod of Germanys It came about tl)rough 3 rangements were made on the middotroommiddot ~eceptiori is excep~nt Protestant Church Council sPot for the first of the weekly noted Mrs Sullivan fully 88 middot~iiJbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbulliIbullbullbull_

The clergyman Bishop Fried- series of coincidences that conv~sations good as a local telephoriecallmiddot bull III rich Wilhem krummachet of Mrs SuliivaIi ascribesld the The luck extended to a fellow Another beneficiary ofthmiddot 11I11I J B ~ East Geimany said that SChool iuck6f the Irish and had its religious of Sister Anne Marie weekly radio reunion is REvmiddot bull ii ~~ld~~a~I~~V~~ti~~~~bel~~~~~~ ~t~~A~~~n~a~~nC~~i~~~~~~~ ~~~~~i~o~Sre~~~~r~~~~~~i~~~d~~~~~=~tOfS~tat~~~ ILUMBER CO beliefs 1 - $140 teleph~rie bill talkinllto ly appointment ~nd asked Mrs Mariesbrother bull bull

Lut~eranBish~~ ~~t Fr~liz th~~o~~~~g~~~riotin~~ri li~~tmiddote~r$Ullivan t if hSheWtohUld ~ewla~t a FOImiddotwonderlnmiddotg friends of the 11I 5middot0middot Dortmoutmiddothmiddot ~harf of Berlin chairman of th~ ~~SSl1g~ 0 er JTIQ er ar a Fall River Sister be it notedltGe~man Protestant C h u r c hmiddot rlidlO o~erator middotwho darra~ge a mmu~e slud MrAI~~rt r0rt~7 that she has middotexercisedmiddotthe name- and yan~ismiddot Council made similar charges at connectlOnmiddot for you said a WIth he got the PrOVIdence ~e western section of the synod frleId and someone else sug- Jlother on the phone and gave

I rgested Mr Albert middotwhom the h th of b IfoBejause the Eastmiddotmiddot lterman ~ r bull er e surpnsl e~ Ie as t t t t t b Sullivans- had )mown _for

some bull

she heard her daughter s vOICeIrovernmen res riC s col ac s e- t b th d th ht f ~ E t G -P t t ts Ime u a neVlr Qug omiddot J I don t even have to go tomiddotbullween as elman ro es in _ bl If and those in the West middotthe Protmiddot =~ a ~OsSI e channe omiddot cmmu ~wansea to talk said Mrs SII~ - t t d h ld t mcatlOnwIttISpamshHO1QQras livan Mr Albert can oConnec~

flS an syno was e middotmmiddot wo llec- S l middotmiddotmiddott d M tons one in west Berliri and the T~e ul Iv~ns VISI e r~ AI~ th E tB j berts t)oIle to talk over th~ e er ~ear as er m possibility of contacting-Sister

Catholics face similar pr()b- Anne Marie~ While they were raquoems because of a divi~~d G~r- th~re he demonsthitelt hi~ equip- ~an~ The East Gelman govern- ment fishing bull around the- airshyinen~ ~has prevented thej)ishops wavesmiddot and picking up an ama-middot ~here ~ om attending meetings o~ teur in -rexas

~he G~rman Bishops Conference To his feliow ham he menshyheld iiJ the West tioned that he was looking for

Join in Praytr an operator in Spanish HOlldurasmiddot BiShop Krummacher said at

the synod that iii the preslmtmiddot criss the Protestant churches must use evelY opportunity to join with Catholics in prayer Catholics and Pwtestants he llaid are bound together b~ the word of the Lord and a common Ilesponsibility

The bisho~ said Protestants in East Germany have made every effort to obtain relief fwm antishyJeligious discrimination but govshyernment authorities have reshyjacted all appeals for action

He said such refusals of the East Gelman regime to end the assaults on religion is partmiddot of communist strategy and planshy

ming To further their objectives he said the comTIunists will pelshymstip indoctrinating children in 1lheir ideology while interfering with the consciences and rights _ tJ children and their parenti

And the next voice wemiddot heard recounted Mrs Sullivan still sounding amazed was a man saying This is Sal Pedro Sula Spanish Honduras

Not only was Jack Gaffney th r operator from Honduras in te same city as Sister Anne Marie but it developed that he lived across the street from her

convent a~d had me~ her o~ sevshyeral occaSlOns- He ImmedIately offered to r~n across ~he s~reet and prmg Sister to hiS mlcro-middot phone lgtut it turned out that sie

Wins Festival Piize NEW YOEK (NC) - The

Search produced by Father Peytons Family Theater has received an award at Monte Carlo in the annual television

competition sponsored by the International Catholic Radio and TV Association

hiS radiO eq~llPrne~t to the tel~ phone and the Sulhvans can chat

Permit Experiment In bullShared Time P9RTLAND (NC)The Port-middot ~~nd school board has approvedai shared time experiment iii -Which children from a parochial ~chool in North Portland will attend classes part time in a nearby public school -

The experi~ent will inv~lve at first only physical education classes and will extend for only two middotyears

Children fro m Immaculate Heart parish elementary schoolwill be allowed to attend gym classes in Eliot school in the Qregon corrlmunity

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Bishop Medeiros Urges Justice ~ For Workers

BROWNSVILLE (NO) ~ Bishop Humbertltgt S Medeishyros of B~wn8ville whose diocese has been the scene of lPl 10-month strike by migrant farm laborers has told farm owners to meet their demands for highe) pay and bettei living eonditions

In a pastoral letter to all Cathshyolics in the diocese-most of the population - released today the bishop said

The present plight of the mishygrant farm workers of America is a constant reproach to our way of life

lFor 1lJse of Ail

They do not ask for charity They demand what is theirs by natural right When the affluent farmers pay a just wage to the migrant workers when they make it possible for him to supshyport himself and his family in frugal comfort and to provide education for the whole family they are not making a gift of their possessions to the farm worker they are simply handilg over to him what is his for they had arrogated to themselves what had becn given in common for Ute use of all

Migrant workers in the Rio Grande vaIiey surrounding Brownsville have been strikihg the larger farms for nearly a year in an attempt to get higher wages and better living condi- tions Their action supported by thc United Farm WorkersOr- ganizing Committee followed the limited success encountered by UFWOC laborers in Califomias lrape vineyards

Precarious Existence

But the Rio Grande workers have encountcred little successshyIllthough a recently organized boycott of produce has received growing support among the states food chains

Bishop Medeilos quoted libshyerally from both Pope John XXIII and Pope Paul VIs recent encyClical On the Development of Peoples in establishing the right of farm workers to adecent Jiving

But be also took note of the plight of Amcricas farmers themselvell who live out a preshylaquoarious existence unless they constitute large enterprises sllch as corporations 01 cooperashyiives

He urged both farmers and workers to organize in their own interest

Natural Ri~ht

Given the natiol~lr and even

aioll of Agricultule ald of fa~m workClS and of manyfarm own- ers in purticular it is urgent that they be aware of thei~ right

~~~o~~o~~~~C~~~i~II~~~~h I~~~~~ of development Which in the words of Pope Priul VI signifies ]lgte~cc

We know that every man hAS a basic natural right to form and join wOIkers unions which conshytribute to economic progress by dcfending his ights he said But thc circumstances of the times the world over indicate that for the common good it is also thc duty for both migrant farm workers and for farmers to form associations

The United States he said has bull duty to its miglant laborers llnd farmers which it must fulfill by passing apPlopliate legislashytion and using other suitable and dcmocratic means of assistance so that not only our tables but thc tables of the world may be blessed with the abundance of the fruits of the earth

lLO~AIJ INTEREST NIl IUSlHIOPS MEETING Disshy W Va Bishop Connolly Bishop Humberto IS Medeiros

cussing topics between sessions are Lawrence Cardinal Brownsville Tex and Bishop Joseph Brunini NatchezshySh~han Baltimore Bishop Joseph H Hodges Whe~]jng Jackson Miss

Churches Shore Latin America Failures

LutheranSees Stumbling Blocks Ahead SPJlINGFIELD (NC) -- The

Roman Catholic and Protestant churches have both failed in the past in Latin America and both face severe stumbli6g blocks in the future a Lutheran layman from Argentina said here

Dr Leopolydo Juan Niilus of Buenos Aires director of the Argentine Department of the River Plate Centre of Christian Studies discussed the Church in Latin America at a meeting of the Lutheran World Federations

Commission on Stewardship and Evangelism

He warned the group that in

too mlIlyquarters the Roman Cath~Ii~ Church has been the main whipping boy for the Latin AmeJican backwaldness~ and there hllS been too much selfshy

Some of the things atheist marxists are doingin our conti shynent should by heritage be added have bee) done by Christians

Looking toward the future Dr Niilus said there are very seshy

were stumbling blocks ahead for our Roman Catholic brethren also

Inseparable Unity They are he said being

hysterically requested by the supporters of the status quo tobecome their defenders once

again The Roman Church failed whenLatin America waS strug- glingJor its independence n may-all of us mayfail now

wheniHs struggling for its eco- lIlomic Independence Dr Niilus said that all

complacency and self-righteous- qhurdiesin Latin America roust ness about the positive role

quickly recognize that study and commitment as an insepshyarable unity is their most urshygent task if they are to play an effective role in the future of Latin America

They must study be said ~both political and economic isshysuell amplnd their theological imshy

Cancer Study lLOST UIS (NC)-The insti shy

lute Ior J)lolecular virology at St LOUiS University here in Misshy

bull souri has b~en awarded a $265shy

101 gJant from the National Canshyeer Instilute of the U S Departshyment of Health Jducation and Welf~re whic~ will enable reshysearchers to look for viral speshyeitic genetic material in himiavl elmcer

plicAtions and must be comshymitted to providing adequate pastoral CAre to those involvel in political and economic action

Pho~ClJI Archbishop Wons Sourin Medal

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Arc~

bishop John J Krol of Philadelshyphia bas received the annual Sourin Award of thc ] 17-yearshyold Catholic Philopatrian LiteJ1shyary Institute

The presentation marked the first time the award has beelll made to a member of the hieJ1shyarchy ]t is ordinarily given w a distinguished Catholic layman The Archbishop was cited 100 confident and courageous leadshyers~jP

played by the Protegttants in Latiq American social andeco N~w Music nomiltdeve~opment 1 PURCHAS~ (NC)-The Pius

Protestants be said have a X School of Litlllgical Music of share and~ responsibility in the Manhattanville College of the WHITE SPA creation of seriougt structural Sacred Heal1 here received maladjustments - both economic $20000 in grants from Charl~ and moral~ in Latin America ~nd Arthur Morgan Of New

York and John Morgan oi Most of the things our pro-Rockville Centre N Y to stimushy

gressive Roman Catholic bret~shy iae new music for the new BANQUETS bull WEDIl)~NG5imiddot P~RTIESilltc~national deprc~sed middotcondi-middot ie are doing today i~Latin m~rgy

America shouldbyheritage he -COMMUNION BREAKfASTSai~ have beel~~~nepygtrotes tants [ 11M3 PLEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

JEFFREY E SULLIVAN 993-778GFer~ Dome

MEMPHIS (NC)~Bi~tiopJoshySishopo~~~ed

550 Locust Street seph A Durick apostolic admin lFall River Mass istrator of the Nashville diocese received the first annual Human 672-2391 Relations Award from the Memshy Iltose E Sullivan CONVENIENT BANKINGphis Catholic Human Relations

Jeglrey E SullivallCouncil He was cited for his WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMSstands on human dignity and

at theequal job opportunities He reshycently instituted Project Equalshyity in Tennessee SlADES FERRY TRUST COMPANY

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-11lun Apr 20 1961 12 - )

Irish Emigronts Concern B~hops inmiddot Pgstoral

DUBLIN (NC)-Thespiritual and social needs of Irish 0trtifirants and the importance of preparing them for their new life in other countries were major concerns of the

Irish hierarchy at its meeti~g here in- Maynooth In a pas~ toFal on emigration it wasmiddotmiddot pointed out that while de- parture of Irish people foigt residence in other cuiitries is on the decline those who do leave ~can be an enormous force formiddotgoodmiddotin the lands they go to if they have the right ideals and motLves and abilities properly developed

Without these the pastoral adds the alien enironment in which they find themselves may presen~ serious dangers to the spiritual and moral wenfare ~

the weaker ones Education and religious formashy

tion of young people by the bullbull schools and by the clergy coopshy

erating with teachers were cited as most effective contriilgtutiona

to the formation of those likely to emigrate

Among recommendations made in the pastoral for properly pi-eshyparing potential emigrants for livingin other lands were

Young people should be enshycouraied to remain in schooias long as they can benefit from H

Emphasis on the virtue of tem perance

The utilization of youth club activities (discussion clubs and

guiles) to help young members to acquire healthy and natural

sOcial graces and habits The aid of priests in helping

the young people to grow up to

confident maturity Counse by priests on expected

problems of housing suitable

I

REV ALBERT F SHOVELTON

Priest to Spe(l]llc At Seminar

Rev Albert E fShovelton dishy

rector of Sl Mary Home New Bedford will speak as a represhy

sentative of the Diocesan Comshy employment dangersmiddot to health Unity atNClline Committe~ longhours of work in other the75th anniversary celebration

countries advanced atrange- at Holy Trinity LutheranTo SurveyCU mentS with Catholic welfaeChurchNorth Easton Thursday agencies in countries 9f their April 27

CHIltAGO (NC) - The board choice and the provision of in Father Shoveltons talk ~iU of trusteesof the Catholic Uni-formlltion concerning facilities be part of aseroinar middotHe wili be versity of America Washing- abroad for emigrantS preceded by Rev Dr Nils Ehtenshyton D9middot his est~blished it ne~ ~he h6ldin~ Of Irisit~nhlli~middot 8~rom Boston University School survey and ogtlectlODs ~()mmlttee lft llt1rge centers lt ~ Theology whose subject will headed br ~ St ~OU~1l1(ly~a~ Aparishnewsletter s~nt be Ecun1eni~m in Protestant to study ~he funct~op and plaOl th I fmiddot h middotmiddotf g Perspective Today f th Cmiddotth li U -Of Of Dl0n y rom omemiddot 10 Or1ll1O ~ a 0 r ~vterslY~ lt the emigrants bfuricti6ns inFathel ShovElltons suoject will m~nqa ~r~o ern a hoh~ - the local parishes at Chri~tmaiJbe ~EcumeJ1ismin Roman Cllthshy

laCatton on middota national scale d thO t f th h oljc PerspectiveToday A dis-Th middottt an 0 er lmes 0 e yearw en JJ

e cozpml ee~~made up U4 they mightmiddot possibly be home~uss)n period will follow SIX laymen and four archbIshops ) The audience will be comshyall of whom ar~ pr~sent trustees _ prised of the Lutheran parisa o~ the u~lverslty Formatu~n at Southern PrOVince cmgregation the townspeople ~he conrrutteewasannounce by ~ _ the towns clergy and the stll~ FrancII Cardinal Spellman of Favors DIGcoraate ~ dents at Holy Cross Fathenl New york ch~rman of the MIAMI CNC)Bishops of the Seminary Catholic Urnverslty board province of Atlanta have giyen Pastor of Holy Trjnity is Rev

The appointment of the com- p~sts in the six-ctiocese area Kenneth E Bjorklund

nlission for Christian

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mittee came against a backshyground of reports that the U S bishops might transfer its Ionshytrol of CatJlolic University to 11 group of laymen The univershysitys rector Bishop William J McDonald has denied the middotreshyports but the chairman of the

new commi~ee Dr Ca~roU Hochwalt SaId the commIttee has been given the widest posshysible mandate from which nothshying will be excluded Our assignment Dr Hochshy

walt saidis the most farshyreaching one possible We are to take a reaiistic look at every aspec~ of the university all it has developed under its original directive since 1889 and at its potential for the forseeable

gt futule It is obviously the trusshyteef desire to leave no qtiestfon unanswered which may aftect the unfyersityas anational-hlsti tution 1its ~aculty students ~d

permission to hear confessions in the entire province and they have also asked the National Brothers VOuDlltee~ Conference of Catholic BishoPs As firefilllhters

to consider restoring the perma- nent diaconate in dioceses that want it

The two decisions were ~~_ nounced after the Bishops held their annual meeting in Miami

Archbls~OP P~ul J Hallman of A~lanta SaId l~ IS cus~omary ~or prtests t~ receIve theIr faculties from theIr own dl~cese and they h~ve been restncted o use wlthn that diocese EffectlVelmshy

II NORTHBROOK (NC) - Four

of the 34 men in the Northbrook volunteer fire department here are religious Brothers They are assigned to the national headshyquarters of the Society ofmiddot the Divine Word at nearby Techny Ill

The Brothrs are on call any time the Northbrook first stashytion standby has two or less men on duty for all general

the Cliurcli and the nation ift ~ J llmohgihemthejt haVe fouglU serves~ ( I i) middotClosingmiddotMeasure middotisome 50fires lti

j middot5T PAUL (NC)4AbilLban

Dedicate Monment ~ing ~l)e sale pf spe~iti~mtr 0ROURKtr chandise on Sundays has heen ~

To adFe Serra middot houses bullbull FunealHomepassed b)-both of the j

medl~telY all pne~ts In good alaons and for any fire or emershystandmg may nw he~r the con- gency when additional personnel fesslOns of Iemtents 10 the A- are needed Their volunteering la~ta archdIOcese ~nd th~ 41- was approved by the superiors oces~ of Sva~nah Charleston andmiddot the seminary bought them II ~alelgh MIami and St Augus- veh~C1e to expedite transportmshy

tine tion when they answer a fire ~ ca~I

Solons pass Sun JI n y The Brothers estaimat~ that

S_CRAMENTO (NC) dDme MinrElsota legislatureGov~aJ monument of Padre runipero old LeVander of Minnesota was Serra OFMwassolemnly ded- exPected to sign it into law icated on the grounds of tille The legislation forbids the sale State Capitol here Saturday OIl Sundays and six holidays

The formal ceremonies were (New Years Day Memorial Day qonducted by officials of the Independence Day Labor Day state alld by officers of the Nll- Thapksgiving and Christmas) of tive Sf ns and Daughters of the cameras musical instruments Golden West The project haa phonographs and tape recorders been sponsored by the California radios and television sets jewel-State Legislature and the fra- ry clocks and watches furs terrial ~ orders who provided furni~ure and other home furshymatching funds to finance its nishings including appliances executi~n middotmiddotmiddotAlso wearing apparel ()all

S7J ~c~nd St~~ef

Fall River MOIss_ 679-6072

MICHAEL J McMAHON Licensed Funeral Director Regisfered Embalmer

D D II- bull _ 5u Ivan amp Sons

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Father Noel F Moholy OFMkinds including footwear lug- 469 LOCUST STREIE1T vice postulator for the canorlizashy gage lawnmowers and 9ther tion of Ithe Franciscan friar who outdvor machinery and equipshy FAU RIVER MASS bas been hailed as Californias ment hardware and tools paints 672-3381 First Citizen and Greatest Pio-Illeer W3 the principal speakeII at the ded~cation

varnishes wallpaper and re-middot lated tools lumber and other buildine materials and supplies

Wilfred e~

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Suburban Parishes Should H~lp Save City Parishes

WASHINGTON (NC)-Archbishop Patrick A YBoy1e of Washington appealed here to ~ubJrbanCatholic parisbes to come to the aid of poverty-stricken parishes in the inner city At least 10 Catholic parishes in the inner city need financial help to continue to ismiddotmiddoth d d - ize t II h told C Has ave ecrease s exlS e a ommumon though the schools have contimshy

breakfast of the St Vincent ued to operate at fun capacity de Paul Society and the Whll~ parish income has faUellil only way we can give it iI off school costs have risen ~ through our suburban parishes cause of increased salaries em-

Suburban parishes are hard ployment of lay teachers and pressed themselves he said with higher maintenance costs for most of them deepiy in debt 00- older buildings cause of new constru~tion and expansion Nevertheless they must inaiJpirit of true charity share their resources with our poor parishes

The archbishop said that one of the reasons flr the poor fi shynancial condition of the inner city parishes was the cost of operating their schools but said emphatically that none of these schools would be given up

If we didnt have to support our schools Archbishop OBoyle said nearly all Of our parishes couldmiddot take care of their basic needs But we are not going to giv~ up any of our schools as long as we can get Ii dime to support them

Not mentioning which parish was concerned he stated thatmiddot one middotitmner city parish received $54000 from archdiocesan funds las~ year

Msgr Thomas W Lyons Arch diocesanmiddot Director of Educatiot1 said th~t before the whije middotmigramiddot tionmiddot to the suburbs CathoUa constituted about 22 per cent 01 the Washington Population The Negr~ who replaced the whitea are only about JO per cent Cathshyolic The result is that the par

Parochial school tuiti6n which averages about $4 a month haa not kept pace with costs Msgr Lyons explained

The St Vincent de Paul Soclshyety-here recently announced a twinning program in whicb sOlue of the more affluent parshyishes adopt inner city parisheo and provide for their needs

Offers Folk Mass For Vocations

HOUSTON (NC)-Bishop John L Morkowsky of Galveston- Houston offered a special foUt MaSs for youth on World Day oL Pr~yer for Vocations at Sacred Heart co-cathedral here

Father William Steele diocshyesan vocation director said the folk Mass is being offered to atshytract the young people middotThemiddot homily duringmiddot the Mass dealt with vocations

Contemporarymiddot folk musiC composed by Ray Repp nation ally known folk song writer was played during the Mass Guitar aceompaniment was proshyvided by seminarians from St MaryoS Seminary here

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Cardinal Cushing Sees Decrease In Seminaries

BOSTON (NC)-The numshyber of Catholic seminaries in the United States will deshycrease because of the diffi shyculty of obtaining top-flight scholars to staH them Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston preshydicted here

Addressing the New England Conference of the Catholic Hosshypital Association the cardinal told some 680 nuns priests and

laymen that schools of theology both Catholic and Protestant will become more closely identi shyfied with the great colleges and universities of this country a system not unlike that of Oxford in England

Sharing the platform with Archbishop Cushing was Bishop Fulton J Sheen of Rochester N Y who urged Catholic hosshypitals to go outside their own walls to bring social and medical help to the poor

Go out into the slums he said Give two or three hours a day visiting poor families for healing and counseling

He also suggested that Cathoshylic hospitals in this country adopt hospitals in poor counshytries

In A Rut We can certainly afford to

have someone put up a hut in the poor world We have the spirit but we have gotten into a rut the bishop said

Bishop Sheen told the confershyence the hallmark of a Catholic hospital is that we serve each patient as we would serve Christ

Cardinal Cushing also preshydicted that rising costs of care of the sick will induce the fedshyeral government to become more closely identified in hosshypital administration

I was told he added that in some hospitals the cost of a bed per day is almost $100 There must be a ceiling somewhere

Salons to Study Divorce Laws

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey State Assembly has unanimously approved a resolushytion to establish a commission to study the states divorce laws The measure already passed by the Senate is expected to be signed quickly by Gov Richard J Hughes

Thp commission described by Governor Hughes as an effort to strengthen marriage has al shyready encountered the opposishytion of -the Monitor the Trenton laquoiocesan newspaper But the bIShOps of the states three other Oatholic dioceses have reserved comment -

Boih Governor Hughes and the commissions sponsor Sen Jereshymiah F OConnor are Catholics And while Senator OConnor would like to see the commission recommend liberalization of the states di~orce law - desertion adultery and extreme cruelty are the only grounds at present-he would also like other changes made

Among them are a- family eourt which would serve as

counseling agency as well as divorce court lengthening of the present three-day waiting period as a1 obstacle to quick marriages and anr a warning to young PershySODS of the seriousness of marshyriqe

Senate Election PROVIDENCE (NC)-Sixteen

members of the 26-member senshyate of priests for the Providence dJocese have been elected in the first part of the senates twoshyatage elections

REV PATRICK 3 ONEILL

NCIEA Appoints Fr ONeiU

Rev Patrick J ONeill Supershyintendent of Schools in the Dioshycese of Fall River has been apshypointed by the Superintendents Department of the National Catholic Educational Association to serve as a member of the nashytional committee concerning tbe shygrowth and development of diocshyesan and parish school boards

This committee under the chairman Rt Rev Msgr ONeill DAmour will serv() as an adshyvisory unit It will gather and distribute information concernshying the development growth and function of school boards

Father ONeill made an extenshysive study of functioning school boards throughout the country His work in organizing our Diocshyesan Board of Education and working with it during the past year has been commended

Newman Chaplains School at IHCJJlvOlId

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Newman Chaplains Asshysociation has added a second training school for priests and Sisters entering Newman work It will be conducted at Harvard University

As in past years a school will be held at the University of Colshyorado in Boulder Dates for both schools are June 113 to July 2

The Newman Chaplains School prepares priests and nuns asshysigned to the secular campus The faculty has been chosen on the basis of experience in the Newman apostolate and speciali shyzation in theology -philosophy script~reand counseliJ)g _

Wlhere A GOODNAME

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 13

Family Care Program forO Children The Paul A Dever State by the psychologists and pre-placement visits with the

School Taunton under the sponsorship of the Departshyment of Mental Health has recently begun a Family Care Program in an attempt tomiddot proshyvide some of its children with the experience of family life

screened by the social workers have all been approved by the schools physicians for the proshygram

These children are ready and able to enter into the commushynity said Dr John L Smalldon superintendent of the Dever

child to the prospective foster parents to determine the comshypatibility of the youngster with the family Once settled within the family the child will also be periodically visited by a schooi social worker to assist in the adjustment The youngsters

The program is initially seekshying to place approximately 20 selected youngsters in homes in

school Provides Funds

This program with its emphashy

would attend special educatiOD classes in public schoolll throughout the South Shore

the South Shore area These chidren have been selected for their advanced capacities for edshyucation and training and their abilities to adjust to a home enshyvironment

These children reconmmended

sis on the advantages of the proper fa mil y environment seeks through a gradual process to assimilate the child within the community

The Social Service Department at the Dever School will conduct

The Department of Mental Health which sponsorsmiddot similar Family Care Programs in sevshyeral other schools in the state is providing funds for the supshyport of the children

What do you do when you live on a Take a good look at your everyday very small island with over three and a - surroundings You are apart of the 20 half million people-say Hong Kong of theworlds populati~nthat has access Move to the suburbs But what if the to 80 of the worlds food That means suburb is Red China The only answer that the other 80 of the world must be is this-and rbe hundreds of thousands content with the remaining ~O Of who crowd these house- boats are lucky course you can read this and say So Ovlaquo half die people of the world ani But You cannot say to someone who taorneless-and most live in Asia is hungry come tomorrow We must

When we hear that three-fourths ol act today because tomorrow may be too cbe human race lives inpoverty or below late (pope Paul VI) Feed the man the subsist~ level these are the peo- dying of hunger if you have not fed pie we are talking about Do we know him you have killed h1m (Vatican II) what it feels like to subsist to know no Dear Monsignor OMeara 1 am attachshyother feeling but that of hunger It is ing my gilt 0 $__ to help right the impossible or we could never spend over imbalance in our world Please use it so 100 billion dollars annually on arma- that a missionary can feed the starving ments while 10000 die each day from name---------- shyyenJldernouri8bment address _~____

THE HOLYFATHER~S

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THE ANCHOR~Diocese ofFa River-Thursbull Apr 20 19M

middotSocial Revolutmiddotion Is Needed In latin America Lands

From Social Revohitiiolll iin the New Latin America Edited by John 3 Considine MM

The possibility of orientating regional planning toward an overall solution of the pressing problems that concern more than one Latin nation could well engage Christian initiative writes Rene Atero The most typical example of this kind he sa)s concerns Social Revolution in Latin-~ershythe region of the Andean ica Most Rev Mark GMcshyMountains where peasants Grath CSC says Barbara numbering more than five Ward widely read Catholic

million live in thee different economist begins her book enshyltcountries possessing basically titled The Rich Nations and the

Poor Nations with the flat stateshy similar pro b- ment I suppose we are all lems Our asso- aware of the fact that we live in ciation with na- the most catastrophically revolushy~ional orgariiza- tionary age that men have ever

tions concerned fced middotmiddotwith deyelop- Social Revolution ment planning Vice-President Hubert Humshyin no way im- phrey who honored this meeting plies the im- with his presence last year proper subordi- writes in a recent issue of Forshynation of enti- eign Affairs Although the obshytie sund e r servation that Latin America is Church s p 0 n- in the midst of a political ecoshysorship to less effectual accom- nomic and social revolution has plishment under the state become a commonplace it is

On the contrary it is a ques- true tion of becoming involved in a The influential Chilean magashynew front in which Christian zine Mensaje published by the action is not only indispensable Jesuit Fathers dedicated an enshybut will be most efficacious in tire issue in December of 1962 to helping to enlist sectors of Latin the theme Revolution in Latin American society of top impor- America and followed this up

middottance for national dEvelopment withmiddot another special issue in With reference to the actual bctober 1963 on Revolutionary implementation of plans through Reforms in Latin America

well elaborated projectS we Early in 1964 the Civilta Catshyshould make certain that iden- tolica published in Rome by the tification and recognition as an Jesuits carried a critique of important part of the national these two issues of Mensaje by effort are given to current Father Jarlot which questioned Church activities already oper- the prudence of using the terio ating numerous projects of social revolution in a Christian conshydevelopment throughout the text pointing out that itia ltcontinent loaded with Marxist overtones

For example with regard to Not only does it signify rapid education we should lteall atten- c structural changes Father Jarlot tion to the fact that there aremiddot in asserts but also connotes vioshy

lence and some measure of hate Latin America about 5000 pri- and class warfare He would vate ed~cational insttutions pre- prefer the term evolution pared to share in current eduea- tional programs throughout the Social Revolution oontinent Mr Humphrey in the article

The private univemities andmiddot already mentioned asks the eenters of technical training inmiddot question Is it appropriate te the fields of agriculture labor define Alliance (for Progress) and cooperatives couY-a double policy as favoring social revolll shythe potential for plofessional tion - or should this word be and technical trainin1 if they avoided in favor of evolution 01 would participate on D national some other expression basis ir serving the more press- He anwers Evolution if ing needs of society carefully examined proves to be

Broad Horizons inadequate for it implies an un-We must work also in the pres- conscious non-deliberate change

ervation of the progress which that is slow and gradual has been achieved in the areas- What is required is conscious of social welfare now b~ing em- rapid change in the socioshyphasized (housing education economic structure a process public health) Lay groups such that can correctly and precisely as Catholic Action in different be called a revolutionmiddot If used spheres _ Legion of Mary St not as a slogan but in itS precise Vincent de Paul Carita3-which sense the policy of peaceful s0shy

up to now have directed their -cial and economic revolution is efforts mainly towards religion agtcorrect~haracterizatio~ofmiddot il~

t hid limce policy d If t middot an we are ac IVlless ou eJmiddot We should not hesitaietoi pand theIr programs a11d focus d tf l th t m some of their work on ilrojects I e~ I y o~rse ~es WI I ~i planned by specialists J JatmAmencaiJust ~ Presldcnt

This would permit the cltanel ~ohnson ~ssoclated hunseU WIth it in hIS war on poverty I~ng of theIr ~eal t~elr ~rga~l~a- throughout the world whenhe gtcent

tIOn and theIr splnt of saCrIfIce tl k d Iffit b bull recen y remar e a peaceshyas power u resources 0 e put f lItmiddot th i5 at the disposal of society Among u re~bo u IOn ~n ese areas such works surely programs of ~mossl Ie a VIolent revolutIon

IS mevltable community improvement will be especially attractive to tlhese lay groups

Thus the Church might con- sider putting its knowledge and resources to more effective use in preparing programs and projshyects for adaptation to national and regional needs

They should select carefully those with the capacity to fulfill so that they may obtain financing from national or international sources to complement their own eontributions thus enlarging the scope of their activities

In a study of The Church and

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Theres muchthat$ new at Firat National these days~ bullbull and this sign atthe meat oaeels one of the most exoltlng~

But- dont tlhlnk~ for a moment~ FIRST CHOICE MEAT I merely a n~w name If yo havntshopped our meat case Oa~ely youre In for happy 8urprlse~

Weve always enjoyed a great reputation formiddotmeat have always sold the pIck of oholce meats as Ih$p~cted and graded by the USDepartment of Agrloulture (USDA)

But now with our YouCome First policy our meat casel have taken on ~ new look

Our finicky p~IIQy~t~~reotlng oniy the ohoicest of the

oholce c has beoome believe It middotor not evet1lmiddotmol-e-flnlokye The trlmnilng and outtlng leoloser and mQre~a~e(ld ~ e bull to etJlv~ you th0 gie~tGstm~at vaYu9middotand most flavorful meats In lF~r2~ National hIS~O[y OLill oounters are the cieanes~ and our butohers mor~ eager than ever to lend you aweloomemiddotrneal tpia8lnlng Idea~

tiuohs gre~~ InQwsplrlt demanded a great new name II

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Arguments For Celibacy Outweigh Those Against

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Arguments urging that the requirement of eeHbacy of priests be set aside as an obshystacle to increasing vooationsare not sufficient Archbi-shop Gabriel Garribe pro-prefect of the Congregation of Semishynaries and Universities told a pressconfelence here My personal answer is that the arguments for celibacy cd the clergy are stronger than those against it He said he beshylieved there should be a firm affirmation in this respect and that it would maintain celibacy in the Latin Church

By doing so he said the quality ofpriesUy candidates will grow and through the quaUy of its priests the Church will harvest an increase in the quantity of candidates

The drop in the number of vocations the Archbishop stated Is due in part at least to the new attitude of todays youth and therefore requires changes_ in the traditional seminary formation

The prelate told the press that todays youth is much more fully aware of the whole world and far more sensitive to its problems than in the past Those responsible for seminary training must realize the importance of education and be capable of understanding the new generashytion of admiring them and of discovering for them the mission of the Church

StatistiCs Given Archbishop Garrone not e d

tj~at although there has been a falilng off in vocations generally there have been some surprising exceptions He singled out 1be

Dominican Work Continued from Page One

means that the approach will be intellectual rather than devoshytional and the emphasis win rest on accuracy on the truth of a statement rather than on whether it is opportune

In performing such a task mistakes 1n the form of partisan statements ~ld ill-balanced reshymarks are sometimes inevitable Father Hislop said

He affirmed the Dominicans loyalty to the Church but noted that it is often difficult for a vanguard intellectual group to express itself in terms that win not be misunderstood by the majority of Catholics

CCD Talks Continued from Page One

Tauntol as the speaker Mrs Mary Fuller of Buzzards

Bay will speak at the meetiDll in Bishop Stang High School North Dartmouth

At Bishop CasSidy High School Taunton the speaker will be Edward McDonagh-Of North Attleboro

Thomas Flangheddy of Taunshyton will address the meeting at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

The Cape area meeting will be held at Holy Trinity West Hallshywich with Miss Patricia llIIakle as speaker

Seek More funds WASHINGTON (NC) -Two

members of Marylands congresshysional delegation have introshyduced a bill which would make the government spend $75 milshylion annually for birth eontrol aid in the U ~ by 1973 The bin introduced by Sen Joseph Ty ings and Rep Samuel Freidel would propose $20 million the fkst year rising to $75 million bIV the fifth )ear Sta1e and loeal governments would provide _ edditiODal $25 mDJiclID br )87J

extraordinary development of vocations in Mexicp and in Yugoslavia and the stable continuity of recruitment in Poland

Among the statistics provided at the conference were the fact that the latest Church figures count 234000 Diocesan priests and 168000 Religious priests There are in addition 166400 Religious who are not ordained priests

One of the most heartening things in the vocational world picture it was pointed out hasshybeen the increase of priestly vocations in Africa Asia and Oceania

The growth of the local clergy has been a phenomenon of the last 40 years Today in Africa and Asia approximately 500 orshydinations take place every year

~regregampfsect ~ITOW(QJtfreg

$e~~ Aod WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep

Clement J Zablocki of Wisconshysin has introduced a proposal to correct U a defense education gap in American schools

Zablockis bill wo~ld amend the National Defense Education Act (NDEA) to provide federal grants for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment which could be used by children and teachers In parochial and private schools

In a statement on themiddot flOor Of the House of Representatives Zablocki pointed to inequities In

the present NDEA progra~ which Congress passed In 1958 to strengthen instruction in scishyence mathematics foreign lanshyguages and related subjects

An important provision of the act Zablocki said is Title III which provides matching grants to public schools for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment Non-public schools now are eligible only for loans for that purpose

Under Zablockis bill public authorities could obtain federal funds to buy laboratory and other special equipment which eould then be provided for use in non-public schools

In order to comply with matching provisions of the NDEA the non-public schools or groups of such schools would be required to prove they had spent an equal amount thenr selves for such eqUipment from private funds

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FALL RIVER AUXllLhARY AT MEETING Bishop Gerrard Auxiliary lBishop of the Diocese of Fall River is pictured at one of the sessions of the Spring meeting of the Bishops of theU Sheld in Ohicago NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 h A priI 20T urs 1967

Say~ ~Q~~OIP No SIQ7(~ ~ lovell

KANSAS CITY (NC) - The new role of a Bishop in the era of renewal has been spelled out here by Bishop Charles H Helmshysing of Kansas City-St Joseph

In addition to the age-old role of teacher Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop today must read stud) and apply the teachings of the Second Vatican Council the Gosshypels expressed to meet the needs of the modern world In short Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop must be a slave of love to serve as Christ served mankind

Bishop Helmsil1g spoke at the consecration of Auxiliary Bishop Joseph V Sullivan 45 of Kansas City-St Joseph

Bishop Sullivan is the fir~

native of this Missouri city eleshyvated to the hierarchy He was ordained to the priesthood June 1 1946 has served as chancellor of the diocese since 1957 and was named Bishop by Pope Paul VI last month

MarltqJ MregGGreg TJ~ ~~i MILWAUKEE (NC)-ALuthshy

eran scholar will teach Lutheran theology to graduate students at Marquette University here start shying next September Dr Kenneth G Hagen assistant professor of religion at Concordia College Moorhead MinJl will be the Marquet~e theology departmentu first full-time visiting scholra unshyder a grant from the Louis Calshyder Foundation in New York

-THREE LOCATIONS bull youre lookIng for the best in banking se~lce come 011J in to The NationalBank With the opening of our Stafford Square Office were now nearer to even more of you rOll the Greater Fall River area and each of our offices has Just aboUt every service you could want for yourself andl your family We mean M when we say were your FuID lervice BankPft

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t6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~n River-Thurs~ Apr 201967

Friend~2 [iJescribes Stru~g~ For QM~gtLy in T~~regwo~~~

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Rennedy When Fred W Friendly resigned from the Columbia

Broadcasting System in 1966 he ended a 16-year association with that network His trials in broadcast journalism are tbe subject of his new book Due To Circumstances Beyond Our Control Control bull Managements obligation is toRandom House $695 457 protect the interests of these Madison Avenue New York stockho~ders

NY 10022) But this volume But Mr Friendly is concprned is far more than a personal about the other stockholders memoir It is the story of th~ the 195 million citizens who

grant CBS and the other broadshybattle a losing casters the franchise to use theirbattle of course air for quality in

FCC Gutlesscommercial tel shyOne might naively expect that

~vision The the Federal Communications

main point is Commission would effectivelythat the story is here told by an insider Mr Friendlys middotfame criginally gprang from his close associashytion with the late Edward R Murrow He was Murrows partner in the prepashyntion of such pioneering and still unparalleled series as Se~ lil Now and CBS Reports

After Murrow left CBS and wentmiddot into governm()nt service Mr Friendly became president

of CBS news He resigned that ~sition because of a clispute conshycerning the broadcasting of Senshyate hearings on the Vietnam war

Many ancient or recent conshyfilets over broadcasting policy are rehearsed in this hook There fta for example a detailed acshy~unt of the hassies concerning Murrows TV _program dealing with Senator McCarthy before McCarthys downfall as the reshyault of the hearings in the Spring of 1954

There are briefer accounts of other skirmishes Thflse are all interesting and instructive But the value of the book lies not so much in these reminiscences as fin Mr Friendlys knowledgeable analysis of the process whereby television has retreated more and more from public service and become a purveyor of junk and garbage littering the American Iiving room and worse the American mind with trash

Geared to Prcfit Many factors account for this

perversion The principal one is greed Television is geared to private profit not puqUc service lLast years whopping profits will not suffice this year There must be sizable increase

This is to satisfy stockholders Mr Friendly asked William Paley chairman of the board Why do we have to make more money every year The reply was We have many small shareholders across the country and within the companybullbullbullbull

Subcommittee Sets Hearings on Smut

WASHINGTON (NC) -The House Select Subcommittee on Education is holding hearings beginning today on a bill to esshytablish a National Commissionmiddot on Noxious and Obscene Matters and Materials

Subcomllittee chairman Domishynick Daniels of New Jersey is sponsor of thc bill which would provide for a 16-member panel to study the problem of obscenity and recoqunend means Clf dealing with it

On the same day that the hearshyings were announced two other congressmen Arnold Olsen of Montana and Glenn Cunningham of Nebraska introduced bills to curb the mailing of obscene matshyter Olsens bill has bpoundlen enshydorsed by the Post Office Deshy~artment

protect the interests of the other 195 milion But Mr Friendly on the basis of close observation has -no kind words and no reshyspect for the FCC For all pur- poses the agency is toothless and gutless

To make even more money for the shareholders every possible penny has to be wrung out of the advertising medium which television now essentially is This consideration governs proshygramming

It might be supposed that even if prime time at night must eco- ~

nomically go chiefly to programshyming which brings in the maxishymum advertising dollar there is ample opportunity for public service broadcasting in the dayshytime hours But no pienty of money is to be made from dayshytime advertising

Endless Re-runs Three soap companJes alone

spend $290 million a year on television advertising and a lot of this is directed at housewives during the daytime And the programming dictated by this advertising comprisesmostly old old movies and endless re-runs of stupid situation comedies

Huge profits (are) being realshyized from the use of the miracle of television as a transmission belt for retread serials soap opshyeras game shows and the like The yield from the detergent deodorant bleach or food advershytisers who possess the daytime schedule (whose annualexpendishytures (are) some $130000000 ) is the principal reason why no serious progtamming can be sustained for any length of time during these hours

l3y serious programming is meant such things as crittcal UN debates (for example on Vietnam) vital congressional hearings the Popes visit to the UN Churchills funeral etc) Some of these have in fact got on the air and even for a conshysiderable period oftime b~t alshyways there is a major bitter battle involved

Educational TV What may not be realized is

the power of the local station n is by no means meekly subshymissive to the network It largely gqes its own way and its wayis in search of the utmost in profits

It is this fact for example which accounts for the nonshyexistence of a good solid repre~ sentative late-evening news broadcast over the nekwork The local station prefers to put on its own scrappy superficial travesty of a news program beshycause it can get-in an excessively large number of profitable comshymercials

Perhaps there is some hope in the field of educational televishy

sion Mr Friendly is now enshygaged in exploring that possibil shyity For our sake may he be successful At any rate we must thank him for reminding us of our tolerance of the criminial misuse Qf the air waves

H E A 0 S UNIVlERSliJIY New president of St Bonashyventure University St Bonashyventure N Y is the Very Rev Reginald A Redlon

OFM formerly of St Franshycis College Rye Beach N H The university Is operated by the Holy_ Name province of the Order of Friars Minor NC Photo

Issues GlLIidelimiddotnes For IEcumenism

LITTLE ROCK (NC) - Ecushymenical guidelines dealing prinshycipally with the conduct of Catholics at Protestant functions have been issued by Bishop Alshybert L Fletcher of Lttle Rock

Composed of the diocesan ecumenical commission the gUidelines specify that Catholics may attend Protestant church services participate in the singshying and common prayer but may not act as a reader or officer of such services

The rules permit Catholics to serye in wedding parties at mar- riages in Protestant churches providing the service does not involve a Catholic or a divorceci person Attendance at baccalaushyreate services in a church or elsewhere is permitted

Under the rules Catholics may not act as sponsors at Protestantmiddot baptisms Oi confirmation nat Jlarticipate in intercommunion services The guidelines encour- age Protestant attendance at Catholic services

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Misunderstandingmiddot Faced In Ecumenical Meeting

Roman Catholic and Lutheran theologians agreed here after their fourth meeting that many misunderstandings had been overcome on the Sacrament of the Lords SuppeR -Holy Eucharist-but that further examination is necesshysary The doctrinal consulshy to the concrete worship life o1Ztation held at the headquartshy the Church ers of the Lutheran Church In a prepared statement reshyin America was the fourth leased ft the conclusion of the in a series sponsored by the closed meeting the group noted Bishops Committee for Ecumenshy that in contrat to topics disshyism and Interreligious Affairs cussed at the first two meetings of the NCCB and the USA Nashy -the Nicene Creed and Baptismtional Committee of the Luthershy -there have been historically an Wotld Federation serious disagreements between

Main themes discussed at the the confessions concerning the three-day meeting were the Eucharist Lords Supper as a sacrifice the All participants the stateshymanner of Christs presence in ment added agreed that many the Sacrament the import of the misunderstandings had beellll concept of transubstantiation overcome as a result of the latest and the relation of these issues meeting

HOW TDCURE LEPERS

THIi HilLY FATHERS MIBSIDNAID TD THI ORIIlNTAL CHURCH

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ARE THII

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A LEPER IN~

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patient for a year

C Strfngless glftlil of $100 $50 $25 $11S $10 $5 $2 Bet the Sisters buy what they need

IiJ $850 equals 10000 Dapsone tablets

IlJ $1 a month ($12 a yeer) gives you membershyehlp un our Damlen Club for lepers

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For our eIght edlcal Sisters In P1rappancode south India today is just a normal day Doctors bags In hand they are out In the villages eKmiddot amlnlng everyone for leprosybullbullbullbull Leprosy can be cured If diagnosed early says Sister Elizashybeth a surgeon Better yet Itcan be prevented In this case an ounce of prevention is worthten pounds of cure bullbullbull The cure is cheaper than penny nely Only $850 buys 10000 Dapsone _ mIracle tablets enough for 43 lepers for a yeerl bullbullbull The effort In Pirappancode islnternashytional German Catholics built the 25middotbed ho pital (1St Johns) French Catholics gave a workshop (for therapy) and an American friend of ours has pledged a convent and chapel Now the Sisters need medicinps a $200 microscope a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for treating children especially In farmiddotflung villages Will you help them Monsignor Nolan will acshyknowledge your gifts promptly and the Slste win pray for you aware you are helping them cure lepers as Christ did -

WHAT YOU CAN DO IJ $5000 gives the Sisters a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for fighting leprosy at Ita source (A sign on the side will featu re the name ofyour favorite saint and your name ifyou wish)

IJ $1500wlll give theSlster-surgeon an ope Instable Shes ustng akitchen table now

WOULDc $575 buys a whirlpool beth $100 a sterilizer

NEED C $300 pays In full ~or the two-year training 01 IF a native Slsternurse She will write to you

YOU WERI C $240 ($5 a Week) takes care of bull fuMmiddottlme

~IlAII IA8T WlILflARIi ASBDelATIGN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN PresIdent

MSGR JOHN G NOLAN Natlonal8ecretaIJ Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc S30 Madison Avenuemiddot New York NY 1001 T~one 212yUkOft 6-5840

rHf ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Apr 20 196717

CATHOLIC (HAR~l~~S AP~EAL SILVER JUBILEE YEAR

MAY 7-17

What does it mean to you The opportunity to raise your sights to the level of a $2500 Jubilee Gift

An act of aratitude for 25 years of Charitable Seice

Bishop Connollys love for exceptionoillhiidren cannot be

described in words-but this picture D5 beyond description

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THE ANCHORshy~18 Top East C~ast College Hoopsters middotPlay )Sees SociaI EquityThurs April 20 1967

Still Lagging Anglicalfj)~ ~teview At I(ennedy Center For P C Alumni In Spain Antii Cali~~i~ By Patricia Francis MALAGA (NC) - Spain

was taken to task for lagging1562 C~~lireglf A full house crowd saw some o( the East Coasts top collegIate basketball players behind many other countriesLONDON (NC) _ The demonstrate last week how basketball should be played Occasion was the 8th annual hi the development of a

ehurch of England has set Scholarship Basketball Game sponsored by the Providence College Alumni Club of New just Christian social and ecoshyup a permanent commission Bedford at Kennedy Youth Center in New Bedford Initiated in 1959 to - raise nomic life at the 26th Spanish C1)n Christian Docbine with tis first task to consider recastshying or replacing that churchs historic charter of the Thirtyshy~Hne Articles of Religion which

are strongly anti-Catholic In tOne

They are regarded by many as o stumbling block to Christian ~ity The articles drawn up in 1562

for the avoiding of diversities $pound opinions and for the establishshyhtg of consent touching truereli shygion must be publicly accepted py the clergy at ordination

They have become a matter of ~increasing objection lind some

Anglican clergymen now feel talat they should not be called Upon to subscribe to doctrinal definitions which reflect views formed in the 16th oentury aarship is a $2400 one paid at the time of extreme and bitter reli- rate of $600 a year to the winner gious controversy Next award will be made in

The articles denounce the 1970 TheRevEdwardC Duffy eurohurch of Rome as erroneous in chairman of- the scholarship matters of faith and declare games and recruiter of the among other things that theplaye~s who participate emphashyBishop of Rome hath no jurisdic- sizes the scholarship is open middotto tion in this -realm of Englandany deserving boy who has been Some prominent Anglican clergymen have blal1led the sharp declfnein ordination canshy

Qlidates on a reluctance to subshy~ribe to this document

Consider Advis( The new commission was apshy

pointed by Anglican Archbishops Michael Ramsey of Canterbury and Donald Coggan of York It consists of 17 members most of them theological professors repshyzesenting different schools of thought in the Anglican Church

Anglican Bishop Iar Ramsey of Durham is chairman The commissions general terms of reference say that it is

to consider and advise upon doctrinal questions submitted to it from time to time by the archshybishops and to plan when deshyslrable the investigation of

I ~uestions by other groups Its first task will be to conshy

sider the place of the Thirty- lege University of Rhode Island Nine Articles in the Anglican St Josephs of Philadelphia Bosshy

tradition and the question of ton College and Holy Cross subscription and assentto them There were Bill Blair Jim

Benedict Bob Kavolski and Bill Lasher of PC Mike FitzgeraldReligious Influence (of Mattapoisett) Henry Carey

In US on Wan~ -7- NEW YORK (NC)-Although

a majority of all Americans exshypressed the belief that 11eligion is losing its influence in the

United States in the latest Gallup Poll Catholics declined to-give majority assent to the opinion

The national survey showed tilat 57 per cent of all Americans in 1967 believe religion is losing its influence Only 14 per cent expressed this opinion in 1957

Among Protestants 60 per cent In 1967 compared with L7 per eent in 1957 said religion was losing its influence Forty-eight

per-cent of Catholics agreed in the latest survey compared with Beven per cent in 1957

Get Federal Funds PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A

Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyect under the auspices of Philashydelppia Archbishop John J Krols Commjssion on Economic Oppi)rtunity Programs hlils reshyceived $267980 from the federal government It was one of 74 Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyects in 30 states approved by Secretary of Labor W Willard Wirtz

accepted as a freshman at Provshyidence College regardless of the high school he attended

Primary Method William F Doyle president of

the NE Bedford club says the games are the alumnis primary method of raising money for the schoJarship fund

Since it was first held the game has attracted a following of avid fans-who help swell the scholshyarship treasury

Father Duffy feels it is the top post-season game in New England arid cites as proof the fact that his long time friend Bob Cousy Hoiy Cross All- Anierican and Boston Celtic great played in it himself two years ago It was his last game

Players who participated in this years money-for-scholarshyships game-all college seniors

represented Providence Colshy

scholarship funds for deserv- ing gr~duates of area high

schools the game profits enabled presentation of the first Edward J Tucker Memorial Scholarship of $2000 to Clifford Marr of New Bedford in 1962 Marr a graduate of Holy Family High was graduated from Provishydence College in 1966 and curshyrently is an Army lieutenant on duty in Korea

The second scholarship---named for the late 1r Tucker of Fairshyhaven a Providence College

graduate and one of the charter members of the New Bedford club--was awarded last year to Michael Doherty of New Bedshyford also a Holy Family gradushyate

Currently the four-year scholshy

Steve Chubin and Bob Boehm of the U of RI Richie Murphy and Greg Hochstein of Holy Cross John Austin and Ed Hock- enbury of Boston College and

f~nll lHoMsnln1~ fLaw Olhoc City EI1il(Jlcts

SPRIfiGFIELD (NC) - By unanimous vote of its five city commissioners this city has enshyacted a fair housing ordinance

The ordinance the third of its kind in OhiO becomes effecshytive May 3 Considerably strongshyer than the fair housing legisia- tion enacted by the Ohio Legisshylature in 1965 it outlaws disshycrimination in the sale or rental of any housing excepting only dwellings for members of reli shygious organizations or housing established for one sex only

Springfields new ordinance came as the res~lt of an improved climate of racial harmony The citys mayor Robert C Henry is a Negro whose performance of his duties has won wide reshyspect In recent years an Urban League has been launched and has made considerable progress A Human Relations Commission is functioning

PROVIDENCE COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP In atshytendance at PC Scholarship Fund Basketball Game in New Bedford were William Doyle presidentof the PC Club of New Bedford and Michael Doherty present scholarship recipient

Billy Oakes Marty Ford and Tom Duff of st Josephs the nations fifth-ranked_ team

Sees lay Teachers

Form Asso~iataon CLEVELAND (NC)-Groundshy

work for a diocesan lay teachers asso~iation was laid at a meeting of representatives of 21 diocesan high schools here

shy Patrick Bruening teacher at St Josephs high school and temshyporary chairman of the new unit said the association is an organshyization of professional people seekint professional growth

He added Only after we have proven ourselves as professionshyals with a professional attitude

about our job can we ask for and hope to get professional consideration I

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lhe players enjoyed demonshystrating th~ir proficiency The fans enjoyed watching the demonstration ~ and the scholar shipfund of the Providence Colshylege Alumni Club of New Bedshy~ord teaped tbebenef~il ~fboth

~ Population Control WASHINGTON (NC) - U s

Sen J W Fulbright of Arkansas has asked for aCongressional appropdation of $150 million for increased population coritior asshysistanCe to developIng countries

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Social Week here Angel Cardinal Herrera y

Oria former archbishop of Mashylaga in a letter to the Social Week sessions deplored what he called a deficiency of Catholic influence in Spanish public lilfe declaring that Spain a Catholic nation was far from being a model of social justice

No Dialogue Earlier Auxiliary Bishop Rashy

fael Gonzalez Moralejo of Valenshycia ecclesiastical moderator of the SocialWeek sounded a simshyilar note declaring that where there is no dialogue between citizens and their government there is no democracy and such a society cannot call itself Christian

Cardinal Herrera said that ahead of Spain are nations who

have learned how to organize their natioJlallif~ according to the norms of justice which are the daughters of consciElnce Sweden has progressed in the social and pOlitlclll o~der to such an extent that the ~ope

could state that its public ~n~ishy tutions are in harmonywith the teachings of the Seco~dVatican Council he said

1[Jpper ~Iasses Cardinal Herrera lirged the

upper classes of -the countryto contribute toward the formation of a sound and realistic public opinion by which religious conshycepts would be applied to the economic and social life of Spain

It is necessary he said to diminish the differences in classes to work toward Unity not only in the economic order but also in i~ the education and

c~vic department

The Best

Car

Georgell Cluh Olf to Good Start mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Apr 20 1967

Taunton High Is Surprise In County Diamond loop former FltrrJDD Riweff CYOer on Scholagslvop ltltIt PIl1Jf$~ns

By PETE~ BARTEK Norton High Coach

Coach BiD Georges Taunton High diamond aggreg~

tion is the early season surprise in the Bristol County schoolboy league now in ita second week of the eampaign The pennant race appeam ~ be developing into one of the most exciting in many years Five clubs are battling of Ule better area clubs year fOIl the coveted flag And after year

Coach Harold (Chet) Haneshywhile action is fast and fm-shywichs Bishop Feehan High teamiOWl in the BCL the eight N3rshyof Attleboro has tucked awayragansett League teams are early season wins over Northgetting I e Q d y Attleboro and New Bedford Voshy

lor the chamshy cational The latter two will pionship race m probably fight it out fornext-toshytheir COmpetishy the-last place in the final standshytion Delayed ing as they seek to avoid theboth by rain and cellar Ii old weather The two top contests on nextCOaches h a v e Mondays BCL card will seebeen reminding Coyle playing Durfelte at Alumnitheir charges of Field in Fall River while Taunshythe pitfalls of ton journeys to North Dartmoutheareless loose to clash with stang Two northernplay and also Peter eounty rivals Attleboro andthe IOOmmission Bartek Feehan meet at the formers of Deedless errors which ean field next Monday when North relegatea club to an early Deeshy Attleboro travels to New Bedshyond diviaion berth from which it ford to take 0111 Vocatlonal win be bard to emerge as 1M Nury Contests oompetition progresses Meanwhile the Narragansett

Chausse and JlaJkut loop is comple~ing its first week The Herring City Orange and of play Its still a little early to

Black pulled the big surprise of make 8 judgment as to how thebe young season when it held clubs will stand at the end of thethe always strong Dullfee High

lI~mpaign team of Fall River to a 2-2 tie in Four Narry tilts are on tap for11 innings The prognosticators next Tuesdaybad been writing off the Georgeshy Coach Jack McCartys Caseeoached clan solely because they High Cardinals of Swansea willfelt Taunton would be unable to face Coach Jack Harts DimanJeplace Artmiddot Koska lost by gradshy Vocational team in Fall River uation in what looms as one of the

But Scott Chawrse impressed most interesting early seasonin his confrontation with the Fan games Coach Doug Baxendales River Hilltoppelll aDd now the Msgr Prevost High team of Fall same pundits who had relegated River will be at Dighton to meet Taunton to a lowly apot 8re the Coach Eddie Texeiras D - ~ first to admit that things will be Regionals Coach Ed Bibeau will much more pleasant for the lead his W~port High aggr~gashyTauntonians this Spring tion to Seekonk to middotvh( with

Stro~ Coyle Offense Coach Roger Hills charges The Admittedly an the doubting fourth Narry contest next Tuesshy

Thomases were not convinced day will see Coach Jack Brenshyon the basis of a single performshy nans Holy Family High teain of ance So Joe Majkut and Chausse New Bedford meeting Coach Jim Ulen eombined to throw a no-hit Sullivans Somersetmiddot High teamwin over Coach Dick Joyces at the latters field Attleboro High team Even the

Lanllers Ready most skeptical then conceded that Taunton must be reckoned On Ca~ Cod n nip-~pd~tuck

in the flag race battle is going on in that areas While Taunton High has heeD eon1erence schedule Four conshy

eGualling the early season attenshy tests are listed for the Capeway tion unexpected results have eircuit next Monday They are eccurred in several other diashy Oldmiddot Rochester (Mattapoisett) mond eontests Attleboro which at Barnstable Bourne at Wareshydid DOt seem destined lor gfeat bam Dartmouth middotat Dennis-Yarshythings this Spring provided the mouth and Fairhaven vs Lawshyfirst surprise w~en it toppled rence High at Falmouth Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Norton High in the Clover Stang High of North Dartmouth Valley Conference plays its first

Taunton then proved its mettle league game at home against when it defeated surprising Millis next Monday The Purple Attleboro Hickey has talent at - and White Lancers travel to Stang but his problem has heeD Medfield next Wednesday tv properly align his best playem Apparently they were not in the Score Governmentright spots when they went down to defeat at the hands of Coach On Lab~r Problems Jim Burns Msgr Coyle High

BUENOS AIRES (NC) -TwonJne of Taunton which has Catholic organizations have isshycwuted its way to two one~sided sued a joint manifesto criticizingviet(lries Coyles strength is in thlte Argentine government sayshyits offensive attack but it also ing it has failed to protect workshy

has a capable defense and pitch ers basic rightsJng staff to make a real run for Issued by the Catholic Youngthe BCL crown Workers (JOC) and Catholic _ Feehans Auspicious Start Action Workers Movement

Durfee while it may have been (MOAC) the statement alsotemporarily halted by Taunton called upon the bishops to be enpects to be among the leaders aware of the needs and goals of before the end of the week The young workers and the labor Hilltoppers looked good in winshy class and to be brave in ltexshy

double-header from Pil-shyning a pressing the Churchs doctrine grim High of Rhode Island last as applied to real-life situations weekend CoachJoe Lewis feelsmiddot It said that the government his boys can now maintain the which calls itself Christian but momentum they have generated is anything but Christian has in the non-league affairs It goes nothing to do with the Gospelalmost without saying that one or Christs teachings or with the off-day is not going to thwart Churchs doctrines as defined by the Hilltopperll wbo produce ODe the Second Vatican Councit

By JOE MIRANDA A Parsons College senior JRobshy

eli Bonalewicz of Fall River is -nearIng the end of a most sucshycessful college career both athshyletically and academically

Bob is attending Parsons in Fairfield Iowa on a baseball scholarship and has started bis third season as the colleges first strong catcher

neans List Student A Physical Education major

Bob has a minor in History and during the last marking period was named to the Deans List at Parsons -

A member of St PatrIcks Parshyish Bonny is a 1963 graduate of Durfee High School where he participated in football basketshyball and baseball

The son of Mr and Mrs Mathew Bonalewicz of 50 Chapshylin Street he is oile of five chil shydren ald has not yet decided upon a vocation

Bonny has two older brotherll a lieutenant and Mathew Jr II

staff sergeant both in the Air Force and stationed ubroad Bob also has two sisters Kathleen II student at Durfee High and Ma) Ann a grammar school pupil

Has f80 Average Bonalewicz recently returned

from a Southern baseball trip end gained excellent commendashytions from his coach Duane Banks for his performance as the Wildcats won 11 of 13 games

The Fall River player batted 430 belted three homers had nine runs-batted-in and seltlred 10 during Parsons first 13 games

Bonalewicz a 22-year-old 175shyJ)ound 5-8 giant enjoys playing baseball and so does his coach who scheduled 89 games last seashyson to set a ollegiate record fur the most games played in one year

Ankle IBjUlY

With the former Durfee backshystop handling the brunt of the catching duties until a knee inshyjury forced him to the sidelines Parsons won 72 lost 15 and twice finished in ti~d games called beshyca~se of darkness

The former St Patricks star in the CYO baseball program started poory this season finshyis middotng off the Southern trip with an ankle sprain but entering this week the ankle was in good shape and Bonny expected to take his regular spot behind the plate

Federal Agency Has Inter-Faith Advisors

WASHINGTON (NC)- A Catholic priest a Methodist minshyister and a Jewish rabbi have been appointed religious advishyBors to the United States Inforshymation Agency here

Msgr George G Higgins clIishyrector of the Social Action Deshypartment U S Catholic Confershyence the Rev Edward G Cu-middot roll superintendent of the Washshyington Northwest District ol the Methodist Baltimore Conference and Rabbi Richard G Hirsch dishyrector of the Relgious Action Center Union of American Heshybrew Congregations have been named to the USIA advisory panel

Officials of the agency noted that while it has had religious advisors since its inception this marks the first time an interfaith panel had been established

The purpose of the panel offi shycials said is to assure that the agencys handling of religious matters serves the best intlterest of the nation and its dlveraity of faiths

Bonalewicz also played for St Patricks T)iocesan championship team and for the Fall River Mershychants in the Newport Sunse~ League

As a senior at DUrfee Bonny was awarded the 1963 George Kaplan Memorial Trophy as the Hilltoppers best senior basketshyball player

His hustle and determination while performing for Durfee at Bostcm Garden during the anshynual Eastern Massachusetts Tecb tournament gained him the reshyspect and admiration of all that witnessed his efforts

Bonalewicz recently completed a practice teaching tour in an Iowa Junior High School and while tere coached the eighth grade team to a league chamshypionship

Earlier in the college year Bob_ was a member of the Parsons intramural flag football progmiddotam and received a trophy for his performan J

Despite the heavy bnsebaU schedule Bob has manged to keep hi grades above average and after the Fall semestershyshowed his prowess in the classshyroom by being named to the Deans List for the second time

DeMatha Winner In Hoop Tourney

WASHINGTON (NC) - DeshyMatha High of suburban Hyattsshyville Md scored an upset cliff shyhanger victory to cop the 12th national high sChool basketballl tournament sponsored by thE local Knights of Columbus J017 the fifth straight time

DeMatha avenged two regula17 season defeats by Mackin High Washington Catholic League

champ with its last minute 70-68 victory Mount Carmel of Chiengo took

third place with a 47-45 overshytime win over DePaul Acndemy of Chicago Northeast Cnthrt1ie of Philadelphia took fifth pIhce with a 77-74 win over St Petertl

B(~ BONALEWICZ of New Brunswick N J Catheshydral High of Trenton NJ Inpound

The oung catcher has been Dwight School of New York alslaquo) long known for his bullet like participated tlnrowlr arm and gained conshy Aubrey Nash DeMatha junloY siderable praise from opponents wall named the tournnmentl in 111gh school amateur and colshy most valuable player lege eompetitions for his savvy A 5-11 junior John Somogyftbehind the plate set three tournament records-shy

Three-Letter Man 40 field goals 108 points in threE Bonalewicz played football for games and 43 points in one game Don MontIe basketb~ll for Tom and tied another record ll-forshyKaram and baseball for middotJoe 11 from the foul line Lewis while at Durfee and also performed for Lewis Chathammiddot team in the Cape Cod League

The Fall Riverite cannot get FAIRHAVENenough baseball according to his mother Mrs Bonalewicz recalls LUMBER a game at Alumni Field when

COMPANYDurfee bested a Venezuelan team sponsored by the Peoplesshyto-Peoples program Bob was inshy Complete linejured and taken -to the hospital Mrs Bonalewicz remembers Building Materials then came back to finish the game hitting a home run to win I SPRING ST FAIRHAVENmiddotit for the Hilltoppers He wall voted the outstanding player in 993-2611the gameo

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sect Increase the Use sect ~ of Fish ~ I ~~e ~ Fomily Diet ~

middot1 UN~~~ ~ _ 1 ~IUllIIllIllllllIllUlllutJUJHIJJJJlllllllllill IIIJlIlIIampIUIltIllHWlUlnmJWnIUlWIIJJllllllllliIllIIlIUIIIIII~

I

THEANCHOR()ioltese of Fan ~tv~r-Thurs ApO 1967 ~ ~ middot-middotmiddotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ middot20

AT BISEIOPS CONFERENCE Facilities for offering Mass were provided by the Archdiocese of Chicago when 230 U S bishops met in semi-annual conference In left photo nine othel prelates concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Joseph TRyan of Anchorage Alaska In right

photo are Archbishop John F Dearde~ of Detroit at left president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and at right Archbishop Johl1l F Cody of Chicago conference host Bishops Connolly and Gerrard attended from the Fall River Diocese NC Photos

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Page 3: 04.20.67

3 rHE ANLHOR-Cathonc Efforts Violet Leonard of Taunton First Woman Thurs April 20 1967

Towards Unity Teacher at Bridgewater Rehab Ce~teJr Sees Ukrainian Sile~t S~edy By JI)oJrltthy Eastman WASHINGTON (NC) shy Rite ExtinctionThe Massachusetts maximum security prison for juvenile offenders is 8 gloomy place llewspapers front-page covshy to visit even on a sparkling Spring day But t~e grey stone walls that surround the ~ge of the American bishshy Near in CO1oda

ancient Bridgewater institution are hiding a secret bull a very pleasant secret as a matshy-Ps guidelines for Catholicshy TORONTO (NC) - A voshyliampwish relations once again joshy ter of fact Inside those forbidding walls are 85 youthful offenders who are guided and

cations authority warnedltUsed public attention on the cared for by a remarkable 1fOntinued Catholic involvement here that the Ukrainianteam of counsellors and ~ inter-Church and interreli shy Church in Oanada is threatshyteachers They have created Iirous affairs ened with extinction if parentsfor the boys an ideal atmo-Occasionally sensational usushy do not seriously take into conshyQDy silent Catholic efforts at sphere designed to bring about sideration the fostering of vocashy

-~hieving Christian unity and their rehabilitation into society tions among their own children ~erreligious cooperation are A fairly recent addition to that

Father Joseph Denischuk~ing on constantly Marked by team is Miss Violet Leonard a

CSSR vocations director forresident and native of Taunton[eontinual conferences but rare Ukrainian-rite Catholics in Canshywhere she is a member of Stannouncements the movement ada says there now are 190000towards unity has more to it Marys Parish Last September

Ukrainian Catholics in Canaclattihan usually meets the eye Miss Leonard became the first

being served by four Bishopswoman ever to teach at the venshyBetween now and the end of 268 priests 218 Sisters 26 Brothshyrtane Catholic participants and erable institution

ers and six members of secular ~servers will be taking part in The channing young teacher

institutes ~zens of minor ecumenical acshy with the ~parkling brown eyes is

The Ukrainian rite has four$vities and a handful of major part of the pleasant surprise a

Sees with a total of 565 parishes~ents Only a few of these will visitor gets after stepping inside

and missions in Canada Morebve immediate results Most of the walls Her office like the

than 80 per cent of the priestsitbem wont make the papers But rest of the interior of the buildshy

are more than 40 years of age~y will all be important ing is gaily painted and abloom

with only one-third Canadianwith many colorful works of artDoctrinal Questions born Father Denischuk saidSo far this year the boys have The supply of European priestsSome of these will be initial read and discussed Blackboard

is almost exhausted and the supshyJireps taken by representatives Jungle Catcher in the Rye ~ different churches and tradishy ply of newly ordained priestsand Lord of the Flies They ~ns to sound out the possibility falls far short of the expectedsaw the movie Blackboard

~ further discussion Others will results he said Only one UkraishyJungle and decided that they1ll2 second third or fourth meetshy nian-rite Catholic priest hasliked the book better ~gs meetings that will probe been- ordained in the past yearBearing in mind that these are(sectJeep into doctrinal questions while nine priests have died he boys who have most likely neverMiting and dividing churches addedread a book from cover to cover

API-il opens with a meeting beshy The vocational director isbefore in their lives - thIs is tween representatives of the - touring parishes in eastern CanshyquHe an achievement So many

ada to recruit young men toCatliolic Church and the Amershy of them have acquired a real k~ n Baptist Convention This enter St Vladimir College inlove for reading Miss Leonardmeeting on Monday April 3 the Roblin only Ukrainian Catholicsays They come up here to thelClrst between the two groups mino) seminary in Canada andreading room every chance they

also to interest girls in religious~ll be chaired by Bishop Joseph have shyvocations During the past twoGreen of Reno Nev in De Witt Judging from its success at the

lilIich It will establish guidelines years he has talked with 3000Bridgewater institution Hookedf])r future discussions youths and children and intershyon Books seems to be a program

viewed 250 prospective seminashyThree days later April 6-9 that has lived up to its provacashyrians and nunsCatholic and Lutheran delegates tive title

will meet in New York for their A larger part of the boys daysfourth meeting Conversations are spent in other types of learnshythere at the headquarters of the Maranists Meeting

ing situations including woodshybutheran Church in America magazines and current books society that range from car theft DAYTON (NC)-The 18th anshyworking upholstery lessons~ill probe more deeply into These are their textbooks from to murder _ nual National Association ofbookbinding music and art lesshyquestions of Eucharistic sacri shy which they earn modern history Hopefully most of them will Marianist Organizations convenshysonsiIice earlier studied in Septemshy geography and reading improye- leave here to become successfUl tion will be held here in Ohio When a boy first enters the inshy~r 1966 ment and useful members of society -May 6 and 7 at the University stltution he is given no privishy

Meet Wftth Orthodox These boys dont ordinarily Miss Leonard says of Dayton

ViOLET LEONAlR)lJl

leges allowed no personal posshyOn April 19 Catholic ecumenishy sessions in his bare cell As he respond well to books Theyve As you leave the prison you

m leaders from around the progresses in his rehabiiitation flunked out or dropped out of know you will not soon forget school and society These are the the faces of those boys behindiJiFOrld will travel to Rome for lie gradually earns more privishy

f1 10-day plenary meeting of the leges more responsibility until kids whove always hated the bleak walls They -were ~ticans Secretariat for Promotshy the cell of a boy who is near the schoo happy faces hopeful faces ing Christian Unity This secreshy tlm~ for his parole inay resem1lle So all the more remarkable is Faces of boys you would be

the progress that Miss Leonard prcmd to call your sons Youtariat is the Churchs official the room of any teenage boy body for supervising and guiding pictures on the walls materials and her two fellow teachers have pray that when the boys leave

made this year in their new pro- those walls they will findin theraquoelations between Catholicism for his hobbies phonographs 81ld other Christian Churches and record collectii)]ls gram The program is called outside world some of the Chrisshy

Back in the United States St What about discipline probshy Hooked on Books It was orig- tian love they will need so much IOhns University in Collegeville lems I have had none says imited at the Industrial School to help them make their adjust

fo Boys and has worked with mentMinn will be the scene of the Miss Leonard And as you walk great success wherever its been~xt major meeting a dialogue through the halls and observe tried fraquoetween Catholics and Presbyshy the boys busy at their work you

terians This fifth meeting April are struck by the friendly coshy Part of the reason for this reshy STONEHILL36-28 will investigate the probshy operative attitude of the boys markable state of affairs is what ems of mixed marriage who give Miss Leonard a cheery she calls reciprocal respect

May will open with a Worcesshy greeting wherever she goes I respect them and care for Summer Session~r meeting with delegates of the All the paintings and the them and they know this and figtrthodox Church Discussion at respect me in return JUNE 26 - AUG sculpture have been done by the ~e May 5 conference will center boys she says with obvious The) have grown up getting

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UNDIRGRADUAYIE COURSES00 concrete proposals drawn up so little respect from societypride And they maintain the by joint Catholic-Orthodox theoshy institution themselves they do Sometimes I think that they llilQeDlaquolID Arts bull Bus Admin (i) Science reg Math logical task forces Their threeshy all the cleaning cooking laundry dont think of the walls as proshy

Write Director of Summer Sessionraquoart inquiry investigated - tecting society from them theyand most of the maintenance think of the walls as protectingwork STONEHIU COLlLIEGIE

Greek Church Again Her new job is quite a change them from society which has N Easton Mass 02356hurt themfur Miss eonard who had preshyHits Birth Control viously taught fourth grade for The major problem each boy

CHICAGO (NC)-The Greek four years at Notre Dame School has when he- first comes to the ~rthodox Church is still opposed in Fall River institution is an almost complete 1raquo artificial birth control ac- ][ve always wanted to work lack of self contro So while at lording to 0rthodox Bishop Me~ in special education she says the institution he receives psyshyIetios of Chicago My job here is like being a chiatric help with this problem

The Bishop said the Churchs mother father counselor to that has led to crimes against Gtand against contraception is these boys-whatever the relashy~iterated in a statement by the tionship thats needed Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of It is only recently that school North and South America in the attendance became compulsory 1967 official Orthodox Yearbook for the boys at the Bridgewater

institution They must now spend ne hour aday in school ButEducation Chair tbis school in no way resembles

NEW YORK (NC) - A new 11 conventional one on the outshycbalamp to be occupied by an aushy side thority in urban education has be boys come eight at a time been established at the Fordham to her office for an hour a day lJnjversity school of education to read and dicsuss newspapers

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 4 Jewish leader Desc~o~reg~ Visit

Dregml~es C~th~oltr S~h~~s Watliu ~[flfinal CINCINNATI (NC)- A~~~HD[[reg~ mJ [g)regWD~OWreg Cincinnati attorney and Aushy

gustin Cardinal Bea SJTORONTO (NC)-Catholics who have gone to Cathshypresident of the Vatican See- olic schools do better economically than those who went retariat for Promoting Christian

either partly to the public schools or entirely so Peter H Unity found in their very conshyRossi middotdireetor- of the National Opinion Research Center at versation a sign of the progreSB Chicago told separate (Cathshy of Christian - Jewish relations

cation he dealt -with two comshy when they met recently in Romeolic) school trustees of Onshy mon objections to Catholic Simon Lazarus Jr of Cincinshytario at their annual banquet schools First do Catholic nati a leader in the local andschools prepare their graduatesin Toronto national American Jewish Comshy

Declaring that American as well as other schools for getshy mittee was one of a small groupting along in economic achieveshyCatholic schools are a success of members of the committeement and secondly ~do CathshyRossi co-author of the Greeleyshy who met and talked with the carshyolicsehools playa divisive roleRossi Report said that American dinal laSt month in Rome whilein American society as -some ofCatholic schools have managed theymiddot were on a three-week studytheir critics maintainto maintain themselves and grow mission to Mediterranean counshy

Declaring that Catholics doat least in proportion to the inshy tries with the committee crease in Catholic population and better economically with their

Lazarus who was tremenshyCatholic education backgrouoothey do produce noticeable efshy ilously encouraged by his visithe said Apparently there werefects in their graduates along the with Cardinal Bea said in ansome qualities of the Catholiclines that follow the emphases interview here that he told theschools which either fosteredstressed by the organization cardinal about increasing Chrisshyeconomic success - perhaps theObjections tian-Jewish dialogue in the U Skinds of work habits instilled bySpeaking on the social conseshy Cardinal Bea in turn told ofthe vaunted better discipline ofquences of Catholic schoOI edushy projects that were going on inCatholic schools~or the religious other parts of the world includshyvalues of Catholicism in this hisshying the study and revision oftorical period had effects similar textbooks to take out passagesThe tc the values of Protestantism in harmful to the Jewsthe early period of the Reforshy

mation Saintly ManParish Parade Divisiveness The fact that we are here toshyROSLINDALE CONFIRMATION Rev Richard Johnshy

gether the cardinal told theSS PETER AND PAUL On the question of ilivisiveshy son hands the chalice to ~l member- of the confirmation group is living proof of theFALL RIVER ness Rossi said the evidence class at Sacred Heart Chllrch Roslindale where the Holy progress that is being made andseems clearly against supportingR gistration for grade one in such an allegation Eucharist was administered under both species of bread of the spirit thats behind it

the parish school ill bc held Twenty years ago a meetingVlikeIn general he noted no signifi shy and wine Bishop Jeremiah F Minihan Auxiliary Bishop Sunday April 23 after the 8 9 this probably wouldnt havecant difference)n anti-Negro10 and 11 oclock Masses of the middotBoston Archdiocese confirmed the class of 275 in happenedanti-Semitic or anti-ProtestantBoy Scouts will go to Expo Boston suburban parish NC Photo attitudes between Cahtolic schoolmiddot Urging Christians and Jews67 Montreal in August Their

Catholics an public school Cathshy to work together on social asmothers are assisting in fundshyolics was perceived Indeed well as religious questions Carshyraising activitic and announce

a cake sale after all Masses there was some evidence that dinal Bea commended coopershythe Catholic graduates of greatershy ation among Christians and Jews

-Retirement Plon Sunday April 23 The troop comshy

educational attainment were less even in areas where they disshymittee will have a musical vari shy Bridgeport Bishop Curtis Announces Programlikely to evidence prejudicial at shy agree like federal aid and supshyety show in the hall Sunday titudes of all sorts than those of port of text books for privateApril 30 to raise money for theshy For Priests on Connecticut Diocesesimilar educational attainment shy schoolstrip who had gone to public schools BRIDGEPORT (NC) - Bishop Retirement prior to age 70 but Lazarus who described CardishyThe omcns Club will have

Catholic schooling did not hold Walter W Curtis of Bridgeport after age 65 may be requested nal Bea as a saintly man saida rummage sale in the church back Catholics from participatshy has announced a retirement proshy by priests through a diocesan that if all religious leadershall Thursday and Friday April ing in public life he added gram for priests of the Bridgeshy personnel committee which will could exude the same feeling27 and 28 and hold its installashy

port Diocese Retroactive to Jan make its recommendation to the and understanding that Cardinaltion banquet at Dighton Rock 1 last it provides that bishop regarding acceptance or Bea did the worldmiddot would be11a~or Tuesday May 9

Men of the parish have organshy ~p~$ lP~nJffillaquoY All priests subniit their resigshy non-acceptance of the request much better ized a CYO athletic advisory nations by the age of 75 either On reaching 70 priests are exshy The cardinal is a great human council and plan a baseball team ~~reg] tri)_ lLte voluntarily or at the request of pected to resign any official poshy being he said and he ought

proper authority t) be a saint along with Popethis season Chairman is Milton sition they may hold in the dishyVATICAN CITY (NC)-Love The age for voluntary retireshy JohnM Kozak sccretary William F is the keynote in the primacy of ocese to allow younger priests to

ment is 70 yearsPatten coach Robert A Fredshy take over the activities of these ermiddot~lc Their next mecting is at offices

Peter and his successors in the guidance and service of the

10 Sunday morning April 30 Christian people Pope Paul VI Leaders UII1 Alabama Priests on retirement will conshyCommittees have been formed told thousands assembled in St tinue to possess faculties and willto plan the Summer parish picnic Peters during a general audience Blast Gov Wallace be free to give assistance in passhyto be held Sunday July 30 at Taking his theme from March toral work in parishes and otherUIbans Grove Tiverton - MOBILE (NC)-More than 40029s Gospel in which Christ asks Church instihitions if their

Alabama citizens here haveSTJEAN THE BAPTISTE Peter Do you love me more health penuits

signed a statement expressingALL RIVER than these do- the Pope stressed

dismay at Gov LUIleer Walshy A home for retired priests T~1C Council of Catholic Women the significance of the question

laces recent speech calling for now being constructed is sched- I will sponsor a pilgrimagetn La He wa3 asking the Apostle

stmiddot~te defiance of federal court uled for completion in 1968 and 1 Salette Shrinc Attleboro on Sunshy the first confessor of faith in ordered school desegregation Vill be open to all retired priests == ~ day April 23 A bus will leave the divine Messianic niis~ion of the school yard at 1 and return Christ for that complementing Among the signers were many bullbull at 5 Catholic clergymen Religiouscharacteristic which makes faith

Mrs Thomas Tache chairman and lay leaders including represhylive and work that is love and lVIIS Oscar Phenix co-chairshy charity sentatives of the Society of Jesus ir - BISIALONS man head the ticket committee the Josephite Fathers the SistersThe Pope continued The

of Loretto and the Dominican s~ primacy of Peter in the guidanceMARGARET Sisters i GARAGEand service of the Christian peoshyBUZZARDS BAY

ple was to be a pastoral primacy The statement appeared as A ~A whist party will be sponshy bullNote to Our Fellow Citizens insored at 8 Saturday night April a primacy of love -0 pray

beloved sons that all may undershy an advertisement in the Mobile22 at the school hall Main Street stand this prodigious divine Registerb~ the SS Margmet-Mary Guild design Maintaining that racism is the

HOLY NAME underlying issue in the controshyFALL RIVER versy the statements described

First communicants will hold Benedictine Oblates

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the states dual school system as rehearsals at 315 Monday aftershy Oblates of St Benedict will unjust and unequal and in- bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull noon April 24 and Thursday hold a chapter meeting Saturshy sited other citizens to joi n the afternoon April 27 at the parish day afternoon April 29 at Portsshy signers in working for justiceschool mouth Priory R I beginning now

at 4 with Mass Dinner willbe ST FRANCIS XAVIER served at 6 Reservations ~ may HYANNIS be made with the Priory or by

Mrs Kenneth B Clarke a calling Mrs Frank S Moriarty licensed grapho-analyst will be Fall River 672-1439 the guest speaker at tonights meeting of the Womens Guild ICheduled for 8 in the IQwC1 Coyle Penny Sale ehureh hall - -he Mothers Chlb of Coyle

The nominating committee High Schoo Taunton will sponshywill present a slate of officers sor a penny sale on Vednesday 101 the 1967-68 year at this meetshy night April 26 at 8 at Coyle in~ High

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THE ANCHOR-Dlocete of Fait R1yener-1h Apr 20 bull

~

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1 I

FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF HYACINTH CIRCLE Participatshying in the Golden Jubilee Celebration of the Daughters of Isabella-Hya-~

einth Circle--New Bedford were left Miss Mary E Foley regent and Mrs Richard H Walsh supreme regent of St Louis~ Mo at the cake cutshyting ceremony Center seated Miss Lydia Pacheco past regent and Mrs

Emile J Monfils chairman of decorations standing Mrs Richard H Manning vice-regent and Mrs Antone J Morris past regent Right -Mrs John B Lowney first regent seated in front of Miss Evelyn Henshydricks first guide left and Mrs Emmet Almond past regent The Circle has a membership of 500

Cardsna Cushing Emphas~es Need For Inv~vement

BOSTON (NC) - Om atechisms must be transshybted into real human conshyeern Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston asserted here

Cardinal Cushing said Christ did not make the rhetorical proshynouncements in response to peoples need but rather helped them by action Christians must take similar risks to wipe out the IJOcial evils of the 20th century be decl~red

For the Christian this social ftnvolvement consists not only in the desire for material well shybeing which we share with all humanitarians but also in the psychological hunger for more shybeing in mans thirst for the fullness of undying love in the final estabiishment of all things in the love of God the cardinal said

Cardinal Cushing said that the message of Easter is hope He asserted that fear is prevalent in our society-fear of nuclear deshytJtruction of our fellow men of the future of non-acceptance in a conformist society This fear be said is kindled by the conshytinued expansion of communism JiJi the various sectors of the a1obe

Christian lImperative

The cardinal warned While some satisfaction can be obtained jjn diminishing the degree of (Chill in the Cold War let no one be so mesmerizec as to think nIl is well and secure Let no one of us be duped into accepting war as peace

Cardinal Cushing said Chrisshytians have not always seen their Christian responsibility because of complacency or fear of inshyvolvement~ He added The Fathers of Vatican II have made it clear that for the Church and the Christian involvement is not only not to be feared-involveshyment is the Christian imperashytive

New Bedfords Hyacinth Circle lsabellas Mark Fifty Years of Community Service

By Patricia Francis Hyacinth Circle Daughters of Isabella of New Bedford marked its golden anniversary

Sunday morning at the 11 oclock Mass at Holy Name Church and a dinner that followed at the New Bedford Hotel Guests of honor were Mrs Anna C Walsh of Florisant Mo supreme regent members of the area clergy and charter members of the circle

Organized April 15 1917 at a meeting at Duff Han Hyacinth Circle began its half century of charitable work with a charter membership of 335 women Today it has a membership of approximately 500

In 1934 the drcle sponsored establishment of the first Junior C I N E 1 dmiddott

Irc e III ew ng an WI h acharter class of 125 young women from 10 to 20

Through the years members of the circle have participated in national and local charitable works including raising funds for he Queen Isabella FoundashytionFund of $100000 donated to te National Catholic School of Social Service affiliated with Catholic University in Washingshyton

Two area women were among those awarded fellowships to the school Mrs Mary Lou (Cleary) Nally formerly of New Bedford and now residing in Jeffersonshyville Pa and Mrs Jeanette (Mulvey) Mahoney of Arlington fOmel1y of Fairhaven Following erection of the Rose

Hawthorne Lathrop Home in Fall River for treatment of canshycer patients members of the circle adopted the work of proshyviding surgical dressings and other hosryital needs They also work closely with the Catholic Welfare Bureau One of the cirshycps pet projects was help for the White Sisters until they left New Bedford in 1965

First regent of Hyacinth Cirshycle was Mrs Helen E Lowney who contacted all charter memshybers before the anniversary celebration inducing many of those able to attend to join in the birthday party

Secoud regent was the late

Mrs Caroline ~ Manning of New Bedford who remained active in the DlUghters of Isashybella until her death She served as national regent

The late Rt Rev Henry J Noon of St James Church was the first of three chaplains who have provided spiritual direction for members of Hyacinth Circle Second chaplain was the Rt Rev Msgr Timothy B Sweeney of Holy Name Church and current chaplain is the Rt Revt Msgr John J Hayes also of Holy Name

ror many years Hyacinth Cirshycle held its meetings in the hall at the Knights of Columbus building at Pleasant and Camp bell Streets Then in the mid 1940s the Most Rev James E Cassidy gave the circle use of a house at 11 Robeson Street which ~eassince served as its headquarshy

Plans for the anniversary obshy

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servance were ~ade by a l~rge committee that included Miss Mary E Foley regent Mrs Anshytone Morris ticket chairman and Mrs Mary P Quinn a charshyter member

Miss Ellen Gaughan read a history of the circle which she had written an entertainment was provided by Nancy Howard Debruyn of Milton who offeredselections from Sound of Music

Hear Bishop NASHVILU (NC) - Bishop

Joseph A Durick is the first Catholic clergyman to address a state convention of the Episcopal Church Women of Tennessee

St Johns to Open New School in 68

JAMAICA (NC) - St Johns University here in New York state will establish ilschool of general studies in September1968

It will consist of three divishysions each with a separate facshyulty and assistant dean

The new school will offer It

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6 THE ANCHOR-Di~c~se of Fail Riv~r-Thurs Ap~ 20 1961 - ~ 1middotmiddot 1 ~ --~ ~ bull bull - ~~

Reports Mean What There will undoubtedly be more than the usual furor over the release by the National Oatholi~ Reporter of a text of majority and minority reports submitted to PopeshyPaul on the matter of birth control It will be well to reshymember what these reports are and what they are supshyposed to do

Members of the Papal Commission on Birth Control were asked by the Pope to study the whole matter from every possible point of view and to submit their findings to him so that in the light of this work and in the light of the medical issues involved he might make moral judgeshyments and pronouncements on these matters The studies would then be expected to contain every possible aspect of the birth control problem with every kind of argument both for and against every type of method of birth cOntrol This is fundamental to any kind of reshysearch paper All sides of every aspect are discussed argushyments strong and weak are brought out to bolster each

aspect and then the whole is presented for thought and prayer and decision

This indeed is what the Papal Commission has done For a reader to take this or that argument and from

it to mak~ his own deductions is unwise and a misuse of what the Commission has done For a reader to take what the Reporter has printed and to assume that this is the whole story is to come to conclusions on partial evidence

The Reporters release of these texts will be seen by many as an act of freedom the willingness for all matters -to be discussed openly and before the entire world It is hoped that the Reporter has gone a step further even and has indicated to its readers what these texts really IPean how they are to be understood and the purpose of research papers of this type Most people are neither philosophers nor scientists nor theologians Philosophical concepts socioshylogical and scientific ideas theologizing about issues-all this cannot be simply thrown at people with the expec~tion that there will be no confusionTo think this way would pe naive

It is never enough simply to issue reports Two questions should always be asked in the wake of reports---are they accurate and what do they mean Or-to put it quite inelegailtly-Sez you and So What

Auschwitz Mem(jrial Attempts to slant or rewrite history should alw~ys be

met with vigorous and serious protest On Sunday a monshyument was dedicated in Poland to the memory of the four million persons who met death in the gas chambers of the infamous Auschwitz death camp This act of unspeakable barbarity should live forever in the memory of man

But the -dedication ceremony Sunday made scarce menshytion of the fact that the overwhelming preponderance of thos~ killed were put to death only and precisely because they were Jews The only reference to this martyrdom of the Jews was made in French by the president of the Intershy

nationa1 Auschwitz Committee and his remarks were not translated into Polish

The chief speaker Polands Premier gave greetings to the Jews who had come to pay tribute to their dead but glossed over the ordeal of the Jews which still hangs heavy On the consciences of those who call this a civilized world

It remained for individuals and groups after the formal eeremonies to offer prayers for the Jews who died because they were Jews and for no other reason

Men the world over should add their prayers for these ~agic victims and should pray too that time will not erase either the blrbarity of the deed or the reason-s for it

rhe ANCHOR OffiCIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAILL ~QVER

410 Highland Avenue

ublished weekly by The Catholi~ Press of the Diocese of Fall River Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER ~ost Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

~ ~

tbfs In the U So Universal eashyonical nonns will be given bv the Vatican and U S norms jr$ be established by the NCCD

It was suggested that trained CCD laymen be permitted to dIlt part-time ministry as a step tilshyward this establishment

Missions A comniission of seven bishopa

will guide coordinating effon among mission appeals for finalilot cial support and personnel

Religious Needs Regarding fund solicitations hi1

religious communities t)te bis~

ops felt the problem is very comshyplicated and voted an ad hOC joint committee be formed further study

Justice-Peace The bishops formed a natio~

counterpart of the Vatican COJDoo mission on World Justice-Peaee

It was described as a broad c0shyoperative program ofeducatiOlil designed to arouse collaboratioO with other religious groups in an

ecumenical kind of project to make this affluent nation of oUDI more aware of the tremend01lilll needs of developing nations

Vietnam The Justice-Peace Commissiou

vIas obviously interested JDj such topics as Vietnam and musti face them as moral dilemmas ~

[D) 0 rL 11 A IL J our time it was notedWD~lflJ~ tr[FtOl -~rn1 e(1~ A spokesman mentioned greali

Lr Continued from Page One

On mixed marriages the formof the promises as used in the Madison Diocese was recomshymended for general use throughshyout the U S It states We sol emnly promise that all children who may be born of our marshy

riage will be baptized in theCatholic Church and carefully~eared in the knowledge and practice of the Catholic religion We are both aware that our marshyriage contract will remain biJid

ing until death We promise not to hinder each other in the pracUce of religion

On previous censorship the bishops wish prior approval be required for the actual texts Of Sacred Scripture books of prayer or devotion liturgical or ceremorial books textbooks used in religious eliucation programs especially in the primary and secondary levels that prior apshyproval not-be required on books or articles dealing with Scripshy

ture theology canon law eccleshysiastical history and like subshy

jectsIf dangerous tea~hings are

found a warning in pastoral tone should be issued

Coordination A Cominittee onPalitoral Reshy

should correspond more closely have asked the VatIcan to rele shysearch and Practice was founded shy to what is usually found in the them from these provisionshwhic WIll coordinate the follow- American system of education COD

ing committees Liturgy Ecu- f f menism Canonical Affairs and ~ur years 0 high school four The CCD has been and wiD Doctrine 0 college four of theology that continue primarily as a religiouB

seminaries on the high school Liturgy and college levels take accredi- educational program on the

Four possible texts ofthe Eng- tation steps all seminariestake parochial level reported BishoP lish Canon of the Mass were Greco to the hierarchy He alsO given By a vote of C to 1 one cond~l~t self-study in the ligbt of announced that the complete text ~xt was given approval of genshyeral tenor A definite text is expected by June of this yjar

~etirement For bishops it wasmoved that

a retiring bishop be permitted to reside in his diocese that suit~ able sustenance be provided him (especially medical and hospital care) and that the N~B do so

if a particular diocese cannot that r permanent commLJion is needed to oyersee this that the pr~visions for retirement extend to all bishops-auxiliaries titushylar etC-and not only residential bishops

For prirsts that various beneshyfit plans be reviewed so as to ready a national plan of care and benefits for retired priests

Priests One of the first functions of

the Committee on Pastoral Reshysearch and Practices will be to study in depth the role amI life of the priest in American society It should consider priestly forshymatioD income distribution

i2J concern among the bishops abou~ seminary studies parish strue- Vietnam citing their statemellli ture celibacy the mission needs last November that no serioWl of Latin America and the thkd Christian can absolve himseril

world from being concerned with tb18 As fa- as celibacy is concerned question but added I sense

the NCCB unanimously rea1- great reluctance among the bis~ firmed clearly and strongly the ops to take a stand either crill shyexplicit teaching of the Vatican cizing or endorsing various as-Council on the current and ira- pects of the prosecution of the ditional observance of clerical war

celibacy Pastoral Councils To rumors that a Catholic The bishops are in search far

priest can leave the Chufth II sample constitutIon for pap marry and in a few years obtaID 10ral councils which will clead permission from Rome for lay distinguish it from the diocesaD Catholic standing a spokesman eonsultors and the priests seDshyfor the bishops answered ates

This is a policy the JJoJv Twenty-four topics were pre-Father controls Any priest who sented which might profitably be engages in this is engaging in ma~ers of study ranging frOlia spiritual Russian roulette Be adult education to vocations has no guarantee any dispensa- National Parishes tion will be given to him in tile It was shown that accordingfuture

A survey of the distribution Pope Pauls Ecclesiae Sanctae a and utilization of priests in the bishop has the rigllt to suppresS

national parishes-those estabshyU S is being prepared bythe lished for special ethnic groups Center for Applied Research in T R C h

the ~postolate (CARA) Nothing he oman urIa oweveJl definite could be presented since bid the bishops not use this rIght

because of concordats WIth go~only 63 per cent of the dioceses shyhave responded so far ernments or the physical or

moral rights of persons involved Priestly Formation without first referring to tho

Eight general recommenda- Holy See tions were made for all semina- Since these conditions do ~ ries the seminary structure apply t0 the U S the blsh shy~

c~nci Ibear documents that provJ- of the new edition of the CeD SIons made for a system of Bible will be published in earlYcommunication between the litoshydet body and the administrative 1968 mong the scholars preshyand teaChing faculties so that paring translations are five dieshystudents may present their views tingUishec Protestant memberS regarding the seminary program Newman for faculty consideration that It was recommended thai seminary advisory boards of priests in Newman work be enshyqualified members of clergy and couraged to secure advanced laity apart from seminary per- academic degrees especially m sonnel be encouraged that a theology that the high rate otl BA degree or its equivalent be turnover among Newman priests an entrance requirement for a be curtailed that part-time theoloID seminary that eccel- chaplains be made full time siastical studies begin with a where possible that more priests course so students lerceive the be assigned to the Newman meaning order and pastoral end Apostolate for the growing numshyof their studies ber of Catholics attending col-

The bishops also encouraged lege and university that the amalgamation where seminaries bishops re-emphasize the growshycannot maintain a suitable pro- ing importance of the Newmali gram due to size unsatisfactory Apostolate facilities inadequate faculty fi- New Dioceses nancing and similar programs The committee on presen~

Deacons names for new bishops will a- It was recognized that there deal regularly with the questi_

will be permanent order of of diocesan boundaries and tile deacons established and that the establishment of new dioceses

_NCCB will be empowered 10 do Turn to Pll4Ie SeVeD

7 Diocesan Sc~oots Students Reap Honors Aplenty as Senior Year Enters Into Final Phase

Honors aplenty are being garne~d by Diocesan students among them Andrea Trczinski a senior at Tauntons Bishop Cassidy High whos been selected as one of 15 New England students to participate in the 1967 Youth Science Congress jointly sponsored by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the National Science Teachers Association

In the course of the two and a half day congress now in progshyress at the NASA Electronics Research Center in Boston Anshydrea like the other participants will present a 15 minute oral

report of the project which gained her inclusion in the

event

Duck Fond The presentations say conshy

gress officials are not comPetishytive but will give listening scishyentists and teachers the opporshytunity to evalute them and offer guidance to the students

Andreas project is an arehaeshyological and geological investigashytion of an early American potshytery works The Duck Pond Site It has already won her many awards in state and reshygional science fairs

Students from Stang and from St Anthony and Holy Family high schools in New Bedford were participants in an essay eontest sponsored by the New Bedford Serra Club on The Role of the Priest and Nun in the Christian Community

First place winner was Cidhshyerine Giammalvo of Stang and cliiIdren at st Josephs Home to mnners-up were Mary Black a~ outing Sunda) while NBSers also of Stang and Michael at Mt St Marys have elected Tames of St Anthony Stang their officers for next year inshyalso won a plaque for baving the eluding Martha Nugent presi- most entrants in the contest dent Judith Doolan vice-presi-

At Stang theyre congratu- dent Susan Bernier s~cretary lating Cynthia Curry named to Diane Berger treasurer represent ber school on an area -Speed reading is the word at department stores teen fashion Sacred Hearts Fall River where board Mt St Mary Academys some 30 students are devoting representative to the same board th~ hours eery Saturday is Elaine Chaves The lucky gals mo~ing to a reading improve will receive modeling instruc- ment course Reading power tiona in connection withmiddot their ~ed and word study are em- appointments and will also be phasized in the 10 week course given the clothes they model which began April 1 Again at Stang word has Also at SHA varsity and jayshyreached the office that John vee teams in volleyball and basshyGolenski a 65 grad and now s ketball honored Mrs GeGrge Be sophomore has received a Snyder their coach at a surprise grant for Summer study in dinner Well they might since

EuroSePbe hi A ta Mrs Snyder has led them to olani PB coop nees Narry League championships in

Still very much in the newa ~t~ sports are notices of college scholar-middotmiddot Honoi lroviJiclai ships and acceptances At Doshyminican Academy Fall River Jesus-Mary students honored Elarne Fisette has been accepted the Mother Provincial of the lReshyat Southern Conn State College ligiousf Jes~s-Mary at ~ eer-middot powet supplied to them occupied Briana Doherty Linda Guill Diane Giasson at SMTI and Sue emony mcludmg ~e readmg of the bishops The NCCB will furshy mette and Mary Wynne Gagnon at Bryant while Jerome lIl~ ad~ress by PaulIne Dumas ther study the matter

Mancini has received a full tul- s~hool preSident the presenta- Oth b t h h th b h f f1 er su Jec s w IC e is shytion grant from St Annesmiddot~os- tion 0 owers anll gIfts and a ops treated were communica- pitaI School of Nursing ana a pe~orrnance by the g~et C~U tions between the bishops and

padial grant from the Utlion OccasIOn was the Provmcial smiddot tmiddott tmiddotmiddotmiddot f p hi 1 bullbull t t d Colle Ins 1 u IOns 0 Ig er earnshyosplmiddottal dItto annua VISit 0 heaca emy 1 middotmiddotmiddottmiddotiUmiddot S h n J bullbull Ilg In bullbulle c anges In pershy Receiving annual renewable ChristIan Youth Movement mission middotformiddot the alienation of

Scholarships at Jesus middotlVlary m~mbe~ of Prevost and JM~ churchproperty increased edushy J

Academy Fall River are Su- Wlll VISIt Nazareth Hall thiS cation onthe threats of abortionshyianne Lagarde awarded a $2300middotmiddot month and will also sJonsor a cooperation with the YMCA ami grant from Fordham University cake sale Sunday AprIl 30 A YWCA better coordination with and Yvonne L Berger recipient vigil service is set for Monday ihe usce celebration of the ()f three grants from Northeast- em University totaling $2180 Suzanne previously received a $2500 scholarship from Northshye~tern ~nd Yvonne is a semishyfinalist In the Rhode Island State Scholarship Program

Prevost reports that Gerry Ferris has been accepted at Bridgewater State College and Cassidy notes that Rita Donnelly has received a full scholarshiJ) fto Johnson and Wales Business School

Chess Tournamenamp Prevost students arent giving

their gray matter a rest this vacation week In progress is a schoolwide chess tou~ament

IIDd the winner will receive a tro~nv

On the agenda at Cassidy is a Junior College Day slated for Thursday April 27 a Couples Dance Saturday April 29 and a father-daughter night Wednesshyday May 3

lPRan lltetJreat

Mt St Mary students will helli a taUt by Rev Bernard Sullivan Friday April 28 in preparation for the retreat theyll be making the first three days ox May Also to speak at Mount on the same day is Mother Mary Martha Assistant General of the Sisters of St Joan of Arc whose topic will be vocations The Sisters of St Joan of Arc care for rectories bishops houses and seminaries

Still in the vocation line Sister Mary LaSalette of the Mount faculty will attend a meeting at Bristol Community College Wednesday April 26 Subject Vocations

Dominican Academy students will enjoy their senior prom Frishyday June 9 at the Hearthstone restaurant and congratulations are in order for DAs student council moderator Sister Mary Agnes who has been offered a

graduate assistantship at the University of Wisconsin Prevost members of the Nashy

tional Honor Society treated

April 24 and members will hold Year orFaith in connection with their year-end banquet Saturday the 1900th anniversary of the June 3 _ martyrdom of Ss Peter and Paul

Prevost debaters are preparing celebration of Communications for the JFK tournament to be Day May 7 held at Cassidy in May Thus far the Prevost team has chalked up an 8-5 record

(ASA BLANCA Just Across The

Coggeshall St Bridge Fairhaven Mass

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STEAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

MOTHER PARKERS famous for OLD FASHIONED DOUGHNUTS

QUALITY and baked by your Sunbeam Baker SERVICE

CONTESTS WINNElRS Winners of New Bedford Serra Club essay contest on roles of priest nun in Christian community are from left runners-up Mary Black Stang High and Michael James St Anthony High and first prize winner Catherine Giammalvo Stang High Stang also won plaque for having most entrants in contest

Parent-Teacher Night is sched- duties for many of the Cassidy uled for Tuesday April 25 at students meanS more time to JMA and will feature as a profit byvarlous e~ucational opshyspeaker Dr Betty-Anne Metz of portunities At the Mass State

Bristol County Community Col- Science Fair Friday April 21 lege through Sunday April 23 Cheryl

And Prevost students are anti- McCaffrey top winner in the cipating a dance Friday April school SCience Fair and chosen 28 at St Annes Audit6rium The one of the 25 representatives Torquays will play from the Fall River Regional

This isNational Library Week will repr~sent Cassidy High toshyand mixt week is Secretaries gether WIth Pamela Candee Week so maybe everyone should The Massachusetts Youth Cit shyreld a book about secretaries izenship Conference at Bndg~shyAt any rjlte Cassidy Future Sec- water sc~eduled ~or tod~y ~Ill retaries of America will tour a attract the follOWIng 10 JUnIors North Dighton plant and visit chosen as representatives Donna Wheaton College Also pn their Cole M~y Fenton Kathl~en agenda isa reception on Sunday Hanna Eb~beth Laffan Paulme and aluncheon next Wednesday Lecuyer

Cassidy Go Despite Vaeatlon Also Carolyn McCaffrey Joshy anne Orchekowski Margarita

Free time from regular class Procopio Anne Marie Sullivan and Donna White The subject of this years Conference is ValuesU SmiddotmiddotBishopmiddots in a Changing World

Continued frQm Page Six At EmmailUel College Friday hiterdiocesan Offices April 21 three of Cassidys lanshy

An extended discussion on guage students will compete in sueD agencies might be best the annual French Contest for strUctured and adequate manshy High School Students They are

fHE ANCHORshylhun April 20 1967

Labor Statement Wins Approval

SAN ANTONIO (NC) Farm labor leaders hailed the Catholic bishops of Texas for issuing a statement supshyporting the right of farm workshyers to form unions and urging national legislation to protec~ this right

Spokesmen of farm associashytions responded that they do no~

oppose field workers joining unions but withheld comment pending a study of the bishops pronouncement

The bishops declared that among the basic rights of a human person is the right of freely founding associations or unions for working people and that all should have the right of freely taking part in the activities of these unions without risk of reprisal

The statement was issued at the conclusion of a two-day meeting of the board of directors of the Texas Catholic Confershyence It was approved by the bishops of the 10 Texas dioceses

Farm workers in the Rio Grande City area of south Texas have been on strike since last June and their efforts had been endorsed previously by Archshybisho Robert E Lucey of Sam Antonio and Bishop Humberto Medeiros of Brownsville

Leading the praise for the bishops was Cesar Chavez of Delano Calif national director ofthe United Farm Workers Organizing Committee whose Local No2 is striking in Rio Grande City

Chavez termed the statement very powerful and very charshyitable lle said he thinks the declaration is an answer to the prayers of thousands and thoushysands of farm workers in the Southwest asking that their Church and Church leaders stand with them in their struggle to ~ure social -justice as ennunshyciated toy the popes in the many encyclicals~

DEBROSS OIL co

Heating Oils and Burners

365 NORTH FRONT STREET NEW BEDFORD

992-5534

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 Medical Gr9uP Inducts Nun

Spring Cleaning Reveals WASHINGTON (NC) - The first nun was inducted as a fel shylow of the American College ClI Obsttricians and Gynecologists at its 15th annual clinical here

Hoards of Yardgoods lBy Mary Tinley Daly The honor went to SiBtel

Spring housecleaning is like a great white light revealshy Miriam Paul Klaus of the Me~

ing all Its not just dust in the bedsprings and radiators cal Mission Sisters who have headquarters in Philadelphi~the great unwashed slats of Venetian blinds gummy glasses dlJring the coJeges session~stashed away on an upper shelf finding of borrowed books Sister Miriam Paul was nlaquolI

too long unreturned These are what i call honest misshytakes chores you dont mind having household help help you with like doing floors walls windows rugs furniture

This is orthodox Spring cleaning such as every housewife can t a c k 1e have done with and point to with pride No the nuisances at least at our house are the secret sins jobs weve really anticipatshyed getting at one of these days but the llPecific day never seems to come And nobody but nobody can help in this department

Moms Hobby Shll)p For instance theres the used

furniture corner of the attic sOmetimes laughingly referredto as Moms Hobby Shop Theres the dresser bench Mom b going to cane when and if Mom learns how to cane an art supposed to be lotS of fun There ure two perlectly good boudoir chairs or iiI be perfectly good when theyre recovered And the little stand picked up at uuction waiting patiently to be antiqued when and if Mom learns how to antique another touted fun hobby bull

What the good-natured ribbers of Moms Hobby Shop dont know is that another secret cache of to-be-dones awaits in one corner of the basement the touch of a little hand pktures to be framed along with a framshying kit which any child can master another kit of clear plastic resin ideal for embedshyding coins flowers leaves rocks shells pictures novelties jewshyelry So far efforts have reshysulted in the embedding of one penny askew and far from ornashymental Theres also ever~thing

you need to wire a lamp everyshything but the skill that is

A strong-minded woman would become a Jill of all trades masshy1er skills necessary and do away with the jobs one at a time or else give away all t1e maIdngs ~~t then a str~))~gmil)d~ woman probably wouldnt have gotten

intothisfixin the first place With springcleani~goncoming

lik~ the inevitable tinie and taxes we decided to dean around the undones in attic and

basement facl up to legitimate eatchiills like the ~drponlClos~ etsbull

Dougherty High Band Wins Festival Honor

WASHINGTON (NC)-In this middot ease to the victors it was a mix- ture of cherry blpssoms and roses

The members of the Cardinal Dougherty High School Band of

Phiiadelphia marched ltYff with first place honors in the band

middot eompetitlon at the annual Cherry Blossom Festival _parade -an event which attracts tens of

middotthousands of visitors annually 10 the nations capital

The vIctory was nothing new to the bandsmen - and girls They won first prize two years ago and last March 17 won middotfirst prize in New Yorks St Patricks Day paralaquoe

present to receive the honor PelshyThere not in one not in two but in every closet we were sonally She is stationed at the

communitys Holy Family Heampfaced with the nemesis a box or pital in Dacca East Pakistan a bag or apile of yardgoods

The college accepts as fello~Forgotten IItems physicians who specialize in obshyThe sewing center has been stetrics and gynecology and aregoing pretty full tilt at our house judged competent and ethical byrecently what with a bedroom their colleagues Sister Miriamwhere we can set up the mashy Paul took the written examinashychine the ironing board sew tions for the American Boardseveral hours every day walk of Obstetrics and Gynecology iQout shut the door and come back Pakistan in 1965middot and the oralto undisturbed work the followshy examination in Chicago in Apriling day 1966

Matter of fact we thought She is a native of Viennasmugly we were getting all

Allstria a naturalized U S citi shysewed up tents and jumpers zen and a convert to the Cathoshyand miniskirts for the young

suits skirts hats for the more NO ATTLEBORO ART WINNERS Pauline Lemieux lic Faith from Judaism She joined the Medical Mission Sisshyconservative first grade William Midon eighth grade Cecile Parent ters in 1957 after completing herWe even felt no compunction sixth grade were the leading artists in the contest conshy medical education at the Univerin indulging a long-standing ducted in Sacred Heart School No Attleboro sity of Louisville Ky and herhabit of visiting a yardgoods residency at Barnes Generalcenter quite often picking up an Hospital in St Louis She haGirresistible bargain in cloth seshy

~spent six years at the sisteplecting a pattern and actually hoods hospitals in Pakistaneompleting garments

The sewing room Markie~ Sister Mary Luke Gray an- erstwhile bedroom was in reshy o~her Medical Mission physician markably good shape as a proshy has also passed _the AniericaD duction center and could eVeR IMAGE-MAKING Board of 0bstl~tricsand Gyne suffer the pangs of Spring houseshy

In this ever-changing worldcleaning with mere picking up of scraps setting 10 rights and a horough cleaning

But those unearthed forgotshyten treasures in the other closshyets Why there was enough mashyterial here to keep Us chained 10 that sewing machine as was Proshymetheus to his rock

Now what had we intended 10 do with that short length of pink flannel Oh yes wed picked it up for the proverbial song at a visit to a mill in South Caroshylina would have it until the folshylowing spring and make a coat for Mary Daly Brennan (Mary is now nine years old and this pink bit wouldnt even make a coat for her little sister) MUs~ lin broadcloth velvet tweedshyyou name it we have it -

Out into the clear with every item from every box bag and pile

Io more saving no more stashing away no more visits 10 remnant counters

The Head of the House paying one of his rare visits to our sew- ing center viewed the miniature mill-end display

By the way he asked hows about putting a new pocket in these trousers And sOme shirt buttons that have popped

OK First t~ings first

Baltirnor~ Nun to Head C()lIeg~ Advisory Unit

PITTSBURGH (NC) -Sister M Cleophas Costello of Balti shymore will serve as chairman of the newly formed Commission on Higher Education of the Fedshyeration of the Sisters of Mercy

The commission will serve in an advisory capacity in mat~ers concerning the 15 colleges opershyated by the order The federashytion numbers 15000 nUDll throughout the United states Canada and Lat~n America

New President LOS ANGELEE (NC)-5ister

Cecilia Louise Moore will beshycome president of Mount St Marys College here in Califorshynia ~)D Aug 15 next succeeding Sister Mary Rebecca who haS headed the womens liberal aris college since 1961

where what is in one moment is obsolete the next there is nothing more changeable than

the image of the ideal woman This image that stamps itself on the minds of millions causes fashion design- ers to change styles and forces females alI over the world to rush to the beauty facshytories to be turned out as its carbon copies is created in many ways Sometimes it starts with a particular model that hits the publics fancy or a cinema star that reaches her audience or even as in the case of Mrs Kennedy with the rise and public acclaim of a woman associated with politics

However whatever the reason or manner or time that creates an idol of this woman 8Jl idol she is at least until someone else more exciting comes along ~ cpallenge her place

This phenomenon of one womshyan or tyPe of woman leading alI others is nothing new Im sure there has been an ideal type of beauty since Neanderthal man dragged his mate by her long thick tresses into his cave (eer- tainly no short-haired eave girl wOuld have shone m prehistoric times)

Charles Dana Gibson pPOVided the image of the goddess of the

Protestants to Speck At Catholic Retreats

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - At least one Protestant minister Or layman ~ill appear as guest

speaker at retreats held in the San Antonio area during the coming year an archdiocesan committtee OIl lay ecumenism has decided

The ecUmenical aspects of the retreat program win carry over into a 1967 Ecumenical Diashylogue scheduled for June 29 UI July 1 at St J~ephs retreat bouse here Selected ministers

priest Sisters Brothers and laity will be speakers

cology examinations and win 1900s with heavenly sketches of return to Pakistan to continue a dark haired question mark her practice coiffured beauty with Ii lOng 11gt

graceful swanlike neck Immediateiy all fashion-con-

csious females of that day rushed out to the local emporiums to purchase henna rinses and rats (the hair peces of the 90s) to puff out their skimpy pompashydOlUS

The tWihkling 20s had no sooner been born than the It Girl Clara Bow caused the daughters of the aforementioned females to toss away their rats head for the nearest barber and expose their ears as well as their knees

Not a decade later these knees were encased in satin lounging pajamas and the ears hidden under the marcelled curls that Jean Harlow sported

And such has been the tide of fashion everchanging and generally influenced by circumshystances from the short skirts of the material-rationed war years through the New Look that welcomed the advent of peace

TOdays Qlieen

What of our present fashion Queen Who is the woman ofshythe 60s who isthe darii~goft~ fashion press and fashion de- signers oddly enough in this age of affluencemiddot it seems that the female wile outshines an others is ~ long-legged wideshyeyed British model who looks like an ad for Care packages and answers to the improbable name of Twiggy ~sley ~ornby (the name on

Twiggys birth certificate) is a 11 year old pathetically thin ex- schoolgirl who has been sky- rocketed to fame and fortune through the efforts of her Sven laquoali -her manager

Her waif-like face shining Jrom the cOvers of hundreds of magazines haS inspired young females everywhere ie nmtfgt their hairdress~rs ~ ) g~miR eut paint theirmiddot lower lashes_ like those of a kewpie don and push away t~at dessert pla1e Twiggy is apparently the JleW

idol of the fashion world - at l~ast until next season

9 Nows RightTime to Plant Peas for Early Enjoyment

By J~ aridlfan1ynRoderiek It is a eustom in New England to serve salmon and peas

00 the Fourth of July Years back this was the time when thresh salmon showed up Jin New England fish markets and Jllative peas could be found ~t the corner store Now we have frozen peas year round and amp Imon may be had throug~- ~t most of the year Thll3 lm-as taken the special delight (iJlJt of native foods but we can G1tfll appreciate fresh vegetabtea limd fish made much morepaia-~ oble by being put on a tablel 3

day or so after it is caught If you want fresh peas fortne

~ourth of July you can sow your creed about the third week of llIlay We prefer ours a little ear_I ~er and so we get the seeci ~lanted by the second or third week in April 00 that the planta will be well on their way before ~e cold weather is gone and (he warm weather arrives By QlllIll reckoning the peas we planted last week will be ready ~ the second week of June

Peas are simple to grow and Ililave nO special difficulties They Ilteed sun moisture and good s6il A row of peas may be planted fulna matter of 10 minutes ahd OOten forgotten until it ia tiine

Th k Si te h d th IIS wee s rae c ass act out the sacrainent to go along with their lesson in the religious Workbqok My daughter came homedelirious with joy because she was chosen to bring in the baby

We unearthed a doll that we ilelt was closest to newborn baby size and Grandma helped by finding the baptismal garments that were stored in her house and by dressing the fortunate stand-in while she explained to Meryl and Melissa that this was the same dress that they wore when they became members of the Church

In fact the children were awed as I further explained that actually four children had used these baptismal garments Meryl ~gan making plans immediateshyly Ann Marie is going to be the father (this in our all-girl ochool) Wendy is the godmother and Karen is going to be the ptiest because her new little

~r pickinlt b~othe was christened Sunday Jrirst tum the soil over to il a~d she knows jllst what to do

ilepth of about six inches or ~ Innoeent DIscussion and break up the clods Make ~ Even Melissa got into the act twrrow about an inch deep~~tl as she proceeded to spiel off m drop the peas into the furrow list of names that she thought iellst an inch and a half a~a~lt t~~ dfl~lshould be given Meryl eovel the furrow water ~~~ si~ e~pIiil1edto her that salt would ~ack a~d wait In 50 days or so dlependmg on the varIety of seed ~u ~se the peas wi1l be ready faj plckmg and ~atmg

Plant Anywhere )peas may be planted in rows

lMlt they may also be planted aishylllillost anywh~re they will get the IgtUUn I planted two little roWlJ ~tween some raspberry bushes raquolaquolother row in front of a flowe ~ where my wife will be able 00 get to them and still another JIlandful of seed in a foundation ~ianting in front of the house

This latter may seem to be goshyl1mg a little too far but by the ~me the annuals a~e in bloom le peas will have been con~

d oome the plants pulled up and DO one will be the wiser

The point is that one does not Thlave to make a big project out ~ growing a packet of seeds mnce half the pleasure is to be

flound in doing a minimum of work while reaping deliciolw nesults

In the Kitchen Most middot0f the books which conshy 1 thltOOJlI emse ves with heading

lIUr children in the right direc_ (tioqas living thinking Chrlsshyllians recommend that middotthebestW4yOOle Sacrament of Baptism is to Ilaye them attend an actual cer+ ~ony This is quite true as we

~rvotlCnced when Jason WM lgtavtized and Meryl and Melis Were allowed to attend

We were fortunate in that the l)lliest who performed the cereshyIlllOny was a personal friend who _plained clearly to the childreUll _actly wha~ he was doing rOIl liIUre this made a lasting impres-Ilion but I also feel that theii IlIIllnds were on the celebratiollll

be Pllt on the dolls tongue to preserve her from the sins of the Yorld and to give her III

atlste for wisdom It was delightful to hear them

discussing the sacrament in such inn~cent and childlike ways and yet witlt understanding that demonstrated wisdom far beyond their years The following incishyde~~ occurred at about the time this was happening and demon- strates the feeling of some chishydrep arid the naive wisdom they possess For two or three days last week Joe had seen a female rabbit in the yard and he had pointed it out to the children

th t itsayIng a appeared ready to have a litter Sure enough the rabbit did have a litter under the mulch around one of the rose bushes The children were thrilled but

f un ortunately a neighbors dog found the litter and killed the tiny newborn rabbits When

~~~~JIiCheese Gingerbread l3~ounee package ere a JllIl

cheese l cup molasses 2 eggs

1 cups sifted all-purpose ftOtllfi teaspoon baking soda

1 teaspoons baking powdeR 1 teaspoon cinnamon

OOnat was to take place at home 1 teaspoon ginger smd on all the people who were t~aspoon cloves ltllllming to help them celebrate 1-8 teasp~n salt

llhis in itself wasnt bad as it IIgt boiling water lB alsoimportant that they ~al- 1) Beat the cream cheese urim koo th~t a baptism is aiQytul Ce- ~BOft andfluftly then gradually llWliori which should be shared beatit the molasses Ytdh others butwith the confu- 2~ Beat- in the eggs one at Cl

CATHOLIC WOMEN HONOR BISHOP Welcoming Most Rev James L Connolly to the Annual Bishops Night Sponsored by the New BedfordCathoJic Womens Club are Mrs John W Glenn left president and Mrs Daniel F Dwyer first vice-president

Receiver Takes Over FHA Starts Foreclos~te lProcee~ings

Against Retirem~rjfttoriu~ MOUNT ANGEL (NC) - A

oourt-appointed receiver hall taken over operation of Mount Angel Towers a $34 million reshytirement home completed scarceshyy more than a year ago

The receiver-Portland attorshyney John R Fawt Jr - was named less than a month after the Federal Housing Administrashytion announced that it was start shying foreclosure proceedings against the home here in Oregon

Mount Angel Towers built on Beven acres of land donated to it

Sch001 Honors Chaplain

Killed in Vietnam PLEIKU (NC)-A new wing

has been added to St Pauls

School here in memory of Father (Maj) William J Barragy of the Dubuque archdiocese who was

killed in a helicopter crash inVietnam May 4 1966

A brass plaque on the office wall states Rev William J

Melissa appeared on -the scene Barragy (Major U S Army)boni October 13 1923ordained

she said realistically New life May 22 1948 dled In VIetnamI k p un and its all over Just May 4 1966 like Jesus born at Christmas

The new wing has five classshy dead at Easter rooms all on the ground floor

Last year when my oldest St Pauls is in the charge of the to teachyoungstersabout daitghier received the sacrament I Sisters ofSt Paul de Chartres

of tfie HolyEucharist for the first who alsohave anorphahge near tim~~ wil celebrated With a fam the iichoOtmiddot Thereare 1000 Viet ililgtru~ch Ali lt~~ everyon~ namese children receiving pri seeffied to enjoy was warm mar an -secondary educatmiddot10n i~

a bullbull ging~tbread the schOOL

by theilelghobririg Mount Angel Benedictine Abbey was billed on its completion in 1965 as the nations first Catholic retirement home

it was not the most prosperous however and by JIeb 7 when the mortgage-holder assigned the mortgage to FHA which had inshysured it the 207-unit six-story building had only 80 residents in 61 apartments

Appointment of a receiver was the first step in FHAs machinery toward eventual sale of the propshy~rty to another private operator

The home will be run as beshyfore according to the FHA Portshyland office until it can be sold to a suitable organization to maintain its operation as housing for senior citizens

FHAs office in Washington said Mount Angel Towers was one of about 20 such projectsshynot all Catholic - which had failed since 1960 when FHA mortgage insurance became available to them More than 200 have been built

llHE ANCHOR-Thurs April 20 1967

Sisters Assume Pasroral Duties

AKRON (NC)-Priests visit flBl administer the sacraments bu~

day by day the ordinary passhytoral duties are performed bsr nuns in Brazilian parishesmiddot il1l Natal and Salvador administered by the Daughters of Divine Charity

Their duties which includ~ the distribution of Holy Comshymunion were described here bV Mother M Fidelis Weninger who worked in Brazil for 21 years prior to her election in 1965 as mother general of th0 community

The Daughters of Divine Charity she said care for those parishes just as though they were priests Of course we cant administer the sacraments but we handle everything elseshysuch as pre-marriage instructionD and parish visitations

Permission for the nuns t distribute Communion was obshytained from Pope Paul vr through Bishop Eugenio de Araujo Sales apastolic adminisshytrator of Sao Salvador de Bahia she explained

Sister Mother Fidelis ordeli has been working in Brazil sincia 1919 and now has 460 nuns there aUexcept 18 of whom are Brashyzilians

The order has 1900 membero serVing in 10 countries throug~shyout the world with headquartern

in Vienna Mother Fidelis U1 completing a five-month visiia tion of the orders 37 convents in the United States

Greater Boston Sister Gets Fulbright Award

MEDFORD (NC) - SistCll Madeline Marie Nevins a gradushyate student at Tufts University has been awarded a Fulbright Fellowship to study medievaD French literature at the Univershysity of Paris France

The Mass Sister of St Josep~

will complete her doctoral wor at Tufts after her year abroad

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Schedules Convocation 1 bull

On Council Documents WILMINGTON (NC)- A dayshy

llong session of lectures and disshyICUssions on the Wilmington dioshyease and the post-council er81 will be conducted here

Some 600 clergy and laity are ~From anOlde English recipe - expected to attend the meeting

which is being sponsored by a Plumper rounderp bullarollp of ~concerned Catholics illl th~Wg~ing~on piocese fuller muffins~

batter is smooth 5) Gently stir in the boiling

Dn of the party it was difficul Um~~ water bull ascertain just how much the7 3) s~tt tltgether the flour bak- 6) Pourinto a greased 7 by ~ learned With this in mincll Ang ooda baking powdei ~ H pan Sunbeam English Muffins ~ were delighted when 1ft andspice~ f) Bake in a 350 oven 40 to lIound that Meryl was studying 41) Add the dry ingredients te 45 mlhutes] add about cup Olf Baked by your Sunbeam Baker _tism in 8daoo1 l1he cheese mixtu-l0 GUlring watilll Jl3iBins but this is optionaL

-

bullbull

HAPPINESS IS FAMILY REUNION A weekly radio reunion is Sula Spanish Honduras L~ft Barton Albert ham radio operator middot)liIl

enjoyed by Mr and Mrs Bernard Sullivan Holy Name parish Fall River Swansea connects the Sullivans with their daughter Right InSart Pedro

with their daughter Sister Anne Marie RSM missioned to San Pedro Sula Jack Gaffney performs the same service for Sister Anne Marie

Monastery VisitsSt~esses Serio~smiddot Ham Oplr~t~rs Arrangemiddot We~k~yRadiQ C1tat~ ChmiddoturchSituatilon CRAWFORDSVILLE (NC)C bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbull bull bull bullbull bull

bull bull 0In East -Germany BERLINmiddot (NC)-Christiari

ehurches in communist-ruled lEast Germa~y are suff(~ring from government harrassshymentand restrictions a Luthershy1m bishop told the eastern sec-

For Fa11 RiverParents Missionary Sistet Dr Eric Dean chairman of the religion and philosophy departshy

ments at Wabash College here Thursdays the most important day in the week to Mr and Mrs Bernard Sullivan in middotIndiana plans extended visits

of Holy NameparishFall River Its the day they talk to their daughter Sister Anne to severalmiddot Benedictine monas- shyMarie RSM assigned since last August to missi)n work middotin San Pedro Sula Spanish teries this year The visits Wt)ll

H h kl

onduras T emiddot wee y db

conversatIon is arrange y two h d

am ra W)

operators Jack Gaffshy be financed by a Carnegie gran~

receivedmiddot through the GreatLak~ ney in San Pedro Sula and Colleges Association Harton Albert of Swansea was on retreat However arshy with Sister from their livjng

tion oflt the synod of Germanys It came about tl)rough 3 rangements were made on the middotroommiddot ~eceptiori is excep~nt Protestant Church Council sPot for the first of the weekly noted Mrs Sullivan fully 88 middot~iiJbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbulliIbullbullbull_

The clergyman Bishop Fried- series of coincidences that conv~sations good as a local telephoriecallmiddot bull III rich Wilhem krummachet of Mrs SuliivaIi ascribesld the The luck extended to a fellow Another beneficiary ofthmiddot 11I11I J B ~ East Geimany said that SChool iuck6f the Irish and had its religious of Sister Anne Marie weekly radio reunion is REvmiddot bull ii ~~ld~~a~I~~V~~ti~~~~bel~~~~~~ ~t~~A~~~n~a~~nC~~i~~~~~~~ ~~~~~i~o~Sre~~~~r~~~~~~i~~~d~~~~~=~tOfS~tat~~~ ILUMBER CO beliefs 1 - $140 teleph~rie bill talkinllto ly appointment ~nd asked Mrs Mariesbrother bull bull

Lut~eranBish~~ ~~t Fr~liz th~~o~~~~g~~~riotin~~ri li~~tmiddote~r$Ullivan t if hSheWtohUld ~ewla~t a FOImiddotwonderlnmiddotg friends of the 11I 5middot0middot Dortmoutmiddothmiddot ~harf of Berlin chairman of th~ ~~SSl1g~ 0 er JTIQ er ar a Fall River Sister be it notedltGe~man Protestant C h u r c hmiddot rlidlO o~erator middotwho darra~ge a mmu~e slud MrAI~~rt r0rt~7 that she has middotexercisedmiddotthe name- and yan~ismiddot Council made similar charges at connectlOnmiddot for you said a WIth he got the PrOVIdence ~e western section of the synod frleId and someone else sug- Jlother on the phone and gave

I rgested Mr Albert middotwhom the h th of b IfoBejause the Eastmiddotmiddot lterman ~ r bull er e surpnsl e~ Ie as t t t t t b Sullivans- had )mown _for

some bull

she heard her daughter s vOICeIrovernmen res riC s col ac s e- t b th d th ht f ~ E t G -P t t ts Ime u a neVlr Qug omiddot J I don t even have to go tomiddotbullween as elman ro es in _ bl If and those in the West middotthe Protmiddot =~ a ~OsSI e channe omiddot cmmu ~wansea to talk said Mrs SII~ - t t d h ld t mcatlOnwIttISpamshHO1QQras livan Mr Albert can oConnec~

flS an syno was e middotmmiddot wo llec- S l middotmiddotmiddott d M tons one in west Berliri and the T~e ul Iv~ns VISI e r~ AI~ th E tB j berts t)oIle to talk over th~ e er ~ear as er m possibility of contacting-Sister

Catholics face similar pr()b- Anne Marie~ While they were raquoems because of a divi~~d G~r- th~re he demonsthitelt hi~ equip- ~an~ The East Gelman govern- ment fishing bull around the- airshyinen~ ~has prevented thej)ishops wavesmiddot and picking up an ama-middot ~here ~ om attending meetings o~ teur in -rexas

~he G~rman Bishops Conference To his feliow ham he menshyheld iiJ the West tioned that he was looking for

Join in Praytr an operator in Spanish HOlldurasmiddot BiShop Krummacher said at

the synod that iii the preslmtmiddot criss the Protestant churches must use evelY opportunity to join with Catholics in prayer Catholics and Pwtestants he llaid are bound together b~ the word of the Lord and a common Ilesponsibility

The bisho~ said Protestants in East Germany have made every effort to obtain relief fwm antishyJeligious discrimination but govshyernment authorities have reshyjacted all appeals for action

He said such refusals of the East Gelman regime to end the assaults on religion is partmiddot of communist strategy and planshy

ming To further their objectives he said the comTIunists will pelshymstip indoctrinating children in 1lheir ideology while interfering with the consciences and rights _ tJ children and their parenti

And the next voice wemiddot heard recounted Mrs Sullivan still sounding amazed was a man saying This is Sal Pedro Sula Spanish Honduras

Not only was Jack Gaffney th r operator from Honduras in te same city as Sister Anne Marie but it developed that he lived across the street from her

convent a~d had me~ her o~ sevshyeral occaSlOns- He ImmedIately offered to r~n across ~he s~reet and prmg Sister to hiS mlcro-middot phone lgtut it turned out that sie

Wins Festival Piize NEW YOEK (NC) - The

Search produced by Father Peytons Family Theater has received an award at Monte Carlo in the annual television

competition sponsored by the International Catholic Radio and TV Association

hiS radiO eq~llPrne~t to the tel~ phone and the Sulhvans can chat

Permit Experiment In bullShared Time P9RTLAND (NC)The Port-middot ~~nd school board has approvedai shared time experiment iii -Which children from a parochial ~chool in North Portland will attend classes part time in a nearby public school -

The experi~ent will inv~lve at first only physical education classes and will extend for only two middotyears

Children fro m Immaculate Heart parish elementary schoolwill be allowed to attend gym classes in Eliot school in the Qregon corrlmunity

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Bishop Medeiros Urges Justice ~ For Workers

BROWNSVILLE (NO) ~ Bishop Humbertltgt S Medeishyros of B~wn8ville whose diocese has been the scene of lPl 10-month strike by migrant farm laborers has told farm owners to meet their demands for highe) pay and bettei living eonditions

In a pastoral letter to all Cathshyolics in the diocese-most of the population - released today the bishop said

The present plight of the mishygrant farm workers of America is a constant reproach to our way of life

lFor 1lJse of Ail

They do not ask for charity They demand what is theirs by natural right When the affluent farmers pay a just wage to the migrant workers when they make it possible for him to supshyport himself and his family in frugal comfort and to provide education for the whole family they are not making a gift of their possessions to the farm worker they are simply handilg over to him what is his for they had arrogated to themselves what had becn given in common for Ute use of all

Migrant workers in the Rio Grande vaIiey surrounding Brownsville have been strikihg the larger farms for nearly a year in an attempt to get higher wages and better living condi- tions Their action supported by thc United Farm WorkersOr- ganizing Committee followed the limited success encountered by UFWOC laborers in Califomias lrape vineyards

Precarious Existence

But the Rio Grande workers have encountcred little successshyIllthough a recently organized boycott of produce has received growing support among the states food chains

Bishop Medeilos quoted libshyerally from both Pope John XXIII and Pope Paul VIs recent encyClical On the Development of Peoples in establishing the right of farm workers to adecent Jiving

But be also took note of the plight of Amcricas farmers themselvell who live out a preshylaquoarious existence unless they constitute large enterprises sllch as corporations 01 cooperashyiives

He urged both farmers and workers to organize in their own interest

Natural Ri~ht

Given the natiol~lr and even

aioll of Agricultule ald of fa~m workClS and of manyfarm own- ers in purticular it is urgent that they be aware of thei~ right

~~~o~~o~~~~C~~~i~II~~~~h I~~~~~ of development Which in the words of Pope Priul VI signifies ]lgte~cc

We know that every man hAS a basic natural right to form and join wOIkers unions which conshytribute to economic progress by dcfending his ights he said But thc circumstances of the times the world over indicate that for the common good it is also thc duty for both migrant farm workers and for farmers to form associations

The United States he said has bull duty to its miglant laborers llnd farmers which it must fulfill by passing apPlopliate legislashytion and using other suitable and dcmocratic means of assistance so that not only our tables but thc tables of the world may be blessed with the abundance of the fruits of the earth

lLO~AIJ INTEREST NIl IUSlHIOPS MEETING Disshy W Va Bishop Connolly Bishop Humberto IS Medeiros

cussing topics between sessions are Lawrence Cardinal Brownsville Tex and Bishop Joseph Brunini NatchezshySh~han Baltimore Bishop Joseph H Hodges Whe~]jng Jackson Miss

Churches Shore Latin America Failures

LutheranSees Stumbling Blocks Ahead SPJlINGFIELD (NC) -- The

Roman Catholic and Protestant churches have both failed in the past in Latin America and both face severe stumbli6g blocks in the future a Lutheran layman from Argentina said here

Dr Leopolydo Juan Niilus of Buenos Aires director of the Argentine Department of the River Plate Centre of Christian Studies discussed the Church in Latin America at a meeting of the Lutheran World Federations

Commission on Stewardship and Evangelism

He warned the group that in

too mlIlyquarters the Roman Cath~Ii~ Church has been the main whipping boy for the Latin AmeJican backwaldness~ and there hllS been too much selfshy

Some of the things atheist marxists are doingin our conti shynent should by heritage be added have bee) done by Christians

Looking toward the future Dr Niilus said there are very seshy

were stumbling blocks ahead for our Roman Catholic brethren also

Inseparable Unity They are he said being

hysterically requested by the supporters of the status quo tobecome their defenders once

again The Roman Church failed whenLatin America waS strug- glingJor its independence n may-all of us mayfail now

wheniHs struggling for its eco- lIlomic Independence Dr Niilus said that all

complacency and self-righteous- qhurdiesin Latin America roust ness about the positive role

quickly recognize that study and commitment as an insepshyarable unity is their most urshygent task if they are to play an effective role in the future of Latin America

They must study be said ~both political and economic isshysuell amplnd their theological imshy

Cancer Study lLOST UIS (NC)-The insti shy

lute Ior J)lolecular virology at St LOUiS University here in Misshy

bull souri has b~en awarded a $265shy

101 gJant from the National Canshyeer Instilute of the U S Departshyment of Health Jducation and Welf~re whic~ will enable reshysearchers to look for viral speshyeitic genetic material in himiavl elmcer

plicAtions and must be comshymitted to providing adequate pastoral CAre to those involvel in political and economic action

Pho~ClJI Archbishop Wons Sourin Medal

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Arc~

bishop John J Krol of Philadelshyphia bas received the annual Sourin Award of thc ] 17-yearshyold Catholic Philopatrian LiteJ1shyary Institute

The presentation marked the first time the award has beelll made to a member of the hieJ1shyarchy ]t is ordinarily given w a distinguished Catholic layman The Archbishop was cited 100 confident and courageous leadshyers~jP

played by the Protegttants in Latiq American social andeco N~w Music nomiltdeve~opment 1 PURCHAS~ (NC)-The Pius

Protestants be said have a X School of Litlllgical Music of share and~ responsibility in the Manhattanville College of the WHITE SPA creation of seriougt structural Sacred Heal1 here received maladjustments - both economic $20000 in grants from Charl~ and moral~ in Latin America ~nd Arthur Morgan Of New

York and John Morgan oi Most of the things our pro-Rockville Centre N Y to stimushy

gressive Roman Catholic bret~shy iae new music for the new BANQUETS bull WEDIl)~NG5imiddot P~RTIESilltc~national deprc~sed middotcondi-middot ie are doing today i~Latin m~rgy

America shouldbyheritage he -COMMUNION BREAKfASTSai~ have beel~~~nepygtrotes tants [ 11M3 PLEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

JEFFREY E SULLIVAN 993-778GFer~ Dome

MEMPHIS (NC)~Bi~tiopJoshySishopo~~~ed

550 Locust Street seph A Durick apostolic admin lFall River Mass istrator of the Nashville diocese received the first annual Human 672-2391 Relations Award from the Memshy Iltose E Sullivan CONVENIENT BANKINGphis Catholic Human Relations

Jeglrey E SullivallCouncil He was cited for his WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMSstands on human dignity and

at theequal job opportunities He reshycently instituted Project Equalshyity in Tennessee SlADES FERRY TRUST COMPANY

SOMERSET MASS

llhe most friendly democra~ic BANK offeringCORREIA amp SONS ONE STOP Complete One-Stop Banking

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Member Federal Deposit Insurance CorporotiBy the Village Green Since 18217middot354

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-11lun Apr 20 1961 12 - )

Irish Emigronts Concern B~hops inmiddot Pgstoral

DUBLIN (NC)-Thespiritual and social needs of Irish 0trtifirants and the importance of preparing them for their new life in other countries were major concerns of the

Irish hierarchy at its meeti~g here in- Maynooth In a pas~ toFal on emigration it wasmiddotmiddot pointed out that while de- parture of Irish people foigt residence in other cuiitries is on the decline those who do leave ~can be an enormous force formiddotgoodmiddotin the lands they go to if they have the right ideals and motLves and abilities properly developed

Without these the pastoral adds the alien enironment in which they find themselves may presen~ serious dangers to the spiritual and moral wenfare ~

the weaker ones Education and religious formashy

tion of young people by the bullbull schools and by the clergy coopshy

erating with teachers were cited as most effective contriilgtutiona

to the formation of those likely to emigrate

Among recommendations made in the pastoral for properly pi-eshyparing potential emigrants for livingin other lands were

Young people should be enshycouraied to remain in schooias long as they can benefit from H

Emphasis on the virtue of tem perance

The utilization of youth club activities (discussion clubs and

guiles) to help young members to acquire healthy and natural

sOcial graces and habits The aid of priests in helping

the young people to grow up to

confident maturity Counse by priests on expected

problems of housing suitable

I

REV ALBERT F SHOVELTON

Priest to Spe(l]llc At Seminar

Rev Albert E fShovelton dishy

rector of Sl Mary Home New Bedford will speak as a represhy

sentative of the Diocesan Comshy employment dangersmiddot to health Unity atNClline Committe~ longhours of work in other the75th anniversary celebration

countries advanced atrange- at Holy Trinity LutheranTo SurveyCU mentS with Catholic welfaeChurchNorth Easton Thursday agencies in countries 9f their April 27

CHIltAGO (NC) - The board choice and the provision of in Father Shoveltons talk ~iU of trusteesof the Catholic Uni-formlltion concerning facilities be part of aseroinar middotHe wili be versity of America Washing- abroad for emigrantS preceded by Rev Dr Nils Ehtenshyton D9middot his est~blished it ne~ ~he h6ldin~ Of Irisit~nhlli~middot 8~rom Boston University School survey and ogtlectlODs ~()mmlttee lft llt1rge centers lt ~ Theology whose subject will headed br ~ St ~OU~1l1(ly~a~ Aparishnewsletter s~nt be Ecun1eni~m in Protestant to study ~he funct~op and plaOl th I fmiddot h middotmiddotf g Perspective Today f th Cmiddotth li U -Of Of Dl0n y rom omemiddot 10 Or1ll1O ~ a 0 r ~vterslY~ lt the emigrants bfuricti6ns inFathel ShovElltons suoject will m~nqa ~r~o ern a hoh~ - the local parishes at Chri~tmaiJbe ~EcumeJ1ismin Roman Cllthshy

laCatton on middota national scale d thO t f th h oljc PerspectiveToday A dis-Th middottt an 0 er lmes 0 e yearw en JJ

e cozpml ee~~made up U4 they mightmiddot possibly be home~uss)n period will follow SIX laymen and four archbIshops ) The audience will be comshyall of whom ar~ pr~sent trustees _ prised of the Lutheran parisa o~ the u~lverslty Formatu~n at Southern PrOVince cmgregation the townspeople ~he conrrutteewasannounce by ~ _ the towns clergy and the stll~ FrancII Cardinal Spellman of Favors DIGcoraate ~ dents at Holy Cross Fathenl New york ch~rman of the MIAMI CNC)Bishops of the Seminary Catholic Urnverslty board province of Atlanta have giyen Pastor of Holy Trjnity is Rev

The appointment of the com- p~sts in the six-ctiocese area Kenneth E Bjorklund

nlission for Christian

SAVE DOLLARS

with the MERCHANlS

84EconomOO

Auto Loan Pian

mittee came against a backshyground of reports that the U S bishops might transfer its Ionshytrol of CatJlolic University to 11 group of laymen The univershysitys rector Bishop William J McDonald has denied the middotreshyports but the chairman of the

new commi~ee Dr Ca~roU Hochwalt SaId the commIttee has been given the widest posshysible mandate from which nothshying will be excluded Our assignment Dr Hochshy

walt saidis the most farshyreaching one possible We are to take a reaiistic look at every aspec~ of the university all it has developed under its original directive since 1889 and at its potential for the forseeable

gt futule It is obviously the trusshyteef desire to leave no qtiestfon unanswered which may aftect the unfyersityas anational-hlsti tution 1its ~aculty students ~d

permission to hear confessions in the entire province and they have also asked the National Brothers VOuDlltee~ Conference of Catholic BishoPs As firefilllhters

to consider restoring the perma- nent diaconate in dioceses that want it

The two decisions were ~~_ nounced after the Bishops held their annual meeting in Miami

Archbls~OP P~ul J Hallman of A~lanta SaId l~ IS cus~omary ~or prtests t~ receIve theIr faculties from theIr own dl~cese and they h~ve been restncted o use wlthn that diocese EffectlVelmshy

II NORTHBROOK (NC) - Four

of the 34 men in the Northbrook volunteer fire department here are religious Brothers They are assigned to the national headshyquarters of the Society ofmiddot the Divine Word at nearby Techny Ill

The Brothrs are on call any time the Northbrook first stashytion standby has two or less men on duty for all general

the Cliurcli and the nation ift ~ J llmohgihemthejt haVe fouglU serves~ ( I i) middotClosingmiddotMeasure middotisome 50fires lti

j middot5T PAUL (NC)4AbilLban

Dedicate Monment ~ing ~l)e sale pf spe~iti~mtr 0ROURKtr chandise on Sundays has heen ~

To adFe Serra middot houses bullbull FunealHomepassed b)-both of the j

medl~telY all pne~ts In good alaons and for any fire or emershystandmg may nw he~r the con- gency when additional personnel fesslOns of Iemtents 10 the A- are needed Their volunteering la~ta archdIOcese ~nd th~ 41- was approved by the superiors oces~ of Sva~nah Charleston andmiddot the seminary bought them II ~alelgh MIami and St Augus- veh~C1e to expedite transportmshy

tine tion when they answer a fire ~ ca~I

Solons pass Sun JI n y The Brothers estaimat~ that

S_CRAMENTO (NC) dDme MinrElsota legislatureGov~aJ monument of Padre runipero old LeVander of Minnesota was Serra OFMwassolemnly ded- exPected to sign it into law icated on the grounds of tille The legislation forbids the sale State Capitol here Saturday OIl Sundays and six holidays

The formal ceremonies were (New Years Day Memorial Day qonducted by officials of the Independence Day Labor Day state alld by officers of the Nll- Thapksgiving and Christmas) of tive Sf ns and Daughters of the cameras musical instruments Golden West The project haa phonographs and tape recorders been sponsored by the California radios and television sets jewel-State Legislature and the fra- ry clocks and watches furs terrial ~ orders who provided furni~ure and other home furshymatching funds to finance its nishings including appliances executi~n middotmiddotmiddotAlso wearing apparel ()all

S7J ~c~nd St~~ef

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Father Noel F Moholy OFMkinds including footwear lug- 469 LOCUST STREIE1T vice postulator for the canorlizashy gage lawnmowers and 9ther tion of Ithe Franciscan friar who outdvor machinery and equipshy FAU RIVER MASS bas been hailed as Californias ment hardware and tools paints 672-3381 First Citizen and Greatest Pio-Illeer W3 the principal speakeII at the ded~cation

varnishes wallpaper and re-middot lated tools lumber and other buildine materials and supplies

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Suburban Parishes Should H~lp Save City Parishes

WASHINGTON (NC)-Archbishop Patrick A YBoy1e of Washington appealed here to ~ubJrbanCatholic parisbes to come to the aid of poverty-stricken parishes in the inner city At least 10 Catholic parishes in the inner city need financial help to continue to ismiddotmiddoth d d - ize t II h told C Has ave ecrease s exlS e a ommumon though the schools have contimshy

breakfast of the St Vincent ued to operate at fun capacity de Paul Society and the Whll~ parish income has faUellil only way we can give it iI off school costs have risen ~ through our suburban parishes cause of increased salaries em-

Suburban parishes are hard ployment of lay teachers and pressed themselves he said with higher maintenance costs for most of them deepiy in debt 00- older buildings cause of new constru~tion and expansion Nevertheless they must inaiJpirit of true charity share their resources with our poor parishes

The archbishop said that one of the reasons flr the poor fi shynancial condition of the inner city parishes was the cost of operating their schools but said emphatically that none of these schools would be given up

If we didnt have to support our schools Archbishop OBoyle said nearly all Of our parishes couldmiddot take care of their basic needs But we are not going to giv~ up any of our schools as long as we can get Ii dime to support them

Not mentioning which parish was concerned he stated thatmiddot one middotitmner city parish received $54000 from archdiocesan funds las~ year

Msgr Thomas W Lyons Arch diocesanmiddot Director of Educatiot1 said th~t before the whije middotmigramiddot tionmiddot to the suburbs CathoUa constituted about 22 per cent 01 the Washington Population The Negr~ who replaced the whitea are only about JO per cent Cathshyolic The result is that the par

Parochial school tuiti6n which averages about $4 a month haa not kept pace with costs Msgr Lyons explained

The St Vincent de Paul Soclshyety-here recently announced a twinning program in whicb sOlue of the more affluent parshyishes adopt inner city parisheo and provide for their needs

Offers Folk Mass For Vocations

HOUSTON (NC)-Bishop John L Morkowsky of Galveston- Houston offered a special foUt MaSs for youth on World Day oL Pr~yer for Vocations at Sacred Heart co-cathedral here

Father William Steele diocshyesan vocation director said the folk Mass is being offered to atshytract the young people middotThemiddot homily duringmiddot the Mass dealt with vocations

Contemporarymiddot folk musiC composed by Ray Repp nation ally known folk song writer was played during the Mass Guitar aceompaniment was proshyvided by seminarians from St MaryoS Seminary here

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Cardinal Cushing Sees Decrease In Seminaries

BOSTON (NC)-The numshyber of Catholic seminaries in the United States will deshycrease because of the diffi shyculty of obtaining top-flight scholars to staH them Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston preshydicted here

Addressing the New England Conference of the Catholic Hosshypital Association the cardinal told some 680 nuns priests and

laymen that schools of theology both Catholic and Protestant will become more closely identi shyfied with the great colleges and universities of this country a system not unlike that of Oxford in England

Sharing the platform with Archbishop Cushing was Bishop Fulton J Sheen of Rochester N Y who urged Catholic hosshypitals to go outside their own walls to bring social and medical help to the poor

Go out into the slums he said Give two or three hours a day visiting poor families for healing and counseling

He also suggested that Cathoshylic hospitals in this country adopt hospitals in poor counshytries

In A Rut We can certainly afford to

have someone put up a hut in the poor world We have the spirit but we have gotten into a rut the bishop said

Bishop Sheen told the confershyence the hallmark of a Catholic hospital is that we serve each patient as we would serve Christ

Cardinal Cushing also preshydicted that rising costs of care of the sick will induce the fedshyeral government to become more closely identified in hosshypital administration

I was told he added that in some hospitals the cost of a bed per day is almost $100 There must be a ceiling somewhere

Salons to Study Divorce Laws

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey State Assembly has unanimously approved a resolushytion to establish a commission to study the states divorce laws The measure already passed by the Senate is expected to be signed quickly by Gov Richard J Hughes

Thp commission described by Governor Hughes as an effort to strengthen marriage has al shyready encountered the opposishytion of -the Monitor the Trenton laquoiocesan newspaper But the bIShOps of the states three other Oatholic dioceses have reserved comment -

Boih Governor Hughes and the commissions sponsor Sen Jereshymiah F OConnor are Catholics And while Senator OConnor would like to see the commission recommend liberalization of the states di~orce law - desertion adultery and extreme cruelty are the only grounds at present-he would also like other changes made

Among them are a- family eourt which would serve as

counseling agency as well as divorce court lengthening of the present three-day waiting period as a1 obstacle to quick marriages and anr a warning to young PershySODS of the seriousness of marshyriqe

Senate Election PROVIDENCE (NC)-Sixteen

members of the 26-member senshyate of priests for the Providence dJocese have been elected in the first part of the senates twoshyatage elections

REV PATRICK 3 ONEILL

NCIEA Appoints Fr ONeiU

Rev Patrick J ONeill Supershyintendent of Schools in the Dioshycese of Fall River has been apshypointed by the Superintendents Department of the National Catholic Educational Association to serve as a member of the nashytional committee concerning tbe shygrowth and development of diocshyesan and parish school boards

This committee under the chairman Rt Rev Msgr ONeill DAmour will serv() as an adshyvisory unit It will gather and distribute information concernshying the development growth and function of school boards

Father ONeill made an extenshysive study of functioning school boards throughout the country His work in organizing our Diocshyesan Board of Education and working with it during the past year has been commended

Newman Chaplains School at IHCJJlvOlId

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Newman Chaplains Asshysociation has added a second training school for priests and Sisters entering Newman work It will be conducted at Harvard University

As in past years a school will be held at the University of Colshyorado in Boulder Dates for both schools are June 113 to July 2

The Newman Chaplains School prepares priests and nuns asshysigned to the secular campus The faculty has been chosen on the basis of experience in the Newman apostolate and speciali shyzation in theology -philosophy script~reand counseliJ)g _

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 13

Family Care Program forO Children The Paul A Dever State by the psychologists and pre-placement visits with the

School Taunton under the sponsorship of the Departshyment of Mental Health has recently begun a Family Care Program in an attempt tomiddot proshyvide some of its children with the experience of family life

screened by the social workers have all been approved by the schools physicians for the proshygram

These children are ready and able to enter into the commushynity said Dr John L Smalldon superintendent of the Dever

child to the prospective foster parents to determine the comshypatibility of the youngster with the family Once settled within the family the child will also be periodically visited by a schooi social worker to assist in the adjustment The youngsters

The program is initially seekshying to place approximately 20 selected youngsters in homes in

school Provides Funds

This program with its emphashy

would attend special educatiOD classes in public schoolll throughout the South Shore

the South Shore area These chidren have been selected for their advanced capacities for edshyucation and training and their abilities to adjust to a home enshyvironment

These children reconmmended

sis on the advantages of the proper fa mil y environment seeks through a gradual process to assimilate the child within the community

The Social Service Department at the Dever School will conduct

The Department of Mental Health which sponsorsmiddot similar Family Care Programs in sevshyeral other schools in the state is providing funds for the supshyport of the children

What do you do when you live on a Take a good look at your everyday very small island with over three and a - surroundings You are apart of the 20 half million people-say Hong Kong of theworlds populati~nthat has access Move to the suburbs But what if the to 80 of the worlds food That means suburb is Red China The only answer that the other 80 of the world must be is this-and rbe hundreds of thousands content with the remaining ~O Of who crowd these house- boats are lucky course you can read this and say So Ovlaquo half die people of the world ani But You cannot say to someone who taorneless-and most live in Asia is hungry come tomorrow We must

When we hear that three-fourths ol act today because tomorrow may be too cbe human race lives inpoverty or below late (pope Paul VI) Feed the man the subsist~ level these are the peo- dying of hunger if you have not fed pie we are talking about Do we know him you have killed h1m (Vatican II) what it feels like to subsist to know no Dear Monsignor OMeara 1 am attachshyother feeling but that of hunger It is ing my gilt 0 $__ to help right the impossible or we could never spend over imbalance in our world Please use it so 100 billion dollars annually on arma- that a missionary can feed the starving ments while 10000 die each day from name---------- shyyenJldernouri8bment address _~____

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THE ANCHOR~Diocese ofFa River-Thursbull Apr 20 19M

middotSocial Revolutmiddotion Is Needed In latin America Lands

From Social Revohitiiolll iin the New Latin America Edited by John 3 Considine MM

The possibility of orientating regional planning toward an overall solution of the pressing problems that concern more than one Latin nation could well engage Christian initiative writes Rene Atero The most typical example of this kind he sa)s concerns Social Revolution in Latin-~ershythe region of the Andean ica Most Rev Mark GMcshyMountains where peasants Grath CSC says Barbara numbering more than five Ward widely read Catholic

million live in thee different economist begins her book enshyltcountries possessing basically titled The Rich Nations and the

Poor Nations with the flat stateshy similar pro b- ment I suppose we are all lems Our asso- aware of the fact that we live in ciation with na- the most catastrophically revolushy~ional orgariiza- tionary age that men have ever

tions concerned fced middotmiddotwith deyelop- Social Revolution ment planning Vice-President Hubert Humshyin no way im- phrey who honored this meeting plies the im- with his presence last year proper subordi- writes in a recent issue of Forshynation of enti- eign Affairs Although the obshytie sund e r servation that Latin America is Church s p 0 n- in the midst of a political ecoshysorship to less effectual accom- nomic and social revolution has plishment under the state become a commonplace it is

On the contrary it is a ques- true tion of becoming involved in a The influential Chilean magashynew front in which Christian zine Mensaje published by the action is not only indispensable Jesuit Fathers dedicated an enshybut will be most efficacious in tire issue in December of 1962 to helping to enlist sectors of Latin the theme Revolution in Latin American society of top impor- America and followed this up

middottance for national dEvelopment withmiddot another special issue in With reference to the actual bctober 1963 on Revolutionary implementation of plans through Reforms in Latin America

well elaborated projectS we Early in 1964 the Civilta Catshyshould make certain that iden- tolica published in Rome by the tification and recognition as an Jesuits carried a critique of important part of the national these two issues of Mensaje by effort are given to current Father Jarlot which questioned Church activities already oper- the prudence of using the terio ating numerous projects of social revolution in a Christian conshydevelopment throughout the text pointing out that itia ltcontinent loaded with Marxist overtones

For example with regard to Not only does it signify rapid education we should lteall atten- c structural changes Father Jarlot tion to the fact that there aremiddot in asserts but also connotes vioshy

lence and some measure of hate Latin America about 5000 pri- and class warfare He would vate ed~cational insttutions pre- prefer the term evolution pared to share in current eduea- tional programs throughout the Social Revolution oontinent Mr Humphrey in the article

The private univemities andmiddot already mentioned asks the eenters of technical training inmiddot question Is it appropriate te the fields of agriculture labor define Alliance (for Progress) and cooperatives couY-a double policy as favoring social revolll shythe potential for plofessional tion - or should this word be and technical trainin1 if they avoided in favor of evolution 01 would participate on D national some other expression basis ir serving the more press- He anwers Evolution if ing needs of society carefully examined proves to be

Broad Horizons inadequate for it implies an un-We must work also in the pres- conscious non-deliberate change

ervation of the progress which that is slow and gradual has been achieved in the areas- What is required is conscious of social welfare now b~ing em- rapid change in the socioshyphasized (housing education economic structure a process public health) Lay groups such that can correctly and precisely as Catholic Action in different be called a revolutionmiddot If used spheres _ Legion of Mary St not as a slogan but in itS precise Vincent de Paul Carita3-which sense the policy of peaceful s0shy

up to now have directed their -cial and economic revolution is efforts mainly towards religion agtcorrect~haracterizatio~ofmiddot il~

t hid limce policy d If t middot an we are ac IVlless ou eJmiddot We should not hesitaietoi pand theIr programs a11d focus d tf l th t m some of their work on ilrojects I e~ I y o~rse ~es WI I ~i planned by specialists J JatmAmencaiJust ~ Presldcnt

This would permit the cltanel ~ohnson ~ssoclated hunseU WIth it in hIS war on poverty I~ng of theIr ~eal t~elr ~rga~l~a- throughout the world whenhe gtcent

tIOn and theIr splnt of saCrIfIce tl k d Iffit b bull recen y remar e a peaceshyas power u resources 0 e put f lItmiddot th i5 at the disposal of society Among u re~bo u IOn ~n ese areas such works surely programs of ~mossl Ie a VIolent revolutIon

IS mevltable community improvement will be especially attractive to tlhese lay groups

Thus the Church might con- sider putting its knowledge and resources to more effective use in preparing programs and projshyects for adaptation to national and regional needs

They should select carefully those with the capacity to fulfill so that they may obtain financing from national or international sources to complement their own eontributions thus enlarging the scope of their activities

In a study of The Church and

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Theres muchthat$ new at Firat National these days~ bullbull and this sign atthe meat oaeels one of the most exoltlng~

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Weve always enjoyed a great reputation formiddotmeat have always sold the pIck of oholce meats as Ih$p~cted and graded by the USDepartment of Agrloulture (USDA)

But now with our YouCome First policy our meat casel have taken on ~ new look

Our finicky p~IIQy~t~~reotlng oniy the ohoicest of the

oholce c has beoome believe It middotor not evet1lmiddotmol-e-flnlokye The trlmnilng and outtlng leoloser and mQre~a~e(ld ~ e bull to etJlv~ you th0 gie~tGstm~at vaYu9middotand most flavorful meats In lF~r2~ National hIS~O[y OLill oounters are the cieanes~ and our butohers mor~ eager than ever to lend you aweloomemiddotrneal tpia8lnlng Idea~

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Arguments For Celibacy Outweigh Those Against

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Arguments urging that the requirement of eeHbacy of priests be set aside as an obshystacle to increasing vooationsare not sufficient Archbi-shop Gabriel Garribe pro-prefect of the Congregation of Semishynaries and Universities told a pressconfelence here My personal answer is that the arguments for celibacy cd the clergy are stronger than those against it He said he beshylieved there should be a firm affirmation in this respect and that it would maintain celibacy in the Latin Church

By doing so he said the quality ofpriesUy candidates will grow and through the quaUy of its priests the Church will harvest an increase in the quantity of candidates

The drop in the number of vocations the Archbishop stated Is due in part at least to the new attitude of todays youth and therefore requires changes_ in the traditional seminary formation

The prelate told the press that todays youth is much more fully aware of the whole world and far more sensitive to its problems than in the past Those responsible for seminary training must realize the importance of education and be capable of understanding the new generashytion of admiring them and of discovering for them the mission of the Church

StatistiCs Given Archbishop Garrone not e d

tj~at although there has been a falilng off in vocations generally there have been some surprising exceptions He singled out 1be

Dominican Work Continued from Page One

means that the approach will be intellectual rather than devoshytional and the emphasis win rest on accuracy on the truth of a statement rather than on whether it is opportune

In performing such a task mistakes 1n the form of partisan statements ~ld ill-balanced reshymarks are sometimes inevitable Father Hislop said

He affirmed the Dominicans loyalty to the Church but noted that it is often difficult for a vanguard intellectual group to express itself in terms that win not be misunderstood by the majority of Catholics

CCD Talks Continued from Page One

Tauntol as the speaker Mrs Mary Fuller of Buzzards

Bay will speak at the meetiDll in Bishop Stang High School North Dartmouth

At Bishop CasSidy High School Taunton the speaker will be Edward McDonagh-Of North Attleboro

Thomas Flangheddy of Taunshyton will address the meeting at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

The Cape area meeting will be held at Holy Trinity West Hallshywich with Miss Patricia llIIakle as speaker

Seek More funds WASHINGTON (NC) -Two

members of Marylands congresshysional delegation have introshyduced a bill which would make the government spend $75 milshylion annually for birth eontrol aid in the U ~ by 1973 The bin introduced by Sen Joseph Ty ings and Rep Samuel Freidel would propose $20 million the fkst year rising to $75 million bIV the fifth )ear Sta1e and loeal governments would provide _ edditiODal $25 mDJiclID br )87J

extraordinary development of vocations in Mexicp and in Yugoslavia and the stable continuity of recruitment in Poland

Among the statistics provided at the conference were the fact that the latest Church figures count 234000 Diocesan priests and 168000 Religious priests There are in addition 166400 Religious who are not ordained priests

One of the most heartening things in the vocational world picture it was pointed out hasshybeen the increase of priestly vocations in Africa Asia and Oceania

The growth of the local clergy has been a phenomenon of the last 40 years Today in Africa and Asia approximately 500 orshydinations take place every year

~regregampfsect ~ITOW(QJtfreg

$e~~ Aod WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep

Clement J Zablocki of Wisconshysin has introduced a proposal to correct U a defense education gap in American schools

Zablockis bill wo~ld amend the National Defense Education Act (NDEA) to provide federal grants for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment which could be used by children and teachers In parochial and private schools

In a statement on themiddot flOor Of the House of Representatives Zablocki pointed to inequities In

the present NDEA progra~ which Congress passed In 1958 to strengthen instruction in scishyence mathematics foreign lanshyguages and related subjects

An important provision of the act Zablocki said is Title III which provides matching grants to public schools for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment Non-public schools now are eligible only for loans for that purpose

Under Zablockis bill public authorities could obtain federal funds to buy laboratory and other special equipment which eould then be provided for use in non-public schools

In order to comply with matching provisions of the NDEA the non-public schools or groups of such schools would be required to prove they had spent an equal amount thenr selves for such eqUipment from private funds

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FALL RIVER AUXllLhARY AT MEETING Bishop Gerrard Auxiliary lBishop of the Diocese of Fall River is pictured at one of the sessions of the Spring meeting of the Bishops of theU Sheld in Ohicago NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 h A priI 20T urs 1967

Say~ ~Q~~OIP No SIQ7(~ ~ lovell

KANSAS CITY (NC) - The new role of a Bishop in the era of renewal has been spelled out here by Bishop Charles H Helmshysing of Kansas City-St Joseph

In addition to the age-old role of teacher Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop today must read stud) and apply the teachings of the Second Vatican Council the Gosshypels expressed to meet the needs of the modern world In short Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop must be a slave of love to serve as Christ served mankind

Bishop Helmsil1g spoke at the consecration of Auxiliary Bishop Joseph V Sullivan 45 of Kansas City-St Joseph

Bishop Sullivan is the fir~

native of this Missouri city eleshyvated to the hierarchy He was ordained to the priesthood June 1 1946 has served as chancellor of the diocese since 1957 and was named Bishop by Pope Paul VI last month

MarltqJ MregGGreg TJ~ ~~i MILWAUKEE (NC)-ALuthshy

eran scholar will teach Lutheran theology to graduate students at Marquette University here start shying next September Dr Kenneth G Hagen assistant professor of religion at Concordia College Moorhead MinJl will be the Marquet~e theology departmentu first full-time visiting scholra unshyder a grant from the Louis Calshyder Foundation in New York

-THREE LOCATIONS bull youre lookIng for the best in banking se~lce come 011J in to The NationalBank With the opening of our Stafford Square Office were now nearer to even more of you rOll the Greater Fall River area and each of our offices has Just aboUt every service you could want for yourself andl your family We mean M when we say were your FuID lervice BankPft

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t6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~n River-Thurs~ Apr 201967

Friend~2 [iJescribes Stru~g~ For QM~gtLy in T~~regwo~~~

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Rennedy When Fred W Friendly resigned from the Columbia

Broadcasting System in 1966 he ended a 16-year association with that network His trials in broadcast journalism are tbe subject of his new book Due To Circumstances Beyond Our Control Control bull Managements obligation is toRandom House $695 457 protect the interests of these Madison Avenue New York stockho~ders

NY 10022) But this volume But Mr Friendly is concprned is far more than a personal about the other stockholders memoir It is the story of th~ the 195 million citizens who

grant CBS and the other broadshybattle a losing casters the franchise to use theirbattle of course air for quality in

FCC Gutlesscommercial tel shyOne might naively expect that

~vision The the Federal Communications

main point is Commission would effectivelythat the story is here told by an insider Mr Friendlys middotfame criginally gprang from his close associashytion with the late Edward R Murrow He was Murrows partner in the prepashyntion of such pioneering and still unparalleled series as Se~ lil Now and CBS Reports

After Murrow left CBS and wentmiddot into governm()nt service Mr Friendly became president

of CBS news He resigned that ~sition because of a clispute conshycerning the broadcasting of Senshyate hearings on the Vietnam war

Many ancient or recent conshyfilets over broadcasting policy are rehearsed in this hook There fta for example a detailed acshy~unt of the hassies concerning Murrows TV _program dealing with Senator McCarthy before McCarthys downfall as the reshyault of the hearings in the Spring of 1954

There are briefer accounts of other skirmishes Thflse are all interesting and instructive But the value of the book lies not so much in these reminiscences as fin Mr Friendlys knowledgeable analysis of the process whereby television has retreated more and more from public service and become a purveyor of junk and garbage littering the American Iiving room and worse the American mind with trash

Geared to Prcfit Many factors account for this

perversion The principal one is greed Television is geared to private profit not puqUc service lLast years whopping profits will not suffice this year There must be sizable increase

This is to satisfy stockholders Mr Friendly asked William Paley chairman of the board Why do we have to make more money every year The reply was We have many small shareholders across the country and within the companybullbullbullbull

Subcommittee Sets Hearings on Smut

WASHINGTON (NC) -The House Select Subcommittee on Education is holding hearings beginning today on a bill to esshytablish a National Commissionmiddot on Noxious and Obscene Matters and Materials

Subcomllittee chairman Domishynick Daniels of New Jersey is sponsor of thc bill which would provide for a 16-member panel to study the problem of obscenity and recoqunend means Clf dealing with it

On the same day that the hearshyings were announced two other congressmen Arnold Olsen of Montana and Glenn Cunningham of Nebraska introduced bills to curb the mailing of obscene matshyter Olsens bill has bpoundlen enshydorsed by the Post Office Deshy~artment

protect the interests of the other 195 milion But Mr Friendly on the basis of close observation has -no kind words and no reshyspect for the FCC For all pur- poses the agency is toothless and gutless

To make even more money for the shareholders every possible penny has to be wrung out of the advertising medium which television now essentially is This consideration governs proshygramming

It might be supposed that even if prime time at night must eco- ~

nomically go chiefly to programshyming which brings in the maxishymum advertising dollar there is ample opportunity for public service broadcasting in the dayshytime hours But no pienty of money is to be made from dayshytime advertising

Endless Re-runs Three soap companJes alone

spend $290 million a year on television advertising and a lot of this is directed at housewives during the daytime And the programming dictated by this advertising comprisesmostly old old movies and endless re-runs of stupid situation comedies

Huge profits (are) being realshyized from the use of the miracle of television as a transmission belt for retread serials soap opshyeras game shows and the like The yield from the detergent deodorant bleach or food advershytisers who possess the daytime schedule (whose annualexpendishytures (are) some $130000000 ) is the principal reason why no serious progtamming can be sustained for any length of time during these hours

l3y serious programming is meant such things as crittcal UN debates (for example on Vietnam) vital congressional hearings the Popes visit to the UN Churchills funeral etc) Some of these have in fact got on the air and even for a conshysiderable period oftime b~t alshyways there is a major bitter battle involved

Educational TV What may not be realized is

the power of the local station n is by no means meekly subshymissive to the network It largely gqes its own way and its wayis in search of the utmost in profits

It is this fact for example which accounts for the nonshyexistence of a good solid repre~ sentative late-evening news broadcast over the nekwork The local station prefers to put on its own scrappy superficial travesty of a news program beshycause it can get-in an excessively large number of profitable comshymercials

Perhaps there is some hope in the field of educational televishy

sion Mr Friendly is now enshygaged in exploring that possibil shyity For our sake may he be successful At any rate we must thank him for reminding us of our tolerance of the criminial misuse Qf the air waves

H E A 0 S UNIVlERSliJIY New president of St Bonashyventure University St Bonashyventure N Y is the Very Rev Reginald A Redlon

OFM formerly of St Franshycis College Rye Beach N H The university Is operated by the Holy_ Name province of the Order of Friars Minor NC Photo

Issues GlLIidelimiddotnes For IEcumenism

LITTLE ROCK (NC) - Ecushymenical guidelines dealing prinshycipally with the conduct of Catholics at Protestant functions have been issued by Bishop Alshybert L Fletcher of Lttle Rock

Composed of the diocesan ecumenical commission the gUidelines specify that Catholics may attend Protestant church services participate in the singshying and common prayer but may not act as a reader or officer of such services

The rules permit Catholics to serye in wedding parties at mar- riages in Protestant churches providing the service does not involve a Catholic or a divorceci person Attendance at baccalaushyreate services in a church or elsewhere is permitted

Under the rules Catholics may not act as sponsors at Protestantmiddot baptisms Oi confirmation nat Jlarticipate in intercommunion services The guidelines encour- age Protestant attendance at Catholic services

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Misunderstandingmiddot Faced In Ecumenical Meeting

Roman Catholic and Lutheran theologians agreed here after their fourth meeting that many misunderstandings had been overcome on the Sacrament of the Lords SuppeR -Holy Eucharist-but that further examination is necesshysary The doctrinal consulshy to the concrete worship life o1Ztation held at the headquartshy the Church ers of the Lutheran Church In a prepared statement reshyin America was the fourth leased ft the conclusion of the in a series sponsored by the closed meeting the group noted Bishops Committee for Ecumenshy that in contrat to topics disshyism and Interreligious Affairs cussed at the first two meetings of the NCCB and the USA Nashy -the Nicene Creed and Baptismtional Committee of the Luthershy -there have been historically an Wotld Federation serious disagreements between

Main themes discussed at the the confessions concerning the three-day meeting were the Eucharist Lords Supper as a sacrifice the All participants the stateshymanner of Christs presence in ment added agreed that many the Sacrament the import of the misunderstandings had beellll concept of transubstantiation overcome as a result of the latest and the relation of these issues meeting

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For our eIght edlcal Sisters In P1rappancode south India today is just a normal day Doctors bags In hand they are out In the villages eKmiddot amlnlng everyone for leprosybullbullbullbull Leprosy can be cured If diagnosed early says Sister Elizashybeth a surgeon Better yet Itcan be prevented In this case an ounce of prevention is worthten pounds of cure bullbullbull The cure is cheaper than penny nely Only $850 buys 10000 Dapsone _ mIracle tablets enough for 43 lepers for a yeerl bullbullbull The effort In Pirappancode islnternashytional German Catholics built the 25middotbed ho pital (1St Johns) French Catholics gave a workshop (for therapy) and an American friend of ours has pledged a convent and chapel Now the Sisters need medicinps a $200 microscope a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for treating children especially In farmiddotflung villages Will you help them Monsignor Nolan will acshyknowledge your gifts promptly and the Slste win pray for you aware you are helping them cure lepers as Christ did -

WHAT YOU CAN DO IJ $5000 gives the Sisters a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for fighting leprosy at Ita source (A sign on the side will featu re the name ofyour favorite saint and your name ifyou wish)

IJ $1500wlll give theSlster-surgeon an ope Instable Shes ustng akitchen table now

WOULDc $575 buys a whirlpool beth $100 a sterilizer

NEED C $300 pays In full ~or the two-year training 01 IF a native Slsternurse She will write to you

YOU WERI C $240 ($5 a Week) takes care of bull fuMmiddottlme

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NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN PresIdent

MSGR JOHN G NOLAN Natlonal8ecretaIJ Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc S30 Madison Avenuemiddot New York NY 1001 T~one 212yUkOft 6-5840

rHf ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Apr 20 196717

CATHOLIC (HAR~l~~S AP~EAL SILVER JUBILEE YEAR

MAY 7-17

What does it mean to you The opportunity to raise your sights to the level of a $2500 Jubilee Gift

An act of aratitude for 25 years of Charitable Seice

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THE ANCHORshy~18 Top East C~ast College Hoopsters middotPlay )Sees SociaI EquityThurs April 20 1967

Still Lagging Anglicalfj)~ ~teview At I(ennedy Center For P C Alumni In Spain Antii Cali~~i~ By Patricia Francis MALAGA (NC) - Spain

was taken to task for lagging1562 C~~lireglf A full house crowd saw some o( the East Coasts top collegIate basketball players behind many other countriesLONDON (NC) _ The demonstrate last week how basketball should be played Occasion was the 8th annual hi the development of a

ehurch of England has set Scholarship Basketball Game sponsored by the Providence College Alumni Club of New just Christian social and ecoshyup a permanent commission Bedford at Kennedy Youth Center in New Bedford Initiated in 1959 to - raise nomic life at the 26th Spanish C1)n Christian Docbine with tis first task to consider recastshying or replacing that churchs historic charter of the Thirtyshy~Hne Articles of Religion which

are strongly anti-Catholic In tOne

They are regarded by many as o stumbling block to Christian ~ity The articles drawn up in 1562

for the avoiding of diversities $pound opinions and for the establishshyhtg of consent touching truereli shygion must be publicly accepted py the clergy at ordination

They have become a matter of ~increasing objection lind some

Anglican clergymen now feel talat they should not be called Upon to subscribe to doctrinal definitions which reflect views formed in the 16th oentury aarship is a $2400 one paid at the time of extreme and bitter reli- rate of $600 a year to the winner gious controversy Next award will be made in

The articles denounce the 1970 TheRevEdwardC Duffy eurohurch of Rome as erroneous in chairman of- the scholarship matters of faith and declare games and recruiter of the among other things that theplaye~s who participate emphashyBishop of Rome hath no jurisdic- sizes the scholarship is open middotto tion in this -realm of Englandany deserving boy who has been Some prominent Anglican clergymen have blal1led the sharp declfnein ordination canshy

Qlidates on a reluctance to subshy~ribe to this document

Consider Advis( The new commission was apshy

pointed by Anglican Archbishops Michael Ramsey of Canterbury and Donald Coggan of York It consists of 17 members most of them theological professors repshyzesenting different schools of thought in the Anglican Church

Anglican Bishop Iar Ramsey of Durham is chairman The commissions general terms of reference say that it is

to consider and advise upon doctrinal questions submitted to it from time to time by the archshybishops and to plan when deshyslrable the investigation of

I ~uestions by other groups Its first task will be to conshy

sider the place of the Thirty- lege University of Rhode Island Nine Articles in the Anglican St Josephs of Philadelphia Bosshy

tradition and the question of ton College and Holy Cross subscription and assentto them There were Bill Blair Jim

Benedict Bob Kavolski and Bill Lasher of PC Mike FitzgeraldReligious Influence (of Mattapoisett) Henry Carey

In US on Wan~ -7- NEW YORK (NC)-Although

a majority of all Americans exshypressed the belief that 11eligion is losing its influence in the

United States in the latest Gallup Poll Catholics declined to-give majority assent to the opinion

The national survey showed tilat 57 per cent of all Americans in 1967 believe religion is losing its influence Only 14 per cent expressed this opinion in 1957

Among Protestants 60 per cent In 1967 compared with L7 per eent in 1957 said religion was losing its influence Forty-eight

per-cent of Catholics agreed in the latest survey compared with Beven per cent in 1957

Get Federal Funds PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A

Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyect under the auspices of Philashydelppia Archbishop John J Krols Commjssion on Economic Oppi)rtunity Programs hlils reshyceived $267980 from the federal government It was one of 74 Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyects in 30 states approved by Secretary of Labor W Willard Wirtz

accepted as a freshman at Provshyidence College regardless of the high school he attended

Primary Method William F Doyle president of

the NE Bedford club says the games are the alumnis primary method of raising money for the schoJarship fund

Since it was first held the game has attracted a following of avid fans-who help swell the scholshyarship treasury

Father Duffy feels it is the top post-season game in New England arid cites as proof the fact that his long time friend Bob Cousy Hoiy Cross All- Anierican and Boston Celtic great played in it himself two years ago It was his last game

Players who participated in this years money-for-scholarshyships game-all college seniors

represented Providence Colshy

scholarship funds for deserv- ing gr~duates of area high

schools the game profits enabled presentation of the first Edward J Tucker Memorial Scholarship of $2000 to Clifford Marr of New Bedford in 1962 Marr a graduate of Holy Family High was graduated from Provishydence College in 1966 and curshyrently is an Army lieutenant on duty in Korea

The second scholarship---named for the late 1r Tucker of Fairshyhaven a Providence College

graduate and one of the charter members of the New Bedford club--was awarded last year to Michael Doherty of New Bedshyford also a Holy Family gradushyate

Currently the four-year scholshy

Steve Chubin and Bob Boehm of the U of RI Richie Murphy and Greg Hochstein of Holy Cross John Austin and Ed Hock- enbury of Boston College and

f~nll lHoMsnln1~ fLaw Olhoc City EI1il(Jlcts

SPRIfiGFIELD (NC) - By unanimous vote of its five city commissioners this city has enshyacted a fair housing ordinance

The ordinance the third of its kind in OhiO becomes effecshytive May 3 Considerably strongshyer than the fair housing legisia- tion enacted by the Ohio Legisshylature in 1965 it outlaws disshycrimination in the sale or rental of any housing excepting only dwellings for members of reli shygious organizations or housing established for one sex only

Springfields new ordinance came as the res~lt of an improved climate of racial harmony The citys mayor Robert C Henry is a Negro whose performance of his duties has won wide reshyspect In recent years an Urban League has been launched and has made considerable progress A Human Relations Commission is functioning

PROVIDENCE COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP In atshytendance at PC Scholarship Fund Basketball Game in New Bedford were William Doyle presidentof the PC Club of New Bedford and Michael Doherty present scholarship recipient

Billy Oakes Marty Ford and Tom Duff of st Josephs the nations fifth-ranked_ team

Sees lay Teachers

Form Asso~iataon CLEVELAND (NC)-Groundshy

work for a diocesan lay teachers asso~iation was laid at a meeting of representatives of 21 diocesan high schools here

shy Patrick Bruening teacher at St Josephs high school and temshyporary chairman of the new unit said the association is an organshyization of professional people seekint professional growth

He added Only after we have proven ourselves as professionshyals with a professional attitude

about our job can we ask for and hope to get professional consideration I

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lhe players enjoyed demonshystrating th~ir proficiency The fans enjoyed watching the demonstration ~ and the scholar shipfund of the Providence Colshylege Alumni Club of New Bedshy~ord teaped tbebenef~il ~fboth

~ Population Control WASHINGTON (NC) - U s

Sen J W Fulbright of Arkansas has asked for aCongressional appropdation of $150 million for increased population coritior asshysistanCe to developIng countries

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Social Week here Angel Cardinal Herrera y

Oria former archbishop of Mashylaga in a letter to the Social Week sessions deplored what he called a deficiency of Catholic influence in Spanish public lilfe declaring that Spain a Catholic nation was far from being a model of social justice

No Dialogue Earlier Auxiliary Bishop Rashy

fael Gonzalez Moralejo of Valenshycia ecclesiastical moderator of the SocialWeek sounded a simshyilar note declaring that where there is no dialogue between citizens and their government there is no democracy and such a society cannot call itself Christian

Cardinal Herrera said that ahead of Spain are nations who

have learned how to organize their natioJlallif~ according to the norms of justice which are the daughters of consciElnce Sweden has progressed in the social and pOlitlclll o~der to such an extent that the ~ope

could state that its public ~n~ishy tutions are in harmonywith the teachings of the Seco~dVatican Council he said

1[Jpper ~Iasses Cardinal Herrera lirged the

upper classes of -the countryto contribute toward the formation of a sound and realistic public opinion by which religious conshycepts would be applied to the economic and social life of Spain

It is necessary he said to diminish the differences in classes to work toward Unity not only in the economic order but also in i~ the education and

c~vic department

The Best

Car

Georgell Cluh Olf to Good Start mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Apr 20 1967

Taunton High Is Surprise In County Diamond loop former FltrrJDD Riweff CYOer on Scholagslvop ltltIt PIl1Jf$~ns

By PETE~ BARTEK Norton High Coach

Coach BiD Georges Taunton High diamond aggreg~

tion is the early season surprise in the Bristol County schoolboy league now in ita second week of the eampaign The pennant race appeam ~ be developing into one of the most exciting in many years Five clubs are battling of Ule better area clubs year fOIl the coveted flag And after year

Coach Harold (Chet) Haneshywhile action is fast and fm-shywichs Bishop Feehan High teamiOWl in the BCL the eight N3rshyof Attleboro has tucked awayragansett League teams are early season wins over Northgetting I e Q d y Attleboro and New Bedford Voshy

lor the chamshy cational The latter two will pionship race m probably fight it out fornext-toshytheir COmpetishy the-last place in the final standshytion Delayed ing as they seek to avoid theboth by rain and cellar Ii old weather The two top contests on nextCOaches h a v e Mondays BCL card will seebeen reminding Coyle playing Durfelte at Alumnitheir charges of Field in Fall River while Taunshythe pitfalls of ton journeys to North Dartmoutheareless loose to clash with stang Two northernplay and also Peter eounty rivals Attleboro andthe IOOmmission Bartek Feehan meet at the formers of Deedless errors which ean field next Monday when North relegatea club to an early Deeshy Attleboro travels to New Bedshyond diviaion berth from which it ford to take 0111 Vocatlonal win be bard to emerge as 1M Nury Contests oompetition progresses Meanwhile the Narragansett

Chausse and JlaJkut loop is comple~ing its first week The Herring City Orange and of play Its still a little early to

Black pulled the big surprise of make 8 judgment as to how thebe young season when it held clubs will stand at the end of thethe always strong Dullfee High

lI~mpaign team of Fall River to a 2-2 tie in Four Narry tilts are on tap for11 innings The prognosticators next Tuesdaybad been writing off the Georgeshy Coach Jack McCartys Caseeoached clan solely because they High Cardinals of Swansea willfelt Taunton would be unable to face Coach Jack Harts DimanJeplace Artmiddot Koska lost by gradshy Vocational team in Fall River uation in what looms as one of the

But Scott Chawrse impressed most interesting early seasonin his confrontation with the Fan games Coach Doug Baxendales River Hilltoppelll aDd now the Msgr Prevost High team of Fall same pundits who had relegated River will be at Dighton to meet Taunton to a lowly apot 8re the Coach Eddie Texeiras D - ~ first to admit that things will be Regionals Coach Ed Bibeau will much more pleasant for the lead his W~port High aggr~gashyTauntonians this Spring tion to Seekonk to middotvh( with

Stro~ Coyle Offense Coach Roger Hills charges The Admittedly an the doubting fourth Narry contest next Tuesshy

Thomases were not convinced day will see Coach Jack Brenshyon the basis of a single performshy nans Holy Family High teain of ance So Joe Majkut and Chausse New Bedford meeting Coach Jim Ulen eombined to throw a no-hit Sullivans Somersetmiddot High teamwin over Coach Dick Joyces at the latters field Attleboro High team Even the

Lanllers Ready most skeptical then conceded that Taunton must be reckoned On Ca~ Cod n nip-~pd~tuck

in the flag race battle is going on in that areas While Taunton High has heeD eon1erence schedule Four conshy

eGualling the early season attenshy tests are listed for the Capeway tion unexpected results have eircuit next Monday They are eccurred in several other diashy Oldmiddot Rochester (Mattapoisett) mond eontests Attleboro which at Barnstable Bourne at Wareshydid DOt seem destined lor gfeat bam Dartmouth middotat Dennis-Yarshythings this Spring provided the mouth and Fairhaven vs Lawshyfirst surprise w~en it toppled rence High at Falmouth Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Norton High in the Clover Stang High of North Dartmouth Valley Conference plays its first

Taunton then proved its mettle league game at home against when it defeated surprising Millis next Monday The Purple Attleboro Hickey has talent at - and White Lancers travel to Stang but his problem has heeD Medfield next Wednesday tv properly align his best playem Apparently they were not in the Score Governmentright spots when they went down to defeat at the hands of Coach On Lab~r Problems Jim Burns Msgr Coyle High

BUENOS AIRES (NC) -TwonJne of Taunton which has Catholic organizations have isshycwuted its way to two one~sided sued a joint manifesto criticizingviet(lries Coyles strength is in thlte Argentine government sayshyits offensive attack but it also ing it has failed to protect workshy

has a capable defense and pitch ers basic rightsJng staff to make a real run for Issued by the Catholic Youngthe BCL crown Workers (JOC) and Catholic _ Feehans Auspicious Start Action Workers Movement

Durfee while it may have been (MOAC) the statement alsotemporarily halted by Taunton called upon the bishops to be enpects to be among the leaders aware of the needs and goals of before the end of the week The young workers and the labor Hilltoppers looked good in winshy class and to be brave in ltexshy

double-header from Pil-shyning a pressing the Churchs doctrine grim High of Rhode Island last as applied to real-life situations weekend CoachJoe Lewis feelsmiddot It said that the government his boys can now maintain the which calls itself Christian but momentum they have generated is anything but Christian has in the non-league affairs It goes nothing to do with the Gospelalmost without saying that one or Christs teachings or with the off-day is not going to thwart Churchs doctrines as defined by the Hilltopperll wbo produce ODe the Second Vatican Councit

By JOE MIRANDA A Parsons College senior JRobshy

eli Bonalewicz of Fall River is -nearIng the end of a most sucshycessful college career both athshyletically and academically

Bob is attending Parsons in Fairfield Iowa on a baseball scholarship and has started bis third season as the colleges first strong catcher

neans List Student A Physical Education major

Bob has a minor in History and during the last marking period was named to the Deans List at Parsons -

A member of St PatrIcks Parshyish Bonny is a 1963 graduate of Durfee High School where he participated in football basketshyball and baseball

The son of Mr and Mrs Mathew Bonalewicz of 50 Chapshylin Street he is oile of five chil shydren ald has not yet decided upon a vocation

Bonny has two older brotherll a lieutenant and Mathew Jr II

staff sergeant both in the Air Force and stationed ubroad Bob also has two sisters Kathleen II student at Durfee High and Ma) Ann a grammar school pupil

Has f80 Average Bonalewicz recently returned

from a Southern baseball trip end gained excellent commendashytions from his coach Duane Banks for his performance as the Wildcats won 11 of 13 games

The Fall River player batted 430 belted three homers had nine runs-batted-in and seltlred 10 during Parsons first 13 games

Bonalewicz a 22-year-old 175shyJ)ound 5-8 giant enjoys playing baseball and so does his coach who scheduled 89 games last seashyson to set a ollegiate record fur the most games played in one year

Ankle IBjUlY

With the former Durfee backshystop handling the brunt of the catching duties until a knee inshyjury forced him to the sidelines Parsons won 72 lost 15 and twice finished in ti~d games called beshyca~se of darkness

The former St Patricks star in the CYO baseball program started poory this season finshyis middotng off the Southern trip with an ankle sprain but entering this week the ankle was in good shape and Bonny expected to take his regular spot behind the plate

Federal Agency Has Inter-Faith Advisors

WASHINGTON (NC)- A Catholic priest a Methodist minshyister and a Jewish rabbi have been appointed religious advishyBors to the United States Inforshymation Agency here

Msgr George G Higgins clIishyrector of the Social Action Deshypartment U S Catholic Confershyence the Rev Edward G Cu-middot roll superintendent of the Washshyington Northwest District ol the Methodist Baltimore Conference and Rabbi Richard G Hirsch dishyrector of the Relgious Action Center Union of American Heshybrew Congregations have been named to the USIA advisory panel

Officials of the agency noted that while it has had religious advisors since its inception this marks the first time an interfaith panel had been established

The purpose of the panel offi shycials said is to assure that the agencys handling of religious matters serves the best intlterest of the nation and its dlveraity of faiths

Bonalewicz also played for St Patricks T)iocesan championship team and for the Fall River Mershychants in the Newport Sunse~ League

As a senior at DUrfee Bonny was awarded the 1963 George Kaplan Memorial Trophy as the Hilltoppers best senior basketshyball player

His hustle and determination while performing for Durfee at Bostcm Garden during the anshynual Eastern Massachusetts Tecb tournament gained him the reshyspect and admiration of all that witnessed his efforts

Bonalewicz recently completed a practice teaching tour in an Iowa Junior High School and while tere coached the eighth grade team to a league chamshypionship

Earlier in the college year Bob_ was a member of the Parsons intramural flag football progmiddotam and received a trophy for his performan J

Despite the heavy bnsebaU schedule Bob has manged to keep hi grades above average and after the Fall semestershyshowed his prowess in the classshyroom by being named to the Deans List for the second time

DeMatha Winner In Hoop Tourney

WASHINGTON (NC) - DeshyMatha High of suburban Hyattsshyville Md scored an upset cliff shyhanger victory to cop the 12th national high sChool basketballl tournament sponsored by thE local Knights of Columbus J017 the fifth straight time

DeMatha avenged two regula17 season defeats by Mackin High Washington Catholic League

champ with its last minute 70-68 victory Mount Carmel of Chiengo took

third place with a 47-45 overshytime win over DePaul Acndemy of Chicago Northeast Cnthrt1ie of Philadelphia took fifth pIhce with a 77-74 win over St Petertl

B(~ BONALEWICZ of New Brunswick N J Catheshydral High of Trenton NJ Inpound

The oung catcher has been Dwight School of New York alslaquo) long known for his bullet like participated tlnrowlr arm and gained conshy Aubrey Nash DeMatha junloY siderable praise from opponents wall named the tournnmentl in 111gh school amateur and colshy most valuable player lege eompetitions for his savvy A 5-11 junior John Somogyftbehind the plate set three tournament records-shy

Three-Letter Man 40 field goals 108 points in threE Bonalewicz played football for games and 43 points in one game Don MontIe basketb~ll for Tom and tied another record ll-forshyKaram and baseball for middotJoe 11 from the foul line Lewis while at Durfee and also performed for Lewis Chathammiddot team in the Cape Cod League

The Fall Riverite cannot get FAIRHAVENenough baseball according to his mother Mrs Bonalewicz recalls LUMBER a game at Alumni Field when

COMPANYDurfee bested a Venezuelan team sponsored by the Peoplesshyto-Peoples program Bob was inshy Complete linejured and taken -to the hospital Mrs Bonalewicz remembers Building Materials then came back to finish the game hitting a home run to win I SPRING ST FAIRHAVENmiddotit for the Hilltoppers He wall voted the outstanding player in 993-2611the gameo

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I

THEANCHOR()ioltese of Fan ~tv~r-Thurs ApO 1967 ~ ~ middot-middotmiddotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ middot20

AT BISEIOPS CONFERENCE Facilities for offering Mass were provided by the Archdiocese of Chicago when 230 U S bishops met in semi-annual conference In left photo nine othel prelates concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Joseph TRyan of Anchorage Alaska In right

photo are Archbishop John F Dearde~ of Detroit at left president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and at right Archbishop Johl1l F Cody of Chicago conference host Bishops Connolly and Gerrard attended from the Fall River Diocese NC Photos

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 4 Jewish leader Desc~o~reg~ Visit

Dregml~es C~th~oltr S~h~~s Watliu ~[flfinal CINCINNATI (NC)- A~~~HD[[reg~ mJ [g)regWD~OWreg Cincinnati attorney and Aushy

gustin Cardinal Bea SJTORONTO (NC)-Catholics who have gone to Cathshypresident of the Vatican See- olic schools do better economically than those who went retariat for Promoting Christian

either partly to the public schools or entirely so Peter H Unity found in their very conshyRossi middotdireetor- of the National Opinion Research Center at versation a sign of the progreSB Chicago told separate (Cathshy of Christian - Jewish relations

cation he dealt -with two comshy when they met recently in Romeolic) school trustees of Onshy mon objections to Catholic Simon Lazarus Jr of Cincinshytario at their annual banquet schools First do Catholic nati a leader in the local andschools prepare their graduatesin Toronto national American Jewish Comshy

Declaring that American as well as other schools for getshy mittee was one of a small groupting along in economic achieveshyCatholic schools are a success of members of the committeement and secondly ~do CathshyRossi co-author of the Greeleyshy who met and talked with the carshyolicsehools playa divisive roleRossi Report said that American dinal laSt month in Rome whilein American society as -some ofCatholic schools have managed theymiddot were on a three-week studytheir critics maintainto maintain themselves and grow mission to Mediterranean counshy

Declaring that Catholics doat least in proportion to the inshy tries with the committee crease in Catholic population and better economically with their

Lazarus who was tremenshyCatholic education backgrouoothey do produce noticeable efshy ilously encouraged by his visithe said Apparently there werefects in their graduates along the with Cardinal Bea said in ansome qualities of the Catholiclines that follow the emphases interview here that he told theschools which either fosteredstressed by the organization cardinal about increasing Chrisshyeconomic success - perhaps theObjections tian-Jewish dialogue in the U Skinds of work habits instilled bySpeaking on the social conseshy Cardinal Bea in turn told ofthe vaunted better discipline ofquences of Catholic schoOI edushy projects that were going on inCatholic schools~or the religious other parts of the world includshyvalues of Catholicism in this hisshying the study and revision oftorical period had effects similar textbooks to take out passagesThe tc the values of Protestantism in harmful to the Jewsthe early period of the Reforshy

mation Saintly ManParish Parade Divisiveness The fact that we are here toshyROSLINDALE CONFIRMATION Rev Richard Johnshy

gether the cardinal told theSS PETER AND PAUL On the question of ilivisiveshy son hands the chalice to ~l member- of the confirmation group is living proof of theFALL RIVER ness Rossi said the evidence class at Sacred Heart Chllrch Roslindale where the Holy progress that is being made andseems clearly against supportingR gistration for grade one in such an allegation Eucharist was administered under both species of bread of the spirit thats behind it

the parish school ill bc held Twenty years ago a meetingVlikeIn general he noted no signifi shy and wine Bishop Jeremiah F Minihan Auxiliary Bishop Sunday April 23 after the 8 9 this probably wouldnt havecant difference)n anti-Negro10 and 11 oclock Masses of the middotBoston Archdiocese confirmed the class of 275 in happenedanti-Semitic or anti-ProtestantBoy Scouts will go to Expo Boston suburban parish NC Photo attitudes between Cahtolic schoolmiddot Urging Christians and Jews67 Montreal in August Their

Catholics an public school Cathshy to work together on social asmothers are assisting in fundshyolics was perceived Indeed well as religious questions Carshyraising activitic and announce

a cake sale after all Masses there was some evidence that dinal Bea commended coopershythe Catholic graduates of greatershy ation among Christians and Jews

-Retirement Plon Sunday April 23 The troop comshy

educational attainment were less even in areas where they disshymittee will have a musical vari shy Bridgeport Bishop Curtis Announces Programlikely to evidence prejudicial at shy agree like federal aid and supshyety show in the hall Sunday titudes of all sorts than those of port of text books for privateApril 30 to raise money for theshy For Priests on Connecticut Diocesesimilar educational attainment shy schoolstrip who had gone to public schools BRIDGEPORT (NC) - Bishop Retirement prior to age 70 but Lazarus who described CardishyThe omcns Club will have

Catholic schooling did not hold Walter W Curtis of Bridgeport after age 65 may be requested nal Bea as a saintly man saida rummage sale in the church back Catholics from participatshy has announced a retirement proshy by priests through a diocesan that if all religious leadershall Thursday and Friday April ing in public life he added gram for priests of the Bridgeshy personnel committee which will could exude the same feeling27 and 28 and hold its installashy

port Diocese Retroactive to Jan make its recommendation to the and understanding that Cardinaltion banquet at Dighton Rock 1 last it provides that bishop regarding acceptance or Bea did the worldmiddot would be11a~or Tuesday May 9

Men of the parish have organshy ~p~$ lP~nJffillaquoY All priests subniit their resigshy non-acceptance of the request much better ized a CYO athletic advisory nations by the age of 75 either On reaching 70 priests are exshy The cardinal is a great human council and plan a baseball team ~~reg] tri)_ lLte voluntarily or at the request of pected to resign any official poshy being he said and he ought

proper authority t) be a saint along with Popethis season Chairman is Milton sition they may hold in the dishyVATICAN CITY (NC)-Love The age for voluntary retireshy JohnM Kozak sccretary William F is the keynote in the primacy of ocese to allow younger priests to

ment is 70 yearsPatten coach Robert A Fredshy take over the activities of these ermiddot~lc Their next mecting is at offices

Peter and his successors in the guidance and service of the

10 Sunday morning April 30 Christian people Pope Paul VI Leaders UII1 Alabama Priests on retirement will conshyCommittees have been formed told thousands assembled in St tinue to possess faculties and willto plan the Summer parish picnic Peters during a general audience Blast Gov Wallace be free to give assistance in passhyto be held Sunday July 30 at Taking his theme from March toral work in parishes and otherUIbans Grove Tiverton - MOBILE (NC)-More than 40029s Gospel in which Christ asks Church instihitions if their

Alabama citizens here haveSTJEAN THE BAPTISTE Peter Do you love me more health penuits

signed a statement expressingALL RIVER than these do- the Pope stressed

dismay at Gov LUIleer Walshy A home for retired priests T~1C Council of Catholic Women the significance of the question

laces recent speech calling for now being constructed is sched- I will sponsor a pilgrimagetn La He wa3 asking the Apostle

stmiddot~te defiance of federal court uled for completion in 1968 and 1 Salette Shrinc Attleboro on Sunshy the first confessor of faith in ordered school desegregation Vill be open to all retired priests == ~ day April 23 A bus will leave the divine Messianic niis~ion of the school yard at 1 and return Christ for that complementing Among the signers were many bullbull at 5 Catholic clergymen Religiouscharacteristic which makes faith

Mrs Thomas Tache chairman and lay leaders including represhylive and work that is love and lVIIS Oscar Phenix co-chairshy charity sentatives of the Society of Jesus ir - BISIALONS man head the ticket committee the Josephite Fathers the SistersThe Pope continued The

of Loretto and the Dominican s~ primacy of Peter in the guidanceMARGARET Sisters i GARAGEand service of the Christian peoshyBUZZARDS BAY

ple was to be a pastoral primacy The statement appeared as A ~A whist party will be sponshy bullNote to Our Fellow Citizens insored at 8 Saturday night April a primacy of love -0 pray

beloved sons that all may undershy an advertisement in the Mobile22 at the school hall Main Street stand this prodigious divine Registerb~ the SS Margmet-Mary Guild design Maintaining that racism is the

HOLY NAME underlying issue in the controshyFALL RIVER versy the statements described

First communicants will hold Benedictine Oblates

24-Hour Wreltker Service

653 Washington Street Fairhaven 994-5058

the states dual school system as rehearsals at 315 Monday aftershy Oblates of St Benedict will unjust and unequal and in- bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull noon April 24 and Thursday hold a chapter meeting Saturshy sited other citizens to joi n the afternoon April 27 at the parish day afternoon April 29 at Portsshy signers in working for justiceschool mouth Priory R I beginning now

at 4 with Mass Dinner willbe ST FRANCIS XAVIER served at 6 Reservations ~ may HYANNIS be made with the Priory or by

Mrs Kenneth B Clarke a calling Mrs Frank S Moriarty licensed grapho-analyst will be Fall River 672-1439 the guest speaker at tonights meeting of the Womens Guild ICheduled for 8 in the IQwC1 Coyle Penny Sale ehureh hall - -he Mothers Chlb of Coyle

The nominating committee High Schoo Taunton will sponshywill present a slate of officers sor a penny sale on Vednesday 101 the 1967-68 year at this meetshy night April 26 at 8 at Coyle in~ High

ANY WALLET SIZE ITEM

SEALED IN PlASTIC

3Sc each -3 f~r $100

- Mail Money with Items to _

FRAN-LOU PIASTICS P O Box 05

FALL RIYER MASS 02722

UYou Can Whip Our Cream but You Cant Beat Our Milk

YOUI Gulf Hill Route Man is Always at YOUI SerYice

FOR HOME DELIVERY CALL 998-5691

GULF HmiddotILlmiddot DAIRY so DARTMOUTH MASS

THE ANCHOR-Dlocete of Fait R1yener-1h Apr 20 bull

~

~flt

1 I

FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF HYACINTH CIRCLE Participatshying in the Golden Jubilee Celebration of the Daughters of Isabella-Hya-~

einth Circle--New Bedford were left Miss Mary E Foley regent and Mrs Richard H Walsh supreme regent of St Louis~ Mo at the cake cutshyting ceremony Center seated Miss Lydia Pacheco past regent and Mrs

Emile J Monfils chairman of decorations standing Mrs Richard H Manning vice-regent and Mrs Antone J Morris past regent Right -Mrs John B Lowney first regent seated in front of Miss Evelyn Henshydricks first guide left and Mrs Emmet Almond past regent The Circle has a membership of 500

Cardsna Cushing Emphas~es Need For Inv~vement

BOSTON (NC) - Om atechisms must be transshybted into real human conshyeern Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston asserted here

Cardinal Cushing said Christ did not make the rhetorical proshynouncements in response to peoples need but rather helped them by action Christians must take similar risks to wipe out the IJOcial evils of the 20th century be decl~red

For the Christian this social ftnvolvement consists not only in the desire for material well shybeing which we share with all humanitarians but also in the psychological hunger for more shybeing in mans thirst for the fullness of undying love in the final estabiishment of all things in the love of God the cardinal said

Cardinal Cushing said that the message of Easter is hope He asserted that fear is prevalent in our society-fear of nuclear deshytJtruction of our fellow men of the future of non-acceptance in a conformist society This fear be said is kindled by the conshytinued expansion of communism JiJi the various sectors of the a1obe

Christian lImperative

The cardinal warned While some satisfaction can be obtained jjn diminishing the degree of (Chill in the Cold War let no one be so mesmerizec as to think nIl is well and secure Let no one of us be duped into accepting war as peace

Cardinal Cushing said Chrisshytians have not always seen their Christian responsibility because of complacency or fear of inshyvolvement~ He added The Fathers of Vatican II have made it clear that for the Church and the Christian involvement is not only not to be feared-involveshyment is the Christian imperashytive

New Bedfords Hyacinth Circle lsabellas Mark Fifty Years of Community Service

By Patricia Francis Hyacinth Circle Daughters of Isabella of New Bedford marked its golden anniversary

Sunday morning at the 11 oclock Mass at Holy Name Church and a dinner that followed at the New Bedford Hotel Guests of honor were Mrs Anna C Walsh of Florisant Mo supreme regent members of the area clergy and charter members of the circle

Organized April 15 1917 at a meeting at Duff Han Hyacinth Circle began its half century of charitable work with a charter membership of 335 women Today it has a membership of approximately 500

In 1934 the drcle sponsored establishment of the first Junior C I N E 1 dmiddott

Irc e III ew ng an WI h acharter class of 125 young women from 10 to 20

Through the years members of the circle have participated in national and local charitable works including raising funds for he Queen Isabella FoundashytionFund of $100000 donated to te National Catholic School of Social Service affiliated with Catholic University in Washingshyton

Two area women were among those awarded fellowships to the school Mrs Mary Lou (Cleary) Nally formerly of New Bedford and now residing in Jeffersonshyville Pa and Mrs Jeanette (Mulvey) Mahoney of Arlington fOmel1y of Fairhaven Following erection of the Rose

Hawthorne Lathrop Home in Fall River for treatment of canshycer patients members of the circle adopted the work of proshyviding surgical dressings and other hosryital needs They also work closely with the Catholic Welfare Bureau One of the cirshycps pet projects was help for the White Sisters until they left New Bedford in 1965

First regent of Hyacinth Cirshycle was Mrs Helen E Lowney who contacted all charter memshybers before the anniversary celebration inducing many of those able to attend to join in the birthday party

Secoud regent was the late

Mrs Caroline ~ Manning of New Bedford who remained active in the DlUghters of Isashybella until her death She served as national regent

The late Rt Rev Henry J Noon of St James Church was the first of three chaplains who have provided spiritual direction for members of Hyacinth Circle Second chaplain was the Rt Rev Msgr Timothy B Sweeney of Holy Name Church and current chaplain is the Rt Revt Msgr John J Hayes also of Holy Name

ror many years Hyacinth Cirshycle held its meetings in the hall at the Knights of Columbus building at Pleasant and Camp bell Streets Then in the mid 1940s the Most Rev James E Cassidy gave the circle use of a house at 11 Robeson Street which ~eassince served as its headquarshy

Plans for the anniversary obshy

a SYSTEMAnC5 50 01 bull 10 vear SAVINGS

96 monthly deposits requirelll

~ INVESTMENT5 0001 bull fO year SAVINGS

90 dar nolice for wilhdratral

4 50 01 a REGULAR bull 10 vear SAYINGS

Bass River Savings Bank

Bank By Mail We Pay The Postage

IISOUTH YARMOUTH HVANNIS

bull YARMOUTH SHOPPING PIJlZA

e DENNIS PORT bull OSTERVILLf

servance were ~ade by a l~rge committee that included Miss Mary E Foley regent Mrs Anshytone Morris ticket chairman and Mrs Mary P Quinn a charshyter member

Miss Ellen Gaughan read a history of the circle which she had written an entertainment was provided by Nancy Howard Debruyn of Milton who offeredselections from Sound of Music

Hear Bishop NASHVILU (NC) - Bishop

Joseph A Durick is the first Catholic clergyman to address a state convention of the Episcopal Church Women of Tennessee

St Johns to Open New School in 68

JAMAICA (NC) - St Johns University here in New York state will establish ilschool of general studies in September1968

It will consist of three divishysions each with a separate facshyulty and assistant dean

The new school will offer It

part-time program leading to D

bachelors degree a two-year asshysociate degree program and am adult continuing education proshygram

Now Many Wear

FALSE TEETH With More Comfort

FASTEETH t pleasant alkaline powder holds false teeth firmer To eat and talk In more comfort justsprinkle a little FASTEETH on yourplates No gummy gooey taste 0shyteellng Cllecks denture breath Denshytures that fit are essentIal to health see your dentist regularly Get FASTEETH at all droll counteru

Play an extra set of tennis

i ~ ( lt

o ~~lt onthe II ~

energy you get from

3 slices of Sunbeam Bread

6 THE ANCHOR-Di~c~se of Fail Riv~r-Thurs Ap~ 20 1961 - ~ 1middotmiddot 1 ~ --~ ~ bull bull - ~~

Reports Mean What There will undoubtedly be more than the usual furor over the release by the National Oatholi~ Reporter of a text of majority and minority reports submitted to PopeshyPaul on the matter of birth control It will be well to reshymember what these reports are and what they are supshyposed to do

Members of the Papal Commission on Birth Control were asked by the Pope to study the whole matter from every possible point of view and to submit their findings to him so that in the light of this work and in the light of the medical issues involved he might make moral judgeshyments and pronouncements on these matters The studies would then be expected to contain every possible aspect of the birth control problem with every kind of argument both for and against every type of method of birth cOntrol This is fundamental to any kind of reshysearch paper All sides of every aspect are discussed argushyments strong and weak are brought out to bolster each

aspect and then the whole is presented for thought and prayer and decision

This indeed is what the Papal Commission has done For a reader to take this or that argument and from

it to mak~ his own deductions is unwise and a misuse of what the Commission has done For a reader to take what the Reporter has printed and to assume that this is the whole story is to come to conclusions on partial evidence

The Reporters release of these texts will be seen by many as an act of freedom the willingness for all matters -to be discussed openly and before the entire world It is hoped that the Reporter has gone a step further even and has indicated to its readers what these texts really IPean how they are to be understood and the purpose of research papers of this type Most people are neither philosophers nor scientists nor theologians Philosophical concepts socioshylogical and scientific ideas theologizing about issues-all this cannot be simply thrown at people with the expec~tion that there will be no confusionTo think this way would pe naive

It is never enough simply to issue reports Two questions should always be asked in the wake of reports---are they accurate and what do they mean Or-to put it quite inelegailtly-Sez you and So What

Auschwitz Mem(jrial Attempts to slant or rewrite history should alw~ys be

met with vigorous and serious protest On Sunday a monshyument was dedicated in Poland to the memory of the four million persons who met death in the gas chambers of the infamous Auschwitz death camp This act of unspeakable barbarity should live forever in the memory of man

But the -dedication ceremony Sunday made scarce menshytion of the fact that the overwhelming preponderance of thos~ killed were put to death only and precisely because they were Jews The only reference to this martyrdom of the Jews was made in French by the president of the Intershy

nationa1 Auschwitz Committee and his remarks were not translated into Polish

The chief speaker Polands Premier gave greetings to the Jews who had come to pay tribute to their dead but glossed over the ordeal of the Jews which still hangs heavy On the consciences of those who call this a civilized world

It remained for individuals and groups after the formal eeremonies to offer prayers for the Jews who died because they were Jews and for no other reason

Men the world over should add their prayers for these ~agic victims and should pray too that time will not erase either the blrbarity of the deed or the reason-s for it

rhe ANCHOR OffiCIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAILL ~QVER

410 Highland Avenue

ublished weekly by The Catholi~ Press of the Diocese of Fall River Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER ~ost Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

~ ~

tbfs In the U So Universal eashyonical nonns will be given bv the Vatican and U S norms jr$ be established by the NCCD

It was suggested that trained CCD laymen be permitted to dIlt part-time ministry as a step tilshyward this establishment

Missions A comniission of seven bishopa

will guide coordinating effon among mission appeals for finalilot cial support and personnel

Religious Needs Regarding fund solicitations hi1

religious communities t)te bis~

ops felt the problem is very comshyplicated and voted an ad hOC joint committee be formed further study

Justice-Peace The bishops formed a natio~

counterpart of the Vatican COJDoo mission on World Justice-Peaee

It was described as a broad c0shyoperative program ofeducatiOlil designed to arouse collaboratioO with other religious groups in an

ecumenical kind of project to make this affluent nation of oUDI more aware of the tremend01lilll needs of developing nations

Vietnam The Justice-Peace Commissiou

vIas obviously interested JDj such topics as Vietnam and musti face them as moral dilemmas ~

[D) 0 rL 11 A IL J our time it was notedWD~lflJ~ tr[FtOl -~rn1 e(1~ A spokesman mentioned greali

Lr Continued from Page One

On mixed marriages the formof the promises as used in the Madison Diocese was recomshymended for general use throughshyout the U S It states We sol emnly promise that all children who may be born of our marshy

riage will be baptized in theCatholic Church and carefully~eared in the knowledge and practice of the Catholic religion We are both aware that our marshyriage contract will remain biJid

ing until death We promise not to hinder each other in the pracUce of religion

On previous censorship the bishops wish prior approval be required for the actual texts Of Sacred Scripture books of prayer or devotion liturgical or ceremorial books textbooks used in religious eliucation programs especially in the primary and secondary levels that prior apshyproval not-be required on books or articles dealing with Scripshy

ture theology canon law eccleshysiastical history and like subshy

jectsIf dangerous tea~hings are

found a warning in pastoral tone should be issued

Coordination A Cominittee onPalitoral Reshy

should correspond more closely have asked the VatIcan to rele shysearch and Practice was founded shy to what is usually found in the them from these provisionshwhic WIll coordinate the follow- American system of education COD

ing committees Liturgy Ecu- f f menism Canonical Affairs and ~ur years 0 high school four The CCD has been and wiD Doctrine 0 college four of theology that continue primarily as a religiouB

seminaries on the high school Liturgy and college levels take accredi- educational program on the

Four possible texts ofthe Eng- tation steps all seminariestake parochial level reported BishoP lish Canon of the Mass were Greco to the hierarchy He alsO given By a vote of C to 1 one cond~l~t self-study in the ligbt of announced that the complete text ~xt was given approval of genshyeral tenor A definite text is expected by June of this yjar

~etirement For bishops it wasmoved that

a retiring bishop be permitted to reside in his diocese that suit~ able sustenance be provided him (especially medical and hospital care) and that the N~B do so

if a particular diocese cannot that r permanent commLJion is needed to oyersee this that the pr~visions for retirement extend to all bishops-auxiliaries titushylar etC-and not only residential bishops

For prirsts that various beneshyfit plans be reviewed so as to ready a national plan of care and benefits for retired priests

Priests One of the first functions of

the Committee on Pastoral Reshysearch and Practices will be to study in depth the role amI life of the priest in American society It should consider priestly forshymatioD income distribution

i2J concern among the bishops abou~ seminary studies parish strue- Vietnam citing their statemellli ture celibacy the mission needs last November that no serioWl of Latin America and the thkd Christian can absolve himseril

world from being concerned with tb18 As fa- as celibacy is concerned question but added I sense

the NCCB unanimously rea1- great reluctance among the bis~ firmed clearly and strongly the ops to take a stand either crill shyexplicit teaching of the Vatican cizing or endorsing various as-Council on the current and ira- pects of the prosecution of the ditional observance of clerical war

celibacy Pastoral Councils To rumors that a Catholic The bishops are in search far

priest can leave the Chufth II sample constitutIon for pap marry and in a few years obtaID 10ral councils which will clead permission from Rome for lay distinguish it from the diocesaD Catholic standing a spokesman eonsultors and the priests seDshyfor the bishops answered ates

This is a policy the JJoJv Twenty-four topics were pre-Father controls Any priest who sented which might profitably be engages in this is engaging in ma~ers of study ranging frOlia spiritual Russian roulette Be adult education to vocations has no guarantee any dispensa- National Parishes tion will be given to him in tile It was shown that accordingfuture

A survey of the distribution Pope Pauls Ecclesiae Sanctae a and utilization of priests in the bishop has the rigllt to suppresS

national parishes-those estabshyU S is being prepared bythe lished for special ethnic groups Center for Applied Research in T R C h

the ~postolate (CARA) Nothing he oman urIa oweveJl definite could be presented since bid the bishops not use this rIght

because of concordats WIth go~only 63 per cent of the dioceses shyhave responded so far ernments or the physical or

moral rights of persons involved Priestly Formation without first referring to tho

Eight general recommenda- Holy See tions were made for all semina- Since these conditions do ~ ries the seminary structure apply t0 the U S the blsh shy~

c~nci Ibear documents that provJ- of the new edition of the CeD SIons made for a system of Bible will be published in earlYcommunication between the litoshydet body and the administrative 1968 mong the scholars preshyand teaChing faculties so that paring translations are five dieshystudents may present their views tingUishec Protestant memberS regarding the seminary program Newman for faculty consideration that It was recommended thai seminary advisory boards of priests in Newman work be enshyqualified members of clergy and couraged to secure advanced laity apart from seminary per- academic degrees especially m sonnel be encouraged that a theology that the high rate otl BA degree or its equivalent be turnover among Newman priests an entrance requirement for a be curtailed that part-time theoloID seminary that eccel- chaplains be made full time siastical studies begin with a where possible that more priests course so students lerceive the be assigned to the Newman meaning order and pastoral end Apostolate for the growing numshyof their studies ber of Catholics attending col-

The bishops also encouraged lege and university that the amalgamation where seminaries bishops re-emphasize the growshycannot maintain a suitable pro- ing importance of the Newmali gram due to size unsatisfactory Apostolate facilities inadequate faculty fi- New Dioceses nancing and similar programs The committee on presen~

Deacons names for new bishops will a- It was recognized that there deal regularly with the questi_

will be permanent order of of diocesan boundaries and tile deacons established and that the establishment of new dioceses

_NCCB will be empowered 10 do Turn to Pll4Ie SeVeD

7 Diocesan Sc~oots Students Reap Honors Aplenty as Senior Year Enters Into Final Phase

Honors aplenty are being garne~d by Diocesan students among them Andrea Trczinski a senior at Tauntons Bishop Cassidy High whos been selected as one of 15 New England students to participate in the 1967 Youth Science Congress jointly sponsored by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the National Science Teachers Association

In the course of the two and a half day congress now in progshyress at the NASA Electronics Research Center in Boston Anshydrea like the other participants will present a 15 minute oral

report of the project which gained her inclusion in the

event

Duck Fond The presentations say conshy

gress officials are not comPetishytive but will give listening scishyentists and teachers the opporshytunity to evalute them and offer guidance to the students

Andreas project is an arehaeshyological and geological investigashytion of an early American potshytery works The Duck Pond Site It has already won her many awards in state and reshygional science fairs

Students from Stang and from St Anthony and Holy Family high schools in New Bedford were participants in an essay eontest sponsored by the New Bedford Serra Club on The Role of the Priest and Nun in the Christian Community

First place winner was Cidhshyerine Giammalvo of Stang and cliiIdren at st Josephs Home to mnners-up were Mary Black a~ outing Sunda) while NBSers also of Stang and Michael at Mt St Marys have elected Tames of St Anthony Stang their officers for next year inshyalso won a plaque for baving the eluding Martha Nugent presi- most entrants in the contest dent Judith Doolan vice-presi-

At Stang theyre congratu- dent Susan Bernier s~cretary lating Cynthia Curry named to Diane Berger treasurer represent ber school on an area -Speed reading is the word at department stores teen fashion Sacred Hearts Fall River where board Mt St Mary Academys some 30 students are devoting representative to the same board th~ hours eery Saturday is Elaine Chaves The lucky gals mo~ing to a reading improve will receive modeling instruc- ment course Reading power tiona in connection withmiddot their ~ed and word study are em- appointments and will also be phasized in the 10 week course given the clothes they model which began April 1 Again at Stang word has Also at SHA varsity and jayshyreached the office that John vee teams in volleyball and basshyGolenski a 65 grad and now s ketball honored Mrs GeGrge Be sophomore has received a Snyder their coach at a surprise grant for Summer study in dinner Well they might since

EuroSePbe hi A ta Mrs Snyder has led them to olani PB coop nees Narry League championships in

Still very much in the newa ~t~ sports are notices of college scholar-middotmiddot Honoi lroviJiclai ships and acceptances At Doshyminican Academy Fall River Jesus-Mary students honored Elarne Fisette has been accepted the Mother Provincial of the lReshyat Southern Conn State College ligiousf Jes~s-Mary at ~ eer-middot powet supplied to them occupied Briana Doherty Linda Guill Diane Giasson at SMTI and Sue emony mcludmg ~e readmg of the bishops The NCCB will furshy mette and Mary Wynne Gagnon at Bryant while Jerome lIl~ ad~ress by PaulIne Dumas ther study the matter

Mancini has received a full tul- s~hool preSident the presenta- Oth b t h h th b h f f1 er su Jec s w IC e is shytion grant from St Annesmiddot~os- tion 0 owers anll gIfts and a ops treated were communica- pitaI School of Nursing ana a pe~orrnance by the g~et C~U tions between the bishops and

padial grant from the Utlion OccasIOn was the Provmcial smiddot tmiddott tmiddotmiddotmiddot f p hi 1 bullbull t t d Colle Ins 1 u IOns 0 Ig er earnshyosplmiddottal dItto annua VISit 0 heaca emy 1 middotmiddotmiddottmiddotiUmiddot S h n J bullbull Ilg In bullbulle c anges In pershy Receiving annual renewable ChristIan Youth Movement mission middotformiddot the alienation of

Scholarships at Jesus middotlVlary m~mbe~ of Prevost and JM~ churchproperty increased edushy J

Academy Fall River are Su- Wlll VISIt Nazareth Hall thiS cation onthe threats of abortionshyianne Lagarde awarded a $2300middotmiddot month and will also sJonsor a cooperation with the YMCA ami grant from Fordham University cake sale Sunday AprIl 30 A YWCA better coordination with and Yvonne L Berger recipient vigil service is set for Monday ihe usce celebration of the ()f three grants from Northeast- em University totaling $2180 Suzanne previously received a $2500 scholarship from Northshye~tern ~nd Yvonne is a semishyfinalist In the Rhode Island State Scholarship Program

Prevost reports that Gerry Ferris has been accepted at Bridgewater State College and Cassidy notes that Rita Donnelly has received a full scholarshiJ) fto Johnson and Wales Business School

Chess Tournamenamp Prevost students arent giving

their gray matter a rest this vacation week In progress is a schoolwide chess tou~ament

IIDd the winner will receive a tro~nv

On the agenda at Cassidy is a Junior College Day slated for Thursday April 27 a Couples Dance Saturday April 29 and a father-daughter night Wednesshyday May 3

lPRan lltetJreat

Mt St Mary students will helli a taUt by Rev Bernard Sullivan Friday April 28 in preparation for the retreat theyll be making the first three days ox May Also to speak at Mount on the same day is Mother Mary Martha Assistant General of the Sisters of St Joan of Arc whose topic will be vocations The Sisters of St Joan of Arc care for rectories bishops houses and seminaries

Still in the vocation line Sister Mary LaSalette of the Mount faculty will attend a meeting at Bristol Community College Wednesday April 26 Subject Vocations

Dominican Academy students will enjoy their senior prom Frishyday June 9 at the Hearthstone restaurant and congratulations are in order for DAs student council moderator Sister Mary Agnes who has been offered a

graduate assistantship at the University of Wisconsin Prevost members of the Nashy

tional Honor Society treated

April 24 and members will hold Year orFaith in connection with their year-end banquet Saturday the 1900th anniversary of the June 3 _ martyrdom of Ss Peter and Paul

Prevost debaters are preparing celebration of Communications for the JFK tournament to be Day May 7 held at Cassidy in May Thus far the Prevost team has chalked up an 8-5 record

(ASA BLANCA Just Across The

Coggeshall St Bridge Fairhaven Mass

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STEAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

MOTHER PARKERS famous for OLD FASHIONED DOUGHNUTS

QUALITY and baked by your Sunbeam Baker SERVICE

CONTESTS WINNElRS Winners of New Bedford Serra Club essay contest on roles of priest nun in Christian community are from left runners-up Mary Black Stang High and Michael James St Anthony High and first prize winner Catherine Giammalvo Stang High Stang also won plaque for having most entrants in contest

Parent-Teacher Night is sched- duties for many of the Cassidy uled for Tuesday April 25 at students meanS more time to JMA and will feature as a profit byvarlous e~ucational opshyspeaker Dr Betty-Anne Metz of portunities At the Mass State

Bristol County Community Col- Science Fair Friday April 21 lege through Sunday April 23 Cheryl

And Prevost students are anti- McCaffrey top winner in the cipating a dance Friday April school SCience Fair and chosen 28 at St Annes Audit6rium The one of the 25 representatives Torquays will play from the Fall River Regional

This isNational Library Week will repr~sent Cassidy High toshyand mixt week is Secretaries gether WIth Pamela Candee Week so maybe everyone should The Massachusetts Youth Cit shyreld a book about secretaries izenship Conference at Bndg~shyAt any rjlte Cassidy Future Sec- water sc~eduled ~or tod~y ~Ill retaries of America will tour a attract the follOWIng 10 JUnIors North Dighton plant and visit chosen as representatives Donna Wheaton College Also pn their Cole M~y Fenton Kathl~en agenda isa reception on Sunday Hanna Eb~beth Laffan Paulme and aluncheon next Wednesday Lecuyer

Cassidy Go Despite Vaeatlon Also Carolyn McCaffrey Joshy anne Orchekowski Margarita

Free time from regular class Procopio Anne Marie Sullivan and Donna White The subject of this years Conference is ValuesU SmiddotmiddotBishopmiddots in a Changing World

Continued frQm Page Six At EmmailUel College Friday hiterdiocesan Offices April 21 three of Cassidys lanshy

An extended discussion on guage students will compete in sueD agencies might be best the annual French Contest for strUctured and adequate manshy High School Students They are

fHE ANCHORshylhun April 20 1967

Labor Statement Wins Approval

SAN ANTONIO (NC) Farm labor leaders hailed the Catholic bishops of Texas for issuing a statement supshyporting the right of farm workshyers to form unions and urging national legislation to protec~ this right

Spokesmen of farm associashytions responded that they do no~

oppose field workers joining unions but withheld comment pending a study of the bishops pronouncement

The bishops declared that among the basic rights of a human person is the right of freely founding associations or unions for working people and that all should have the right of freely taking part in the activities of these unions without risk of reprisal

The statement was issued at the conclusion of a two-day meeting of the board of directors of the Texas Catholic Confershyence It was approved by the bishops of the 10 Texas dioceses

Farm workers in the Rio Grande City area of south Texas have been on strike since last June and their efforts had been endorsed previously by Archshybisho Robert E Lucey of Sam Antonio and Bishop Humberto Medeiros of Brownsville

Leading the praise for the bishops was Cesar Chavez of Delano Calif national director ofthe United Farm Workers Organizing Committee whose Local No2 is striking in Rio Grande City

Chavez termed the statement very powerful and very charshyitable lle said he thinks the declaration is an answer to the prayers of thousands and thoushysands of farm workers in the Southwest asking that their Church and Church leaders stand with them in their struggle to ~ure social -justice as ennunshyciated toy the popes in the many encyclicals~

DEBROSS OIL co

Heating Oils and Burners

365 NORTH FRONT STREET NEW BEDFORD

992-5534

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 Medical Gr9uP Inducts Nun

Spring Cleaning Reveals WASHINGTON (NC) - The first nun was inducted as a fel shylow of the American College ClI Obsttricians and Gynecologists at its 15th annual clinical here

Hoards of Yardgoods lBy Mary Tinley Daly The honor went to SiBtel

Spring housecleaning is like a great white light revealshy Miriam Paul Klaus of the Me~

ing all Its not just dust in the bedsprings and radiators cal Mission Sisters who have headquarters in Philadelphi~the great unwashed slats of Venetian blinds gummy glasses dlJring the coJeges session~stashed away on an upper shelf finding of borrowed books Sister Miriam Paul was nlaquolI

too long unreturned These are what i call honest misshytakes chores you dont mind having household help help you with like doing floors walls windows rugs furniture

This is orthodox Spring cleaning such as every housewife can t a c k 1e have done with and point to with pride No the nuisances at least at our house are the secret sins jobs weve really anticipatshyed getting at one of these days but the llPecific day never seems to come And nobody but nobody can help in this department

Moms Hobby Shll)p For instance theres the used

furniture corner of the attic sOmetimes laughingly referredto as Moms Hobby Shop Theres the dresser bench Mom b going to cane when and if Mom learns how to cane an art supposed to be lotS of fun There ure two perlectly good boudoir chairs or iiI be perfectly good when theyre recovered And the little stand picked up at uuction waiting patiently to be antiqued when and if Mom learns how to antique another touted fun hobby bull

What the good-natured ribbers of Moms Hobby Shop dont know is that another secret cache of to-be-dones awaits in one corner of the basement the touch of a little hand pktures to be framed along with a framshying kit which any child can master another kit of clear plastic resin ideal for embedshyding coins flowers leaves rocks shells pictures novelties jewshyelry So far efforts have reshysulted in the embedding of one penny askew and far from ornashymental Theres also ever~thing

you need to wire a lamp everyshything but the skill that is

A strong-minded woman would become a Jill of all trades masshy1er skills necessary and do away with the jobs one at a time or else give away all t1e maIdngs ~~t then a str~))~gmil)d~ woman probably wouldnt have gotten

intothisfixin the first place With springcleani~goncoming

lik~ the inevitable tinie and taxes we decided to dean around the undones in attic and

basement facl up to legitimate eatchiills like the ~drponlClos~ etsbull

Dougherty High Band Wins Festival Honor

WASHINGTON (NC)-In this middot ease to the victors it was a mix- ture of cherry blpssoms and roses

The members of the Cardinal Dougherty High School Band of

Phiiadelphia marched ltYff with first place honors in the band

middot eompetitlon at the annual Cherry Blossom Festival _parade -an event which attracts tens of

middotthousands of visitors annually 10 the nations capital

The vIctory was nothing new to the bandsmen - and girls They won first prize two years ago and last March 17 won middotfirst prize in New Yorks St Patricks Day paralaquoe

present to receive the honor PelshyThere not in one not in two but in every closet we were sonally She is stationed at the

communitys Holy Family Heampfaced with the nemesis a box or pital in Dacca East Pakistan a bag or apile of yardgoods

The college accepts as fello~Forgotten IItems physicians who specialize in obshyThe sewing center has been stetrics and gynecology and aregoing pretty full tilt at our house judged competent and ethical byrecently what with a bedroom their colleagues Sister Miriamwhere we can set up the mashy Paul took the written examinashychine the ironing board sew tions for the American Boardseveral hours every day walk of Obstetrics and Gynecology iQout shut the door and come back Pakistan in 1965middot and the oralto undisturbed work the followshy examination in Chicago in Apriling day 1966

Matter of fact we thought She is a native of Viennasmugly we were getting all

Allstria a naturalized U S citi shysewed up tents and jumpers zen and a convert to the Cathoshyand miniskirts for the young

suits skirts hats for the more NO ATTLEBORO ART WINNERS Pauline Lemieux lic Faith from Judaism She joined the Medical Mission Sisshyconservative first grade William Midon eighth grade Cecile Parent ters in 1957 after completing herWe even felt no compunction sixth grade were the leading artists in the contest conshy medical education at the Univerin indulging a long-standing ducted in Sacred Heart School No Attleboro sity of Louisville Ky and herhabit of visiting a yardgoods residency at Barnes Generalcenter quite often picking up an Hospital in St Louis She haGirresistible bargain in cloth seshy

~spent six years at the sisteplecting a pattern and actually hoods hospitals in Pakistaneompleting garments

The sewing room Markie~ Sister Mary Luke Gray an- erstwhile bedroom was in reshy o~her Medical Mission physician markably good shape as a proshy has also passed _the AniericaD duction center and could eVeR IMAGE-MAKING Board of 0bstl~tricsand Gyne suffer the pangs of Spring houseshy

In this ever-changing worldcleaning with mere picking up of scraps setting 10 rights and a horough cleaning

But those unearthed forgotshyten treasures in the other closshyets Why there was enough mashyterial here to keep Us chained 10 that sewing machine as was Proshymetheus to his rock

Now what had we intended 10 do with that short length of pink flannel Oh yes wed picked it up for the proverbial song at a visit to a mill in South Caroshylina would have it until the folshylowing spring and make a coat for Mary Daly Brennan (Mary is now nine years old and this pink bit wouldnt even make a coat for her little sister) MUs~ lin broadcloth velvet tweedshyyou name it we have it -

Out into the clear with every item from every box bag and pile

Io more saving no more stashing away no more visits 10 remnant counters

The Head of the House paying one of his rare visits to our sew- ing center viewed the miniature mill-end display

By the way he asked hows about putting a new pocket in these trousers And sOme shirt buttons that have popped

OK First t~ings first

Baltirnor~ Nun to Head C()lIeg~ Advisory Unit

PITTSBURGH (NC) -Sister M Cleophas Costello of Balti shymore will serve as chairman of the newly formed Commission on Higher Education of the Fedshyeration of the Sisters of Mercy

The commission will serve in an advisory capacity in mat~ers concerning the 15 colleges opershyated by the order The federashytion numbers 15000 nUDll throughout the United states Canada and Lat~n America

New President LOS ANGELEE (NC)-5ister

Cecilia Louise Moore will beshycome president of Mount St Marys College here in Califorshynia ~)D Aug 15 next succeeding Sister Mary Rebecca who haS headed the womens liberal aris college since 1961

where what is in one moment is obsolete the next there is nothing more changeable than

the image of the ideal woman This image that stamps itself on the minds of millions causes fashion design- ers to change styles and forces females alI over the world to rush to the beauty facshytories to be turned out as its carbon copies is created in many ways Sometimes it starts with a particular model that hits the publics fancy or a cinema star that reaches her audience or even as in the case of Mrs Kennedy with the rise and public acclaim of a woman associated with politics

However whatever the reason or manner or time that creates an idol of this woman 8Jl idol she is at least until someone else more exciting comes along ~ cpallenge her place

This phenomenon of one womshyan or tyPe of woman leading alI others is nothing new Im sure there has been an ideal type of beauty since Neanderthal man dragged his mate by her long thick tresses into his cave (eer- tainly no short-haired eave girl wOuld have shone m prehistoric times)

Charles Dana Gibson pPOVided the image of the goddess of the

Protestants to Speck At Catholic Retreats

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - At least one Protestant minister Or layman ~ill appear as guest

speaker at retreats held in the San Antonio area during the coming year an archdiocesan committtee OIl lay ecumenism has decided

The ecUmenical aspects of the retreat program win carry over into a 1967 Ecumenical Diashylogue scheduled for June 29 UI July 1 at St J~ephs retreat bouse here Selected ministers

priest Sisters Brothers and laity will be speakers

cology examinations and win 1900s with heavenly sketches of return to Pakistan to continue a dark haired question mark her practice coiffured beauty with Ii lOng 11gt

graceful swanlike neck Immediateiy all fashion-con-

csious females of that day rushed out to the local emporiums to purchase henna rinses and rats (the hair peces of the 90s) to puff out their skimpy pompashydOlUS

The tWihkling 20s had no sooner been born than the It Girl Clara Bow caused the daughters of the aforementioned females to toss away their rats head for the nearest barber and expose their ears as well as their knees

Not a decade later these knees were encased in satin lounging pajamas and the ears hidden under the marcelled curls that Jean Harlow sported

And such has been the tide of fashion everchanging and generally influenced by circumshystances from the short skirts of the material-rationed war years through the New Look that welcomed the advent of peace

TOdays Qlieen

What of our present fashion Queen Who is the woman ofshythe 60s who isthe darii~goft~ fashion press and fashion de- signers oddly enough in this age of affluencemiddot it seems that the female wile outshines an others is ~ long-legged wideshyeyed British model who looks like an ad for Care packages and answers to the improbable name of Twiggy ~sley ~ornby (the name on

Twiggys birth certificate) is a 11 year old pathetically thin ex- schoolgirl who has been sky- rocketed to fame and fortune through the efforts of her Sven laquoali -her manager

Her waif-like face shining Jrom the cOvers of hundreds of magazines haS inspired young females everywhere ie nmtfgt their hairdress~rs ~ ) g~miR eut paint theirmiddot lower lashes_ like those of a kewpie don and push away t~at dessert pla1e Twiggy is apparently the JleW

idol of the fashion world - at l~ast until next season

9 Nows RightTime to Plant Peas for Early Enjoyment

By J~ aridlfan1ynRoderiek It is a eustom in New England to serve salmon and peas

00 the Fourth of July Years back this was the time when thresh salmon showed up Jin New England fish markets and Jllative peas could be found ~t the corner store Now we have frozen peas year round and amp Imon may be had throug~- ~t most of the year Thll3 lm-as taken the special delight (iJlJt of native foods but we can G1tfll appreciate fresh vegetabtea limd fish made much morepaia-~ oble by being put on a tablel 3

day or so after it is caught If you want fresh peas fortne

~ourth of July you can sow your creed about the third week of llIlay We prefer ours a little ear_I ~er and so we get the seeci ~lanted by the second or third week in April 00 that the planta will be well on their way before ~e cold weather is gone and (he warm weather arrives By QlllIll reckoning the peas we planted last week will be ready ~ the second week of June

Peas are simple to grow and Ililave nO special difficulties They Ilteed sun moisture and good s6il A row of peas may be planted fulna matter of 10 minutes ahd OOten forgotten until it ia tiine

Th k Si te h d th IIS wee s rae c ass act out the sacrainent to go along with their lesson in the religious Workbqok My daughter came homedelirious with joy because she was chosen to bring in the baby

We unearthed a doll that we ilelt was closest to newborn baby size and Grandma helped by finding the baptismal garments that were stored in her house and by dressing the fortunate stand-in while she explained to Meryl and Melissa that this was the same dress that they wore when they became members of the Church

In fact the children were awed as I further explained that actually four children had used these baptismal garments Meryl ~gan making plans immediateshyly Ann Marie is going to be the father (this in our all-girl ochool) Wendy is the godmother and Karen is going to be the ptiest because her new little

~r pickinlt b~othe was christened Sunday Jrirst tum the soil over to il a~d she knows jllst what to do

ilepth of about six inches or ~ Innoeent DIscussion and break up the clods Make ~ Even Melissa got into the act twrrow about an inch deep~~tl as she proceeded to spiel off m drop the peas into the furrow list of names that she thought iellst an inch and a half a~a~lt t~~ dfl~lshould be given Meryl eovel the furrow water ~~~ si~ e~pIiil1edto her that salt would ~ack a~d wait In 50 days or so dlependmg on the varIety of seed ~u ~se the peas wi1l be ready faj plckmg and ~atmg

Plant Anywhere )peas may be planted in rows

lMlt they may also be planted aishylllillost anywh~re they will get the IgtUUn I planted two little roWlJ ~tween some raspberry bushes raquolaquolother row in front of a flowe ~ where my wife will be able 00 get to them and still another JIlandful of seed in a foundation ~ianting in front of the house

This latter may seem to be goshyl1mg a little too far but by the ~me the annuals a~e in bloom le peas will have been con~

d oome the plants pulled up and DO one will be the wiser

The point is that one does not Thlave to make a big project out ~ growing a packet of seeds mnce half the pleasure is to be

flound in doing a minimum of work while reaping deliciolw nesults

In the Kitchen Most middot0f the books which conshy 1 thltOOJlI emse ves with heading

lIUr children in the right direc_ (tioqas living thinking Chrlsshyllians recommend that middotthebestW4yOOle Sacrament of Baptism is to Ilaye them attend an actual cer+ ~ony This is quite true as we

~rvotlCnced when Jason WM lgtavtized and Meryl and Melis Were allowed to attend

We were fortunate in that the l)lliest who performed the cereshyIlllOny was a personal friend who _plained clearly to the childreUll _actly wha~ he was doing rOIl liIUre this made a lasting impres-Ilion but I also feel that theii IlIIllnds were on the celebratiollll

be Pllt on the dolls tongue to preserve her from the sins of the Yorld and to give her III

atlste for wisdom It was delightful to hear them

discussing the sacrament in such inn~cent and childlike ways and yet witlt understanding that demonstrated wisdom far beyond their years The following incishyde~~ occurred at about the time this was happening and demon- strates the feeling of some chishydrep arid the naive wisdom they possess For two or three days last week Joe had seen a female rabbit in the yard and he had pointed it out to the children

th t itsayIng a appeared ready to have a litter Sure enough the rabbit did have a litter under the mulch around one of the rose bushes The children were thrilled but

f un ortunately a neighbors dog found the litter and killed the tiny newborn rabbits When

~~~~JIiCheese Gingerbread l3~ounee package ere a JllIl

cheese l cup molasses 2 eggs

1 cups sifted all-purpose ftOtllfi teaspoon baking soda

1 teaspoons baking powdeR 1 teaspoon cinnamon

OOnat was to take place at home 1 teaspoon ginger smd on all the people who were t~aspoon cloves ltllllming to help them celebrate 1-8 teasp~n salt

llhis in itself wasnt bad as it IIgt boiling water lB alsoimportant that they ~al- 1) Beat the cream cheese urim koo th~t a baptism is aiQytul Ce- ~BOft andfluftly then gradually llWliori which should be shared beatit the molasses Ytdh others butwith the confu- 2~ Beat- in the eggs one at Cl

CATHOLIC WOMEN HONOR BISHOP Welcoming Most Rev James L Connolly to the Annual Bishops Night Sponsored by the New BedfordCathoJic Womens Club are Mrs John W Glenn left president and Mrs Daniel F Dwyer first vice-president

Receiver Takes Over FHA Starts Foreclos~te lProcee~ings

Against Retirem~rjfttoriu~ MOUNT ANGEL (NC) - A

oourt-appointed receiver hall taken over operation of Mount Angel Towers a $34 million reshytirement home completed scarceshyy more than a year ago

The receiver-Portland attorshyney John R Fawt Jr - was named less than a month after the Federal Housing Administrashytion announced that it was start shying foreclosure proceedings against the home here in Oregon

Mount Angel Towers built on Beven acres of land donated to it

Sch001 Honors Chaplain

Killed in Vietnam PLEIKU (NC)-A new wing

has been added to St Pauls

School here in memory of Father (Maj) William J Barragy of the Dubuque archdiocese who was

killed in a helicopter crash inVietnam May 4 1966

A brass plaque on the office wall states Rev William J

Melissa appeared on -the scene Barragy (Major U S Army)boni October 13 1923ordained

she said realistically New life May 22 1948 dled In VIetnamI k p un and its all over Just May 4 1966 like Jesus born at Christmas

The new wing has five classshy dead at Easter rooms all on the ground floor

Last year when my oldest St Pauls is in the charge of the to teachyoungstersabout daitghier received the sacrament I Sisters ofSt Paul de Chartres

of tfie HolyEucharist for the first who alsohave anorphahge near tim~~ wil celebrated With a fam the iichoOtmiddot Thereare 1000 Viet ililgtru~ch Ali lt~~ everyon~ namese children receiving pri seeffied to enjoy was warm mar an -secondary educatmiddot10n i~

a bullbull ging~tbread the schOOL

by theilelghobririg Mount Angel Benedictine Abbey was billed on its completion in 1965 as the nations first Catholic retirement home

it was not the most prosperous however and by JIeb 7 when the mortgage-holder assigned the mortgage to FHA which had inshysured it the 207-unit six-story building had only 80 residents in 61 apartments

Appointment of a receiver was the first step in FHAs machinery toward eventual sale of the propshy~rty to another private operator

The home will be run as beshyfore according to the FHA Portshyland office until it can be sold to a suitable organization to maintain its operation as housing for senior citizens

FHAs office in Washington said Mount Angel Towers was one of about 20 such projectsshynot all Catholic - which had failed since 1960 when FHA mortgage insurance became available to them More than 200 have been built

llHE ANCHOR-Thurs April 20 1967

Sisters Assume Pasroral Duties

AKRON (NC)-Priests visit flBl administer the sacraments bu~

day by day the ordinary passhytoral duties are performed bsr nuns in Brazilian parishesmiddot il1l Natal and Salvador administered by the Daughters of Divine Charity

Their duties which includ~ the distribution of Holy Comshymunion were described here bV Mother M Fidelis Weninger who worked in Brazil for 21 years prior to her election in 1965 as mother general of th0 community

The Daughters of Divine Charity she said care for those parishes just as though they were priests Of course we cant administer the sacraments but we handle everything elseshysuch as pre-marriage instructionD and parish visitations

Permission for the nuns t distribute Communion was obshytained from Pope Paul vr through Bishop Eugenio de Araujo Sales apastolic adminisshytrator of Sao Salvador de Bahia she explained

Sister Mother Fidelis ordeli has been working in Brazil sincia 1919 and now has 460 nuns there aUexcept 18 of whom are Brashyzilians

The order has 1900 membero serVing in 10 countries throug~shyout the world with headquartern

in Vienna Mother Fidelis U1 completing a five-month visiia tion of the orders 37 convents in the United States

Greater Boston Sister Gets Fulbright Award

MEDFORD (NC) - SistCll Madeline Marie Nevins a gradushyate student at Tufts University has been awarded a Fulbright Fellowship to study medievaD French literature at the Univershysity of Paris France

The Mass Sister of St Josep~

will complete her doctoral wor at Tufts after her year abroad

BROOKLAWN fUNERAL HOME INC

a MllrCOI Roy - G lorralno RG1 lIoger laFranco

FUNERAL DIRECTORS IS tllVington C~

995-5166 lN~w Bedfo8cIl

Schedules Convocation 1 bull

On Council Documents WILMINGTON (NC)- A dayshy

llong session of lectures and disshyICUssions on the Wilmington dioshyease and the post-council er81 will be conducted here

Some 600 clergy and laity are ~From anOlde English recipe - expected to attend the meeting

which is being sponsored by a Plumper rounderp bullarollp of ~concerned Catholics illl th~Wg~ing~on piocese fuller muffins~

batter is smooth 5) Gently stir in the boiling

Dn of the party it was difficul Um~~ water bull ascertain just how much the7 3) s~tt tltgether the flour bak- 6) Pourinto a greased 7 by ~ learned With this in mincll Ang ooda baking powdei ~ H pan Sunbeam English Muffins ~ were delighted when 1ft andspice~ f) Bake in a 350 oven 40 to lIound that Meryl was studying 41) Add the dry ingredients te 45 mlhutes] add about cup Olf Baked by your Sunbeam Baker _tism in 8daoo1 l1he cheese mixtu-l0 GUlring watilll Jl3iBins but this is optionaL

-

bullbull

HAPPINESS IS FAMILY REUNION A weekly radio reunion is Sula Spanish Honduras L~ft Barton Albert ham radio operator middot)liIl

enjoyed by Mr and Mrs Bernard Sullivan Holy Name parish Fall River Swansea connects the Sullivans with their daughter Right InSart Pedro

with their daughter Sister Anne Marie RSM missioned to San Pedro Sula Jack Gaffney performs the same service for Sister Anne Marie

Monastery VisitsSt~esses Serio~smiddot Ham Oplr~t~rs Arrangemiddot We~k~yRadiQ C1tat~ ChmiddoturchSituatilon CRAWFORDSVILLE (NC)C bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbull bull bull bullbull bull

bull bull 0In East -Germany BERLINmiddot (NC)-Christiari

ehurches in communist-ruled lEast Germa~y are suff(~ring from government harrassshymentand restrictions a Luthershy1m bishop told the eastern sec-

For Fa11 RiverParents Missionary Sistet Dr Eric Dean chairman of the religion and philosophy departshy

ments at Wabash College here Thursdays the most important day in the week to Mr and Mrs Bernard Sullivan in middotIndiana plans extended visits

of Holy NameparishFall River Its the day they talk to their daughter Sister Anne to severalmiddot Benedictine monas- shyMarie RSM assigned since last August to missi)n work middotin San Pedro Sula Spanish teries this year The visits Wt)ll

H h kl

onduras T emiddot wee y db

conversatIon is arrange y two h d

am ra W)

operators Jack Gaffshy be financed by a Carnegie gran~

receivedmiddot through the GreatLak~ ney in San Pedro Sula and Colleges Association Harton Albert of Swansea was on retreat However arshy with Sister from their livjng

tion oflt the synod of Germanys It came about tl)rough 3 rangements were made on the middotroommiddot ~eceptiori is excep~nt Protestant Church Council sPot for the first of the weekly noted Mrs Sullivan fully 88 middot~iiJbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbulliIbullbullbull_

The clergyman Bishop Fried- series of coincidences that conv~sations good as a local telephoriecallmiddot bull III rich Wilhem krummachet of Mrs SuliivaIi ascribesld the The luck extended to a fellow Another beneficiary ofthmiddot 11I11I J B ~ East Geimany said that SChool iuck6f the Irish and had its religious of Sister Anne Marie weekly radio reunion is REvmiddot bull ii ~~ld~~a~I~~V~~ti~~~~bel~~~~~~ ~t~~A~~~n~a~~nC~~i~~~~~~~ ~~~~~i~o~Sre~~~~r~~~~~~i~~~d~~~~~=~tOfS~tat~~~ ILUMBER CO beliefs 1 - $140 teleph~rie bill talkinllto ly appointment ~nd asked Mrs Mariesbrother bull bull

Lut~eranBish~~ ~~t Fr~liz th~~o~~~~g~~~riotin~~ri li~~tmiddote~r$Ullivan t if hSheWtohUld ~ewla~t a FOImiddotwonderlnmiddotg friends of the 11I 5middot0middot Dortmoutmiddothmiddot ~harf of Berlin chairman of th~ ~~SSl1g~ 0 er JTIQ er ar a Fall River Sister be it notedltGe~man Protestant C h u r c hmiddot rlidlO o~erator middotwho darra~ge a mmu~e slud MrAI~~rt r0rt~7 that she has middotexercisedmiddotthe name- and yan~ismiddot Council made similar charges at connectlOnmiddot for you said a WIth he got the PrOVIdence ~e western section of the synod frleId and someone else sug- Jlother on the phone and gave

I rgested Mr Albert middotwhom the h th of b IfoBejause the Eastmiddotmiddot lterman ~ r bull er e surpnsl e~ Ie as t t t t t b Sullivans- had )mown _for

some bull

she heard her daughter s vOICeIrovernmen res riC s col ac s e- t b th d th ht f ~ E t G -P t t ts Ime u a neVlr Qug omiddot J I don t even have to go tomiddotbullween as elman ro es in _ bl If and those in the West middotthe Protmiddot =~ a ~OsSI e channe omiddot cmmu ~wansea to talk said Mrs SII~ - t t d h ld t mcatlOnwIttISpamshHO1QQras livan Mr Albert can oConnec~

flS an syno was e middotmmiddot wo llec- S l middotmiddotmiddott d M tons one in west Berliri and the T~e ul Iv~ns VISI e r~ AI~ th E tB j berts t)oIle to talk over th~ e er ~ear as er m possibility of contacting-Sister

Catholics face similar pr()b- Anne Marie~ While they were raquoems because of a divi~~d G~r- th~re he demonsthitelt hi~ equip- ~an~ The East Gelman govern- ment fishing bull around the- airshyinen~ ~has prevented thej)ishops wavesmiddot and picking up an ama-middot ~here ~ om attending meetings o~ teur in -rexas

~he G~rman Bishops Conference To his feliow ham he menshyheld iiJ the West tioned that he was looking for

Join in Praytr an operator in Spanish HOlldurasmiddot BiShop Krummacher said at

the synod that iii the preslmtmiddot criss the Protestant churches must use evelY opportunity to join with Catholics in prayer Catholics and Pwtestants he llaid are bound together b~ the word of the Lord and a common Ilesponsibility

The bisho~ said Protestants in East Germany have made every effort to obtain relief fwm antishyJeligious discrimination but govshyernment authorities have reshyjacted all appeals for action

He said such refusals of the East Gelman regime to end the assaults on religion is partmiddot of communist strategy and planshy

ming To further their objectives he said the comTIunists will pelshymstip indoctrinating children in 1lheir ideology while interfering with the consciences and rights _ tJ children and their parenti

And the next voice wemiddot heard recounted Mrs Sullivan still sounding amazed was a man saying This is Sal Pedro Sula Spanish Honduras

Not only was Jack Gaffney th r operator from Honduras in te same city as Sister Anne Marie but it developed that he lived across the street from her

convent a~d had me~ her o~ sevshyeral occaSlOns- He ImmedIately offered to r~n across ~he s~reet and prmg Sister to hiS mlcro-middot phone lgtut it turned out that sie

Wins Festival Piize NEW YOEK (NC) - The

Search produced by Father Peytons Family Theater has received an award at Monte Carlo in the annual television

competition sponsored by the International Catholic Radio and TV Association

hiS radiO eq~llPrne~t to the tel~ phone and the Sulhvans can chat

Permit Experiment In bullShared Time P9RTLAND (NC)The Port-middot ~~nd school board has approvedai shared time experiment iii -Which children from a parochial ~chool in North Portland will attend classes part time in a nearby public school -

The experi~ent will inv~lve at first only physical education classes and will extend for only two middotyears

Children fro m Immaculate Heart parish elementary schoolwill be allowed to attend gym classes in Eliot school in the Qregon corrlmunity

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Bishop Medeiros Urges Justice ~ For Workers

BROWNSVILLE (NO) ~ Bishop Humbertltgt S Medeishyros of B~wn8ville whose diocese has been the scene of lPl 10-month strike by migrant farm laborers has told farm owners to meet their demands for highe) pay and bettei living eonditions

In a pastoral letter to all Cathshyolics in the diocese-most of the population - released today the bishop said

The present plight of the mishygrant farm workers of America is a constant reproach to our way of life

lFor 1lJse of Ail

They do not ask for charity They demand what is theirs by natural right When the affluent farmers pay a just wage to the migrant workers when they make it possible for him to supshyport himself and his family in frugal comfort and to provide education for the whole family they are not making a gift of their possessions to the farm worker they are simply handilg over to him what is his for they had arrogated to themselves what had becn given in common for Ute use of all

Migrant workers in the Rio Grande vaIiey surrounding Brownsville have been strikihg the larger farms for nearly a year in an attempt to get higher wages and better living condi- tions Their action supported by thc United Farm WorkersOr- ganizing Committee followed the limited success encountered by UFWOC laborers in Califomias lrape vineyards

Precarious Existence

But the Rio Grande workers have encountcred little successshyIllthough a recently organized boycott of produce has received growing support among the states food chains

Bishop Medeilos quoted libshyerally from both Pope John XXIII and Pope Paul VIs recent encyClical On the Development of Peoples in establishing the right of farm workers to adecent Jiving

But be also took note of the plight of Amcricas farmers themselvell who live out a preshylaquoarious existence unless they constitute large enterprises sllch as corporations 01 cooperashyiives

He urged both farmers and workers to organize in their own interest

Natural Ri~ht

Given the natiol~lr and even

aioll of Agricultule ald of fa~m workClS and of manyfarm own- ers in purticular it is urgent that they be aware of thei~ right

~~~o~~o~~~~C~~~i~II~~~~h I~~~~~ of development Which in the words of Pope Priul VI signifies ]lgte~cc

We know that every man hAS a basic natural right to form and join wOIkers unions which conshytribute to economic progress by dcfending his ights he said But thc circumstances of the times the world over indicate that for the common good it is also thc duty for both migrant farm workers and for farmers to form associations

The United States he said has bull duty to its miglant laborers llnd farmers which it must fulfill by passing apPlopliate legislashytion and using other suitable and dcmocratic means of assistance so that not only our tables but thc tables of the world may be blessed with the abundance of the fruits of the earth

lLO~AIJ INTEREST NIl IUSlHIOPS MEETING Disshy W Va Bishop Connolly Bishop Humberto IS Medeiros

cussing topics between sessions are Lawrence Cardinal Brownsville Tex and Bishop Joseph Brunini NatchezshySh~han Baltimore Bishop Joseph H Hodges Whe~]jng Jackson Miss

Churches Shore Latin America Failures

LutheranSees Stumbling Blocks Ahead SPJlINGFIELD (NC) -- The

Roman Catholic and Protestant churches have both failed in the past in Latin America and both face severe stumbli6g blocks in the future a Lutheran layman from Argentina said here

Dr Leopolydo Juan Niilus of Buenos Aires director of the Argentine Department of the River Plate Centre of Christian Studies discussed the Church in Latin America at a meeting of the Lutheran World Federations

Commission on Stewardship and Evangelism

He warned the group that in

too mlIlyquarters the Roman Cath~Ii~ Church has been the main whipping boy for the Latin AmeJican backwaldness~ and there hllS been too much selfshy

Some of the things atheist marxists are doingin our conti shynent should by heritage be added have bee) done by Christians

Looking toward the future Dr Niilus said there are very seshy

were stumbling blocks ahead for our Roman Catholic brethren also

Inseparable Unity They are he said being

hysterically requested by the supporters of the status quo tobecome their defenders once

again The Roman Church failed whenLatin America waS strug- glingJor its independence n may-all of us mayfail now

wheniHs struggling for its eco- lIlomic Independence Dr Niilus said that all

complacency and self-righteous- qhurdiesin Latin America roust ness about the positive role

quickly recognize that study and commitment as an insepshyarable unity is their most urshygent task if they are to play an effective role in the future of Latin America

They must study be said ~both political and economic isshysuell amplnd their theological imshy

Cancer Study lLOST UIS (NC)-The insti shy

lute Ior J)lolecular virology at St LOUiS University here in Misshy

bull souri has b~en awarded a $265shy

101 gJant from the National Canshyeer Instilute of the U S Departshyment of Health Jducation and Welf~re whic~ will enable reshysearchers to look for viral speshyeitic genetic material in himiavl elmcer

plicAtions and must be comshymitted to providing adequate pastoral CAre to those involvel in political and economic action

Pho~ClJI Archbishop Wons Sourin Medal

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Arc~

bishop John J Krol of Philadelshyphia bas received the annual Sourin Award of thc ] 17-yearshyold Catholic Philopatrian LiteJ1shyary Institute

The presentation marked the first time the award has beelll made to a member of the hieJ1shyarchy ]t is ordinarily given w a distinguished Catholic layman The Archbishop was cited 100 confident and courageous leadshyers~jP

played by the Protegttants in Latiq American social andeco N~w Music nomiltdeve~opment 1 PURCHAS~ (NC)-The Pius

Protestants be said have a X School of Litlllgical Music of share and~ responsibility in the Manhattanville College of the WHITE SPA creation of seriougt structural Sacred Heal1 here received maladjustments - both economic $20000 in grants from Charl~ and moral~ in Latin America ~nd Arthur Morgan Of New

York and John Morgan oi Most of the things our pro-Rockville Centre N Y to stimushy

gressive Roman Catholic bret~shy iae new music for the new BANQUETS bull WEDIl)~NG5imiddot P~RTIESilltc~national deprc~sed middotcondi-middot ie are doing today i~Latin m~rgy

America shouldbyheritage he -COMMUNION BREAKfASTSai~ have beel~~~nepygtrotes tants [ 11M3 PLEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

JEFFREY E SULLIVAN 993-778GFer~ Dome

MEMPHIS (NC)~Bi~tiopJoshySishopo~~~ed

550 Locust Street seph A Durick apostolic admin lFall River Mass istrator of the Nashville diocese received the first annual Human 672-2391 Relations Award from the Memshy Iltose E Sullivan CONVENIENT BANKINGphis Catholic Human Relations

Jeglrey E SullivallCouncil He was cited for his WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMSstands on human dignity and

at theequal job opportunities He reshycently instituted Project Equalshyity in Tennessee SlADES FERRY TRUST COMPANY

SOMERSET MASS

llhe most friendly democra~ic BANK offeringCORREIA amp SONS ONE STOP Complete One-Stop Banking

SHOPPING CENTER Clubmiddot Accounts Auto Loans Checking Accounts Business Loansbull Televisiolll _ Furniture SllDvings Accounts lleaiEstate Loansbull Appliances _ Grocery

AfJ Somerset Shopping Arellll-BroSJhtman St BridgeThe IFIlDmouth National BankMM ABDen $t New Bedforcll FlIlMOUTH MASS

Member Federal Deposit Insurance CorporotiBy the Village Green Since 18217middot354

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-11lun Apr 20 1961 12 - )

Irish Emigronts Concern B~hops inmiddot Pgstoral

DUBLIN (NC)-Thespiritual and social needs of Irish 0trtifirants and the importance of preparing them for their new life in other countries were major concerns of the

Irish hierarchy at its meeti~g here in- Maynooth In a pas~ toFal on emigration it wasmiddotmiddot pointed out that while de- parture of Irish people foigt residence in other cuiitries is on the decline those who do leave ~can be an enormous force formiddotgoodmiddotin the lands they go to if they have the right ideals and motLves and abilities properly developed

Without these the pastoral adds the alien enironment in which they find themselves may presen~ serious dangers to the spiritual and moral wenfare ~

the weaker ones Education and religious formashy

tion of young people by the bullbull schools and by the clergy coopshy

erating with teachers were cited as most effective contriilgtutiona

to the formation of those likely to emigrate

Among recommendations made in the pastoral for properly pi-eshyparing potential emigrants for livingin other lands were

Young people should be enshycouraied to remain in schooias long as they can benefit from H

Emphasis on the virtue of tem perance

The utilization of youth club activities (discussion clubs and

guiles) to help young members to acquire healthy and natural

sOcial graces and habits The aid of priests in helping

the young people to grow up to

confident maturity Counse by priests on expected

problems of housing suitable

I

REV ALBERT F SHOVELTON

Priest to Spe(l]llc At Seminar

Rev Albert E fShovelton dishy

rector of Sl Mary Home New Bedford will speak as a represhy

sentative of the Diocesan Comshy employment dangersmiddot to health Unity atNClline Committe~ longhours of work in other the75th anniversary celebration

countries advanced atrange- at Holy Trinity LutheranTo SurveyCU mentS with Catholic welfaeChurchNorth Easton Thursday agencies in countries 9f their April 27

CHIltAGO (NC) - The board choice and the provision of in Father Shoveltons talk ~iU of trusteesof the Catholic Uni-formlltion concerning facilities be part of aseroinar middotHe wili be versity of America Washing- abroad for emigrantS preceded by Rev Dr Nils Ehtenshyton D9middot his est~blished it ne~ ~he h6ldin~ Of Irisit~nhlli~middot 8~rom Boston University School survey and ogtlectlODs ~()mmlttee lft llt1rge centers lt ~ Theology whose subject will headed br ~ St ~OU~1l1(ly~a~ Aparishnewsletter s~nt be Ecun1eni~m in Protestant to study ~he funct~op and plaOl th I fmiddot h middotmiddotf g Perspective Today f th Cmiddotth li U -Of Of Dl0n y rom omemiddot 10 Or1ll1O ~ a 0 r ~vterslY~ lt the emigrants bfuricti6ns inFathel ShovElltons suoject will m~nqa ~r~o ern a hoh~ - the local parishes at Chri~tmaiJbe ~EcumeJ1ismin Roman Cllthshy

laCatton on middota national scale d thO t f th h oljc PerspectiveToday A dis-Th middottt an 0 er lmes 0 e yearw en JJ

e cozpml ee~~made up U4 they mightmiddot possibly be home~uss)n period will follow SIX laymen and four archbIshops ) The audience will be comshyall of whom ar~ pr~sent trustees _ prised of the Lutheran parisa o~ the u~lverslty Formatu~n at Southern PrOVince cmgregation the townspeople ~he conrrutteewasannounce by ~ _ the towns clergy and the stll~ FrancII Cardinal Spellman of Favors DIGcoraate ~ dents at Holy Cross Fathenl New york ch~rman of the MIAMI CNC)Bishops of the Seminary Catholic Urnverslty board province of Atlanta have giyen Pastor of Holy Trjnity is Rev

The appointment of the com- p~sts in the six-ctiocese area Kenneth E Bjorklund

nlission for Christian

SAVE DOLLARS

with the MERCHANlS

84EconomOO

Auto Loan Pian

mittee came against a backshyground of reports that the U S bishops might transfer its Ionshytrol of CatJlolic University to 11 group of laymen The univershysitys rector Bishop William J McDonald has denied the middotreshyports but the chairman of the

new commi~ee Dr Ca~roU Hochwalt SaId the commIttee has been given the widest posshysible mandate from which nothshying will be excluded Our assignment Dr Hochshy

walt saidis the most farshyreaching one possible We are to take a reaiistic look at every aspec~ of the university all it has developed under its original directive since 1889 and at its potential for the forseeable

gt futule It is obviously the trusshyteef desire to leave no qtiestfon unanswered which may aftect the unfyersityas anational-hlsti tution 1its ~aculty students ~d

permission to hear confessions in the entire province and they have also asked the National Brothers VOuDlltee~ Conference of Catholic BishoPs As firefilllhters

to consider restoring the perma- nent diaconate in dioceses that want it

The two decisions were ~~_ nounced after the Bishops held their annual meeting in Miami

Archbls~OP P~ul J Hallman of A~lanta SaId l~ IS cus~omary ~or prtests t~ receIve theIr faculties from theIr own dl~cese and they h~ve been restncted o use wlthn that diocese EffectlVelmshy

II NORTHBROOK (NC) - Four

of the 34 men in the Northbrook volunteer fire department here are religious Brothers They are assigned to the national headshyquarters of the Society ofmiddot the Divine Word at nearby Techny Ill

The Brothrs are on call any time the Northbrook first stashytion standby has two or less men on duty for all general

the Cliurcli and the nation ift ~ J llmohgihemthejt haVe fouglU serves~ ( I i) middotClosingmiddotMeasure middotisome 50fires lti

j middot5T PAUL (NC)4AbilLban

Dedicate Monment ~ing ~l)e sale pf spe~iti~mtr 0ROURKtr chandise on Sundays has heen ~

To adFe Serra middot houses bullbull FunealHomepassed b)-both of the j

medl~telY all pne~ts In good alaons and for any fire or emershystandmg may nw he~r the con- gency when additional personnel fesslOns of Iemtents 10 the A- are needed Their volunteering la~ta archdIOcese ~nd th~ 41- was approved by the superiors oces~ of Sva~nah Charleston andmiddot the seminary bought them II ~alelgh MIami and St Augus- veh~C1e to expedite transportmshy

tine tion when they answer a fire ~ ca~I

Solons pass Sun JI n y The Brothers estaimat~ that

S_CRAMENTO (NC) dDme MinrElsota legislatureGov~aJ monument of Padre runipero old LeVander of Minnesota was Serra OFMwassolemnly ded- exPected to sign it into law icated on the grounds of tille The legislation forbids the sale State Capitol here Saturday OIl Sundays and six holidays

The formal ceremonies were (New Years Day Memorial Day qonducted by officials of the Independence Day Labor Day state alld by officers of the Nll- Thapksgiving and Christmas) of tive Sf ns and Daughters of the cameras musical instruments Golden West The project haa phonographs and tape recorders been sponsored by the California radios and television sets jewel-State Legislature and the fra- ry clocks and watches furs terrial ~ orders who provided furni~ure and other home furshymatching funds to finance its nishings including appliances executi~n middotmiddotmiddotAlso wearing apparel ()all

S7J ~c~nd St~~ef

Fall River MOIss_ 679-6072

MICHAEL J McMAHON Licensed Funeral Director Regisfered Embalmer

D D II- bull _ 5u Ivan amp Sons

FUNERAL HOME

Father Noel F Moholy OFMkinds including footwear lug- 469 LOCUST STREIE1T vice postulator for the canorlizashy gage lawnmowers and 9ther tion of Ithe Franciscan friar who outdvor machinery and equipshy FAU RIVER MASS bas been hailed as Californias ment hardware and tools paints 672-3381 First Citizen and Greatest Pio-Illeer W3 the principal speakeII at the ded~cation

varnishes wallpaper and re-middot lated tools lumber and other buildine materials and supplies

Wilfred e~

Driscollmiddot

James IE

Sullivan Jr

Suburban Parishes Should H~lp Save City Parishes

WASHINGTON (NC)-Archbishop Patrick A YBoy1e of Washington appealed here to ~ubJrbanCatholic parisbes to come to the aid of poverty-stricken parishes in the inner city At least 10 Catholic parishes in the inner city need financial help to continue to ismiddotmiddoth d d - ize t II h told C Has ave ecrease s exlS e a ommumon though the schools have contimshy

breakfast of the St Vincent ued to operate at fun capacity de Paul Society and the Whll~ parish income has faUellil only way we can give it iI off school costs have risen ~ through our suburban parishes cause of increased salaries em-

Suburban parishes are hard ployment of lay teachers and pressed themselves he said with higher maintenance costs for most of them deepiy in debt 00- older buildings cause of new constru~tion and expansion Nevertheless they must inaiJpirit of true charity share their resources with our poor parishes

The archbishop said that one of the reasons flr the poor fi shynancial condition of the inner city parishes was the cost of operating their schools but said emphatically that none of these schools would be given up

If we didnt have to support our schools Archbishop OBoyle said nearly all Of our parishes couldmiddot take care of their basic needs But we are not going to giv~ up any of our schools as long as we can get Ii dime to support them

Not mentioning which parish was concerned he stated thatmiddot one middotitmner city parish received $54000 from archdiocesan funds las~ year

Msgr Thomas W Lyons Arch diocesanmiddot Director of Educatiot1 said th~t before the whije middotmigramiddot tionmiddot to the suburbs CathoUa constituted about 22 per cent 01 the Washington Population The Negr~ who replaced the whitea are only about JO per cent Cathshyolic The result is that the par

Parochial school tuiti6n which averages about $4 a month haa not kept pace with costs Msgr Lyons explained

The St Vincent de Paul Soclshyety-here recently announced a twinning program in whicb sOlue of the more affluent parshyishes adopt inner city parisheo and provide for their needs

Offers Folk Mass For Vocations

HOUSTON (NC)-Bishop John L Morkowsky of Galveston- Houston offered a special foUt MaSs for youth on World Day oL Pr~yer for Vocations at Sacred Heart co-cathedral here

Father William Steele diocshyesan vocation director said the folk Mass is being offered to atshytract the young people middotThemiddot homily duringmiddot the Mass dealt with vocations

Contemporarymiddot folk musiC composed by Ray Repp nation ally known folk song writer was played during the Mass Guitar aceompaniment was proshyvided by seminarians from St MaryoS Seminary here

ct HOME IMPROV~MENl LOANS

bull PERSONAL LOANS

bull VACATIONmiddot LoANS ONE $10 COMPlm BANKI~GSERVICEAl Atlaquo

OF OUR 6 HAHOY IANKS

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DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near RockdCiieA- N~RTH BANK-Acushnet Ave at CoHin Ave CENTER BANK-Purchase and WilliamSts

DRIVE-IN SERVICE AT AU BANKS

Cardinal Cushing Sees Decrease In Seminaries

BOSTON (NC)-The numshyber of Catholic seminaries in the United States will deshycrease because of the diffi shyculty of obtaining top-flight scholars to staH them Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston preshydicted here

Addressing the New England Conference of the Catholic Hosshypital Association the cardinal told some 680 nuns priests and

laymen that schools of theology both Catholic and Protestant will become more closely identi shyfied with the great colleges and universities of this country a system not unlike that of Oxford in England

Sharing the platform with Archbishop Cushing was Bishop Fulton J Sheen of Rochester N Y who urged Catholic hosshypitals to go outside their own walls to bring social and medical help to the poor

Go out into the slums he said Give two or three hours a day visiting poor families for healing and counseling

He also suggested that Cathoshylic hospitals in this country adopt hospitals in poor counshytries

In A Rut We can certainly afford to

have someone put up a hut in the poor world We have the spirit but we have gotten into a rut the bishop said

Bishop Sheen told the confershyence the hallmark of a Catholic hospital is that we serve each patient as we would serve Christ

Cardinal Cushing also preshydicted that rising costs of care of the sick will induce the fedshyeral government to become more closely identified in hosshypital administration

I was told he added that in some hospitals the cost of a bed per day is almost $100 There must be a ceiling somewhere

Salons to Study Divorce Laws

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey State Assembly has unanimously approved a resolushytion to establish a commission to study the states divorce laws The measure already passed by the Senate is expected to be signed quickly by Gov Richard J Hughes

Thp commission described by Governor Hughes as an effort to strengthen marriage has al shyready encountered the opposishytion of -the Monitor the Trenton laquoiocesan newspaper But the bIShOps of the states three other Oatholic dioceses have reserved comment -

Boih Governor Hughes and the commissions sponsor Sen Jereshymiah F OConnor are Catholics And while Senator OConnor would like to see the commission recommend liberalization of the states di~orce law - desertion adultery and extreme cruelty are the only grounds at present-he would also like other changes made

Among them are a- family eourt which would serve as

counseling agency as well as divorce court lengthening of the present three-day waiting period as a1 obstacle to quick marriages and anr a warning to young PershySODS of the seriousness of marshyriqe

Senate Election PROVIDENCE (NC)-Sixteen

members of the 26-member senshyate of priests for the Providence dJocese have been elected in the first part of the senates twoshyatage elections

REV PATRICK 3 ONEILL

NCIEA Appoints Fr ONeiU

Rev Patrick J ONeill Supershyintendent of Schools in the Dioshycese of Fall River has been apshypointed by the Superintendents Department of the National Catholic Educational Association to serve as a member of the nashytional committee concerning tbe shygrowth and development of diocshyesan and parish school boards

This committee under the chairman Rt Rev Msgr ONeill DAmour will serv() as an adshyvisory unit It will gather and distribute information concernshying the development growth and function of school boards

Father ONeill made an extenshysive study of functioning school boards throughout the country His work in organizing our Diocshyesan Board of Education and working with it during the past year has been commended

Newman Chaplains School at IHCJJlvOlId

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Newman Chaplains Asshysociation has added a second training school for priests and Sisters entering Newman work It will be conducted at Harvard University

As in past years a school will be held at the University of Colshyorado in Boulder Dates for both schools are June 113 to July 2

The Newman Chaplains School prepares priests and nuns asshysigned to the secular campus The faculty has been chosen on the basis of experience in the Newman apostolate and speciali shyzation in theology -philosophy script~reand counseliJ)g _

Wlhere A GOODNAME

Means A GREAT DEAL

GEO-OHARA CHEVROLET

1001 Kings Hwy

NEW BEDFORD

Open Evenings

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 13

Family Care Program forO Children The Paul A Dever State by the psychologists and pre-placement visits with the

School Taunton under the sponsorship of the Departshyment of Mental Health has recently begun a Family Care Program in an attempt tomiddot proshyvide some of its children with the experience of family life

screened by the social workers have all been approved by the schools physicians for the proshygram

These children are ready and able to enter into the commushynity said Dr John L Smalldon superintendent of the Dever

child to the prospective foster parents to determine the comshypatibility of the youngster with the family Once settled within the family the child will also be periodically visited by a schooi social worker to assist in the adjustment The youngsters

The program is initially seekshying to place approximately 20 selected youngsters in homes in

school Provides Funds

This program with its emphashy

would attend special educatiOD classes in public schoolll throughout the South Shore

the South Shore area These chidren have been selected for their advanced capacities for edshyucation and training and their abilities to adjust to a home enshyvironment

These children reconmmended

sis on the advantages of the proper fa mil y environment seeks through a gradual process to assimilate the child within the community

The Social Service Department at the Dever School will conduct

The Department of Mental Health which sponsorsmiddot similar Family Care Programs in sevshyeral other schools in the state is providing funds for the supshyport of the children

What do you do when you live on a Take a good look at your everyday very small island with over three and a - surroundings You are apart of the 20 half million people-say Hong Kong of theworlds populati~nthat has access Move to the suburbs But what if the to 80 of the worlds food That means suburb is Red China The only answer that the other 80 of the world must be is this-and rbe hundreds of thousands content with the remaining ~O Of who crowd these house- boats are lucky course you can read this and say So Ovlaquo half die people of the world ani But You cannot say to someone who taorneless-and most live in Asia is hungry come tomorrow We must

When we hear that three-fourths ol act today because tomorrow may be too cbe human race lives inpoverty or below late (pope Paul VI) Feed the man the subsist~ level these are the peo- dying of hunger if you have not fed pie we are talking about Do we know him you have killed h1m (Vatican II) what it feels like to subsist to know no Dear Monsignor OMeara 1 am attachshyother feeling but that of hunger It is ing my gilt 0 $__ to help right the impossible or we could never spend over imbalance in our world Please use it so 100 billion dollars annually on arma- that a missionary can feed the starving ments while 10000 die each day from name---------- shyyenJldernouri8bment address _~____

THE HOLYFATHER~S

FUND FOR THE POOR RT REV EDWARD T OmiddotMEARA NAT~NAL DIRECTOR THE SOCIETY POR THE PROPAGATION Of THE FMTH 36e 5TH AVE NYbull NY 10001

IN PALL RIVER YOUR DIRECTOR e RT REV RAYMOND CONSIDINE 868 N MAIN ST

THE ANCHOR~Diocese ofFa River-Thursbull Apr 20 19M

middotSocial Revolutmiddotion Is Needed In latin America Lands

From Social Revohitiiolll iin the New Latin America Edited by John 3 Considine MM

The possibility of orientating regional planning toward an overall solution of the pressing problems that concern more than one Latin nation could well engage Christian initiative writes Rene Atero The most typical example of this kind he sa)s concerns Social Revolution in Latin-~ershythe region of the Andean ica Most Rev Mark GMcshyMountains where peasants Grath CSC says Barbara numbering more than five Ward widely read Catholic

million live in thee different economist begins her book enshyltcountries possessing basically titled The Rich Nations and the

Poor Nations with the flat stateshy similar pro b- ment I suppose we are all lems Our asso- aware of the fact that we live in ciation with na- the most catastrophically revolushy~ional orgariiza- tionary age that men have ever

tions concerned fced middotmiddotwith deyelop- Social Revolution ment planning Vice-President Hubert Humshyin no way im- phrey who honored this meeting plies the im- with his presence last year proper subordi- writes in a recent issue of Forshynation of enti- eign Affairs Although the obshytie sund e r servation that Latin America is Church s p 0 n- in the midst of a political ecoshysorship to less effectual accom- nomic and social revolution has plishment under the state become a commonplace it is

On the contrary it is a ques- true tion of becoming involved in a The influential Chilean magashynew front in which Christian zine Mensaje published by the action is not only indispensable Jesuit Fathers dedicated an enshybut will be most efficacious in tire issue in December of 1962 to helping to enlist sectors of Latin the theme Revolution in Latin American society of top impor- America and followed this up

middottance for national dEvelopment withmiddot another special issue in With reference to the actual bctober 1963 on Revolutionary implementation of plans through Reforms in Latin America

well elaborated projectS we Early in 1964 the Civilta Catshyshould make certain that iden- tolica published in Rome by the tification and recognition as an Jesuits carried a critique of important part of the national these two issues of Mensaje by effort are given to current Father Jarlot which questioned Church activities already oper- the prudence of using the terio ating numerous projects of social revolution in a Christian conshydevelopment throughout the text pointing out that itia ltcontinent loaded with Marxist overtones

For example with regard to Not only does it signify rapid education we should lteall atten- c structural changes Father Jarlot tion to the fact that there aremiddot in asserts but also connotes vioshy

lence and some measure of hate Latin America about 5000 pri- and class warfare He would vate ed~cational insttutions pre- prefer the term evolution pared to share in current eduea- tional programs throughout the Social Revolution oontinent Mr Humphrey in the article

The private univemities andmiddot already mentioned asks the eenters of technical training inmiddot question Is it appropriate te the fields of agriculture labor define Alliance (for Progress) and cooperatives couY-a double policy as favoring social revolll shythe potential for plofessional tion - or should this word be and technical trainin1 if they avoided in favor of evolution 01 would participate on D national some other expression basis ir serving the more press- He anwers Evolution if ing needs of society carefully examined proves to be

Broad Horizons inadequate for it implies an un-We must work also in the pres- conscious non-deliberate change

ervation of the progress which that is slow and gradual has been achieved in the areas- What is required is conscious of social welfare now b~ing em- rapid change in the socioshyphasized (housing education economic structure a process public health) Lay groups such that can correctly and precisely as Catholic Action in different be called a revolutionmiddot If used spheres _ Legion of Mary St not as a slogan but in itS precise Vincent de Paul Carita3-which sense the policy of peaceful s0shy

up to now have directed their -cial and economic revolution is efforts mainly towards religion agtcorrect~haracterizatio~ofmiddot il~

t hid limce policy d If t middot an we are ac IVlless ou eJmiddot We should not hesitaietoi pand theIr programs a11d focus d tf l th t m some of their work on ilrojects I e~ I y o~rse ~es WI I ~i planned by specialists J JatmAmencaiJust ~ Presldcnt

This would permit the cltanel ~ohnson ~ssoclated hunseU WIth it in hIS war on poverty I~ng of theIr ~eal t~elr ~rga~l~a- throughout the world whenhe gtcent

tIOn and theIr splnt of saCrIfIce tl k d Iffit b bull recen y remar e a peaceshyas power u resources 0 e put f lItmiddot th i5 at the disposal of society Among u re~bo u IOn ~n ese areas such works surely programs of ~mossl Ie a VIolent revolutIon

IS mevltable community improvement will be especially attractive to tlhese lay groups

Thus the Church might con- sider putting its knowledge and resources to more effective use in preparing programs and projshyects for adaptation to national and regional needs

They should select carefully those with the capacity to fulfill so that they may obtain financing from national or international sources to complement their own eontributions thus enlarging the scope of their activities

In a study of The Church and

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Our finicky p~IIQy~t~~reotlng oniy the ohoicest of the

oholce c has beoome believe It middotor not evet1lmiddotmol-e-flnlokye The trlmnilng and outtlng leoloser and mQre~a~e(ld ~ e bull to etJlv~ you th0 gie~tGstm~at vaYu9middotand most flavorful meats In lF~r2~ National hIS~O[y OLill oounters are the cieanes~ and our butohers mor~ eager than ever to lend you aweloomemiddotrneal tpia8lnlng Idea~

tiuohs gre~~ InQwsplrlt demanded a great new name II

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Arguments For Celibacy Outweigh Those Against

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Arguments urging that the requirement of eeHbacy of priests be set aside as an obshystacle to increasing vooationsare not sufficient Archbi-shop Gabriel Garribe pro-prefect of the Congregation of Semishynaries and Universities told a pressconfelence here My personal answer is that the arguments for celibacy cd the clergy are stronger than those against it He said he beshylieved there should be a firm affirmation in this respect and that it would maintain celibacy in the Latin Church

By doing so he said the quality ofpriesUy candidates will grow and through the quaUy of its priests the Church will harvest an increase in the quantity of candidates

The drop in the number of vocations the Archbishop stated Is due in part at least to the new attitude of todays youth and therefore requires changes_ in the traditional seminary formation

The prelate told the press that todays youth is much more fully aware of the whole world and far more sensitive to its problems than in the past Those responsible for seminary training must realize the importance of education and be capable of understanding the new generashytion of admiring them and of discovering for them the mission of the Church

StatistiCs Given Archbishop Garrone not e d

tj~at although there has been a falilng off in vocations generally there have been some surprising exceptions He singled out 1be

Dominican Work Continued from Page One

means that the approach will be intellectual rather than devoshytional and the emphasis win rest on accuracy on the truth of a statement rather than on whether it is opportune

In performing such a task mistakes 1n the form of partisan statements ~ld ill-balanced reshymarks are sometimes inevitable Father Hislop said

He affirmed the Dominicans loyalty to the Church but noted that it is often difficult for a vanguard intellectual group to express itself in terms that win not be misunderstood by the majority of Catholics

CCD Talks Continued from Page One

Tauntol as the speaker Mrs Mary Fuller of Buzzards

Bay will speak at the meetiDll in Bishop Stang High School North Dartmouth

At Bishop CasSidy High School Taunton the speaker will be Edward McDonagh-Of North Attleboro

Thomas Flangheddy of Taunshyton will address the meeting at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

The Cape area meeting will be held at Holy Trinity West Hallshywich with Miss Patricia llIIakle as speaker

Seek More funds WASHINGTON (NC) -Two

members of Marylands congresshysional delegation have introshyduced a bill which would make the government spend $75 milshylion annually for birth eontrol aid in the U ~ by 1973 The bin introduced by Sen Joseph Ty ings and Rep Samuel Freidel would propose $20 million the fkst year rising to $75 million bIV the fifth )ear Sta1e and loeal governments would provide _ edditiODal $25 mDJiclID br )87J

extraordinary development of vocations in Mexicp and in Yugoslavia and the stable continuity of recruitment in Poland

Among the statistics provided at the conference were the fact that the latest Church figures count 234000 Diocesan priests and 168000 Religious priests There are in addition 166400 Religious who are not ordained priests

One of the most heartening things in the vocational world picture it was pointed out hasshybeen the increase of priestly vocations in Africa Asia and Oceania

The growth of the local clergy has been a phenomenon of the last 40 years Today in Africa and Asia approximately 500 orshydinations take place every year

~regregampfsect ~ITOW(QJtfreg

$e~~ Aod WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep

Clement J Zablocki of Wisconshysin has introduced a proposal to correct U a defense education gap in American schools

Zablockis bill wo~ld amend the National Defense Education Act (NDEA) to provide federal grants for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment which could be used by children and teachers In parochial and private schools

In a statement on themiddot flOor Of the House of Representatives Zablocki pointed to inequities In

the present NDEA progra~ which Congress passed In 1958 to strengthen instruction in scishyence mathematics foreign lanshyguages and related subjects

An important provision of the act Zablocki said is Title III which provides matching grants to public schools for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment Non-public schools now are eligible only for loans for that purpose

Under Zablockis bill public authorities could obtain federal funds to buy laboratory and other special equipment which eould then be provided for use in non-public schools

In order to comply with matching provisions of the NDEA the non-public schools or groups of such schools would be required to prove they had spent an equal amount thenr selves for such eqUipment from private funds

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FALL RIVER AUXllLhARY AT MEETING Bishop Gerrard Auxiliary lBishop of the Diocese of Fall River is pictured at one of the sessions of the Spring meeting of the Bishops of theU Sheld in Ohicago NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 h A priI 20T urs 1967

Say~ ~Q~~OIP No SIQ7(~ ~ lovell

KANSAS CITY (NC) - The new role of a Bishop in the era of renewal has been spelled out here by Bishop Charles H Helmshysing of Kansas City-St Joseph

In addition to the age-old role of teacher Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop today must read stud) and apply the teachings of the Second Vatican Council the Gosshypels expressed to meet the needs of the modern world In short Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop must be a slave of love to serve as Christ served mankind

Bishop Helmsil1g spoke at the consecration of Auxiliary Bishop Joseph V Sullivan 45 of Kansas City-St Joseph

Bishop Sullivan is the fir~

native of this Missouri city eleshyvated to the hierarchy He was ordained to the priesthood June 1 1946 has served as chancellor of the diocese since 1957 and was named Bishop by Pope Paul VI last month

MarltqJ MregGGreg TJ~ ~~i MILWAUKEE (NC)-ALuthshy

eran scholar will teach Lutheran theology to graduate students at Marquette University here start shying next September Dr Kenneth G Hagen assistant professor of religion at Concordia College Moorhead MinJl will be the Marquet~e theology departmentu first full-time visiting scholra unshyder a grant from the Louis Calshyder Foundation in New York

-THREE LOCATIONS bull youre lookIng for the best in banking se~lce come 011J in to The NationalBank With the opening of our Stafford Square Office were now nearer to even more of you rOll the Greater Fall River area and each of our offices has Just aboUt every service you could want for yourself andl your family We mean M when we say were your FuID lervice BankPft

THE FALLmiddot RIVER

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t6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~n River-Thurs~ Apr 201967

Friend~2 [iJescribes Stru~g~ For QM~gtLy in T~~regwo~~~

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Rennedy When Fred W Friendly resigned from the Columbia

Broadcasting System in 1966 he ended a 16-year association with that network His trials in broadcast journalism are tbe subject of his new book Due To Circumstances Beyond Our Control Control bull Managements obligation is toRandom House $695 457 protect the interests of these Madison Avenue New York stockho~ders

NY 10022) But this volume But Mr Friendly is concprned is far more than a personal about the other stockholders memoir It is the story of th~ the 195 million citizens who

grant CBS and the other broadshybattle a losing casters the franchise to use theirbattle of course air for quality in

FCC Gutlesscommercial tel shyOne might naively expect that

~vision The the Federal Communications

main point is Commission would effectivelythat the story is here told by an insider Mr Friendlys middotfame criginally gprang from his close associashytion with the late Edward R Murrow He was Murrows partner in the prepashyntion of such pioneering and still unparalleled series as Se~ lil Now and CBS Reports

After Murrow left CBS and wentmiddot into governm()nt service Mr Friendly became president

of CBS news He resigned that ~sition because of a clispute conshycerning the broadcasting of Senshyate hearings on the Vietnam war

Many ancient or recent conshyfilets over broadcasting policy are rehearsed in this hook There fta for example a detailed acshy~unt of the hassies concerning Murrows TV _program dealing with Senator McCarthy before McCarthys downfall as the reshyault of the hearings in the Spring of 1954

There are briefer accounts of other skirmishes Thflse are all interesting and instructive But the value of the book lies not so much in these reminiscences as fin Mr Friendlys knowledgeable analysis of the process whereby television has retreated more and more from public service and become a purveyor of junk and garbage littering the American Iiving room and worse the American mind with trash

Geared to Prcfit Many factors account for this

perversion The principal one is greed Television is geared to private profit not puqUc service lLast years whopping profits will not suffice this year There must be sizable increase

This is to satisfy stockholders Mr Friendly asked William Paley chairman of the board Why do we have to make more money every year The reply was We have many small shareholders across the country and within the companybullbullbullbull

Subcommittee Sets Hearings on Smut

WASHINGTON (NC) -The House Select Subcommittee on Education is holding hearings beginning today on a bill to esshytablish a National Commissionmiddot on Noxious and Obscene Matters and Materials

Subcomllittee chairman Domishynick Daniels of New Jersey is sponsor of thc bill which would provide for a 16-member panel to study the problem of obscenity and recoqunend means Clf dealing with it

On the same day that the hearshyings were announced two other congressmen Arnold Olsen of Montana and Glenn Cunningham of Nebraska introduced bills to curb the mailing of obscene matshyter Olsens bill has bpoundlen enshydorsed by the Post Office Deshy~artment

protect the interests of the other 195 milion But Mr Friendly on the basis of close observation has -no kind words and no reshyspect for the FCC For all pur- poses the agency is toothless and gutless

To make even more money for the shareholders every possible penny has to be wrung out of the advertising medium which television now essentially is This consideration governs proshygramming

It might be supposed that even if prime time at night must eco- ~

nomically go chiefly to programshyming which brings in the maxishymum advertising dollar there is ample opportunity for public service broadcasting in the dayshytime hours But no pienty of money is to be made from dayshytime advertising

Endless Re-runs Three soap companJes alone

spend $290 million a year on television advertising and a lot of this is directed at housewives during the daytime And the programming dictated by this advertising comprisesmostly old old movies and endless re-runs of stupid situation comedies

Huge profits (are) being realshyized from the use of the miracle of television as a transmission belt for retread serials soap opshyeras game shows and the like The yield from the detergent deodorant bleach or food advershytisers who possess the daytime schedule (whose annualexpendishytures (are) some $130000000 ) is the principal reason why no serious progtamming can be sustained for any length of time during these hours

l3y serious programming is meant such things as crittcal UN debates (for example on Vietnam) vital congressional hearings the Popes visit to the UN Churchills funeral etc) Some of these have in fact got on the air and even for a conshysiderable period oftime b~t alshyways there is a major bitter battle involved

Educational TV What may not be realized is

the power of the local station n is by no means meekly subshymissive to the network It largely gqes its own way and its wayis in search of the utmost in profits

It is this fact for example which accounts for the nonshyexistence of a good solid repre~ sentative late-evening news broadcast over the nekwork The local station prefers to put on its own scrappy superficial travesty of a news program beshycause it can get-in an excessively large number of profitable comshymercials

Perhaps there is some hope in the field of educational televishy

sion Mr Friendly is now enshygaged in exploring that possibil shyity For our sake may he be successful At any rate we must thank him for reminding us of our tolerance of the criminial misuse Qf the air waves

H E A 0 S UNIVlERSliJIY New president of St Bonashyventure University St Bonashyventure N Y is the Very Rev Reginald A Redlon

OFM formerly of St Franshycis College Rye Beach N H The university Is operated by the Holy_ Name province of the Order of Friars Minor NC Photo

Issues GlLIidelimiddotnes For IEcumenism

LITTLE ROCK (NC) - Ecushymenical guidelines dealing prinshycipally with the conduct of Catholics at Protestant functions have been issued by Bishop Alshybert L Fletcher of Lttle Rock

Composed of the diocesan ecumenical commission the gUidelines specify that Catholics may attend Protestant church services participate in the singshying and common prayer but may not act as a reader or officer of such services

The rules permit Catholics to serye in wedding parties at mar- riages in Protestant churches providing the service does not involve a Catholic or a divorceci person Attendance at baccalaushyreate services in a church or elsewhere is permitted

Under the rules Catholics may not act as sponsors at Protestantmiddot baptisms Oi confirmation nat Jlarticipate in intercommunion services The guidelines encour- age Protestant attendance at Catholic services

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Misunderstandingmiddot Faced In Ecumenical Meeting

Roman Catholic and Lutheran theologians agreed here after their fourth meeting that many misunderstandings had been overcome on the Sacrament of the Lords SuppeR -Holy Eucharist-but that further examination is necesshysary The doctrinal consulshy to the concrete worship life o1Ztation held at the headquartshy the Church ers of the Lutheran Church In a prepared statement reshyin America was the fourth leased ft the conclusion of the in a series sponsored by the closed meeting the group noted Bishops Committee for Ecumenshy that in contrat to topics disshyism and Interreligious Affairs cussed at the first two meetings of the NCCB and the USA Nashy -the Nicene Creed and Baptismtional Committee of the Luthershy -there have been historically an Wotld Federation serious disagreements between

Main themes discussed at the the confessions concerning the three-day meeting were the Eucharist Lords Supper as a sacrifice the All participants the stateshymanner of Christs presence in ment added agreed that many the Sacrament the import of the misunderstandings had beellll concept of transubstantiation overcome as a result of the latest and the relation of these issues meeting

HOW TDCURE LEPERS

THIi HilLY FATHERS MIBSIDNAID TD THI ORIIlNTAL CHURCH

THE PILLS

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ARE THII

YOU

A LEPER IN~

Dear Itoklm

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patient for a year

C Strfngless glftlil of $100 $50 $25 $11S $10 $5 $2 Bet the Sisters buy what they need

IiJ $850 equals 10000 Dapsone tablets

IlJ $1 a month ($12 a yeer) gives you membershyehlp un our Damlen Club for lepers

---~~---~~-------shy CO INCLOSIm PIJlA8Ul FIND $~======_

1J1OR==========~=-=-==-

NAMlaa====~~~==~_~==-

QTRIlllT====~~==---~===shy

For our eIght edlcal Sisters In P1rappancode south India today is just a normal day Doctors bags In hand they are out In the villages eKmiddot amlnlng everyone for leprosybullbullbullbull Leprosy can be cured If diagnosed early says Sister Elizashybeth a surgeon Better yet Itcan be prevented In this case an ounce of prevention is worthten pounds of cure bullbullbull The cure is cheaper than penny nely Only $850 buys 10000 Dapsone _ mIracle tablets enough for 43 lepers for a yeerl bullbullbull The effort In Pirappancode islnternashytional German Catholics built the 25middotbed ho pital (1St Johns) French Catholics gave a workshop (for therapy) and an American friend of ours has pledged a convent and chapel Now the Sisters need medicinps a $200 microscope a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for treating children especially In farmiddotflung villages Will you help them Monsignor Nolan will acshyknowledge your gifts promptly and the Slste win pray for you aware you are helping them cure lepers as Christ did -

WHAT YOU CAN DO IJ $5000 gives the Sisters a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for fighting leprosy at Ita source (A sign on the side will featu re the name ofyour favorite saint and your name ifyou wish)

IJ $1500wlll give theSlster-surgeon an ope Instable Shes ustng akitchen table now

WOULDc $575 buys a whirlpool beth $100 a sterilizer

NEED C $300 pays In full ~or the two-year training 01 IF a native Slsternurse She will write to you

YOU WERI C $240 ($5 a Week) takes care of bull fuMmiddottlme

~IlAII IA8T WlILflARIi ASBDelATIGN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN PresIdent

MSGR JOHN G NOLAN Natlonal8ecretaIJ Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc S30 Madison Avenuemiddot New York NY 1001 T~one 212yUkOft 6-5840

rHf ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Apr 20 196717

CATHOLIC (HAR~l~~S AP~EAL SILVER JUBILEE YEAR

MAY 7-17

What does it mean to you The opportunity to raise your sights to the level of a $2500 Jubilee Gift

An act of aratitude for 25 years of Charitable Seice

Bishop Connollys love for exceptionoillhiidren cannot be

described in words-but this picture D5 beyond description

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THE ANCHORshy~18 Top East C~ast College Hoopsters middotPlay )Sees SociaI EquityThurs April 20 1967

Still Lagging Anglicalfj)~ ~teview At I(ennedy Center For P C Alumni In Spain Antii Cali~~i~ By Patricia Francis MALAGA (NC) - Spain

was taken to task for lagging1562 C~~lireglf A full house crowd saw some o( the East Coasts top collegIate basketball players behind many other countriesLONDON (NC) _ The demonstrate last week how basketball should be played Occasion was the 8th annual hi the development of a

ehurch of England has set Scholarship Basketball Game sponsored by the Providence College Alumni Club of New just Christian social and ecoshyup a permanent commission Bedford at Kennedy Youth Center in New Bedford Initiated in 1959 to - raise nomic life at the 26th Spanish C1)n Christian Docbine with tis first task to consider recastshying or replacing that churchs historic charter of the Thirtyshy~Hne Articles of Religion which

are strongly anti-Catholic In tOne

They are regarded by many as o stumbling block to Christian ~ity The articles drawn up in 1562

for the avoiding of diversities $pound opinions and for the establishshyhtg of consent touching truereli shygion must be publicly accepted py the clergy at ordination

They have become a matter of ~increasing objection lind some

Anglican clergymen now feel talat they should not be called Upon to subscribe to doctrinal definitions which reflect views formed in the 16th oentury aarship is a $2400 one paid at the time of extreme and bitter reli- rate of $600 a year to the winner gious controversy Next award will be made in

The articles denounce the 1970 TheRevEdwardC Duffy eurohurch of Rome as erroneous in chairman of- the scholarship matters of faith and declare games and recruiter of the among other things that theplaye~s who participate emphashyBishop of Rome hath no jurisdic- sizes the scholarship is open middotto tion in this -realm of Englandany deserving boy who has been Some prominent Anglican clergymen have blal1led the sharp declfnein ordination canshy

Qlidates on a reluctance to subshy~ribe to this document

Consider Advis( The new commission was apshy

pointed by Anglican Archbishops Michael Ramsey of Canterbury and Donald Coggan of York It consists of 17 members most of them theological professors repshyzesenting different schools of thought in the Anglican Church

Anglican Bishop Iar Ramsey of Durham is chairman The commissions general terms of reference say that it is

to consider and advise upon doctrinal questions submitted to it from time to time by the archshybishops and to plan when deshyslrable the investigation of

I ~uestions by other groups Its first task will be to conshy

sider the place of the Thirty- lege University of Rhode Island Nine Articles in the Anglican St Josephs of Philadelphia Bosshy

tradition and the question of ton College and Holy Cross subscription and assentto them There were Bill Blair Jim

Benedict Bob Kavolski and Bill Lasher of PC Mike FitzgeraldReligious Influence (of Mattapoisett) Henry Carey

In US on Wan~ -7- NEW YORK (NC)-Although

a majority of all Americans exshypressed the belief that 11eligion is losing its influence in the

United States in the latest Gallup Poll Catholics declined to-give majority assent to the opinion

The national survey showed tilat 57 per cent of all Americans in 1967 believe religion is losing its influence Only 14 per cent expressed this opinion in 1957

Among Protestants 60 per cent In 1967 compared with L7 per eent in 1957 said religion was losing its influence Forty-eight

per-cent of Catholics agreed in the latest survey compared with Beven per cent in 1957

Get Federal Funds PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A

Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyect under the auspices of Philashydelppia Archbishop John J Krols Commjssion on Economic Oppi)rtunity Programs hlils reshyceived $267980 from the federal government It was one of 74 Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyects in 30 states approved by Secretary of Labor W Willard Wirtz

accepted as a freshman at Provshyidence College regardless of the high school he attended

Primary Method William F Doyle president of

the NE Bedford club says the games are the alumnis primary method of raising money for the schoJarship fund

Since it was first held the game has attracted a following of avid fans-who help swell the scholshyarship treasury

Father Duffy feels it is the top post-season game in New England arid cites as proof the fact that his long time friend Bob Cousy Hoiy Cross All- Anierican and Boston Celtic great played in it himself two years ago It was his last game

Players who participated in this years money-for-scholarshyships game-all college seniors

represented Providence Colshy

scholarship funds for deserv- ing gr~duates of area high

schools the game profits enabled presentation of the first Edward J Tucker Memorial Scholarship of $2000 to Clifford Marr of New Bedford in 1962 Marr a graduate of Holy Family High was graduated from Provishydence College in 1966 and curshyrently is an Army lieutenant on duty in Korea

The second scholarship---named for the late 1r Tucker of Fairshyhaven a Providence College

graduate and one of the charter members of the New Bedford club--was awarded last year to Michael Doherty of New Bedshyford also a Holy Family gradushyate

Currently the four-year scholshy

Steve Chubin and Bob Boehm of the U of RI Richie Murphy and Greg Hochstein of Holy Cross John Austin and Ed Hock- enbury of Boston College and

f~nll lHoMsnln1~ fLaw Olhoc City EI1il(Jlcts

SPRIfiGFIELD (NC) - By unanimous vote of its five city commissioners this city has enshyacted a fair housing ordinance

The ordinance the third of its kind in OhiO becomes effecshytive May 3 Considerably strongshyer than the fair housing legisia- tion enacted by the Ohio Legisshylature in 1965 it outlaws disshycrimination in the sale or rental of any housing excepting only dwellings for members of reli shygious organizations or housing established for one sex only

Springfields new ordinance came as the res~lt of an improved climate of racial harmony The citys mayor Robert C Henry is a Negro whose performance of his duties has won wide reshyspect In recent years an Urban League has been launched and has made considerable progress A Human Relations Commission is functioning

PROVIDENCE COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP In atshytendance at PC Scholarship Fund Basketball Game in New Bedford were William Doyle presidentof the PC Club of New Bedford and Michael Doherty present scholarship recipient

Billy Oakes Marty Ford and Tom Duff of st Josephs the nations fifth-ranked_ team

Sees lay Teachers

Form Asso~iataon CLEVELAND (NC)-Groundshy

work for a diocesan lay teachers asso~iation was laid at a meeting of representatives of 21 diocesan high schools here

shy Patrick Bruening teacher at St Josephs high school and temshyporary chairman of the new unit said the association is an organshyization of professional people seekint professional growth

He added Only after we have proven ourselves as professionshyals with a professional attitude

about our job can we ask for and hope to get professional consideration I

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lhe players enjoyed demonshystrating th~ir proficiency The fans enjoyed watching the demonstration ~ and the scholar shipfund of the Providence Colshylege Alumni Club of New Bedshy~ord teaped tbebenef~il ~fboth

~ Population Control WASHINGTON (NC) - U s

Sen J W Fulbright of Arkansas has asked for aCongressional appropdation of $150 million for increased population coritior asshysistanCe to developIng countries

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Social Week here Angel Cardinal Herrera y

Oria former archbishop of Mashylaga in a letter to the Social Week sessions deplored what he called a deficiency of Catholic influence in Spanish public lilfe declaring that Spain a Catholic nation was far from being a model of social justice

No Dialogue Earlier Auxiliary Bishop Rashy

fael Gonzalez Moralejo of Valenshycia ecclesiastical moderator of the SocialWeek sounded a simshyilar note declaring that where there is no dialogue between citizens and their government there is no democracy and such a society cannot call itself Christian

Cardinal Herrera said that ahead of Spain are nations who

have learned how to organize their natioJlallif~ according to the norms of justice which are the daughters of consciElnce Sweden has progressed in the social and pOlitlclll o~der to such an extent that the ~ope

could state that its public ~n~ishy tutions are in harmonywith the teachings of the Seco~dVatican Council he said

1[Jpper ~Iasses Cardinal Herrera lirged the

upper classes of -the countryto contribute toward the formation of a sound and realistic public opinion by which religious conshycepts would be applied to the economic and social life of Spain

It is necessary he said to diminish the differences in classes to work toward Unity not only in the economic order but also in i~ the education and

c~vic department

The Best

Car

Georgell Cluh Olf to Good Start mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Apr 20 1967

Taunton High Is Surprise In County Diamond loop former FltrrJDD Riweff CYOer on Scholagslvop ltltIt PIl1Jf$~ns

By PETE~ BARTEK Norton High Coach

Coach BiD Georges Taunton High diamond aggreg~

tion is the early season surprise in the Bristol County schoolboy league now in ita second week of the eampaign The pennant race appeam ~ be developing into one of the most exciting in many years Five clubs are battling of Ule better area clubs year fOIl the coveted flag And after year

Coach Harold (Chet) Haneshywhile action is fast and fm-shywichs Bishop Feehan High teamiOWl in the BCL the eight N3rshyof Attleboro has tucked awayragansett League teams are early season wins over Northgetting I e Q d y Attleboro and New Bedford Voshy

lor the chamshy cational The latter two will pionship race m probably fight it out fornext-toshytheir COmpetishy the-last place in the final standshytion Delayed ing as they seek to avoid theboth by rain and cellar Ii old weather The two top contests on nextCOaches h a v e Mondays BCL card will seebeen reminding Coyle playing Durfelte at Alumnitheir charges of Field in Fall River while Taunshythe pitfalls of ton journeys to North Dartmoutheareless loose to clash with stang Two northernplay and also Peter eounty rivals Attleboro andthe IOOmmission Bartek Feehan meet at the formers of Deedless errors which ean field next Monday when North relegatea club to an early Deeshy Attleboro travels to New Bedshyond diviaion berth from which it ford to take 0111 Vocatlonal win be bard to emerge as 1M Nury Contests oompetition progresses Meanwhile the Narragansett

Chausse and JlaJkut loop is comple~ing its first week The Herring City Orange and of play Its still a little early to

Black pulled the big surprise of make 8 judgment as to how thebe young season when it held clubs will stand at the end of thethe always strong Dullfee High

lI~mpaign team of Fall River to a 2-2 tie in Four Narry tilts are on tap for11 innings The prognosticators next Tuesdaybad been writing off the Georgeshy Coach Jack McCartys Caseeoached clan solely because they High Cardinals of Swansea willfelt Taunton would be unable to face Coach Jack Harts DimanJeplace Artmiddot Koska lost by gradshy Vocational team in Fall River uation in what looms as one of the

But Scott Chawrse impressed most interesting early seasonin his confrontation with the Fan games Coach Doug Baxendales River Hilltoppelll aDd now the Msgr Prevost High team of Fall same pundits who had relegated River will be at Dighton to meet Taunton to a lowly apot 8re the Coach Eddie Texeiras D - ~ first to admit that things will be Regionals Coach Ed Bibeau will much more pleasant for the lead his W~port High aggr~gashyTauntonians this Spring tion to Seekonk to middotvh( with

Stro~ Coyle Offense Coach Roger Hills charges The Admittedly an the doubting fourth Narry contest next Tuesshy

Thomases were not convinced day will see Coach Jack Brenshyon the basis of a single performshy nans Holy Family High teain of ance So Joe Majkut and Chausse New Bedford meeting Coach Jim Ulen eombined to throw a no-hit Sullivans Somersetmiddot High teamwin over Coach Dick Joyces at the latters field Attleboro High team Even the

Lanllers Ready most skeptical then conceded that Taunton must be reckoned On Ca~ Cod n nip-~pd~tuck

in the flag race battle is going on in that areas While Taunton High has heeD eon1erence schedule Four conshy

eGualling the early season attenshy tests are listed for the Capeway tion unexpected results have eircuit next Monday They are eccurred in several other diashy Oldmiddot Rochester (Mattapoisett) mond eontests Attleboro which at Barnstable Bourne at Wareshydid DOt seem destined lor gfeat bam Dartmouth middotat Dennis-Yarshythings this Spring provided the mouth and Fairhaven vs Lawshyfirst surprise w~en it toppled rence High at Falmouth Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Norton High in the Clover Stang High of North Dartmouth Valley Conference plays its first

Taunton then proved its mettle league game at home against when it defeated surprising Millis next Monday The Purple Attleboro Hickey has talent at - and White Lancers travel to Stang but his problem has heeD Medfield next Wednesday tv properly align his best playem Apparently they were not in the Score Governmentright spots when they went down to defeat at the hands of Coach On Lab~r Problems Jim Burns Msgr Coyle High

BUENOS AIRES (NC) -TwonJne of Taunton which has Catholic organizations have isshycwuted its way to two one~sided sued a joint manifesto criticizingviet(lries Coyles strength is in thlte Argentine government sayshyits offensive attack but it also ing it has failed to protect workshy

has a capable defense and pitch ers basic rightsJng staff to make a real run for Issued by the Catholic Youngthe BCL crown Workers (JOC) and Catholic _ Feehans Auspicious Start Action Workers Movement

Durfee while it may have been (MOAC) the statement alsotemporarily halted by Taunton called upon the bishops to be enpects to be among the leaders aware of the needs and goals of before the end of the week The young workers and the labor Hilltoppers looked good in winshy class and to be brave in ltexshy

double-header from Pil-shyning a pressing the Churchs doctrine grim High of Rhode Island last as applied to real-life situations weekend CoachJoe Lewis feelsmiddot It said that the government his boys can now maintain the which calls itself Christian but momentum they have generated is anything but Christian has in the non-league affairs It goes nothing to do with the Gospelalmost without saying that one or Christs teachings or with the off-day is not going to thwart Churchs doctrines as defined by the Hilltopperll wbo produce ODe the Second Vatican Councit

By JOE MIRANDA A Parsons College senior JRobshy

eli Bonalewicz of Fall River is -nearIng the end of a most sucshycessful college career both athshyletically and academically

Bob is attending Parsons in Fairfield Iowa on a baseball scholarship and has started bis third season as the colleges first strong catcher

neans List Student A Physical Education major

Bob has a minor in History and during the last marking period was named to the Deans List at Parsons -

A member of St PatrIcks Parshyish Bonny is a 1963 graduate of Durfee High School where he participated in football basketshyball and baseball

The son of Mr and Mrs Mathew Bonalewicz of 50 Chapshylin Street he is oile of five chil shydren ald has not yet decided upon a vocation

Bonny has two older brotherll a lieutenant and Mathew Jr II

staff sergeant both in the Air Force and stationed ubroad Bob also has two sisters Kathleen II student at Durfee High and Ma) Ann a grammar school pupil

Has f80 Average Bonalewicz recently returned

from a Southern baseball trip end gained excellent commendashytions from his coach Duane Banks for his performance as the Wildcats won 11 of 13 games

The Fall River player batted 430 belted three homers had nine runs-batted-in and seltlred 10 during Parsons first 13 games

Bonalewicz a 22-year-old 175shyJ)ound 5-8 giant enjoys playing baseball and so does his coach who scheduled 89 games last seashyson to set a ollegiate record fur the most games played in one year

Ankle IBjUlY

With the former Durfee backshystop handling the brunt of the catching duties until a knee inshyjury forced him to the sidelines Parsons won 72 lost 15 and twice finished in ti~d games called beshyca~se of darkness

The former St Patricks star in the CYO baseball program started poory this season finshyis middotng off the Southern trip with an ankle sprain but entering this week the ankle was in good shape and Bonny expected to take his regular spot behind the plate

Federal Agency Has Inter-Faith Advisors

WASHINGTON (NC)- A Catholic priest a Methodist minshyister and a Jewish rabbi have been appointed religious advishyBors to the United States Inforshymation Agency here

Msgr George G Higgins clIishyrector of the Social Action Deshypartment U S Catholic Confershyence the Rev Edward G Cu-middot roll superintendent of the Washshyington Northwest District ol the Methodist Baltimore Conference and Rabbi Richard G Hirsch dishyrector of the Relgious Action Center Union of American Heshybrew Congregations have been named to the USIA advisory panel

Officials of the agency noted that while it has had religious advisors since its inception this marks the first time an interfaith panel had been established

The purpose of the panel offi shycials said is to assure that the agencys handling of religious matters serves the best intlterest of the nation and its dlveraity of faiths

Bonalewicz also played for St Patricks T)iocesan championship team and for the Fall River Mershychants in the Newport Sunse~ League

As a senior at DUrfee Bonny was awarded the 1963 George Kaplan Memorial Trophy as the Hilltoppers best senior basketshyball player

His hustle and determination while performing for Durfee at Bostcm Garden during the anshynual Eastern Massachusetts Tecb tournament gained him the reshyspect and admiration of all that witnessed his efforts

Bonalewicz recently completed a practice teaching tour in an Iowa Junior High School and while tere coached the eighth grade team to a league chamshypionship

Earlier in the college year Bob_ was a member of the Parsons intramural flag football progmiddotam and received a trophy for his performan J

Despite the heavy bnsebaU schedule Bob has manged to keep hi grades above average and after the Fall semestershyshowed his prowess in the classshyroom by being named to the Deans List for the second time

DeMatha Winner In Hoop Tourney

WASHINGTON (NC) - DeshyMatha High of suburban Hyattsshyville Md scored an upset cliff shyhanger victory to cop the 12th national high sChool basketballl tournament sponsored by thE local Knights of Columbus J017 the fifth straight time

DeMatha avenged two regula17 season defeats by Mackin High Washington Catholic League

champ with its last minute 70-68 victory Mount Carmel of Chiengo took

third place with a 47-45 overshytime win over DePaul Acndemy of Chicago Northeast Cnthrt1ie of Philadelphia took fifth pIhce with a 77-74 win over St Petertl

B(~ BONALEWICZ of New Brunswick N J Catheshydral High of Trenton NJ Inpound

The oung catcher has been Dwight School of New York alslaquo) long known for his bullet like participated tlnrowlr arm and gained conshy Aubrey Nash DeMatha junloY siderable praise from opponents wall named the tournnmentl in 111gh school amateur and colshy most valuable player lege eompetitions for his savvy A 5-11 junior John Somogyftbehind the plate set three tournament records-shy

Three-Letter Man 40 field goals 108 points in threE Bonalewicz played football for games and 43 points in one game Don MontIe basketb~ll for Tom and tied another record ll-forshyKaram and baseball for middotJoe 11 from the foul line Lewis while at Durfee and also performed for Lewis Chathammiddot team in the Cape Cod League

The Fall Riverite cannot get FAIRHAVENenough baseball according to his mother Mrs Bonalewicz recalls LUMBER a game at Alumni Field when

COMPANYDurfee bested a Venezuelan team sponsored by the Peoplesshyto-Peoples program Bob was inshy Complete linejured and taken -to the hospital Mrs Bonalewicz remembers Building Materials then came back to finish the game hitting a home run to win I SPRING ST FAIRHAVENmiddotit for the Hilltoppers He wall voted the outstanding player in 993-2611the gameo

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I

THEANCHOR()ioltese of Fan ~tv~r-Thurs ApO 1967 ~ ~ middot-middotmiddotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ middot20

AT BISEIOPS CONFERENCE Facilities for offering Mass were provided by the Archdiocese of Chicago when 230 U S bishops met in semi-annual conference In left photo nine othel prelates concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Joseph TRyan of Anchorage Alaska In right

photo are Archbishop John F Dearde~ of Detroit at left president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and at right Archbishop Johl1l F Cody of Chicago conference host Bishops Connolly and Gerrard attended from the Fall River Diocese NC Photos

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Page 5: 04.20.67

THE ANCHOR-Dlocete of Fait R1yener-1h Apr 20 bull

~

~flt

1 I

FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF HYACINTH CIRCLE Participatshying in the Golden Jubilee Celebration of the Daughters of Isabella-Hya-~

einth Circle--New Bedford were left Miss Mary E Foley regent and Mrs Richard H Walsh supreme regent of St Louis~ Mo at the cake cutshyting ceremony Center seated Miss Lydia Pacheco past regent and Mrs

Emile J Monfils chairman of decorations standing Mrs Richard H Manning vice-regent and Mrs Antone J Morris past regent Right -Mrs John B Lowney first regent seated in front of Miss Evelyn Henshydricks first guide left and Mrs Emmet Almond past regent The Circle has a membership of 500

Cardsna Cushing Emphas~es Need For Inv~vement

BOSTON (NC) - Om atechisms must be transshybted into real human conshyeern Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston asserted here

Cardinal Cushing said Christ did not make the rhetorical proshynouncements in response to peoples need but rather helped them by action Christians must take similar risks to wipe out the IJOcial evils of the 20th century be decl~red

For the Christian this social ftnvolvement consists not only in the desire for material well shybeing which we share with all humanitarians but also in the psychological hunger for more shybeing in mans thirst for the fullness of undying love in the final estabiishment of all things in the love of God the cardinal said

Cardinal Cushing said that the message of Easter is hope He asserted that fear is prevalent in our society-fear of nuclear deshytJtruction of our fellow men of the future of non-acceptance in a conformist society This fear be said is kindled by the conshytinued expansion of communism JiJi the various sectors of the a1obe

Christian lImperative

The cardinal warned While some satisfaction can be obtained jjn diminishing the degree of (Chill in the Cold War let no one be so mesmerizec as to think nIl is well and secure Let no one of us be duped into accepting war as peace

Cardinal Cushing said Chrisshytians have not always seen their Christian responsibility because of complacency or fear of inshyvolvement~ He added The Fathers of Vatican II have made it clear that for the Church and the Christian involvement is not only not to be feared-involveshyment is the Christian imperashytive

New Bedfords Hyacinth Circle lsabellas Mark Fifty Years of Community Service

By Patricia Francis Hyacinth Circle Daughters of Isabella of New Bedford marked its golden anniversary

Sunday morning at the 11 oclock Mass at Holy Name Church and a dinner that followed at the New Bedford Hotel Guests of honor were Mrs Anna C Walsh of Florisant Mo supreme regent members of the area clergy and charter members of the circle

Organized April 15 1917 at a meeting at Duff Han Hyacinth Circle began its half century of charitable work with a charter membership of 335 women Today it has a membership of approximately 500

In 1934 the drcle sponsored establishment of the first Junior C I N E 1 dmiddott

Irc e III ew ng an WI h acharter class of 125 young women from 10 to 20

Through the years members of the circle have participated in national and local charitable works including raising funds for he Queen Isabella FoundashytionFund of $100000 donated to te National Catholic School of Social Service affiliated with Catholic University in Washingshyton

Two area women were among those awarded fellowships to the school Mrs Mary Lou (Cleary) Nally formerly of New Bedford and now residing in Jeffersonshyville Pa and Mrs Jeanette (Mulvey) Mahoney of Arlington fOmel1y of Fairhaven Following erection of the Rose

Hawthorne Lathrop Home in Fall River for treatment of canshycer patients members of the circle adopted the work of proshyviding surgical dressings and other hosryital needs They also work closely with the Catholic Welfare Bureau One of the cirshycps pet projects was help for the White Sisters until they left New Bedford in 1965

First regent of Hyacinth Cirshycle was Mrs Helen E Lowney who contacted all charter memshybers before the anniversary celebration inducing many of those able to attend to join in the birthday party

Secoud regent was the late

Mrs Caroline ~ Manning of New Bedford who remained active in the DlUghters of Isashybella until her death She served as national regent

The late Rt Rev Henry J Noon of St James Church was the first of three chaplains who have provided spiritual direction for members of Hyacinth Circle Second chaplain was the Rt Rev Msgr Timothy B Sweeney of Holy Name Church and current chaplain is the Rt Revt Msgr John J Hayes also of Holy Name

ror many years Hyacinth Cirshycle held its meetings in the hall at the Knights of Columbus building at Pleasant and Camp bell Streets Then in the mid 1940s the Most Rev James E Cassidy gave the circle use of a house at 11 Robeson Street which ~eassince served as its headquarshy

Plans for the anniversary obshy

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servance were ~ade by a l~rge committee that included Miss Mary E Foley regent Mrs Anshytone Morris ticket chairman and Mrs Mary P Quinn a charshyter member

Miss Ellen Gaughan read a history of the circle which she had written an entertainment was provided by Nancy Howard Debruyn of Milton who offeredselections from Sound of Music

Hear Bishop NASHVILU (NC) - Bishop

Joseph A Durick is the first Catholic clergyman to address a state convention of the Episcopal Church Women of Tennessee

St Johns to Open New School in 68

JAMAICA (NC) - St Johns University here in New York state will establish ilschool of general studies in September1968

It will consist of three divishysions each with a separate facshyulty and assistant dean

The new school will offer It

part-time program leading to D

bachelors degree a two-year asshysociate degree program and am adult continuing education proshygram

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FASTEETH t pleasant alkaline powder holds false teeth firmer To eat and talk In more comfort justsprinkle a little FASTEETH on yourplates No gummy gooey taste 0shyteellng Cllecks denture breath Denshytures that fit are essentIal to health see your dentist regularly Get FASTEETH at all droll counteru

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6 THE ANCHOR-Di~c~se of Fail Riv~r-Thurs Ap~ 20 1961 - ~ 1middotmiddot 1 ~ --~ ~ bull bull - ~~

Reports Mean What There will undoubtedly be more than the usual furor over the release by the National Oatholi~ Reporter of a text of majority and minority reports submitted to PopeshyPaul on the matter of birth control It will be well to reshymember what these reports are and what they are supshyposed to do

Members of the Papal Commission on Birth Control were asked by the Pope to study the whole matter from every possible point of view and to submit their findings to him so that in the light of this work and in the light of the medical issues involved he might make moral judgeshyments and pronouncements on these matters The studies would then be expected to contain every possible aspect of the birth control problem with every kind of argument both for and against every type of method of birth cOntrol This is fundamental to any kind of reshysearch paper All sides of every aspect are discussed argushyments strong and weak are brought out to bolster each

aspect and then the whole is presented for thought and prayer and decision

This indeed is what the Papal Commission has done For a reader to take this or that argument and from

it to mak~ his own deductions is unwise and a misuse of what the Commission has done For a reader to take what the Reporter has printed and to assume that this is the whole story is to come to conclusions on partial evidence

The Reporters release of these texts will be seen by many as an act of freedom the willingness for all matters -to be discussed openly and before the entire world It is hoped that the Reporter has gone a step further even and has indicated to its readers what these texts really IPean how they are to be understood and the purpose of research papers of this type Most people are neither philosophers nor scientists nor theologians Philosophical concepts socioshylogical and scientific ideas theologizing about issues-all this cannot be simply thrown at people with the expec~tion that there will be no confusionTo think this way would pe naive

It is never enough simply to issue reports Two questions should always be asked in the wake of reports---are they accurate and what do they mean Or-to put it quite inelegailtly-Sez you and So What

Auschwitz Mem(jrial Attempts to slant or rewrite history should alw~ys be

met with vigorous and serious protest On Sunday a monshyument was dedicated in Poland to the memory of the four million persons who met death in the gas chambers of the infamous Auschwitz death camp This act of unspeakable barbarity should live forever in the memory of man

But the -dedication ceremony Sunday made scarce menshytion of the fact that the overwhelming preponderance of thos~ killed were put to death only and precisely because they were Jews The only reference to this martyrdom of the Jews was made in French by the president of the Intershy

nationa1 Auschwitz Committee and his remarks were not translated into Polish

The chief speaker Polands Premier gave greetings to the Jews who had come to pay tribute to their dead but glossed over the ordeal of the Jews which still hangs heavy On the consciences of those who call this a civilized world

It remained for individuals and groups after the formal eeremonies to offer prayers for the Jews who died because they were Jews and for no other reason

Men the world over should add their prayers for these ~agic victims and should pray too that time will not erase either the blrbarity of the deed or the reason-s for it

rhe ANCHOR OffiCIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAILL ~QVER

410 Highland Avenue

ublished weekly by The Catholi~ Press of the Diocese of Fall River Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER ~ost Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

~ ~

tbfs In the U So Universal eashyonical nonns will be given bv the Vatican and U S norms jr$ be established by the NCCD

It was suggested that trained CCD laymen be permitted to dIlt part-time ministry as a step tilshyward this establishment

Missions A comniission of seven bishopa

will guide coordinating effon among mission appeals for finalilot cial support and personnel

Religious Needs Regarding fund solicitations hi1

religious communities t)te bis~

ops felt the problem is very comshyplicated and voted an ad hOC joint committee be formed further study

Justice-Peace The bishops formed a natio~

counterpart of the Vatican COJDoo mission on World Justice-Peaee

It was described as a broad c0shyoperative program ofeducatiOlil designed to arouse collaboratioO with other religious groups in an

ecumenical kind of project to make this affluent nation of oUDI more aware of the tremend01lilll needs of developing nations

Vietnam The Justice-Peace Commissiou

vIas obviously interested JDj such topics as Vietnam and musti face them as moral dilemmas ~

[D) 0 rL 11 A IL J our time it was notedWD~lflJ~ tr[FtOl -~rn1 e(1~ A spokesman mentioned greali

Lr Continued from Page One

On mixed marriages the formof the promises as used in the Madison Diocese was recomshymended for general use throughshyout the U S It states We sol emnly promise that all children who may be born of our marshy

riage will be baptized in theCatholic Church and carefully~eared in the knowledge and practice of the Catholic religion We are both aware that our marshyriage contract will remain biJid

ing until death We promise not to hinder each other in the pracUce of religion

On previous censorship the bishops wish prior approval be required for the actual texts Of Sacred Scripture books of prayer or devotion liturgical or ceremorial books textbooks used in religious eliucation programs especially in the primary and secondary levels that prior apshyproval not-be required on books or articles dealing with Scripshy

ture theology canon law eccleshysiastical history and like subshy

jectsIf dangerous tea~hings are

found a warning in pastoral tone should be issued

Coordination A Cominittee onPalitoral Reshy

should correspond more closely have asked the VatIcan to rele shysearch and Practice was founded shy to what is usually found in the them from these provisionshwhic WIll coordinate the follow- American system of education COD

ing committees Liturgy Ecu- f f menism Canonical Affairs and ~ur years 0 high school four The CCD has been and wiD Doctrine 0 college four of theology that continue primarily as a religiouB

seminaries on the high school Liturgy and college levels take accredi- educational program on the

Four possible texts ofthe Eng- tation steps all seminariestake parochial level reported BishoP lish Canon of the Mass were Greco to the hierarchy He alsO given By a vote of C to 1 one cond~l~t self-study in the ligbt of announced that the complete text ~xt was given approval of genshyeral tenor A definite text is expected by June of this yjar

~etirement For bishops it wasmoved that

a retiring bishop be permitted to reside in his diocese that suit~ able sustenance be provided him (especially medical and hospital care) and that the N~B do so

if a particular diocese cannot that r permanent commLJion is needed to oyersee this that the pr~visions for retirement extend to all bishops-auxiliaries titushylar etC-and not only residential bishops

For prirsts that various beneshyfit plans be reviewed so as to ready a national plan of care and benefits for retired priests

Priests One of the first functions of

the Committee on Pastoral Reshysearch and Practices will be to study in depth the role amI life of the priest in American society It should consider priestly forshymatioD income distribution

i2J concern among the bishops abou~ seminary studies parish strue- Vietnam citing their statemellli ture celibacy the mission needs last November that no serioWl of Latin America and the thkd Christian can absolve himseril

world from being concerned with tb18 As fa- as celibacy is concerned question but added I sense

the NCCB unanimously rea1- great reluctance among the bis~ firmed clearly and strongly the ops to take a stand either crill shyexplicit teaching of the Vatican cizing or endorsing various as-Council on the current and ira- pects of the prosecution of the ditional observance of clerical war

celibacy Pastoral Councils To rumors that a Catholic The bishops are in search far

priest can leave the Chufth II sample constitutIon for pap marry and in a few years obtaID 10ral councils which will clead permission from Rome for lay distinguish it from the diocesaD Catholic standing a spokesman eonsultors and the priests seDshyfor the bishops answered ates

This is a policy the JJoJv Twenty-four topics were pre-Father controls Any priest who sented which might profitably be engages in this is engaging in ma~ers of study ranging frOlia spiritual Russian roulette Be adult education to vocations has no guarantee any dispensa- National Parishes tion will be given to him in tile It was shown that accordingfuture

A survey of the distribution Pope Pauls Ecclesiae Sanctae a and utilization of priests in the bishop has the rigllt to suppresS

national parishes-those estabshyU S is being prepared bythe lished for special ethnic groups Center for Applied Research in T R C h

the ~postolate (CARA) Nothing he oman urIa oweveJl definite could be presented since bid the bishops not use this rIght

because of concordats WIth go~only 63 per cent of the dioceses shyhave responded so far ernments or the physical or

moral rights of persons involved Priestly Formation without first referring to tho

Eight general recommenda- Holy See tions were made for all semina- Since these conditions do ~ ries the seminary structure apply t0 the U S the blsh shy~

c~nci Ibear documents that provJ- of the new edition of the CeD SIons made for a system of Bible will be published in earlYcommunication between the litoshydet body and the administrative 1968 mong the scholars preshyand teaChing faculties so that paring translations are five dieshystudents may present their views tingUishec Protestant memberS regarding the seminary program Newman for faculty consideration that It was recommended thai seminary advisory boards of priests in Newman work be enshyqualified members of clergy and couraged to secure advanced laity apart from seminary per- academic degrees especially m sonnel be encouraged that a theology that the high rate otl BA degree or its equivalent be turnover among Newman priests an entrance requirement for a be curtailed that part-time theoloID seminary that eccel- chaplains be made full time siastical studies begin with a where possible that more priests course so students lerceive the be assigned to the Newman meaning order and pastoral end Apostolate for the growing numshyof their studies ber of Catholics attending col-

The bishops also encouraged lege and university that the amalgamation where seminaries bishops re-emphasize the growshycannot maintain a suitable pro- ing importance of the Newmali gram due to size unsatisfactory Apostolate facilities inadequate faculty fi- New Dioceses nancing and similar programs The committee on presen~

Deacons names for new bishops will a- It was recognized that there deal regularly with the questi_

will be permanent order of of diocesan boundaries and tile deacons established and that the establishment of new dioceses

_NCCB will be empowered 10 do Turn to Pll4Ie SeVeD

7 Diocesan Sc~oots Students Reap Honors Aplenty as Senior Year Enters Into Final Phase

Honors aplenty are being garne~d by Diocesan students among them Andrea Trczinski a senior at Tauntons Bishop Cassidy High whos been selected as one of 15 New England students to participate in the 1967 Youth Science Congress jointly sponsored by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the National Science Teachers Association

In the course of the two and a half day congress now in progshyress at the NASA Electronics Research Center in Boston Anshydrea like the other participants will present a 15 minute oral

report of the project which gained her inclusion in the

event

Duck Fond The presentations say conshy

gress officials are not comPetishytive but will give listening scishyentists and teachers the opporshytunity to evalute them and offer guidance to the students

Andreas project is an arehaeshyological and geological investigashytion of an early American potshytery works The Duck Pond Site It has already won her many awards in state and reshygional science fairs

Students from Stang and from St Anthony and Holy Family high schools in New Bedford were participants in an essay eontest sponsored by the New Bedford Serra Club on The Role of the Priest and Nun in the Christian Community

First place winner was Cidhshyerine Giammalvo of Stang and cliiIdren at st Josephs Home to mnners-up were Mary Black a~ outing Sunda) while NBSers also of Stang and Michael at Mt St Marys have elected Tames of St Anthony Stang their officers for next year inshyalso won a plaque for baving the eluding Martha Nugent presi- most entrants in the contest dent Judith Doolan vice-presi-

At Stang theyre congratu- dent Susan Bernier s~cretary lating Cynthia Curry named to Diane Berger treasurer represent ber school on an area -Speed reading is the word at department stores teen fashion Sacred Hearts Fall River where board Mt St Mary Academys some 30 students are devoting representative to the same board th~ hours eery Saturday is Elaine Chaves The lucky gals mo~ing to a reading improve will receive modeling instruc- ment course Reading power tiona in connection withmiddot their ~ed and word study are em- appointments and will also be phasized in the 10 week course given the clothes they model which began April 1 Again at Stang word has Also at SHA varsity and jayshyreached the office that John vee teams in volleyball and basshyGolenski a 65 grad and now s ketball honored Mrs GeGrge Be sophomore has received a Snyder their coach at a surprise grant for Summer study in dinner Well they might since

EuroSePbe hi A ta Mrs Snyder has led them to olani PB coop nees Narry League championships in

Still very much in the newa ~t~ sports are notices of college scholar-middotmiddot Honoi lroviJiclai ships and acceptances At Doshyminican Academy Fall River Jesus-Mary students honored Elarne Fisette has been accepted the Mother Provincial of the lReshyat Southern Conn State College ligiousf Jes~s-Mary at ~ eer-middot powet supplied to them occupied Briana Doherty Linda Guill Diane Giasson at SMTI and Sue emony mcludmg ~e readmg of the bishops The NCCB will furshy mette and Mary Wynne Gagnon at Bryant while Jerome lIl~ ad~ress by PaulIne Dumas ther study the matter

Mancini has received a full tul- s~hool preSident the presenta- Oth b t h h th b h f f1 er su Jec s w IC e is shytion grant from St Annesmiddot~os- tion 0 owers anll gIfts and a ops treated were communica- pitaI School of Nursing ana a pe~orrnance by the g~et C~U tions between the bishops and

padial grant from the Utlion OccasIOn was the Provmcial smiddot tmiddott tmiddotmiddotmiddot f p hi 1 bullbull t t d Colle Ins 1 u IOns 0 Ig er earnshyosplmiddottal dItto annua VISit 0 heaca emy 1 middotmiddotmiddottmiddotiUmiddot S h n J bullbull Ilg In bullbulle c anges In pershy Receiving annual renewable ChristIan Youth Movement mission middotformiddot the alienation of

Scholarships at Jesus middotlVlary m~mbe~ of Prevost and JM~ churchproperty increased edushy J

Academy Fall River are Su- Wlll VISIt Nazareth Hall thiS cation onthe threats of abortionshyianne Lagarde awarded a $2300middotmiddot month and will also sJonsor a cooperation with the YMCA ami grant from Fordham University cake sale Sunday AprIl 30 A YWCA better coordination with and Yvonne L Berger recipient vigil service is set for Monday ihe usce celebration of the ()f three grants from Northeast- em University totaling $2180 Suzanne previously received a $2500 scholarship from Northshye~tern ~nd Yvonne is a semishyfinalist In the Rhode Island State Scholarship Program

Prevost reports that Gerry Ferris has been accepted at Bridgewater State College and Cassidy notes that Rita Donnelly has received a full scholarshiJ) fto Johnson and Wales Business School

Chess Tournamenamp Prevost students arent giving

their gray matter a rest this vacation week In progress is a schoolwide chess tou~ament

IIDd the winner will receive a tro~nv

On the agenda at Cassidy is a Junior College Day slated for Thursday April 27 a Couples Dance Saturday April 29 and a father-daughter night Wednesshyday May 3

lPRan lltetJreat

Mt St Mary students will helli a taUt by Rev Bernard Sullivan Friday April 28 in preparation for the retreat theyll be making the first three days ox May Also to speak at Mount on the same day is Mother Mary Martha Assistant General of the Sisters of St Joan of Arc whose topic will be vocations The Sisters of St Joan of Arc care for rectories bishops houses and seminaries

Still in the vocation line Sister Mary LaSalette of the Mount faculty will attend a meeting at Bristol Community College Wednesday April 26 Subject Vocations

Dominican Academy students will enjoy their senior prom Frishyday June 9 at the Hearthstone restaurant and congratulations are in order for DAs student council moderator Sister Mary Agnes who has been offered a

graduate assistantship at the University of Wisconsin Prevost members of the Nashy

tional Honor Society treated

April 24 and members will hold Year orFaith in connection with their year-end banquet Saturday the 1900th anniversary of the June 3 _ martyrdom of Ss Peter and Paul

Prevost debaters are preparing celebration of Communications for the JFK tournament to be Day May 7 held at Cassidy in May Thus far the Prevost team has chalked up an 8-5 record

(ASA BLANCA Just Across The

Coggeshall St Bridge Fairhaven Mass

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STEAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

MOTHER PARKERS famous for OLD FASHIONED DOUGHNUTS

QUALITY and baked by your Sunbeam Baker SERVICE

CONTESTS WINNElRS Winners of New Bedford Serra Club essay contest on roles of priest nun in Christian community are from left runners-up Mary Black Stang High and Michael James St Anthony High and first prize winner Catherine Giammalvo Stang High Stang also won plaque for having most entrants in contest

Parent-Teacher Night is sched- duties for many of the Cassidy uled for Tuesday April 25 at students meanS more time to JMA and will feature as a profit byvarlous e~ucational opshyspeaker Dr Betty-Anne Metz of portunities At the Mass State

Bristol County Community Col- Science Fair Friday April 21 lege through Sunday April 23 Cheryl

And Prevost students are anti- McCaffrey top winner in the cipating a dance Friday April school SCience Fair and chosen 28 at St Annes Audit6rium The one of the 25 representatives Torquays will play from the Fall River Regional

This isNational Library Week will repr~sent Cassidy High toshyand mixt week is Secretaries gether WIth Pamela Candee Week so maybe everyone should The Massachusetts Youth Cit shyreld a book about secretaries izenship Conference at Bndg~shyAt any rjlte Cassidy Future Sec- water sc~eduled ~or tod~y ~Ill retaries of America will tour a attract the follOWIng 10 JUnIors North Dighton plant and visit chosen as representatives Donna Wheaton College Also pn their Cole M~y Fenton Kathl~en agenda isa reception on Sunday Hanna Eb~beth Laffan Paulme and aluncheon next Wednesday Lecuyer

Cassidy Go Despite Vaeatlon Also Carolyn McCaffrey Joshy anne Orchekowski Margarita

Free time from regular class Procopio Anne Marie Sullivan and Donna White The subject of this years Conference is ValuesU SmiddotmiddotBishopmiddots in a Changing World

Continued frQm Page Six At EmmailUel College Friday hiterdiocesan Offices April 21 three of Cassidys lanshy

An extended discussion on guage students will compete in sueD agencies might be best the annual French Contest for strUctured and adequate manshy High School Students They are

fHE ANCHORshylhun April 20 1967

Labor Statement Wins Approval

SAN ANTONIO (NC) Farm labor leaders hailed the Catholic bishops of Texas for issuing a statement supshyporting the right of farm workshyers to form unions and urging national legislation to protec~ this right

Spokesmen of farm associashytions responded that they do no~

oppose field workers joining unions but withheld comment pending a study of the bishops pronouncement

The bishops declared that among the basic rights of a human person is the right of freely founding associations or unions for working people and that all should have the right of freely taking part in the activities of these unions without risk of reprisal

The statement was issued at the conclusion of a two-day meeting of the board of directors of the Texas Catholic Confershyence It was approved by the bishops of the 10 Texas dioceses

Farm workers in the Rio Grande City area of south Texas have been on strike since last June and their efforts had been endorsed previously by Archshybisho Robert E Lucey of Sam Antonio and Bishop Humberto Medeiros of Brownsville

Leading the praise for the bishops was Cesar Chavez of Delano Calif national director ofthe United Farm Workers Organizing Committee whose Local No2 is striking in Rio Grande City

Chavez termed the statement very powerful and very charshyitable lle said he thinks the declaration is an answer to the prayers of thousands and thoushysands of farm workers in the Southwest asking that their Church and Church leaders stand with them in their struggle to ~ure social -justice as ennunshyciated toy the popes in the many encyclicals~

DEBROSS OIL co

Heating Oils and Burners

365 NORTH FRONT STREET NEW BEDFORD

992-5534

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 Medical Gr9uP Inducts Nun

Spring Cleaning Reveals WASHINGTON (NC) - The first nun was inducted as a fel shylow of the American College ClI Obsttricians and Gynecologists at its 15th annual clinical here

Hoards of Yardgoods lBy Mary Tinley Daly The honor went to SiBtel

Spring housecleaning is like a great white light revealshy Miriam Paul Klaus of the Me~

ing all Its not just dust in the bedsprings and radiators cal Mission Sisters who have headquarters in Philadelphi~the great unwashed slats of Venetian blinds gummy glasses dlJring the coJeges session~stashed away on an upper shelf finding of borrowed books Sister Miriam Paul was nlaquolI

too long unreturned These are what i call honest misshytakes chores you dont mind having household help help you with like doing floors walls windows rugs furniture

This is orthodox Spring cleaning such as every housewife can t a c k 1e have done with and point to with pride No the nuisances at least at our house are the secret sins jobs weve really anticipatshyed getting at one of these days but the llPecific day never seems to come And nobody but nobody can help in this department

Moms Hobby Shll)p For instance theres the used

furniture corner of the attic sOmetimes laughingly referredto as Moms Hobby Shop Theres the dresser bench Mom b going to cane when and if Mom learns how to cane an art supposed to be lotS of fun There ure two perlectly good boudoir chairs or iiI be perfectly good when theyre recovered And the little stand picked up at uuction waiting patiently to be antiqued when and if Mom learns how to antique another touted fun hobby bull

What the good-natured ribbers of Moms Hobby Shop dont know is that another secret cache of to-be-dones awaits in one corner of the basement the touch of a little hand pktures to be framed along with a framshying kit which any child can master another kit of clear plastic resin ideal for embedshyding coins flowers leaves rocks shells pictures novelties jewshyelry So far efforts have reshysulted in the embedding of one penny askew and far from ornashymental Theres also ever~thing

you need to wire a lamp everyshything but the skill that is

A strong-minded woman would become a Jill of all trades masshy1er skills necessary and do away with the jobs one at a time or else give away all t1e maIdngs ~~t then a str~))~gmil)d~ woman probably wouldnt have gotten

intothisfixin the first place With springcleani~goncoming

lik~ the inevitable tinie and taxes we decided to dean around the undones in attic and

basement facl up to legitimate eatchiills like the ~drponlClos~ etsbull

Dougherty High Band Wins Festival Honor

WASHINGTON (NC)-In this middot ease to the victors it was a mix- ture of cherry blpssoms and roses

The members of the Cardinal Dougherty High School Band of

Phiiadelphia marched ltYff with first place honors in the band

middot eompetitlon at the annual Cherry Blossom Festival _parade -an event which attracts tens of

middotthousands of visitors annually 10 the nations capital

The vIctory was nothing new to the bandsmen - and girls They won first prize two years ago and last March 17 won middotfirst prize in New Yorks St Patricks Day paralaquoe

present to receive the honor PelshyThere not in one not in two but in every closet we were sonally She is stationed at the

communitys Holy Family Heampfaced with the nemesis a box or pital in Dacca East Pakistan a bag or apile of yardgoods

The college accepts as fello~Forgotten IItems physicians who specialize in obshyThe sewing center has been stetrics and gynecology and aregoing pretty full tilt at our house judged competent and ethical byrecently what with a bedroom their colleagues Sister Miriamwhere we can set up the mashy Paul took the written examinashychine the ironing board sew tions for the American Boardseveral hours every day walk of Obstetrics and Gynecology iQout shut the door and come back Pakistan in 1965middot and the oralto undisturbed work the followshy examination in Chicago in Apriling day 1966

Matter of fact we thought She is a native of Viennasmugly we were getting all

Allstria a naturalized U S citi shysewed up tents and jumpers zen and a convert to the Cathoshyand miniskirts for the young

suits skirts hats for the more NO ATTLEBORO ART WINNERS Pauline Lemieux lic Faith from Judaism She joined the Medical Mission Sisshyconservative first grade William Midon eighth grade Cecile Parent ters in 1957 after completing herWe even felt no compunction sixth grade were the leading artists in the contest conshy medical education at the Univerin indulging a long-standing ducted in Sacred Heart School No Attleboro sity of Louisville Ky and herhabit of visiting a yardgoods residency at Barnes Generalcenter quite often picking up an Hospital in St Louis She haGirresistible bargain in cloth seshy

~spent six years at the sisteplecting a pattern and actually hoods hospitals in Pakistaneompleting garments

The sewing room Markie~ Sister Mary Luke Gray an- erstwhile bedroom was in reshy o~her Medical Mission physician markably good shape as a proshy has also passed _the AniericaD duction center and could eVeR IMAGE-MAKING Board of 0bstl~tricsand Gyne suffer the pangs of Spring houseshy

In this ever-changing worldcleaning with mere picking up of scraps setting 10 rights and a horough cleaning

But those unearthed forgotshyten treasures in the other closshyets Why there was enough mashyterial here to keep Us chained 10 that sewing machine as was Proshymetheus to his rock

Now what had we intended 10 do with that short length of pink flannel Oh yes wed picked it up for the proverbial song at a visit to a mill in South Caroshylina would have it until the folshylowing spring and make a coat for Mary Daly Brennan (Mary is now nine years old and this pink bit wouldnt even make a coat for her little sister) MUs~ lin broadcloth velvet tweedshyyou name it we have it -

Out into the clear with every item from every box bag and pile

Io more saving no more stashing away no more visits 10 remnant counters

The Head of the House paying one of his rare visits to our sew- ing center viewed the miniature mill-end display

By the way he asked hows about putting a new pocket in these trousers And sOme shirt buttons that have popped

OK First t~ings first

Baltirnor~ Nun to Head C()lIeg~ Advisory Unit

PITTSBURGH (NC) -Sister M Cleophas Costello of Balti shymore will serve as chairman of the newly formed Commission on Higher Education of the Fedshyeration of the Sisters of Mercy

The commission will serve in an advisory capacity in mat~ers concerning the 15 colleges opershyated by the order The federashytion numbers 15000 nUDll throughout the United states Canada and Lat~n America

New President LOS ANGELEE (NC)-5ister

Cecilia Louise Moore will beshycome president of Mount St Marys College here in Califorshynia ~)D Aug 15 next succeeding Sister Mary Rebecca who haS headed the womens liberal aris college since 1961

where what is in one moment is obsolete the next there is nothing more changeable than

the image of the ideal woman This image that stamps itself on the minds of millions causes fashion design- ers to change styles and forces females alI over the world to rush to the beauty facshytories to be turned out as its carbon copies is created in many ways Sometimes it starts with a particular model that hits the publics fancy or a cinema star that reaches her audience or even as in the case of Mrs Kennedy with the rise and public acclaim of a woman associated with politics

However whatever the reason or manner or time that creates an idol of this woman 8Jl idol she is at least until someone else more exciting comes along ~ cpallenge her place

This phenomenon of one womshyan or tyPe of woman leading alI others is nothing new Im sure there has been an ideal type of beauty since Neanderthal man dragged his mate by her long thick tresses into his cave (eer- tainly no short-haired eave girl wOuld have shone m prehistoric times)

Charles Dana Gibson pPOVided the image of the goddess of the

Protestants to Speck At Catholic Retreats

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - At least one Protestant minister Or layman ~ill appear as guest

speaker at retreats held in the San Antonio area during the coming year an archdiocesan committtee OIl lay ecumenism has decided

The ecUmenical aspects of the retreat program win carry over into a 1967 Ecumenical Diashylogue scheduled for June 29 UI July 1 at St J~ephs retreat bouse here Selected ministers

priest Sisters Brothers and laity will be speakers

cology examinations and win 1900s with heavenly sketches of return to Pakistan to continue a dark haired question mark her practice coiffured beauty with Ii lOng 11gt

graceful swanlike neck Immediateiy all fashion-con-

csious females of that day rushed out to the local emporiums to purchase henna rinses and rats (the hair peces of the 90s) to puff out their skimpy pompashydOlUS

The tWihkling 20s had no sooner been born than the It Girl Clara Bow caused the daughters of the aforementioned females to toss away their rats head for the nearest barber and expose their ears as well as their knees

Not a decade later these knees were encased in satin lounging pajamas and the ears hidden under the marcelled curls that Jean Harlow sported

And such has been the tide of fashion everchanging and generally influenced by circumshystances from the short skirts of the material-rationed war years through the New Look that welcomed the advent of peace

TOdays Qlieen

What of our present fashion Queen Who is the woman ofshythe 60s who isthe darii~goft~ fashion press and fashion de- signers oddly enough in this age of affluencemiddot it seems that the female wile outshines an others is ~ long-legged wideshyeyed British model who looks like an ad for Care packages and answers to the improbable name of Twiggy ~sley ~ornby (the name on

Twiggys birth certificate) is a 11 year old pathetically thin ex- schoolgirl who has been sky- rocketed to fame and fortune through the efforts of her Sven laquoali -her manager

Her waif-like face shining Jrom the cOvers of hundreds of magazines haS inspired young females everywhere ie nmtfgt their hairdress~rs ~ ) g~miR eut paint theirmiddot lower lashes_ like those of a kewpie don and push away t~at dessert pla1e Twiggy is apparently the JleW

idol of the fashion world - at l~ast until next season

9 Nows RightTime to Plant Peas for Early Enjoyment

By J~ aridlfan1ynRoderiek It is a eustom in New England to serve salmon and peas

00 the Fourth of July Years back this was the time when thresh salmon showed up Jin New England fish markets and Jllative peas could be found ~t the corner store Now we have frozen peas year round and amp Imon may be had throug~- ~t most of the year Thll3 lm-as taken the special delight (iJlJt of native foods but we can G1tfll appreciate fresh vegetabtea limd fish made much morepaia-~ oble by being put on a tablel 3

day or so after it is caught If you want fresh peas fortne

~ourth of July you can sow your creed about the third week of llIlay We prefer ours a little ear_I ~er and so we get the seeci ~lanted by the second or third week in April 00 that the planta will be well on their way before ~e cold weather is gone and (he warm weather arrives By QlllIll reckoning the peas we planted last week will be ready ~ the second week of June

Peas are simple to grow and Ililave nO special difficulties They Ilteed sun moisture and good s6il A row of peas may be planted fulna matter of 10 minutes ahd OOten forgotten until it ia tiine

Th k Si te h d th IIS wee s rae c ass act out the sacrainent to go along with their lesson in the religious Workbqok My daughter came homedelirious with joy because she was chosen to bring in the baby

We unearthed a doll that we ilelt was closest to newborn baby size and Grandma helped by finding the baptismal garments that were stored in her house and by dressing the fortunate stand-in while she explained to Meryl and Melissa that this was the same dress that they wore when they became members of the Church

In fact the children were awed as I further explained that actually four children had used these baptismal garments Meryl ~gan making plans immediateshyly Ann Marie is going to be the father (this in our all-girl ochool) Wendy is the godmother and Karen is going to be the ptiest because her new little

~r pickinlt b~othe was christened Sunday Jrirst tum the soil over to il a~d she knows jllst what to do

ilepth of about six inches or ~ Innoeent DIscussion and break up the clods Make ~ Even Melissa got into the act twrrow about an inch deep~~tl as she proceeded to spiel off m drop the peas into the furrow list of names that she thought iellst an inch and a half a~a~lt t~~ dfl~lshould be given Meryl eovel the furrow water ~~~ si~ e~pIiil1edto her that salt would ~ack a~d wait In 50 days or so dlependmg on the varIety of seed ~u ~se the peas wi1l be ready faj plckmg and ~atmg

Plant Anywhere )peas may be planted in rows

lMlt they may also be planted aishylllillost anywh~re they will get the IgtUUn I planted two little roWlJ ~tween some raspberry bushes raquolaquolother row in front of a flowe ~ where my wife will be able 00 get to them and still another JIlandful of seed in a foundation ~ianting in front of the house

This latter may seem to be goshyl1mg a little too far but by the ~me the annuals a~e in bloom le peas will have been con~

d oome the plants pulled up and DO one will be the wiser

The point is that one does not Thlave to make a big project out ~ growing a packet of seeds mnce half the pleasure is to be

flound in doing a minimum of work while reaping deliciolw nesults

In the Kitchen Most middot0f the books which conshy 1 thltOOJlI emse ves with heading

lIUr children in the right direc_ (tioqas living thinking Chrlsshyllians recommend that middotthebestW4yOOle Sacrament of Baptism is to Ilaye them attend an actual cer+ ~ony This is quite true as we

~rvotlCnced when Jason WM lgtavtized and Meryl and Melis Were allowed to attend

We were fortunate in that the l)lliest who performed the cereshyIlllOny was a personal friend who _plained clearly to the childreUll _actly wha~ he was doing rOIl liIUre this made a lasting impres-Ilion but I also feel that theii IlIIllnds were on the celebratiollll

be Pllt on the dolls tongue to preserve her from the sins of the Yorld and to give her III

atlste for wisdom It was delightful to hear them

discussing the sacrament in such inn~cent and childlike ways and yet witlt understanding that demonstrated wisdom far beyond their years The following incishyde~~ occurred at about the time this was happening and demon- strates the feeling of some chishydrep arid the naive wisdom they possess For two or three days last week Joe had seen a female rabbit in the yard and he had pointed it out to the children

th t itsayIng a appeared ready to have a litter Sure enough the rabbit did have a litter under the mulch around one of the rose bushes The children were thrilled but

f un ortunately a neighbors dog found the litter and killed the tiny newborn rabbits When

~~~~JIiCheese Gingerbread l3~ounee package ere a JllIl

cheese l cup molasses 2 eggs

1 cups sifted all-purpose ftOtllfi teaspoon baking soda

1 teaspoons baking powdeR 1 teaspoon cinnamon

OOnat was to take place at home 1 teaspoon ginger smd on all the people who were t~aspoon cloves ltllllming to help them celebrate 1-8 teasp~n salt

llhis in itself wasnt bad as it IIgt boiling water lB alsoimportant that they ~al- 1) Beat the cream cheese urim koo th~t a baptism is aiQytul Ce- ~BOft andfluftly then gradually llWliori which should be shared beatit the molasses Ytdh others butwith the confu- 2~ Beat- in the eggs one at Cl

CATHOLIC WOMEN HONOR BISHOP Welcoming Most Rev James L Connolly to the Annual Bishops Night Sponsored by the New BedfordCathoJic Womens Club are Mrs John W Glenn left president and Mrs Daniel F Dwyer first vice-president

Receiver Takes Over FHA Starts Foreclos~te lProcee~ings

Against Retirem~rjfttoriu~ MOUNT ANGEL (NC) - A

oourt-appointed receiver hall taken over operation of Mount Angel Towers a $34 million reshytirement home completed scarceshyy more than a year ago

The receiver-Portland attorshyney John R Fawt Jr - was named less than a month after the Federal Housing Administrashytion announced that it was start shying foreclosure proceedings against the home here in Oregon

Mount Angel Towers built on Beven acres of land donated to it

Sch001 Honors Chaplain

Killed in Vietnam PLEIKU (NC)-A new wing

has been added to St Pauls

School here in memory of Father (Maj) William J Barragy of the Dubuque archdiocese who was

killed in a helicopter crash inVietnam May 4 1966

A brass plaque on the office wall states Rev William J

Melissa appeared on -the scene Barragy (Major U S Army)boni October 13 1923ordained

she said realistically New life May 22 1948 dled In VIetnamI k p un and its all over Just May 4 1966 like Jesus born at Christmas

The new wing has five classshy dead at Easter rooms all on the ground floor

Last year when my oldest St Pauls is in the charge of the to teachyoungstersabout daitghier received the sacrament I Sisters ofSt Paul de Chartres

of tfie HolyEucharist for the first who alsohave anorphahge near tim~~ wil celebrated With a fam the iichoOtmiddot Thereare 1000 Viet ililgtru~ch Ali lt~~ everyon~ namese children receiving pri seeffied to enjoy was warm mar an -secondary educatmiddot10n i~

a bullbull ging~tbread the schOOL

by theilelghobririg Mount Angel Benedictine Abbey was billed on its completion in 1965 as the nations first Catholic retirement home

it was not the most prosperous however and by JIeb 7 when the mortgage-holder assigned the mortgage to FHA which had inshysured it the 207-unit six-story building had only 80 residents in 61 apartments

Appointment of a receiver was the first step in FHAs machinery toward eventual sale of the propshy~rty to another private operator

The home will be run as beshyfore according to the FHA Portshyland office until it can be sold to a suitable organization to maintain its operation as housing for senior citizens

FHAs office in Washington said Mount Angel Towers was one of about 20 such projectsshynot all Catholic - which had failed since 1960 when FHA mortgage insurance became available to them More than 200 have been built

llHE ANCHOR-Thurs April 20 1967

Sisters Assume Pasroral Duties

AKRON (NC)-Priests visit flBl administer the sacraments bu~

day by day the ordinary passhytoral duties are performed bsr nuns in Brazilian parishesmiddot il1l Natal and Salvador administered by the Daughters of Divine Charity

Their duties which includ~ the distribution of Holy Comshymunion were described here bV Mother M Fidelis Weninger who worked in Brazil for 21 years prior to her election in 1965 as mother general of th0 community

The Daughters of Divine Charity she said care for those parishes just as though they were priests Of course we cant administer the sacraments but we handle everything elseshysuch as pre-marriage instructionD and parish visitations

Permission for the nuns t distribute Communion was obshytained from Pope Paul vr through Bishop Eugenio de Araujo Sales apastolic adminisshytrator of Sao Salvador de Bahia she explained

Sister Mother Fidelis ordeli has been working in Brazil sincia 1919 and now has 460 nuns there aUexcept 18 of whom are Brashyzilians

The order has 1900 membero serVing in 10 countries throug~shyout the world with headquartern

in Vienna Mother Fidelis U1 completing a five-month visiia tion of the orders 37 convents in the United States

Greater Boston Sister Gets Fulbright Award

MEDFORD (NC) - SistCll Madeline Marie Nevins a gradushyate student at Tufts University has been awarded a Fulbright Fellowship to study medievaD French literature at the Univershysity of Paris France

The Mass Sister of St Josep~

will complete her doctoral wor at Tufts after her year abroad

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Schedules Convocation 1 bull

On Council Documents WILMINGTON (NC)- A dayshy

llong session of lectures and disshyICUssions on the Wilmington dioshyease and the post-council er81 will be conducted here

Some 600 clergy and laity are ~From anOlde English recipe - expected to attend the meeting

which is being sponsored by a Plumper rounderp bullarollp of ~concerned Catholics illl th~Wg~ing~on piocese fuller muffins~

batter is smooth 5) Gently stir in the boiling

Dn of the party it was difficul Um~~ water bull ascertain just how much the7 3) s~tt tltgether the flour bak- 6) Pourinto a greased 7 by ~ learned With this in mincll Ang ooda baking powdei ~ H pan Sunbeam English Muffins ~ were delighted when 1ft andspice~ f) Bake in a 350 oven 40 to lIound that Meryl was studying 41) Add the dry ingredients te 45 mlhutes] add about cup Olf Baked by your Sunbeam Baker _tism in 8daoo1 l1he cheese mixtu-l0 GUlring watilll Jl3iBins but this is optionaL

-

bullbull

HAPPINESS IS FAMILY REUNION A weekly radio reunion is Sula Spanish Honduras L~ft Barton Albert ham radio operator middot)liIl

enjoyed by Mr and Mrs Bernard Sullivan Holy Name parish Fall River Swansea connects the Sullivans with their daughter Right InSart Pedro

with their daughter Sister Anne Marie RSM missioned to San Pedro Sula Jack Gaffney performs the same service for Sister Anne Marie

Monastery VisitsSt~esses Serio~smiddot Ham Oplr~t~rs Arrangemiddot We~k~yRadiQ C1tat~ ChmiddoturchSituatilon CRAWFORDSVILLE (NC)C bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbull bull bull bullbull bull

bull bull 0In East -Germany BERLINmiddot (NC)-Christiari

ehurches in communist-ruled lEast Germa~y are suff(~ring from government harrassshymentand restrictions a Luthershy1m bishop told the eastern sec-

For Fa11 RiverParents Missionary Sistet Dr Eric Dean chairman of the religion and philosophy departshy

ments at Wabash College here Thursdays the most important day in the week to Mr and Mrs Bernard Sullivan in middotIndiana plans extended visits

of Holy NameparishFall River Its the day they talk to their daughter Sister Anne to severalmiddot Benedictine monas- shyMarie RSM assigned since last August to missi)n work middotin San Pedro Sula Spanish teries this year The visits Wt)ll

H h kl

onduras T emiddot wee y db

conversatIon is arrange y two h d

am ra W)

operators Jack Gaffshy be financed by a Carnegie gran~

receivedmiddot through the GreatLak~ ney in San Pedro Sula and Colleges Association Harton Albert of Swansea was on retreat However arshy with Sister from their livjng

tion oflt the synod of Germanys It came about tl)rough 3 rangements were made on the middotroommiddot ~eceptiori is excep~nt Protestant Church Council sPot for the first of the weekly noted Mrs Sullivan fully 88 middot~iiJbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbulliIbullbullbull_

The clergyman Bishop Fried- series of coincidences that conv~sations good as a local telephoriecallmiddot bull III rich Wilhem krummachet of Mrs SuliivaIi ascribesld the The luck extended to a fellow Another beneficiary ofthmiddot 11I11I J B ~ East Geimany said that SChool iuck6f the Irish and had its religious of Sister Anne Marie weekly radio reunion is REvmiddot bull ii ~~ld~~a~I~~V~~ti~~~~bel~~~~~~ ~t~~A~~~n~a~~nC~~i~~~~~~~ ~~~~~i~o~Sre~~~~r~~~~~~i~~~d~~~~~=~tOfS~tat~~~ ILUMBER CO beliefs 1 - $140 teleph~rie bill talkinllto ly appointment ~nd asked Mrs Mariesbrother bull bull

Lut~eranBish~~ ~~t Fr~liz th~~o~~~~g~~~riotin~~ri li~~tmiddote~r$Ullivan t if hSheWtohUld ~ewla~t a FOImiddotwonderlnmiddotg friends of the 11I 5middot0middot Dortmoutmiddothmiddot ~harf of Berlin chairman of th~ ~~SSl1g~ 0 er JTIQ er ar a Fall River Sister be it notedltGe~man Protestant C h u r c hmiddot rlidlO o~erator middotwho darra~ge a mmu~e slud MrAI~~rt r0rt~7 that she has middotexercisedmiddotthe name- and yan~ismiddot Council made similar charges at connectlOnmiddot for you said a WIth he got the PrOVIdence ~e western section of the synod frleId and someone else sug- Jlother on the phone and gave

I rgested Mr Albert middotwhom the h th of b IfoBejause the Eastmiddotmiddot lterman ~ r bull er e surpnsl e~ Ie as t t t t t b Sullivans- had )mown _for

some bull

she heard her daughter s vOICeIrovernmen res riC s col ac s e- t b th d th ht f ~ E t G -P t t ts Ime u a neVlr Qug omiddot J I don t even have to go tomiddotbullween as elman ro es in _ bl If and those in the West middotthe Protmiddot =~ a ~OsSI e channe omiddot cmmu ~wansea to talk said Mrs SII~ - t t d h ld t mcatlOnwIttISpamshHO1QQras livan Mr Albert can oConnec~

flS an syno was e middotmmiddot wo llec- S l middotmiddotmiddott d M tons one in west Berliri and the T~e ul Iv~ns VISI e r~ AI~ th E tB j berts t)oIle to talk over th~ e er ~ear as er m possibility of contacting-Sister

Catholics face similar pr()b- Anne Marie~ While they were raquoems because of a divi~~d G~r- th~re he demonsthitelt hi~ equip- ~an~ The East Gelman govern- ment fishing bull around the- airshyinen~ ~has prevented thej)ishops wavesmiddot and picking up an ama-middot ~here ~ om attending meetings o~ teur in -rexas

~he G~rman Bishops Conference To his feliow ham he menshyheld iiJ the West tioned that he was looking for

Join in Praytr an operator in Spanish HOlldurasmiddot BiShop Krummacher said at

the synod that iii the preslmtmiddot criss the Protestant churches must use evelY opportunity to join with Catholics in prayer Catholics and Pwtestants he llaid are bound together b~ the word of the Lord and a common Ilesponsibility

The bisho~ said Protestants in East Germany have made every effort to obtain relief fwm antishyJeligious discrimination but govshyernment authorities have reshyjacted all appeals for action

He said such refusals of the East Gelman regime to end the assaults on religion is partmiddot of communist strategy and planshy

ming To further their objectives he said the comTIunists will pelshymstip indoctrinating children in 1lheir ideology while interfering with the consciences and rights _ tJ children and their parenti

And the next voice wemiddot heard recounted Mrs Sullivan still sounding amazed was a man saying This is Sal Pedro Sula Spanish Honduras

Not only was Jack Gaffney th r operator from Honduras in te same city as Sister Anne Marie but it developed that he lived across the street from her

convent a~d had me~ her o~ sevshyeral occaSlOns- He ImmedIately offered to r~n across ~he s~reet and prmg Sister to hiS mlcro-middot phone lgtut it turned out that sie

Wins Festival Piize NEW YOEK (NC) - The

Search produced by Father Peytons Family Theater has received an award at Monte Carlo in the annual television

competition sponsored by the International Catholic Radio and TV Association

hiS radiO eq~llPrne~t to the tel~ phone and the Sulhvans can chat

Permit Experiment In bullShared Time P9RTLAND (NC)The Port-middot ~~nd school board has approvedai shared time experiment iii -Which children from a parochial ~chool in North Portland will attend classes part time in a nearby public school -

The experi~ent will inv~lve at first only physical education classes and will extend for only two middotyears

Children fro m Immaculate Heart parish elementary schoolwill be allowed to attend gym classes in Eliot school in the Qregon corrlmunity

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Bishop Medeiros Urges Justice ~ For Workers

BROWNSVILLE (NO) ~ Bishop Humbertltgt S Medeishyros of B~wn8ville whose diocese has been the scene of lPl 10-month strike by migrant farm laborers has told farm owners to meet their demands for highe) pay and bettei living eonditions

In a pastoral letter to all Cathshyolics in the diocese-most of the population - released today the bishop said

The present plight of the mishygrant farm workers of America is a constant reproach to our way of life

lFor 1lJse of Ail

They do not ask for charity They demand what is theirs by natural right When the affluent farmers pay a just wage to the migrant workers when they make it possible for him to supshyport himself and his family in frugal comfort and to provide education for the whole family they are not making a gift of their possessions to the farm worker they are simply handilg over to him what is his for they had arrogated to themselves what had becn given in common for Ute use of all

Migrant workers in the Rio Grande vaIiey surrounding Brownsville have been strikihg the larger farms for nearly a year in an attempt to get higher wages and better living condi- tions Their action supported by thc United Farm WorkersOr- ganizing Committee followed the limited success encountered by UFWOC laborers in Califomias lrape vineyards

Precarious Existence

But the Rio Grande workers have encountcred little successshyIllthough a recently organized boycott of produce has received growing support among the states food chains

Bishop Medeilos quoted libshyerally from both Pope John XXIII and Pope Paul VIs recent encyClical On the Development of Peoples in establishing the right of farm workers to adecent Jiving

But be also took note of the plight of Amcricas farmers themselvell who live out a preshylaquoarious existence unless they constitute large enterprises sllch as corporations 01 cooperashyiives

He urged both farmers and workers to organize in their own interest

Natural Ri~ht

Given the natiol~lr and even

aioll of Agricultule ald of fa~m workClS and of manyfarm own- ers in purticular it is urgent that they be aware of thei~ right

~~~o~~o~~~~C~~~i~II~~~~h I~~~~~ of development Which in the words of Pope Priul VI signifies ]lgte~cc

We know that every man hAS a basic natural right to form and join wOIkers unions which conshytribute to economic progress by dcfending his ights he said But thc circumstances of the times the world over indicate that for the common good it is also thc duty for both migrant farm workers and for farmers to form associations

The United States he said has bull duty to its miglant laborers llnd farmers which it must fulfill by passing apPlopliate legislashytion and using other suitable and dcmocratic means of assistance so that not only our tables but thc tables of the world may be blessed with the abundance of the fruits of the earth

lLO~AIJ INTEREST NIl IUSlHIOPS MEETING Disshy W Va Bishop Connolly Bishop Humberto IS Medeiros

cussing topics between sessions are Lawrence Cardinal Brownsville Tex and Bishop Joseph Brunini NatchezshySh~han Baltimore Bishop Joseph H Hodges Whe~]jng Jackson Miss

Churches Shore Latin America Failures

LutheranSees Stumbling Blocks Ahead SPJlINGFIELD (NC) -- The

Roman Catholic and Protestant churches have both failed in the past in Latin America and both face severe stumbli6g blocks in the future a Lutheran layman from Argentina said here

Dr Leopolydo Juan Niilus of Buenos Aires director of the Argentine Department of the River Plate Centre of Christian Studies discussed the Church in Latin America at a meeting of the Lutheran World Federations

Commission on Stewardship and Evangelism

He warned the group that in

too mlIlyquarters the Roman Cath~Ii~ Church has been the main whipping boy for the Latin AmeJican backwaldness~ and there hllS been too much selfshy

Some of the things atheist marxists are doingin our conti shynent should by heritage be added have bee) done by Christians

Looking toward the future Dr Niilus said there are very seshy

were stumbling blocks ahead for our Roman Catholic brethren also

Inseparable Unity They are he said being

hysterically requested by the supporters of the status quo tobecome their defenders once

again The Roman Church failed whenLatin America waS strug- glingJor its independence n may-all of us mayfail now

wheniHs struggling for its eco- lIlomic Independence Dr Niilus said that all

complacency and self-righteous- qhurdiesin Latin America roust ness about the positive role

quickly recognize that study and commitment as an insepshyarable unity is their most urshygent task if they are to play an effective role in the future of Latin America

They must study be said ~both political and economic isshysuell amplnd their theological imshy

Cancer Study lLOST UIS (NC)-The insti shy

lute Ior J)lolecular virology at St LOUiS University here in Misshy

bull souri has b~en awarded a $265shy

101 gJant from the National Canshyeer Instilute of the U S Departshyment of Health Jducation and Welf~re whic~ will enable reshysearchers to look for viral speshyeitic genetic material in himiavl elmcer

plicAtions and must be comshymitted to providing adequate pastoral CAre to those involvel in political and economic action

Pho~ClJI Archbishop Wons Sourin Medal

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Arc~

bishop John J Krol of Philadelshyphia bas received the annual Sourin Award of thc ] 17-yearshyold Catholic Philopatrian LiteJ1shyary Institute

The presentation marked the first time the award has beelll made to a member of the hieJ1shyarchy ]t is ordinarily given w a distinguished Catholic layman The Archbishop was cited 100 confident and courageous leadshyers~jP

played by the Protegttants in Latiq American social andeco N~w Music nomiltdeve~opment 1 PURCHAS~ (NC)-The Pius

Protestants be said have a X School of Litlllgical Music of share and~ responsibility in the Manhattanville College of the WHITE SPA creation of seriougt structural Sacred Heal1 here received maladjustments - both economic $20000 in grants from Charl~ and moral~ in Latin America ~nd Arthur Morgan Of New

York and John Morgan oi Most of the things our pro-Rockville Centre N Y to stimushy

gressive Roman Catholic bret~shy iae new music for the new BANQUETS bull WEDIl)~NG5imiddot P~RTIESilltc~national deprc~sed middotcondi-middot ie are doing today i~Latin m~rgy

America shouldbyheritage he -COMMUNION BREAKfASTSai~ have beel~~~nepygtrotes tants [ 11M3 PLEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

JEFFREY E SULLIVAN 993-778GFer~ Dome

MEMPHIS (NC)~Bi~tiopJoshySishopo~~~ed

550 Locust Street seph A Durick apostolic admin lFall River Mass istrator of the Nashville diocese received the first annual Human 672-2391 Relations Award from the Memshy Iltose E Sullivan CONVENIENT BANKINGphis Catholic Human Relations

Jeglrey E SullivallCouncil He was cited for his WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMSstands on human dignity and

at theequal job opportunities He reshycently instituted Project Equalshyity in Tennessee SlADES FERRY TRUST COMPANY

SOMERSET MASS

llhe most friendly democra~ic BANK offeringCORREIA amp SONS ONE STOP Complete One-Stop Banking

SHOPPING CENTER Clubmiddot Accounts Auto Loans Checking Accounts Business Loansbull Televisiolll _ Furniture SllDvings Accounts lleaiEstate Loansbull Appliances _ Grocery

AfJ Somerset Shopping Arellll-BroSJhtman St BridgeThe IFIlDmouth National BankMM ABDen $t New Bedforcll FlIlMOUTH MASS

Member Federal Deposit Insurance CorporotiBy the Village Green Since 18217middot354

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-11lun Apr 20 1961 12 - )

Irish Emigronts Concern B~hops inmiddot Pgstoral

DUBLIN (NC)-Thespiritual and social needs of Irish 0trtifirants and the importance of preparing them for their new life in other countries were major concerns of the

Irish hierarchy at its meeti~g here in- Maynooth In a pas~ toFal on emigration it wasmiddotmiddot pointed out that while de- parture of Irish people foigt residence in other cuiitries is on the decline those who do leave ~can be an enormous force formiddotgoodmiddotin the lands they go to if they have the right ideals and motLves and abilities properly developed

Without these the pastoral adds the alien enironment in which they find themselves may presen~ serious dangers to the spiritual and moral wenfare ~

the weaker ones Education and religious formashy

tion of young people by the bullbull schools and by the clergy coopshy

erating with teachers were cited as most effective contriilgtutiona

to the formation of those likely to emigrate

Among recommendations made in the pastoral for properly pi-eshyparing potential emigrants for livingin other lands were

Young people should be enshycouraied to remain in schooias long as they can benefit from H

Emphasis on the virtue of tem perance

The utilization of youth club activities (discussion clubs and

guiles) to help young members to acquire healthy and natural

sOcial graces and habits The aid of priests in helping

the young people to grow up to

confident maturity Counse by priests on expected

problems of housing suitable

I

REV ALBERT F SHOVELTON

Priest to Spe(l]llc At Seminar

Rev Albert E fShovelton dishy

rector of Sl Mary Home New Bedford will speak as a represhy

sentative of the Diocesan Comshy employment dangersmiddot to health Unity atNClline Committe~ longhours of work in other the75th anniversary celebration

countries advanced atrange- at Holy Trinity LutheranTo SurveyCU mentS with Catholic welfaeChurchNorth Easton Thursday agencies in countries 9f their April 27

CHIltAGO (NC) - The board choice and the provision of in Father Shoveltons talk ~iU of trusteesof the Catholic Uni-formlltion concerning facilities be part of aseroinar middotHe wili be versity of America Washing- abroad for emigrantS preceded by Rev Dr Nils Ehtenshyton D9middot his est~blished it ne~ ~he h6ldin~ Of Irisit~nhlli~middot 8~rom Boston University School survey and ogtlectlODs ~()mmlttee lft llt1rge centers lt ~ Theology whose subject will headed br ~ St ~OU~1l1(ly~a~ Aparishnewsletter s~nt be Ecun1eni~m in Protestant to study ~he funct~op and plaOl th I fmiddot h middotmiddotf g Perspective Today f th Cmiddotth li U -Of Of Dl0n y rom omemiddot 10 Or1ll1O ~ a 0 r ~vterslY~ lt the emigrants bfuricti6ns inFathel ShovElltons suoject will m~nqa ~r~o ern a hoh~ - the local parishes at Chri~tmaiJbe ~EcumeJ1ismin Roman Cllthshy

laCatton on middota national scale d thO t f th h oljc PerspectiveToday A dis-Th middottt an 0 er lmes 0 e yearw en JJ

e cozpml ee~~made up U4 they mightmiddot possibly be home~uss)n period will follow SIX laymen and four archbIshops ) The audience will be comshyall of whom ar~ pr~sent trustees _ prised of the Lutheran parisa o~ the u~lverslty Formatu~n at Southern PrOVince cmgregation the townspeople ~he conrrutteewasannounce by ~ _ the towns clergy and the stll~ FrancII Cardinal Spellman of Favors DIGcoraate ~ dents at Holy Cross Fathenl New york ch~rman of the MIAMI CNC)Bishops of the Seminary Catholic Urnverslty board province of Atlanta have giyen Pastor of Holy Trjnity is Rev

The appointment of the com- p~sts in the six-ctiocese area Kenneth E Bjorklund

nlission for Christian

SAVE DOLLARS

with the MERCHANlS

84EconomOO

Auto Loan Pian

mittee came against a backshyground of reports that the U S bishops might transfer its Ionshytrol of CatJlolic University to 11 group of laymen The univershysitys rector Bishop William J McDonald has denied the middotreshyports but the chairman of the

new commi~ee Dr Ca~roU Hochwalt SaId the commIttee has been given the widest posshysible mandate from which nothshying will be excluded Our assignment Dr Hochshy

walt saidis the most farshyreaching one possible We are to take a reaiistic look at every aspec~ of the university all it has developed under its original directive since 1889 and at its potential for the forseeable

gt futule It is obviously the trusshyteef desire to leave no qtiestfon unanswered which may aftect the unfyersityas anational-hlsti tution 1its ~aculty students ~d

permission to hear confessions in the entire province and they have also asked the National Brothers VOuDlltee~ Conference of Catholic BishoPs As firefilllhters

to consider restoring the perma- nent diaconate in dioceses that want it

The two decisions were ~~_ nounced after the Bishops held their annual meeting in Miami

Archbls~OP P~ul J Hallman of A~lanta SaId l~ IS cus~omary ~or prtests t~ receIve theIr faculties from theIr own dl~cese and they h~ve been restncted o use wlthn that diocese EffectlVelmshy

II NORTHBROOK (NC) - Four

of the 34 men in the Northbrook volunteer fire department here are religious Brothers They are assigned to the national headshyquarters of the Society ofmiddot the Divine Word at nearby Techny Ill

The Brothrs are on call any time the Northbrook first stashytion standby has two or less men on duty for all general

the Cliurcli and the nation ift ~ J llmohgihemthejt haVe fouglU serves~ ( I i) middotClosingmiddotMeasure middotisome 50fires lti

j middot5T PAUL (NC)4AbilLban

Dedicate Monment ~ing ~l)e sale pf spe~iti~mtr 0ROURKtr chandise on Sundays has heen ~

To adFe Serra middot houses bullbull FunealHomepassed b)-both of the j

medl~telY all pne~ts In good alaons and for any fire or emershystandmg may nw he~r the con- gency when additional personnel fesslOns of Iemtents 10 the A- are needed Their volunteering la~ta archdIOcese ~nd th~ 41- was approved by the superiors oces~ of Sva~nah Charleston andmiddot the seminary bought them II ~alelgh MIami and St Augus- veh~C1e to expedite transportmshy

tine tion when they answer a fire ~ ca~I

Solons pass Sun JI n y The Brothers estaimat~ that

S_CRAMENTO (NC) dDme MinrElsota legislatureGov~aJ monument of Padre runipero old LeVander of Minnesota was Serra OFMwassolemnly ded- exPected to sign it into law icated on the grounds of tille The legislation forbids the sale State Capitol here Saturday OIl Sundays and six holidays

The formal ceremonies were (New Years Day Memorial Day qonducted by officials of the Independence Day Labor Day state alld by officers of the Nll- Thapksgiving and Christmas) of tive Sf ns and Daughters of the cameras musical instruments Golden West The project haa phonographs and tape recorders been sponsored by the California radios and television sets jewel-State Legislature and the fra- ry clocks and watches furs terrial ~ orders who provided furni~ure and other home furshymatching funds to finance its nishings including appliances executi~n middotmiddotmiddotAlso wearing apparel ()all

S7J ~c~nd St~~ef

Fall River MOIss_ 679-6072

MICHAEL J McMAHON Licensed Funeral Director Regisfered Embalmer

D D II- bull _ 5u Ivan amp Sons

FUNERAL HOME

Father Noel F Moholy OFMkinds including footwear lug- 469 LOCUST STREIE1T vice postulator for the canorlizashy gage lawnmowers and 9ther tion of Ithe Franciscan friar who outdvor machinery and equipshy FAU RIVER MASS bas been hailed as Californias ment hardware and tools paints 672-3381 First Citizen and Greatest Pio-Illeer W3 the principal speakeII at the ded~cation

varnishes wallpaper and re-middot lated tools lumber and other buildine materials and supplies

Wilfred e~

Driscollmiddot

James IE

Sullivan Jr

Suburban Parishes Should H~lp Save City Parishes

WASHINGTON (NC)-Archbishop Patrick A YBoy1e of Washington appealed here to ~ubJrbanCatholic parisbes to come to the aid of poverty-stricken parishes in the inner city At least 10 Catholic parishes in the inner city need financial help to continue to ismiddotmiddoth d d - ize t II h told C Has ave ecrease s exlS e a ommumon though the schools have contimshy

breakfast of the St Vincent ued to operate at fun capacity de Paul Society and the Whll~ parish income has faUellil only way we can give it iI off school costs have risen ~ through our suburban parishes cause of increased salaries em-

Suburban parishes are hard ployment of lay teachers and pressed themselves he said with higher maintenance costs for most of them deepiy in debt 00- older buildings cause of new constru~tion and expansion Nevertheless they must inaiJpirit of true charity share their resources with our poor parishes

The archbishop said that one of the reasons flr the poor fi shynancial condition of the inner city parishes was the cost of operating their schools but said emphatically that none of these schools would be given up

If we didnt have to support our schools Archbishop OBoyle said nearly all Of our parishes couldmiddot take care of their basic needs But we are not going to giv~ up any of our schools as long as we can get Ii dime to support them

Not mentioning which parish was concerned he stated thatmiddot one middotitmner city parish received $54000 from archdiocesan funds las~ year

Msgr Thomas W Lyons Arch diocesanmiddot Director of Educatiot1 said th~t before the whije middotmigramiddot tionmiddot to the suburbs CathoUa constituted about 22 per cent 01 the Washington Population The Negr~ who replaced the whitea are only about JO per cent Cathshyolic The result is that the par

Parochial school tuiti6n which averages about $4 a month haa not kept pace with costs Msgr Lyons explained

The St Vincent de Paul Soclshyety-here recently announced a twinning program in whicb sOlue of the more affluent parshyishes adopt inner city parisheo and provide for their needs

Offers Folk Mass For Vocations

HOUSTON (NC)-Bishop John L Morkowsky of Galveston- Houston offered a special foUt MaSs for youth on World Day oL Pr~yer for Vocations at Sacred Heart co-cathedral here

Father William Steele diocshyesan vocation director said the folk Mass is being offered to atshytract the young people middotThemiddot homily duringmiddot the Mass dealt with vocations

Contemporarymiddot folk musiC composed by Ray Repp nation ally known folk song writer was played during the Mass Guitar aceompaniment was proshyvided by seminarians from St MaryoS Seminary here

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Cardinal Cushing Sees Decrease In Seminaries

BOSTON (NC)-The numshyber of Catholic seminaries in the United States will deshycrease because of the diffi shyculty of obtaining top-flight scholars to staH them Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston preshydicted here

Addressing the New England Conference of the Catholic Hosshypital Association the cardinal told some 680 nuns priests and

laymen that schools of theology both Catholic and Protestant will become more closely identi shyfied with the great colleges and universities of this country a system not unlike that of Oxford in England

Sharing the platform with Archbishop Cushing was Bishop Fulton J Sheen of Rochester N Y who urged Catholic hosshypitals to go outside their own walls to bring social and medical help to the poor

Go out into the slums he said Give two or three hours a day visiting poor families for healing and counseling

He also suggested that Cathoshylic hospitals in this country adopt hospitals in poor counshytries

In A Rut We can certainly afford to

have someone put up a hut in the poor world We have the spirit but we have gotten into a rut the bishop said

Bishop Sheen told the confershyence the hallmark of a Catholic hospital is that we serve each patient as we would serve Christ

Cardinal Cushing also preshydicted that rising costs of care of the sick will induce the fedshyeral government to become more closely identified in hosshypital administration

I was told he added that in some hospitals the cost of a bed per day is almost $100 There must be a ceiling somewhere

Salons to Study Divorce Laws

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey State Assembly has unanimously approved a resolushytion to establish a commission to study the states divorce laws The measure already passed by the Senate is expected to be signed quickly by Gov Richard J Hughes

Thp commission described by Governor Hughes as an effort to strengthen marriage has al shyready encountered the opposishytion of -the Monitor the Trenton laquoiocesan newspaper But the bIShOps of the states three other Oatholic dioceses have reserved comment -

Boih Governor Hughes and the commissions sponsor Sen Jereshymiah F OConnor are Catholics And while Senator OConnor would like to see the commission recommend liberalization of the states di~orce law - desertion adultery and extreme cruelty are the only grounds at present-he would also like other changes made

Among them are a- family eourt which would serve as

counseling agency as well as divorce court lengthening of the present three-day waiting period as a1 obstacle to quick marriages and anr a warning to young PershySODS of the seriousness of marshyriqe

Senate Election PROVIDENCE (NC)-Sixteen

members of the 26-member senshyate of priests for the Providence dJocese have been elected in the first part of the senates twoshyatage elections

REV PATRICK 3 ONEILL

NCIEA Appoints Fr ONeiU

Rev Patrick J ONeill Supershyintendent of Schools in the Dioshycese of Fall River has been apshypointed by the Superintendents Department of the National Catholic Educational Association to serve as a member of the nashytional committee concerning tbe shygrowth and development of diocshyesan and parish school boards

This committee under the chairman Rt Rev Msgr ONeill DAmour will serv() as an adshyvisory unit It will gather and distribute information concernshying the development growth and function of school boards

Father ONeill made an extenshysive study of functioning school boards throughout the country His work in organizing our Diocshyesan Board of Education and working with it during the past year has been commended

Newman Chaplains School at IHCJJlvOlId

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Newman Chaplains Asshysociation has added a second training school for priests and Sisters entering Newman work It will be conducted at Harvard University

As in past years a school will be held at the University of Colshyorado in Boulder Dates for both schools are June 113 to July 2

The Newman Chaplains School prepares priests and nuns asshysigned to the secular campus The faculty has been chosen on the basis of experience in the Newman apostolate and speciali shyzation in theology -philosophy script~reand counseliJ)g _

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 13

Family Care Program forO Children The Paul A Dever State by the psychologists and pre-placement visits with the

School Taunton under the sponsorship of the Departshyment of Mental Health has recently begun a Family Care Program in an attempt tomiddot proshyvide some of its children with the experience of family life

screened by the social workers have all been approved by the schools physicians for the proshygram

These children are ready and able to enter into the commushynity said Dr John L Smalldon superintendent of the Dever

child to the prospective foster parents to determine the comshypatibility of the youngster with the family Once settled within the family the child will also be periodically visited by a schooi social worker to assist in the adjustment The youngsters

The program is initially seekshying to place approximately 20 selected youngsters in homes in

school Provides Funds

This program with its emphashy

would attend special educatiOD classes in public schoolll throughout the South Shore

the South Shore area These chidren have been selected for their advanced capacities for edshyucation and training and their abilities to adjust to a home enshyvironment

These children reconmmended

sis on the advantages of the proper fa mil y environment seeks through a gradual process to assimilate the child within the community

The Social Service Department at the Dever School will conduct

The Department of Mental Health which sponsorsmiddot similar Family Care Programs in sevshyeral other schools in the state is providing funds for the supshyport of the children

What do you do when you live on a Take a good look at your everyday very small island with over three and a - surroundings You are apart of the 20 half million people-say Hong Kong of theworlds populati~nthat has access Move to the suburbs But what if the to 80 of the worlds food That means suburb is Red China The only answer that the other 80 of the world must be is this-and rbe hundreds of thousands content with the remaining ~O Of who crowd these house- boats are lucky course you can read this and say So Ovlaquo half die people of the world ani But You cannot say to someone who taorneless-and most live in Asia is hungry come tomorrow We must

When we hear that three-fourths ol act today because tomorrow may be too cbe human race lives inpoverty or below late (pope Paul VI) Feed the man the subsist~ level these are the peo- dying of hunger if you have not fed pie we are talking about Do we know him you have killed h1m (Vatican II) what it feels like to subsist to know no Dear Monsignor OMeara 1 am attachshyother feeling but that of hunger It is ing my gilt 0 $__ to help right the impossible or we could never spend over imbalance in our world Please use it so 100 billion dollars annually on arma- that a missionary can feed the starving ments while 10000 die each day from name---------- shyyenJldernouri8bment address _~____

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middotSocial Revolutmiddotion Is Needed In latin America Lands

From Social Revohitiiolll iin the New Latin America Edited by John 3 Considine MM

The possibility of orientating regional planning toward an overall solution of the pressing problems that concern more than one Latin nation could well engage Christian initiative writes Rene Atero The most typical example of this kind he sa)s concerns Social Revolution in Latin-~ershythe region of the Andean ica Most Rev Mark GMcshyMountains where peasants Grath CSC says Barbara numbering more than five Ward widely read Catholic

million live in thee different economist begins her book enshyltcountries possessing basically titled The Rich Nations and the

Poor Nations with the flat stateshy similar pro b- ment I suppose we are all lems Our asso- aware of the fact that we live in ciation with na- the most catastrophically revolushy~ional orgariiza- tionary age that men have ever

tions concerned fced middotmiddotwith deyelop- Social Revolution ment planning Vice-President Hubert Humshyin no way im- phrey who honored this meeting plies the im- with his presence last year proper subordi- writes in a recent issue of Forshynation of enti- eign Affairs Although the obshytie sund e r servation that Latin America is Church s p 0 n- in the midst of a political ecoshysorship to less effectual accom- nomic and social revolution has plishment under the state become a commonplace it is

On the contrary it is a ques- true tion of becoming involved in a The influential Chilean magashynew front in which Christian zine Mensaje published by the action is not only indispensable Jesuit Fathers dedicated an enshybut will be most efficacious in tire issue in December of 1962 to helping to enlist sectors of Latin the theme Revolution in Latin American society of top impor- America and followed this up

middottance for national dEvelopment withmiddot another special issue in With reference to the actual bctober 1963 on Revolutionary implementation of plans through Reforms in Latin America

well elaborated projectS we Early in 1964 the Civilta Catshyshould make certain that iden- tolica published in Rome by the tification and recognition as an Jesuits carried a critique of important part of the national these two issues of Mensaje by effort are given to current Father Jarlot which questioned Church activities already oper- the prudence of using the terio ating numerous projects of social revolution in a Christian conshydevelopment throughout the text pointing out that itia ltcontinent loaded with Marxist overtones

For example with regard to Not only does it signify rapid education we should lteall atten- c structural changes Father Jarlot tion to the fact that there aremiddot in asserts but also connotes vioshy

lence and some measure of hate Latin America about 5000 pri- and class warfare He would vate ed~cational insttutions pre- prefer the term evolution pared to share in current eduea- tional programs throughout the Social Revolution oontinent Mr Humphrey in the article

The private univemities andmiddot already mentioned asks the eenters of technical training inmiddot question Is it appropriate te the fields of agriculture labor define Alliance (for Progress) and cooperatives couY-a double policy as favoring social revolll shythe potential for plofessional tion - or should this word be and technical trainin1 if they avoided in favor of evolution 01 would participate on D national some other expression basis ir serving the more press- He anwers Evolution if ing needs of society carefully examined proves to be

Broad Horizons inadequate for it implies an un-We must work also in the pres- conscious non-deliberate change

ervation of the progress which that is slow and gradual has been achieved in the areas- What is required is conscious of social welfare now b~ing em- rapid change in the socioshyphasized (housing education economic structure a process public health) Lay groups such that can correctly and precisely as Catholic Action in different be called a revolutionmiddot If used spheres _ Legion of Mary St not as a slogan but in itS precise Vincent de Paul Carita3-which sense the policy of peaceful s0shy

up to now have directed their -cial and economic revolution is efforts mainly towards religion agtcorrect~haracterizatio~ofmiddot il~

t hid limce policy d If t middot an we are ac IVlless ou eJmiddot We should not hesitaietoi pand theIr programs a11d focus d tf l th t m some of their work on ilrojects I e~ I y o~rse ~es WI I ~i planned by specialists J JatmAmencaiJust ~ Presldcnt

This would permit the cltanel ~ohnson ~ssoclated hunseU WIth it in hIS war on poverty I~ng of theIr ~eal t~elr ~rga~l~a- throughout the world whenhe gtcent

tIOn and theIr splnt of saCrIfIce tl k d Iffit b bull recen y remar e a peaceshyas power u resources 0 e put f lItmiddot th i5 at the disposal of society Among u re~bo u IOn ~n ese areas such works surely programs of ~mossl Ie a VIolent revolutIon

IS mevltable community improvement will be especially attractive to tlhese lay groups

Thus the Church might con- sider putting its knowledge and resources to more effective use in preparing programs and projshyects for adaptation to national and regional needs

They should select carefully those with the capacity to fulfill so that they may obtain financing from national or international sources to complement their own eontributions thus enlarging the scope of their activities

In a study of The Church and

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Arguments For Celibacy Outweigh Those Against

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Arguments urging that the requirement of eeHbacy of priests be set aside as an obshystacle to increasing vooationsare not sufficient Archbi-shop Gabriel Garribe pro-prefect of the Congregation of Semishynaries and Universities told a pressconfelence here My personal answer is that the arguments for celibacy cd the clergy are stronger than those against it He said he beshylieved there should be a firm affirmation in this respect and that it would maintain celibacy in the Latin Church

By doing so he said the quality ofpriesUy candidates will grow and through the quaUy of its priests the Church will harvest an increase in the quantity of candidates

The drop in the number of vocations the Archbishop stated Is due in part at least to the new attitude of todays youth and therefore requires changes_ in the traditional seminary formation

The prelate told the press that todays youth is much more fully aware of the whole world and far more sensitive to its problems than in the past Those responsible for seminary training must realize the importance of education and be capable of understanding the new generashytion of admiring them and of discovering for them the mission of the Church

StatistiCs Given Archbishop Garrone not e d

tj~at although there has been a falilng off in vocations generally there have been some surprising exceptions He singled out 1be

Dominican Work Continued from Page One

means that the approach will be intellectual rather than devoshytional and the emphasis win rest on accuracy on the truth of a statement rather than on whether it is opportune

In performing such a task mistakes 1n the form of partisan statements ~ld ill-balanced reshymarks are sometimes inevitable Father Hislop said

He affirmed the Dominicans loyalty to the Church but noted that it is often difficult for a vanguard intellectual group to express itself in terms that win not be misunderstood by the majority of Catholics

CCD Talks Continued from Page One

Tauntol as the speaker Mrs Mary Fuller of Buzzards

Bay will speak at the meetiDll in Bishop Stang High School North Dartmouth

At Bishop CasSidy High School Taunton the speaker will be Edward McDonagh-Of North Attleboro

Thomas Flangheddy of Taunshyton will address the meeting at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

The Cape area meeting will be held at Holy Trinity West Hallshywich with Miss Patricia llIIakle as speaker

Seek More funds WASHINGTON (NC) -Two

members of Marylands congresshysional delegation have introshyduced a bill which would make the government spend $75 milshylion annually for birth eontrol aid in the U ~ by 1973 The bin introduced by Sen Joseph Ty ings and Rep Samuel Freidel would propose $20 million the fkst year rising to $75 million bIV the fifth )ear Sta1e and loeal governments would provide _ edditiODal $25 mDJiclID br )87J

extraordinary development of vocations in Mexicp and in Yugoslavia and the stable continuity of recruitment in Poland

Among the statistics provided at the conference were the fact that the latest Church figures count 234000 Diocesan priests and 168000 Religious priests There are in addition 166400 Religious who are not ordained priests

One of the most heartening things in the vocational world picture it was pointed out hasshybeen the increase of priestly vocations in Africa Asia and Oceania

The growth of the local clergy has been a phenomenon of the last 40 years Today in Africa and Asia approximately 500 orshydinations take place every year

~regregampfsect ~ITOW(QJtfreg

$e~~ Aod WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep

Clement J Zablocki of Wisconshysin has introduced a proposal to correct U a defense education gap in American schools

Zablockis bill wo~ld amend the National Defense Education Act (NDEA) to provide federal grants for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment which could be used by children and teachers In parochial and private schools

In a statement on themiddot flOor Of the House of Representatives Zablocki pointed to inequities In

the present NDEA progra~ which Congress passed In 1958 to strengthen instruction in scishyence mathematics foreign lanshyguages and related subjects

An important provision of the act Zablocki said is Title III which provides matching grants to public schools for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment Non-public schools now are eligible only for loans for that purpose

Under Zablockis bill public authorities could obtain federal funds to buy laboratory and other special equipment which eould then be provided for use in non-public schools

In order to comply with matching provisions of the NDEA the non-public schools or groups of such schools would be required to prove they had spent an equal amount thenr selves for such eqUipment from private funds

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FALL RIVER AUXllLhARY AT MEETING Bishop Gerrard Auxiliary lBishop of the Diocese of Fall River is pictured at one of the sessions of the Spring meeting of the Bishops of theU Sheld in Ohicago NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 h A priI 20T urs 1967

Say~ ~Q~~OIP No SIQ7(~ ~ lovell

KANSAS CITY (NC) - The new role of a Bishop in the era of renewal has been spelled out here by Bishop Charles H Helmshysing of Kansas City-St Joseph

In addition to the age-old role of teacher Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop today must read stud) and apply the teachings of the Second Vatican Council the Gosshypels expressed to meet the needs of the modern world In short Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop must be a slave of love to serve as Christ served mankind

Bishop Helmsil1g spoke at the consecration of Auxiliary Bishop Joseph V Sullivan 45 of Kansas City-St Joseph

Bishop Sullivan is the fir~

native of this Missouri city eleshyvated to the hierarchy He was ordained to the priesthood June 1 1946 has served as chancellor of the diocese since 1957 and was named Bishop by Pope Paul VI last month

MarltqJ MregGGreg TJ~ ~~i MILWAUKEE (NC)-ALuthshy

eran scholar will teach Lutheran theology to graduate students at Marquette University here start shying next September Dr Kenneth G Hagen assistant professor of religion at Concordia College Moorhead MinJl will be the Marquet~e theology departmentu first full-time visiting scholra unshyder a grant from the Louis Calshyder Foundation in New York

-THREE LOCATIONS bull youre lookIng for the best in banking se~lce come 011J in to The NationalBank With the opening of our Stafford Square Office were now nearer to even more of you rOll the Greater Fall River area and each of our offices has Just aboUt every service you could want for yourself andl your family We mean M when we say were your FuID lervice BankPft

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t6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~n River-Thurs~ Apr 201967

Friend~2 [iJescribes Stru~g~ For QM~gtLy in T~~regwo~~~

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Rennedy When Fred W Friendly resigned from the Columbia

Broadcasting System in 1966 he ended a 16-year association with that network His trials in broadcast journalism are tbe subject of his new book Due To Circumstances Beyond Our Control Control bull Managements obligation is toRandom House $695 457 protect the interests of these Madison Avenue New York stockho~ders

NY 10022) But this volume But Mr Friendly is concprned is far more than a personal about the other stockholders memoir It is the story of th~ the 195 million citizens who

grant CBS and the other broadshybattle a losing casters the franchise to use theirbattle of course air for quality in

FCC Gutlesscommercial tel shyOne might naively expect that

~vision The the Federal Communications

main point is Commission would effectivelythat the story is here told by an insider Mr Friendlys middotfame criginally gprang from his close associashytion with the late Edward R Murrow He was Murrows partner in the prepashyntion of such pioneering and still unparalleled series as Se~ lil Now and CBS Reports

After Murrow left CBS and wentmiddot into governm()nt service Mr Friendly became president

of CBS news He resigned that ~sition because of a clispute conshycerning the broadcasting of Senshyate hearings on the Vietnam war

Many ancient or recent conshyfilets over broadcasting policy are rehearsed in this hook There fta for example a detailed acshy~unt of the hassies concerning Murrows TV _program dealing with Senator McCarthy before McCarthys downfall as the reshyault of the hearings in the Spring of 1954

There are briefer accounts of other skirmishes Thflse are all interesting and instructive But the value of the book lies not so much in these reminiscences as fin Mr Friendlys knowledgeable analysis of the process whereby television has retreated more and more from public service and become a purveyor of junk and garbage littering the American Iiving room and worse the American mind with trash

Geared to Prcfit Many factors account for this

perversion The principal one is greed Television is geared to private profit not puqUc service lLast years whopping profits will not suffice this year There must be sizable increase

This is to satisfy stockholders Mr Friendly asked William Paley chairman of the board Why do we have to make more money every year The reply was We have many small shareholders across the country and within the companybullbullbullbull

Subcommittee Sets Hearings on Smut

WASHINGTON (NC) -The House Select Subcommittee on Education is holding hearings beginning today on a bill to esshytablish a National Commissionmiddot on Noxious and Obscene Matters and Materials

Subcomllittee chairman Domishynick Daniels of New Jersey is sponsor of thc bill which would provide for a 16-member panel to study the problem of obscenity and recoqunend means Clf dealing with it

On the same day that the hearshyings were announced two other congressmen Arnold Olsen of Montana and Glenn Cunningham of Nebraska introduced bills to curb the mailing of obscene matshyter Olsens bill has bpoundlen enshydorsed by the Post Office Deshy~artment

protect the interests of the other 195 milion But Mr Friendly on the basis of close observation has -no kind words and no reshyspect for the FCC For all pur- poses the agency is toothless and gutless

To make even more money for the shareholders every possible penny has to be wrung out of the advertising medium which television now essentially is This consideration governs proshygramming

It might be supposed that even if prime time at night must eco- ~

nomically go chiefly to programshyming which brings in the maxishymum advertising dollar there is ample opportunity for public service broadcasting in the dayshytime hours But no pienty of money is to be made from dayshytime advertising

Endless Re-runs Three soap companJes alone

spend $290 million a year on television advertising and a lot of this is directed at housewives during the daytime And the programming dictated by this advertising comprisesmostly old old movies and endless re-runs of stupid situation comedies

Huge profits (are) being realshyized from the use of the miracle of television as a transmission belt for retread serials soap opshyeras game shows and the like The yield from the detergent deodorant bleach or food advershytisers who possess the daytime schedule (whose annualexpendishytures (are) some $130000000 ) is the principal reason why no serious progtamming can be sustained for any length of time during these hours

l3y serious programming is meant such things as crittcal UN debates (for example on Vietnam) vital congressional hearings the Popes visit to the UN Churchills funeral etc) Some of these have in fact got on the air and even for a conshysiderable period oftime b~t alshyways there is a major bitter battle involved

Educational TV What may not be realized is

the power of the local station n is by no means meekly subshymissive to the network It largely gqes its own way and its wayis in search of the utmost in profits

It is this fact for example which accounts for the nonshyexistence of a good solid repre~ sentative late-evening news broadcast over the nekwork The local station prefers to put on its own scrappy superficial travesty of a news program beshycause it can get-in an excessively large number of profitable comshymercials

Perhaps there is some hope in the field of educational televishy

sion Mr Friendly is now enshygaged in exploring that possibil shyity For our sake may he be successful At any rate we must thank him for reminding us of our tolerance of the criminial misuse Qf the air waves

H E A 0 S UNIVlERSliJIY New president of St Bonashyventure University St Bonashyventure N Y is the Very Rev Reginald A Redlon

OFM formerly of St Franshycis College Rye Beach N H The university Is operated by the Holy_ Name province of the Order of Friars Minor NC Photo

Issues GlLIidelimiddotnes For IEcumenism

LITTLE ROCK (NC) - Ecushymenical guidelines dealing prinshycipally with the conduct of Catholics at Protestant functions have been issued by Bishop Alshybert L Fletcher of Lttle Rock

Composed of the diocesan ecumenical commission the gUidelines specify that Catholics may attend Protestant church services participate in the singshying and common prayer but may not act as a reader or officer of such services

The rules permit Catholics to serye in wedding parties at mar- riages in Protestant churches providing the service does not involve a Catholic or a divorceci person Attendance at baccalaushyreate services in a church or elsewhere is permitted

Under the rules Catholics may not act as sponsors at Protestantmiddot baptisms Oi confirmation nat Jlarticipate in intercommunion services The guidelines encour- age Protestant attendance at Catholic services

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Misunderstandingmiddot Faced In Ecumenical Meeting

Roman Catholic and Lutheran theologians agreed here after their fourth meeting that many misunderstandings had been overcome on the Sacrament of the Lords SuppeR -Holy Eucharist-but that further examination is necesshysary The doctrinal consulshy to the concrete worship life o1Ztation held at the headquartshy the Church ers of the Lutheran Church In a prepared statement reshyin America was the fourth leased ft the conclusion of the in a series sponsored by the closed meeting the group noted Bishops Committee for Ecumenshy that in contrat to topics disshyism and Interreligious Affairs cussed at the first two meetings of the NCCB and the USA Nashy -the Nicene Creed and Baptismtional Committee of the Luthershy -there have been historically an Wotld Federation serious disagreements between

Main themes discussed at the the confessions concerning the three-day meeting were the Eucharist Lords Supper as a sacrifice the All participants the stateshymanner of Christs presence in ment added agreed that many the Sacrament the import of the misunderstandings had beellll concept of transubstantiation overcome as a result of the latest and the relation of these issues meeting

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For our eIght edlcal Sisters In P1rappancode south India today is just a normal day Doctors bags In hand they are out In the villages eKmiddot amlnlng everyone for leprosybullbullbullbull Leprosy can be cured If diagnosed early says Sister Elizashybeth a surgeon Better yet Itcan be prevented In this case an ounce of prevention is worthten pounds of cure bullbullbull The cure is cheaper than penny nely Only $850 buys 10000 Dapsone _ mIracle tablets enough for 43 lepers for a yeerl bullbullbull The effort In Pirappancode islnternashytional German Catholics built the 25middotbed ho pital (1St Johns) French Catholics gave a workshop (for therapy) and an American friend of ours has pledged a convent and chapel Now the Sisters need medicinps a $200 microscope a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for treating children especially In farmiddotflung villages Will you help them Monsignor Nolan will acshyknowledge your gifts promptly and the Slste win pray for you aware you are helping them cure lepers as Christ did -

WHAT YOU CAN DO IJ $5000 gives the Sisters a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for fighting leprosy at Ita source (A sign on the side will featu re the name ofyour favorite saint and your name ifyou wish)

IJ $1500wlll give theSlster-surgeon an ope Instable Shes ustng akitchen table now

WOULDc $575 buys a whirlpool beth $100 a sterilizer

NEED C $300 pays In full ~or the two-year training 01 IF a native Slsternurse She will write to you

YOU WERI C $240 ($5 a Week) takes care of bull fuMmiddottlme

~IlAII IA8T WlILflARIi ASBDelATIGN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN PresIdent

MSGR JOHN G NOLAN Natlonal8ecretaIJ Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc S30 Madison Avenuemiddot New York NY 1001 T~one 212yUkOft 6-5840

rHf ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Apr 20 196717

CATHOLIC (HAR~l~~S AP~EAL SILVER JUBILEE YEAR

MAY 7-17

What does it mean to you The opportunity to raise your sights to the level of a $2500 Jubilee Gift

An act of aratitude for 25 years of Charitable Seice

Bishop Connollys love for exceptionoillhiidren cannot be

described in words-but this picture D5 beyond description

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THE ANCHORshy~18 Top East C~ast College Hoopsters middotPlay )Sees SociaI EquityThurs April 20 1967

Still Lagging Anglicalfj)~ ~teview At I(ennedy Center For P C Alumni In Spain Antii Cali~~i~ By Patricia Francis MALAGA (NC) - Spain

was taken to task for lagging1562 C~~lireglf A full house crowd saw some o( the East Coasts top collegIate basketball players behind many other countriesLONDON (NC) _ The demonstrate last week how basketball should be played Occasion was the 8th annual hi the development of a

ehurch of England has set Scholarship Basketball Game sponsored by the Providence College Alumni Club of New just Christian social and ecoshyup a permanent commission Bedford at Kennedy Youth Center in New Bedford Initiated in 1959 to - raise nomic life at the 26th Spanish C1)n Christian Docbine with tis first task to consider recastshying or replacing that churchs historic charter of the Thirtyshy~Hne Articles of Religion which

are strongly anti-Catholic In tOne

They are regarded by many as o stumbling block to Christian ~ity The articles drawn up in 1562

for the avoiding of diversities $pound opinions and for the establishshyhtg of consent touching truereli shygion must be publicly accepted py the clergy at ordination

They have become a matter of ~increasing objection lind some

Anglican clergymen now feel talat they should not be called Upon to subscribe to doctrinal definitions which reflect views formed in the 16th oentury aarship is a $2400 one paid at the time of extreme and bitter reli- rate of $600 a year to the winner gious controversy Next award will be made in

The articles denounce the 1970 TheRevEdwardC Duffy eurohurch of Rome as erroneous in chairman of- the scholarship matters of faith and declare games and recruiter of the among other things that theplaye~s who participate emphashyBishop of Rome hath no jurisdic- sizes the scholarship is open middotto tion in this -realm of Englandany deserving boy who has been Some prominent Anglican clergymen have blal1led the sharp declfnein ordination canshy

Qlidates on a reluctance to subshy~ribe to this document

Consider Advis( The new commission was apshy

pointed by Anglican Archbishops Michael Ramsey of Canterbury and Donald Coggan of York It consists of 17 members most of them theological professors repshyzesenting different schools of thought in the Anglican Church

Anglican Bishop Iar Ramsey of Durham is chairman The commissions general terms of reference say that it is

to consider and advise upon doctrinal questions submitted to it from time to time by the archshybishops and to plan when deshyslrable the investigation of

I ~uestions by other groups Its first task will be to conshy

sider the place of the Thirty- lege University of Rhode Island Nine Articles in the Anglican St Josephs of Philadelphia Bosshy

tradition and the question of ton College and Holy Cross subscription and assentto them There were Bill Blair Jim

Benedict Bob Kavolski and Bill Lasher of PC Mike FitzgeraldReligious Influence (of Mattapoisett) Henry Carey

In US on Wan~ -7- NEW YORK (NC)-Although

a majority of all Americans exshypressed the belief that 11eligion is losing its influence in the

United States in the latest Gallup Poll Catholics declined to-give majority assent to the opinion

The national survey showed tilat 57 per cent of all Americans in 1967 believe religion is losing its influence Only 14 per cent expressed this opinion in 1957

Among Protestants 60 per cent In 1967 compared with L7 per eent in 1957 said religion was losing its influence Forty-eight

per-cent of Catholics agreed in the latest survey compared with Beven per cent in 1957

Get Federal Funds PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A

Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyect under the auspices of Philashydelppia Archbishop John J Krols Commjssion on Economic Oppi)rtunity Programs hlils reshyceived $267980 from the federal government It was one of 74 Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyects in 30 states approved by Secretary of Labor W Willard Wirtz

accepted as a freshman at Provshyidence College regardless of the high school he attended

Primary Method William F Doyle president of

the NE Bedford club says the games are the alumnis primary method of raising money for the schoJarship fund

Since it was first held the game has attracted a following of avid fans-who help swell the scholshyarship treasury

Father Duffy feels it is the top post-season game in New England arid cites as proof the fact that his long time friend Bob Cousy Hoiy Cross All- Anierican and Boston Celtic great played in it himself two years ago It was his last game

Players who participated in this years money-for-scholarshyships game-all college seniors

represented Providence Colshy

scholarship funds for deserv- ing gr~duates of area high

schools the game profits enabled presentation of the first Edward J Tucker Memorial Scholarship of $2000 to Clifford Marr of New Bedford in 1962 Marr a graduate of Holy Family High was graduated from Provishydence College in 1966 and curshyrently is an Army lieutenant on duty in Korea

The second scholarship---named for the late 1r Tucker of Fairshyhaven a Providence College

graduate and one of the charter members of the New Bedford club--was awarded last year to Michael Doherty of New Bedshyford also a Holy Family gradushyate

Currently the four-year scholshy

Steve Chubin and Bob Boehm of the U of RI Richie Murphy and Greg Hochstein of Holy Cross John Austin and Ed Hock- enbury of Boston College and

f~nll lHoMsnln1~ fLaw Olhoc City EI1il(Jlcts

SPRIfiGFIELD (NC) - By unanimous vote of its five city commissioners this city has enshyacted a fair housing ordinance

The ordinance the third of its kind in OhiO becomes effecshytive May 3 Considerably strongshyer than the fair housing legisia- tion enacted by the Ohio Legisshylature in 1965 it outlaws disshycrimination in the sale or rental of any housing excepting only dwellings for members of reli shygious organizations or housing established for one sex only

Springfields new ordinance came as the res~lt of an improved climate of racial harmony The citys mayor Robert C Henry is a Negro whose performance of his duties has won wide reshyspect In recent years an Urban League has been launched and has made considerable progress A Human Relations Commission is functioning

PROVIDENCE COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP In atshytendance at PC Scholarship Fund Basketball Game in New Bedford were William Doyle presidentof the PC Club of New Bedford and Michael Doherty present scholarship recipient

Billy Oakes Marty Ford and Tom Duff of st Josephs the nations fifth-ranked_ team

Sees lay Teachers

Form Asso~iataon CLEVELAND (NC)-Groundshy

work for a diocesan lay teachers asso~iation was laid at a meeting of representatives of 21 diocesan high schools here

shy Patrick Bruening teacher at St Josephs high school and temshyporary chairman of the new unit said the association is an organshyization of professional people seekint professional growth

He added Only after we have proven ourselves as professionshyals with a professional attitude

about our job can we ask for and hope to get professional consideration I

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lhe players enjoyed demonshystrating th~ir proficiency The fans enjoyed watching the demonstration ~ and the scholar shipfund of the Providence Colshylege Alumni Club of New Bedshy~ord teaped tbebenef~il ~fboth

~ Population Control WASHINGTON (NC) - U s

Sen J W Fulbright of Arkansas has asked for aCongressional appropdation of $150 million for increased population coritior asshysistanCe to developIng countries

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Social Week here Angel Cardinal Herrera y

Oria former archbishop of Mashylaga in a letter to the Social Week sessions deplored what he called a deficiency of Catholic influence in Spanish public lilfe declaring that Spain a Catholic nation was far from being a model of social justice

No Dialogue Earlier Auxiliary Bishop Rashy

fael Gonzalez Moralejo of Valenshycia ecclesiastical moderator of the SocialWeek sounded a simshyilar note declaring that where there is no dialogue between citizens and their government there is no democracy and such a society cannot call itself Christian

Cardinal Herrera said that ahead of Spain are nations who

have learned how to organize their natioJlallif~ according to the norms of justice which are the daughters of consciElnce Sweden has progressed in the social and pOlitlclll o~der to such an extent that the ~ope

could state that its public ~n~ishy tutions are in harmonywith the teachings of the Seco~dVatican Council he said

1[Jpper ~Iasses Cardinal Herrera lirged the

upper classes of -the countryto contribute toward the formation of a sound and realistic public opinion by which religious conshycepts would be applied to the economic and social life of Spain

It is necessary he said to diminish the differences in classes to work toward Unity not only in the economic order but also in i~ the education and

c~vic department

The Best

Car

Georgell Cluh Olf to Good Start mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Apr 20 1967

Taunton High Is Surprise In County Diamond loop former FltrrJDD Riweff CYOer on Scholagslvop ltltIt PIl1Jf$~ns

By PETE~ BARTEK Norton High Coach

Coach BiD Georges Taunton High diamond aggreg~

tion is the early season surprise in the Bristol County schoolboy league now in ita second week of the eampaign The pennant race appeam ~ be developing into one of the most exciting in many years Five clubs are battling of Ule better area clubs year fOIl the coveted flag And after year

Coach Harold (Chet) Haneshywhile action is fast and fm-shywichs Bishop Feehan High teamiOWl in the BCL the eight N3rshyof Attleboro has tucked awayragansett League teams are early season wins over Northgetting I e Q d y Attleboro and New Bedford Voshy

lor the chamshy cational The latter two will pionship race m probably fight it out fornext-toshytheir COmpetishy the-last place in the final standshytion Delayed ing as they seek to avoid theboth by rain and cellar Ii old weather The two top contests on nextCOaches h a v e Mondays BCL card will seebeen reminding Coyle playing Durfelte at Alumnitheir charges of Field in Fall River while Taunshythe pitfalls of ton journeys to North Dartmoutheareless loose to clash with stang Two northernplay and also Peter eounty rivals Attleboro andthe IOOmmission Bartek Feehan meet at the formers of Deedless errors which ean field next Monday when North relegatea club to an early Deeshy Attleboro travels to New Bedshyond diviaion berth from which it ford to take 0111 Vocatlonal win be bard to emerge as 1M Nury Contests oompetition progresses Meanwhile the Narragansett

Chausse and JlaJkut loop is comple~ing its first week The Herring City Orange and of play Its still a little early to

Black pulled the big surprise of make 8 judgment as to how thebe young season when it held clubs will stand at the end of thethe always strong Dullfee High

lI~mpaign team of Fall River to a 2-2 tie in Four Narry tilts are on tap for11 innings The prognosticators next Tuesdaybad been writing off the Georgeshy Coach Jack McCartys Caseeoached clan solely because they High Cardinals of Swansea willfelt Taunton would be unable to face Coach Jack Harts DimanJeplace Artmiddot Koska lost by gradshy Vocational team in Fall River uation in what looms as one of the

But Scott Chawrse impressed most interesting early seasonin his confrontation with the Fan games Coach Doug Baxendales River Hilltoppelll aDd now the Msgr Prevost High team of Fall same pundits who had relegated River will be at Dighton to meet Taunton to a lowly apot 8re the Coach Eddie Texeiras D - ~ first to admit that things will be Regionals Coach Ed Bibeau will much more pleasant for the lead his W~port High aggr~gashyTauntonians this Spring tion to Seekonk to middotvh( with

Stro~ Coyle Offense Coach Roger Hills charges The Admittedly an the doubting fourth Narry contest next Tuesshy

Thomases were not convinced day will see Coach Jack Brenshyon the basis of a single performshy nans Holy Family High teain of ance So Joe Majkut and Chausse New Bedford meeting Coach Jim Ulen eombined to throw a no-hit Sullivans Somersetmiddot High teamwin over Coach Dick Joyces at the latters field Attleboro High team Even the

Lanllers Ready most skeptical then conceded that Taunton must be reckoned On Ca~ Cod n nip-~pd~tuck

in the flag race battle is going on in that areas While Taunton High has heeD eon1erence schedule Four conshy

eGualling the early season attenshy tests are listed for the Capeway tion unexpected results have eircuit next Monday They are eccurred in several other diashy Oldmiddot Rochester (Mattapoisett) mond eontests Attleboro which at Barnstable Bourne at Wareshydid DOt seem destined lor gfeat bam Dartmouth middotat Dennis-Yarshythings this Spring provided the mouth and Fairhaven vs Lawshyfirst surprise w~en it toppled rence High at Falmouth Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Norton High in the Clover Stang High of North Dartmouth Valley Conference plays its first

Taunton then proved its mettle league game at home against when it defeated surprising Millis next Monday The Purple Attleboro Hickey has talent at - and White Lancers travel to Stang but his problem has heeD Medfield next Wednesday tv properly align his best playem Apparently they were not in the Score Governmentright spots when they went down to defeat at the hands of Coach On Lab~r Problems Jim Burns Msgr Coyle High

BUENOS AIRES (NC) -TwonJne of Taunton which has Catholic organizations have isshycwuted its way to two one~sided sued a joint manifesto criticizingviet(lries Coyles strength is in thlte Argentine government sayshyits offensive attack but it also ing it has failed to protect workshy

has a capable defense and pitch ers basic rightsJng staff to make a real run for Issued by the Catholic Youngthe BCL crown Workers (JOC) and Catholic _ Feehans Auspicious Start Action Workers Movement

Durfee while it may have been (MOAC) the statement alsotemporarily halted by Taunton called upon the bishops to be enpects to be among the leaders aware of the needs and goals of before the end of the week The young workers and the labor Hilltoppers looked good in winshy class and to be brave in ltexshy

double-header from Pil-shyning a pressing the Churchs doctrine grim High of Rhode Island last as applied to real-life situations weekend CoachJoe Lewis feelsmiddot It said that the government his boys can now maintain the which calls itself Christian but momentum they have generated is anything but Christian has in the non-league affairs It goes nothing to do with the Gospelalmost without saying that one or Christs teachings or with the off-day is not going to thwart Churchs doctrines as defined by the Hilltopperll wbo produce ODe the Second Vatican Councit

By JOE MIRANDA A Parsons College senior JRobshy

eli Bonalewicz of Fall River is -nearIng the end of a most sucshycessful college career both athshyletically and academically

Bob is attending Parsons in Fairfield Iowa on a baseball scholarship and has started bis third season as the colleges first strong catcher

neans List Student A Physical Education major

Bob has a minor in History and during the last marking period was named to the Deans List at Parsons -

A member of St PatrIcks Parshyish Bonny is a 1963 graduate of Durfee High School where he participated in football basketshyball and baseball

The son of Mr and Mrs Mathew Bonalewicz of 50 Chapshylin Street he is oile of five chil shydren ald has not yet decided upon a vocation

Bonny has two older brotherll a lieutenant and Mathew Jr II

staff sergeant both in the Air Force and stationed ubroad Bob also has two sisters Kathleen II student at Durfee High and Ma) Ann a grammar school pupil

Has f80 Average Bonalewicz recently returned

from a Southern baseball trip end gained excellent commendashytions from his coach Duane Banks for his performance as the Wildcats won 11 of 13 games

The Fall River player batted 430 belted three homers had nine runs-batted-in and seltlred 10 during Parsons first 13 games

Bonalewicz a 22-year-old 175shyJ)ound 5-8 giant enjoys playing baseball and so does his coach who scheduled 89 games last seashyson to set a ollegiate record fur the most games played in one year

Ankle IBjUlY

With the former Durfee backshystop handling the brunt of the catching duties until a knee inshyjury forced him to the sidelines Parsons won 72 lost 15 and twice finished in ti~d games called beshyca~se of darkness

The former St Patricks star in the CYO baseball program started poory this season finshyis middotng off the Southern trip with an ankle sprain but entering this week the ankle was in good shape and Bonny expected to take his regular spot behind the plate

Federal Agency Has Inter-Faith Advisors

WASHINGTON (NC)- A Catholic priest a Methodist minshyister and a Jewish rabbi have been appointed religious advishyBors to the United States Inforshymation Agency here

Msgr George G Higgins clIishyrector of the Social Action Deshypartment U S Catholic Confershyence the Rev Edward G Cu-middot roll superintendent of the Washshyington Northwest District ol the Methodist Baltimore Conference and Rabbi Richard G Hirsch dishyrector of the Relgious Action Center Union of American Heshybrew Congregations have been named to the USIA advisory panel

Officials of the agency noted that while it has had religious advisors since its inception this marks the first time an interfaith panel had been established

The purpose of the panel offi shycials said is to assure that the agencys handling of religious matters serves the best intlterest of the nation and its dlveraity of faiths

Bonalewicz also played for St Patricks T)iocesan championship team and for the Fall River Mershychants in the Newport Sunse~ League

As a senior at DUrfee Bonny was awarded the 1963 George Kaplan Memorial Trophy as the Hilltoppers best senior basketshyball player

His hustle and determination while performing for Durfee at Bostcm Garden during the anshynual Eastern Massachusetts Tecb tournament gained him the reshyspect and admiration of all that witnessed his efforts

Bonalewicz recently completed a practice teaching tour in an Iowa Junior High School and while tere coached the eighth grade team to a league chamshypionship

Earlier in the college year Bob_ was a member of the Parsons intramural flag football progmiddotam and received a trophy for his performan J

Despite the heavy bnsebaU schedule Bob has manged to keep hi grades above average and after the Fall semestershyshowed his prowess in the classshyroom by being named to the Deans List for the second time

DeMatha Winner In Hoop Tourney

WASHINGTON (NC) - DeshyMatha High of suburban Hyattsshyville Md scored an upset cliff shyhanger victory to cop the 12th national high sChool basketballl tournament sponsored by thE local Knights of Columbus J017 the fifth straight time

DeMatha avenged two regula17 season defeats by Mackin High Washington Catholic League

champ with its last minute 70-68 victory Mount Carmel of Chiengo took

third place with a 47-45 overshytime win over DePaul Acndemy of Chicago Northeast Cnthrt1ie of Philadelphia took fifth pIhce with a 77-74 win over St Petertl

B(~ BONALEWICZ of New Brunswick N J Catheshydral High of Trenton NJ Inpound

The oung catcher has been Dwight School of New York alslaquo) long known for his bullet like participated tlnrowlr arm and gained conshy Aubrey Nash DeMatha junloY siderable praise from opponents wall named the tournnmentl in 111gh school amateur and colshy most valuable player lege eompetitions for his savvy A 5-11 junior John Somogyftbehind the plate set three tournament records-shy

Three-Letter Man 40 field goals 108 points in threE Bonalewicz played football for games and 43 points in one game Don MontIe basketb~ll for Tom and tied another record ll-forshyKaram and baseball for middotJoe 11 from the foul line Lewis while at Durfee and also performed for Lewis Chathammiddot team in the Cape Cod League

The Fall Riverite cannot get FAIRHAVENenough baseball according to his mother Mrs Bonalewicz recalls LUMBER a game at Alumni Field when

COMPANYDurfee bested a Venezuelan team sponsored by the Peoplesshyto-Peoples program Bob was inshy Complete linejured and taken -to the hospital Mrs Bonalewicz remembers Building Materials then came back to finish the game hitting a home run to win I SPRING ST FAIRHAVENmiddotit for the Hilltoppers He wall voted the outstanding player in 993-2611the gameo

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I

THEANCHOR()ioltese of Fan ~tv~r-Thurs ApO 1967 ~ ~ middot-middotmiddotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ middot20

AT BISEIOPS CONFERENCE Facilities for offering Mass were provided by the Archdiocese of Chicago when 230 U S bishops met in semi-annual conference In left photo nine othel prelates concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Joseph TRyan of Anchorage Alaska In right

photo are Archbishop John F Dearde~ of Detroit at left president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and at right Archbishop Johl1l F Cody of Chicago conference host Bishops Connolly and Gerrard attended from the Fall River Diocese NC Photos

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Page 6: 04.20.67

6 THE ANCHOR-Di~c~se of Fail Riv~r-Thurs Ap~ 20 1961 - ~ 1middotmiddot 1 ~ --~ ~ bull bull - ~~

Reports Mean What There will undoubtedly be more than the usual furor over the release by the National Oatholi~ Reporter of a text of majority and minority reports submitted to PopeshyPaul on the matter of birth control It will be well to reshymember what these reports are and what they are supshyposed to do

Members of the Papal Commission on Birth Control were asked by the Pope to study the whole matter from every possible point of view and to submit their findings to him so that in the light of this work and in the light of the medical issues involved he might make moral judgeshyments and pronouncements on these matters The studies would then be expected to contain every possible aspect of the birth control problem with every kind of argument both for and against every type of method of birth cOntrol This is fundamental to any kind of reshysearch paper All sides of every aspect are discussed argushyments strong and weak are brought out to bolster each

aspect and then the whole is presented for thought and prayer and decision

This indeed is what the Papal Commission has done For a reader to take this or that argument and from

it to mak~ his own deductions is unwise and a misuse of what the Commission has done For a reader to take what the Reporter has printed and to assume that this is the whole story is to come to conclusions on partial evidence

The Reporters release of these texts will be seen by many as an act of freedom the willingness for all matters -to be discussed openly and before the entire world It is hoped that the Reporter has gone a step further even and has indicated to its readers what these texts really IPean how they are to be understood and the purpose of research papers of this type Most people are neither philosophers nor scientists nor theologians Philosophical concepts socioshylogical and scientific ideas theologizing about issues-all this cannot be simply thrown at people with the expec~tion that there will be no confusionTo think this way would pe naive

It is never enough simply to issue reports Two questions should always be asked in the wake of reports---are they accurate and what do they mean Or-to put it quite inelegailtly-Sez you and So What

Auschwitz Mem(jrial Attempts to slant or rewrite history should alw~ys be

met with vigorous and serious protest On Sunday a monshyument was dedicated in Poland to the memory of the four million persons who met death in the gas chambers of the infamous Auschwitz death camp This act of unspeakable barbarity should live forever in the memory of man

But the -dedication ceremony Sunday made scarce menshytion of the fact that the overwhelming preponderance of thos~ killed were put to death only and precisely because they were Jews The only reference to this martyrdom of the Jews was made in French by the president of the Intershy

nationa1 Auschwitz Committee and his remarks were not translated into Polish

The chief speaker Polands Premier gave greetings to the Jews who had come to pay tribute to their dead but glossed over the ordeal of the Jews which still hangs heavy On the consciences of those who call this a civilized world

It remained for individuals and groups after the formal eeremonies to offer prayers for the Jews who died because they were Jews and for no other reason

Men the world over should add their prayers for these ~agic victims and should pray too that time will not erase either the blrbarity of the deed or the reason-s for it

rhe ANCHOR OffiCIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FAILL ~QVER

410 Highland Avenue

ublished weekly by The Catholi~ Press of the Diocese of Fall River Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER ~ost Rev James L Connolly DO PhD

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER Rt Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev John P Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J Golden

~ ~

tbfs In the U So Universal eashyonical nonns will be given bv the Vatican and U S norms jr$ be established by the NCCD

It was suggested that trained CCD laymen be permitted to dIlt part-time ministry as a step tilshyward this establishment

Missions A comniission of seven bishopa

will guide coordinating effon among mission appeals for finalilot cial support and personnel

Religious Needs Regarding fund solicitations hi1

religious communities t)te bis~

ops felt the problem is very comshyplicated and voted an ad hOC joint committee be formed further study

Justice-Peace The bishops formed a natio~

counterpart of the Vatican COJDoo mission on World Justice-Peaee

It was described as a broad c0shyoperative program ofeducatiOlil designed to arouse collaboratioO with other religious groups in an

ecumenical kind of project to make this affluent nation of oUDI more aware of the tremend01lilll needs of developing nations

Vietnam The Justice-Peace Commissiou

vIas obviously interested JDj such topics as Vietnam and musti face them as moral dilemmas ~

[D) 0 rL 11 A IL J our time it was notedWD~lflJ~ tr[FtOl -~rn1 e(1~ A spokesman mentioned greali

Lr Continued from Page One

On mixed marriages the formof the promises as used in the Madison Diocese was recomshymended for general use throughshyout the U S It states We sol emnly promise that all children who may be born of our marshy

riage will be baptized in theCatholic Church and carefully~eared in the knowledge and practice of the Catholic religion We are both aware that our marshyriage contract will remain biJid

ing until death We promise not to hinder each other in the pracUce of religion

On previous censorship the bishops wish prior approval be required for the actual texts Of Sacred Scripture books of prayer or devotion liturgical or ceremorial books textbooks used in religious eliucation programs especially in the primary and secondary levels that prior apshyproval not-be required on books or articles dealing with Scripshy

ture theology canon law eccleshysiastical history and like subshy

jectsIf dangerous tea~hings are

found a warning in pastoral tone should be issued

Coordination A Cominittee onPalitoral Reshy

should correspond more closely have asked the VatIcan to rele shysearch and Practice was founded shy to what is usually found in the them from these provisionshwhic WIll coordinate the follow- American system of education COD

ing committees Liturgy Ecu- f f menism Canonical Affairs and ~ur years 0 high school four The CCD has been and wiD Doctrine 0 college four of theology that continue primarily as a religiouB

seminaries on the high school Liturgy and college levels take accredi- educational program on the

Four possible texts ofthe Eng- tation steps all seminariestake parochial level reported BishoP lish Canon of the Mass were Greco to the hierarchy He alsO given By a vote of C to 1 one cond~l~t self-study in the ligbt of announced that the complete text ~xt was given approval of genshyeral tenor A definite text is expected by June of this yjar

~etirement For bishops it wasmoved that

a retiring bishop be permitted to reside in his diocese that suit~ able sustenance be provided him (especially medical and hospital care) and that the N~B do so

if a particular diocese cannot that r permanent commLJion is needed to oyersee this that the pr~visions for retirement extend to all bishops-auxiliaries titushylar etC-and not only residential bishops

For prirsts that various beneshyfit plans be reviewed so as to ready a national plan of care and benefits for retired priests

Priests One of the first functions of

the Committee on Pastoral Reshysearch and Practices will be to study in depth the role amI life of the priest in American society It should consider priestly forshymatioD income distribution

i2J concern among the bishops abou~ seminary studies parish strue- Vietnam citing their statemellli ture celibacy the mission needs last November that no serioWl of Latin America and the thkd Christian can absolve himseril

world from being concerned with tb18 As fa- as celibacy is concerned question but added I sense

the NCCB unanimously rea1- great reluctance among the bis~ firmed clearly and strongly the ops to take a stand either crill shyexplicit teaching of the Vatican cizing or endorsing various as-Council on the current and ira- pects of the prosecution of the ditional observance of clerical war

celibacy Pastoral Councils To rumors that a Catholic The bishops are in search far

priest can leave the Chufth II sample constitutIon for pap marry and in a few years obtaID 10ral councils which will clead permission from Rome for lay distinguish it from the diocesaD Catholic standing a spokesman eonsultors and the priests seDshyfor the bishops answered ates

This is a policy the JJoJv Twenty-four topics were pre-Father controls Any priest who sented which might profitably be engages in this is engaging in ma~ers of study ranging frOlia spiritual Russian roulette Be adult education to vocations has no guarantee any dispensa- National Parishes tion will be given to him in tile It was shown that accordingfuture

A survey of the distribution Pope Pauls Ecclesiae Sanctae a and utilization of priests in the bishop has the rigllt to suppresS

national parishes-those estabshyU S is being prepared bythe lished for special ethnic groups Center for Applied Research in T R C h

the ~postolate (CARA) Nothing he oman urIa oweveJl definite could be presented since bid the bishops not use this rIght

because of concordats WIth go~only 63 per cent of the dioceses shyhave responded so far ernments or the physical or

moral rights of persons involved Priestly Formation without first referring to tho

Eight general recommenda- Holy See tions were made for all semina- Since these conditions do ~ ries the seminary structure apply t0 the U S the blsh shy~

c~nci Ibear documents that provJ- of the new edition of the CeD SIons made for a system of Bible will be published in earlYcommunication between the litoshydet body and the administrative 1968 mong the scholars preshyand teaChing faculties so that paring translations are five dieshystudents may present their views tingUishec Protestant memberS regarding the seminary program Newman for faculty consideration that It was recommended thai seminary advisory boards of priests in Newman work be enshyqualified members of clergy and couraged to secure advanced laity apart from seminary per- academic degrees especially m sonnel be encouraged that a theology that the high rate otl BA degree or its equivalent be turnover among Newman priests an entrance requirement for a be curtailed that part-time theoloID seminary that eccel- chaplains be made full time siastical studies begin with a where possible that more priests course so students lerceive the be assigned to the Newman meaning order and pastoral end Apostolate for the growing numshyof their studies ber of Catholics attending col-

The bishops also encouraged lege and university that the amalgamation where seminaries bishops re-emphasize the growshycannot maintain a suitable pro- ing importance of the Newmali gram due to size unsatisfactory Apostolate facilities inadequate faculty fi- New Dioceses nancing and similar programs The committee on presen~

Deacons names for new bishops will a- It was recognized that there deal regularly with the questi_

will be permanent order of of diocesan boundaries and tile deacons established and that the establishment of new dioceses

_NCCB will be empowered 10 do Turn to Pll4Ie SeVeD

7 Diocesan Sc~oots Students Reap Honors Aplenty as Senior Year Enters Into Final Phase

Honors aplenty are being garne~d by Diocesan students among them Andrea Trczinski a senior at Tauntons Bishop Cassidy High whos been selected as one of 15 New England students to participate in the 1967 Youth Science Congress jointly sponsored by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the National Science Teachers Association

In the course of the two and a half day congress now in progshyress at the NASA Electronics Research Center in Boston Anshydrea like the other participants will present a 15 minute oral

report of the project which gained her inclusion in the

event

Duck Fond The presentations say conshy

gress officials are not comPetishytive but will give listening scishyentists and teachers the opporshytunity to evalute them and offer guidance to the students

Andreas project is an arehaeshyological and geological investigashytion of an early American potshytery works The Duck Pond Site It has already won her many awards in state and reshygional science fairs

Students from Stang and from St Anthony and Holy Family high schools in New Bedford were participants in an essay eontest sponsored by the New Bedford Serra Club on The Role of the Priest and Nun in the Christian Community

First place winner was Cidhshyerine Giammalvo of Stang and cliiIdren at st Josephs Home to mnners-up were Mary Black a~ outing Sunda) while NBSers also of Stang and Michael at Mt St Marys have elected Tames of St Anthony Stang their officers for next year inshyalso won a plaque for baving the eluding Martha Nugent presi- most entrants in the contest dent Judith Doolan vice-presi-

At Stang theyre congratu- dent Susan Bernier s~cretary lating Cynthia Curry named to Diane Berger treasurer represent ber school on an area -Speed reading is the word at department stores teen fashion Sacred Hearts Fall River where board Mt St Mary Academys some 30 students are devoting representative to the same board th~ hours eery Saturday is Elaine Chaves The lucky gals mo~ing to a reading improve will receive modeling instruc- ment course Reading power tiona in connection withmiddot their ~ed and word study are em- appointments and will also be phasized in the 10 week course given the clothes they model which began April 1 Again at Stang word has Also at SHA varsity and jayshyreached the office that John vee teams in volleyball and basshyGolenski a 65 grad and now s ketball honored Mrs GeGrge Be sophomore has received a Snyder their coach at a surprise grant for Summer study in dinner Well they might since

EuroSePbe hi A ta Mrs Snyder has led them to olani PB coop nees Narry League championships in

Still very much in the newa ~t~ sports are notices of college scholar-middotmiddot Honoi lroviJiclai ships and acceptances At Doshyminican Academy Fall River Jesus-Mary students honored Elarne Fisette has been accepted the Mother Provincial of the lReshyat Southern Conn State College ligiousf Jes~s-Mary at ~ eer-middot powet supplied to them occupied Briana Doherty Linda Guill Diane Giasson at SMTI and Sue emony mcludmg ~e readmg of the bishops The NCCB will furshy mette and Mary Wynne Gagnon at Bryant while Jerome lIl~ ad~ress by PaulIne Dumas ther study the matter

Mancini has received a full tul- s~hool preSident the presenta- Oth b t h h th b h f f1 er su Jec s w IC e is shytion grant from St Annesmiddot~os- tion 0 owers anll gIfts and a ops treated were communica- pitaI School of Nursing ana a pe~orrnance by the g~et C~U tions between the bishops and

padial grant from the Utlion OccasIOn was the Provmcial smiddot tmiddott tmiddotmiddotmiddot f p hi 1 bullbull t t d Colle Ins 1 u IOns 0 Ig er earnshyosplmiddottal dItto annua VISit 0 heaca emy 1 middotmiddotmiddottmiddotiUmiddot S h n J bullbull Ilg In bullbulle c anges In pershy Receiving annual renewable ChristIan Youth Movement mission middotformiddot the alienation of

Scholarships at Jesus middotlVlary m~mbe~ of Prevost and JM~ churchproperty increased edushy J

Academy Fall River are Su- Wlll VISIt Nazareth Hall thiS cation onthe threats of abortionshyianne Lagarde awarded a $2300middotmiddot month and will also sJonsor a cooperation with the YMCA ami grant from Fordham University cake sale Sunday AprIl 30 A YWCA better coordination with and Yvonne L Berger recipient vigil service is set for Monday ihe usce celebration of the ()f three grants from Northeast- em University totaling $2180 Suzanne previously received a $2500 scholarship from Northshye~tern ~nd Yvonne is a semishyfinalist In the Rhode Island State Scholarship Program

Prevost reports that Gerry Ferris has been accepted at Bridgewater State College and Cassidy notes that Rita Donnelly has received a full scholarshiJ) fto Johnson and Wales Business School

Chess Tournamenamp Prevost students arent giving

their gray matter a rest this vacation week In progress is a schoolwide chess tou~ament

IIDd the winner will receive a tro~nv

On the agenda at Cassidy is a Junior College Day slated for Thursday April 27 a Couples Dance Saturday April 29 and a father-daughter night Wednesshyday May 3

lPRan lltetJreat

Mt St Mary students will helli a taUt by Rev Bernard Sullivan Friday April 28 in preparation for the retreat theyll be making the first three days ox May Also to speak at Mount on the same day is Mother Mary Martha Assistant General of the Sisters of St Joan of Arc whose topic will be vocations The Sisters of St Joan of Arc care for rectories bishops houses and seminaries

Still in the vocation line Sister Mary LaSalette of the Mount faculty will attend a meeting at Bristol Community College Wednesday April 26 Subject Vocations

Dominican Academy students will enjoy their senior prom Frishyday June 9 at the Hearthstone restaurant and congratulations are in order for DAs student council moderator Sister Mary Agnes who has been offered a

graduate assistantship at the University of Wisconsin Prevost members of the Nashy

tional Honor Society treated

April 24 and members will hold Year orFaith in connection with their year-end banquet Saturday the 1900th anniversary of the June 3 _ martyrdom of Ss Peter and Paul

Prevost debaters are preparing celebration of Communications for the JFK tournament to be Day May 7 held at Cassidy in May Thus far the Prevost team has chalked up an 8-5 record

(ASA BLANCA Just Across The

Coggeshall St Bridge Fairhaven Mass

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STEAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

MOTHER PARKERS famous for OLD FASHIONED DOUGHNUTS

QUALITY and baked by your Sunbeam Baker SERVICE

CONTESTS WINNElRS Winners of New Bedford Serra Club essay contest on roles of priest nun in Christian community are from left runners-up Mary Black Stang High and Michael James St Anthony High and first prize winner Catherine Giammalvo Stang High Stang also won plaque for having most entrants in contest

Parent-Teacher Night is sched- duties for many of the Cassidy uled for Tuesday April 25 at students meanS more time to JMA and will feature as a profit byvarlous e~ucational opshyspeaker Dr Betty-Anne Metz of portunities At the Mass State

Bristol County Community Col- Science Fair Friday April 21 lege through Sunday April 23 Cheryl

And Prevost students are anti- McCaffrey top winner in the cipating a dance Friday April school SCience Fair and chosen 28 at St Annes Audit6rium The one of the 25 representatives Torquays will play from the Fall River Regional

This isNational Library Week will repr~sent Cassidy High toshyand mixt week is Secretaries gether WIth Pamela Candee Week so maybe everyone should The Massachusetts Youth Cit shyreld a book about secretaries izenship Conference at Bndg~shyAt any rjlte Cassidy Future Sec- water sc~eduled ~or tod~y ~Ill retaries of America will tour a attract the follOWIng 10 JUnIors North Dighton plant and visit chosen as representatives Donna Wheaton College Also pn their Cole M~y Fenton Kathl~en agenda isa reception on Sunday Hanna Eb~beth Laffan Paulme and aluncheon next Wednesday Lecuyer

Cassidy Go Despite Vaeatlon Also Carolyn McCaffrey Joshy anne Orchekowski Margarita

Free time from regular class Procopio Anne Marie Sullivan and Donna White The subject of this years Conference is ValuesU SmiddotmiddotBishopmiddots in a Changing World

Continued frQm Page Six At EmmailUel College Friday hiterdiocesan Offices April 21 three of Cassidys lanshy

An extended discussion on guage students will compete in sueD agencies might be best the annual French Contest for strUctured and adequate manshy High School Students They are

fHE ANCHORshylhun April 20 1967

Labor Statement Wins Approval

SAN ANTONIO (NC) Farm labor leaders hailed the Catholic bishops of Texas for issuing a statement supshyporting the right of farm workshyers to form unions and urging national legislation to protec~ this right

Spokesmen of farm associashytions responded that they do no~

oppose field workers joining unions but withheld comment pending a study of the bishops pronouncement

The bishops declared that among the basic rights of a human person is the right of freely founding associations or unions for working people and that all should have the right of freely taking part in the activities of these unions without risk of reprisal

The statement was issued at the conclusion of a two-day meeting of the board of directors of the Texas Catholic Confershyence It was approved by the bishops of the 10 Texas dioceses

Farm workers in the Rio Grande City area of south Texas have been on strike since last June and their efforts had been endorsed previously by Archshybisho Robert E Lucey of Sam Antonio and Bishop Humberto Medeiros of Brownsville

Leading the praise for the bishops was Cesar Chavez of Delano Calif national director ofthe United Farm Workers Organizing Committee whose Local No2 is striking in Rio Grande City

Chavez termed the statement very powerful and very charshyitable lle said he thinks the declaration is an answer to the prayers of thousands and thoushysands of farm workers in the Southwest asking that their Church and Church leaders stand with them in their struggle to ~ure social -justice as ennunshyciated toy the popes in the many encyclicals~

DEBROSS OIL co

Heating Oils and Burners

365 NORTH FRONT STREET NEW BEDFORD

992-5534

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 Medical Gr9uP Inducts Nun

Spring Cleaning Reveals WASHINGTON (NC) - The first nun was inducted as a fel shylow of the American College ClI Obsttricians and Gynecologists at its 15th annual clinical here

Hoards of Yardgoods lBy Mary Tinley Daly The honor went to SiBtel

Spring housecleaning is like a great white light revealshy Miriam Paul Klaus of the Me~

ing all Its not just dust in the bedsprings and radiators cal Mission Sisters who have headquarters in Philadelphi~the great unwashed slats of Venetian blinds gummy glasses dlJring the coJeges session~stashed away on an upper shelf finding of borrowed books Sister Miriam Paul was nlaquolI

too long unreturned These are what i call honest misshytakes chores you dont mind having household help help you with like doing floors walls windows rugs furniture

This is orthodox Spring cleaning such as every housewife can t a c k 1e have done with and point to with pride No the nuisances at least at our house are the secret sins jobs weve really anticipatshyed getting at one of these days but the llPecific day never seems to come And nobody but nobody can help in this department

Moms Hobby Shll)p For instance theres the used

furniture corner of the attic sOmetimes laughingly referredto as Moms Hobby Shop Theres the dresser bench Mom b going to cane when and if Mom learns how to cane an art supposed to be lotS of fun There ure two perlectly good boudoir chairs or iiI be perfectly good when theyre recovered And the little stand picked up at uuction waiting patiently to be antiqued when and if Mom learns how to antique another touted fun hobby bull

What the good-natured ribbers of Moms Hobby Shop dont know is that another secret cache of to-be-dones awaits in one corner of the basement the touch of a little hand pktures to be framed along with a framshying kit which any child can master another kit of clear plastic resin ideal for embedshyding coins flowers leaves rocks shells pictures novelties jewshyelry So far efforts have reshysulted in the embedding of one penny askew and far from ornashymental Theres also ever~thing

you need to wire a lamp everyshything but the skill that is

A strong-minded woman would become a Jill of all trades masshy1er skills necessary and do away with the jobs one at a time or else give away all t1e maIdngs ~~t then a str~))~gmil)d~ woman probably wouldnt have gotten

intothisfixin the first place With springcleani~goncoming

lik~ the inevitable tinie and taxes we decided to dean around the undones in attic and

basement facl up to legitimate eatchiills like the ~drponlClos~ etsbull

Dougherty High Band Wins Festival Honor

WASHINGTON (NC)-In this middot ease to the victors it was a mix- ture of cherry blpssoms and roses

The members of the Cardinal Dougherty High School Band of

Phiiadelphia marched ltYff with first place honors in the band

middot eompetitlon at the annual Cherry Blossom Festival _parade -an event which attracts tens of

middotthousands of visitors annually 10 the nations capital

The vIctory was nothing new to the bandsmen - and girls They won first prize two years ago and last March 17 won middotfirst prize in New Yorks St Patricks Day paralaquoe

present to receive the honor PelshyThere not in one not in two but in every closet we were sonally She is stationed at the

communitys Holy Family Heampfaced with the nemesis a box or pital in Dacca East Pakistan a bag or apile of yardgoods

The college accepts as fello~Forgotten IItems physicians who specialize in obshyThe sewing center has been stetrics and gynecology and aregoing pretty full tilt at our house judged competent and ethical byrecently what with a bedroom their colleagues Sister Miriamwhere we can set up the mashy Paul took the written examinashychine the ironing board sew tions for the American Boardseveral hours every day walk of Obstetrics and Gynecology iQout shut the door and come back Pakistan in 1965middot and the oralto undisturbed work the followshy examination in Chicago in Apriling day 1966

Matter of fact we thought She is a native of Viennasmugly we were getting all

Allstria a naturalized U S citi shysewed up tents and jumpers zen and a convert to the Cathoshyand miniskirts for the young

suits skirts hats for the more NO ATTLEBORO ART WINNERS Pauline Lemieux lic Faith from Judaism She joined the Medical Mission Sisshyconservative first grade William Midon eighth grade Cecile Parent ters in 1957 after completing herWe even felt no compunction sixth grade were the leading artists in the contest conshy medical education at the Univerin indulging a long-standing ducted in Sacred Heart School No Attleboro sity of Louisville Ky and herhabit of visiting a yardgoods residency at Barnes Generalcenter quite often picking up an Hospital in St Louis She haGirresistible bargain in cloth seshy

~spent six years at the sisteplecting a pattern and actually hoods hospitals in Pakistaneompleting garments

The sewing room Markie~ Sister Mary Luke Gray an- erstwhile bedroom was in reshy o~her Medical Mission physician markably good shape as a proshy has also passed _the AniericaD duction center and could eVeR IMAGE-MAKING Board of 0bstl~tricsand Gyne suffer the pangs of Spring houseshy

In this ever-changing worldcleaning with mere picking up of scraps setting 10 rights and a horough cleaning

But those unearthed forgotshyten treasures in the other closshyets Why there was enough mashyterial here to keep Us chained 10 that sewing machine as was Proshymetheus to his rock

Now what had we intended 10 do with that short length of pink flannel Oh yes wed picked it up for the proverbial song at a visit to a mill in South Caroshylina would have it until the folshylowing spring and make a coat for Mary Daly Brennan (Mary is now nine years old and this pink bit wouldnt even make a coat for her little sister) MUs~ lin broadcloth velvet tweedshyyou name it we have it -

Out into the clear with every item from every box bag and pile

Io more saving no more stashing away no more visits 10 remnant counters

The Head of the House paying one of his rare visits to our sew- ing center viewed the miniature mill-end display

By the way he asked hows about putting a new pocket in these trousers And sOme shirt buttons that have popped

OK First t~ings first

Baltirnor~ Nun to Head C()lIeg~ Advisory Unit

PITTSBURGH (NC) -Sister M Cleophas Costello of Balti shymore will serve as chairman of the newly formed Commission on Higher Education of the Fedshyeration of the Sisters of Mercy

The commission will serve in an advisory capacity in mat~ers concerning the 15 colleges opershyated by the order The federashytion numbers 15000 nUDll throughout the United states Canada and Lat~n America

New President LOS ANGELEE (NC)-5ister

Cecilia Louise Moore will beshycome president of Mount St Marys College here in Califorshynia ~)D Aug 15 next succeeding Sister Mary Rebecca who haS headed the womens liberal aris college since 1961

where what is in one moment is obsolete the next there is nothing more changeable than

the image of the ideal woman This image that stamps itself on the minds of millions causes fashion design- ers to change styles and forces females alI over the world to rush to the beauty facshytories to be turned out as its carbon copies is created in many ways Sometimes it starts with a particular model that hits the publics fancy or a cinema star that reaches her audience or even as in the case of Mrs Kennedy with the rise and public acclaim of a woman associated with politics

However whatever the reason or manner or time that creates an idol of this woman 8Jl idol she is at least until someone else more exciting comes along ~ cpallenge her place

This phenomenon of one womshyan or tyPe of woman leading alI others is nothing new Im sure there has been an ideal type of beauty since Neanderthal man dragged his mate by her long thick tresses into his cave (eer- tainly no short-haired eave girl wOuld have shone m prehistoric times)

Charles Dana Gibson pPOVided the image of the goddess of the

Protestants to Speck At Catholic Retreats

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - At least one Protestant minister Or layman ~ill appear as guest

speaker at retreats held in the San Antonio area during the coming year an archdiocesan committtee OIl lay ecumenism has decided

The ecUmenical aspects of the retreat program win carry over into a 1967 Ecumenical Diashylogue scheduled for June 29 UI July 1 at St J~ephs retreat bouse here Selected ministers

priest Sisters Brothers and laity will be speakers

cology examinations and win 1900s with heavenly sketches of return to Pakistan to continue a dark haired question mark her practice coiffured beauty with Ii lOng 11gt

graceful swanlike neck Immediateiy all fashion-con-

csious females of that day rushed out to the local emporiums to purchase henna rinses and rats (the hair peces of the 90s) to puff out their skimpy pompashydOlUS

The tWihkling 20s had no sooner been born than the It Girl Clara Bow caused the daughters of the aforementioned females to toss away their rats head for the nearest barber and expose their ears as well as their knees

Not a decade later these knees were encased in satin lounging pajamas and the ears hidden under the marcelled curls that Jean Harlow sported

And such has been the tide of fashion everchanging and generally influenced by circumshystances from the short skirts of the material-rationed war years through the New Look that welcomed the advent of peace

TOdays Qlieen

What of our present fashion Queen Who is the woman ofshythe 60s who isthe darii~goft~ fashion press and fashion de- signers oddly enough in this age of affluencemiddot it seems that the female wile outshines an others is ~ long-legged wideshyeyed British model who looks like an ad for Care packages and answers to the improbable name of Twiggy ~sley ~ornby (the name on

Twiggys birth certificate) is a 11 year old pathetically thin ex- schoolgirl who has been sky- rocketed to fame and fortune through the efforts of her Sven laquoali -her manager

Her waif-like face shining Jrom the cOvers of hundreds of magazines haS inspired young females everywhere ie nmtfgt their hairdress~rs ~ ) g~miR eut paint theirmiddot lower lashes_ like those of a kewpie don and push away t~at dessert pla1e Twiggy is apparently the JleW

idol of the fashion world - at l~ast until next season

9 Nows RightTime to Plant Peas for Early Enjoyment

By J~ aridlfan1ynRoderiek It is a eustom in New England to serve salmon and peas

00 the Fourth of July Years back this was the time when thresh salmon showed up Jin New England fish markets and Jllative peas could be found ~t the corner store Now we have frozen peas year round and amp Imon may be had throug~- ~t most of the year Thll3 lm-as taken the special delight (iJlJt of native foods but we can G1tfll appreciate fresh vegetabtea limd fish made much morepaia-~ oble by being put on a tablel 3

day or so after it is caught If you want fresh peas fortne

~ourth of July you can sow your creed about the third week of llIlay We prefer ours a little ear_I ~er and so we get the seeci ~lanted by the second or third week in April 00 that the planta will be well on their way before ~e cold weather is gone and (he warm weather arrives By QlllIll reckoning the peas we planted last week will be ready ~ the second week of June

Peas are simple to grow and Ililave nO special difficulties They Ilteed sun moisture and good s6il A row of peas may be planted fulna matter of 10 minutes ahd OOten forgotten until it ia tiine

Th k Si te h d th IIS wee s rae c ass act out the sacrainent to go along with their lesson in the religious Workbqok My daughter came homedelirious with joy because she was chosen to bring in the baby

We unearthed a doll that we ilelt was closest to newborn baby size and Grandma helped by finding the baptismal garments that were stored in her house and by dressing the fortunate stand-in while she explained to Meryl and Melissa that this was the same dress that they wore when they became members of the Church

In fact the children were awed as I further explained that actually four children had used these baptismal garments Meryl ~gan making plans immediateshyly Ann Marie is going to be the father (this in our all-girl ochool) Wendy is the godmother and Karen is going to be the ptiest because her new little

~r pickinlt b~othe was christened Sunday Jrirst tum the soil over to il a~d she knows jllst what to do

ilepth of about six inches or ~ Innoeent DIscussion and break up the clods Make ~ Even Melissa got into the act twrrow about an inch deep~~tl as she proceeded to spiel off m drop the peas into the furrow list of names that she thought iellst an inch and a half a~a~lt t~~ dfl~lshould be given Meryl eovel the furrow water ~~~ si~ e~pIiil1edto her that salt would ~ack a~d wait In 50 days or so dlependmg on the varIety of seed ~u ~se the peas wi1l be ready faj plckmg and ~atmg

Plant Anywhere )peas may be planted in rows

lMlt they may also be planted aishylllillost anywh~re they will get the IgtUUn I planted two little roWlJ ~tween some raspberry bushes raquolaquolother row in front of a flowe ~ where my wife will be able 00 get to them and still another JIlandful of seed in a foundation ~ianting in front of the house

This latter may seem to be goshyl1mg a little too far but by the ~me the annuals a~e in bloom le peas will have been con~

d oome the plants pulled up and DO one will be the wiser

The point is that one does not Thlave to make a big project out ~ growing a packet of seeds mnce half the pleasure is to be

flound in doing a minimum of work while reaping deliciolw nesults

In the Kitchen Most middot0f the books which conshy 1 thltOOJlI emse ves with heading

lIUr children in the right direc_ (tioqas living thinking Chrlsshyllians recommend that middotthebestW4yOOle Sacrament of Baptism is to Ilaye them attend an actual cer+ ~ony This is quite true as we

~rvotlCnced when Jason WM lgtavtized and Meryl and Melis Were allowed to attend

We were fortunate in that the l)lliest who performed the cereshyIlllOny was a personal friend who _plained clearly to the childreUll _actly wha~ he was doing rOIl liIUre this made a lasting impres-Ilion but I also feel that theii IlIIllnds were on the celebratiollll

be Pllt on the dolls tongue to preserve her from the sins of the Yorld and to give her III

atlste for wisdom It was delightful to hear them

discussing the sacrament in such inn~cent and childlike ways and yet witlt understanding that demonstrated wisdom far beyond their years The following incishyde~~ occurred at about the time this was happening and demon- strates the feeling of some chishydrep arid the naive wisdom they possess For two or three days last week Joe had seen a female rabbit in the yard and he had pointed it out to the children

th t itsayIng a appeared ready to have a litter Sure enough the rabbit did have a litter under the mulch around one of the rose bushes The children were thrilled but

f un ortunately a neighbors dog found the litter and killed the tiny newborn rabbits When

~~~~JIiCheese Gingerbread l3~ounee package ere a JllIl

cheese l cup molasses 2 eggs

1 cups sifted all-purpose ftOtllfi teaspoon baking soda

1 teaspoons baking powdeR 1 teaspoon cinnamon

OOnat was to take place at home 1 teaspoon ginger smd on all the people who were t~aspoon cloves ltllllming to help them celebrate 1-8 teasp~n salt

llhis in itself wasnt bad as it IIgt boiling water lB alsoimportant that they ~al- 1) Beat the cream cheese urim koo th~t a baptism is aiQytul Ce- ~BOft andfluftly then gradually llWliori which should be shared beatit the molasses Ytdh others butwith the confu- 2~ Beat- in the eggs one at Cl

CATHOLIC WOMEN HONOR BISHOP Welcoming Most Rev James L Connolly to the Annual Bishops Night Sponsored by the New BedfordCathoJic Womens Club are Mrs John W Glenn left president and Mrs Daniel F Dwyer first vice-president

Receiver Takes Over FHA Starts Foreclos~te lProcee~ings

Against Retirem~rjfttoriu~ MOUNT ANGEL (NC) - A

oourt-appointed receiver hall taken over operation of Mount Angel Towers a $34 million reshytirement home completed scarceshyy more than a year ago

The receiver-Portland attorshyney John R Fawt Jr - was named less than a month after the Federal Housing Administrashytion announced that it was start shying foreclosure proceedings against the home here in Oregon

Mount Angel Towers built on Beven acres of land donated to it

Sch001 Honors Chaplain

Killed in Vietnam PLEIKU (NC)-A new wing

has been added to St Pauls

School here in memory of Father (Maj) William J Barragy of the Dubuque archdiocese who was

killed in a helicopter crash inVietnam May 4 1966

A brass plaque on the office wall states Rev William J

Melissa appeared on -the scene Barragy (Major U S Army)boni October 13 1923ordained

she said realistically New life May 22 1948 dled In VIetnamI k p un and its all over Just May 4 1966 like Jesus born at Christmas

The new wing has five classshy dead at Easter rooms all on the ground floor

Last year when my oldest St Pauls is in the charge of the to teachyoungstersabout daitghier received the sacrament I Sisters ofSt Paul de Chartres

of tfie HolyEucharist for the first who alsohave anorphahge near tim~~ wil celebrated With a fam the iichoOtmiddot Thereare 1000 Viet ililgtru~ch Ali lt~~ everyon~ namese children receiving pri seeffied to enjoy was warm mar an -secondary educatmiddot10n i~

a bullbull ging~tbread the schOOL

by theilelghobririg Mount Angel Benedictine Abbey was billed on its completion in 1965 as the nations first Catholic retirement home

it was not the most prosperous however and by JIeb 7 when the mortgage-holder assigned the mortgage to FHA which had inshysured it the 207-unit six-story building had only 80 residents in 61 apartments

Appointment of a receiver was the first step in FHAs machinery toward eventual sale of the propshy~rty to another private operator

The home will be run as beshyfore according to the FHA Portshyland office until it can be sold to a suitable organization to maintain its operation as housing for senior citizens

FHAs office in Washington said Mount Angel Towers was one of about 20 such projectsshynot all Catholic - which had failed since 1960 when FHA mortgage insurance became available to them More than 200 have been built

llHE ANCHOR-Thurs April 20 1967

Sisters Assume Pasroral Duties

AKRON (NC)-Priests visit flBl administer the sacraments bu~

day by day the ordinary passhytoral duties are performed bsr nuns in Brazilian parishesmiddot il1l Natal and Salvador administered by the Daughters of Divine Charity

Their duties which includ~ the distribution of Holy Comshymunion were described here bV Mother M Fidelis Weninger who worked in Brazil for 21 years prior to her election in 1965 as mother general of th0 community

The Daughters of Divine Charity she said care for those parishes just as though they were priests Of course we cant administer the sacraments but we handle everything elseshysuch as pre-marriage instructionD and parish visitations

Permission for the nuns t distribute Communion was obshytained from Pope Paul vr through Bishop Eugenio de Araujo Sales apastolic adminisshytrator of Sao Salvador de Bahia she explained

Sister Mother Fidelis ordeli has been working in Brazil sincia 1919 and now has 460 nuns there aUexcept 18 of whom are Brashyzilians

The order has 1900 membero serVing in 10 countries throug~shyout the world with headquartern

in Vienna Mother Fidelis U1 completing a five-month visiia tion of the orders 37 convents in the United States

Greater Boston Sister Gets Fulbright Award

MEDFORD (NC) - SistCll Madeline Marie Nevins a gradushyate student at Tufts University has been awarded a Fulbright Fellowship to study medievaD French literature at the Univershysity of Paris France

The Mass Sister of St Josep~

will complete her doctoral wor at Tufts after her year abroad

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Schedules Convocation 1 bull

On Council Documents WILMINGTON (NC)- A dayshy

llong session of lectures and disshyICUssions on the Wilmington dioshyease and the post-council er81 will be conducted here

Some 600 clergy and laity are ~From anOlde English recipe - expected to attend the meeting

which is being sponsored by a Plumper rounderp bullarollp of ~concerned Catholics illl th~Wg~ing~on piocese fuller muffins~

batter is smooth 5) Gently stir in the boiling

Dn of the party it was difficul Um~~ water bull ascertain just how much the7 3) s~tt tltgether the flour bak- 6) Pourinto a greased 7 by ~ learned With this in mincll Ang ooda baking powdei ~ H pan Sunbeam English Muffins ~ were delighted when 1ft andspice~ f) Bake in a 350 oven 40 to lIound that Meryl was studying 41) Add the dry ingredients te 45 mlhutes] add about cup Olf Baked by your Sunbeam Baker _tism in 8daoo1 l1he cheese mixtu-l0 GUlring watilll Jl3iBins but this is optionaL

-

bullbull

HAPPINESS IS FAMILY REUNION A weekly radio reunion is Sula Spanish Honduras L~ft Barton Albert ham radio operator middot)liIl

enjoyed by Mr and Mrs Bernard Sullivan Holy Name parish Fall River Swansea connects the Sullivans with their daughter Right InSart Pedro

with their daughter Sister Anne Marie RSM missioned to San Pedro Sula Jack Gaffney performs the same service for Sister Anne Marie

Monastery VisitsSt~esses Serio~smiddot Ham Oplr~t~rs Arrangemiddot We~k~yRadiQ C1tat~ ChmiddoturchSituatilon CRAWFORDSVILLE (NC)C bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbull bull bull bullbull bull

bull bull 0In East -Germany BERLINmiddot (NC)-Christiari

ehurches in communist-ruled lEast Germa~y are suff(~ring from government harrassshymentand restrictions a Luthershy1m bishop told the eastern sec-

For Fa11 RiverParents Missionary Sistet Dr Eric Dean chairman of the religion and philosophy departshy

ments at Wabash College here Thursdays the most important day in the week to Mr and Mrs Bernard Sullivan in middotIndiana plans extended visits

of Holy NameparishFall River Its the day they talk to their daughter Sister Anne to severalmiddot Benedictine monas- shyMarie RSM assigned since last August to missi)n work middotin San Pedro Sula Spanish teries this year The visits Wt)ll

H h kl

onduras T emiddot wee y db

conversatIon is arrange y two h d

am ra W)

operators Jack Gaffshy be financed by a Carnegie gran~

receivedmiddot through the GreatLak~ ney in San Pedro Sula and Colleges Association Harton Albert of Swansea was on retreat However arshy with Sister from their livjng

tion oflt the synod of Germanys It came about tl)rough 3 rangements were made on the middotroommiddot ~eceptiori is excep~nt Protestant Church Council sPot for the first of the weekly noted Mrs Sullivan fully 88 middot~iiJbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbulliIbullbullbull_

The clergyman Bishop Fried- series of coincidences that conv~sations good as a local telephoriecallmiddot bull III rich Wilhem krummachet of Mrs SuliivaIi ascribesld the The luck extended to a fellow Another beneficiary ofthmiddot 11I11I J B ~ East Geimany said that SChool iuck6f the Irish and had its religious of Sister Anne Marie weekly radio reunion is REvmiddot bull ii ~~ld~~a~I~~V~~ti~~~~bel~~~~~~ ~t~~A~~~n~a~~nC~~i~~~~~~~ ~~~~~i~o~Sre~~~~r~~~~~~i~~~d~~~~~=~tOfS~tat~~~ ILUMBER CO beliefs 1 - $140 teleph~rie bill talkinllto ly appointment ~nd asked Mrs Mariesbrother bull bull

Lut~eranBish~~ ~~t Fr~liz th~~o~~~~g~~~riotin~~ri li~~tmiddote~r$Ullivan t if hSheWtohUld ~ewla~t a FOImiddotwonderlnmiddotg friends of the 11I 5middot0middot Dortmoutmiddothmiddot ~harf of Berlin chairman of th~ ~~SSl1g~ 0 er JTIQ er ar a Fall River Sister be it notedltGe~man Protestant C h u r c hmiddot rlidlO o~erator middotwho darra~ge a mmu~e slud MrAI~~rt r0rt~7 that she has middotexercisedmiddotthe name- and yan~ismiddot Council made similar charges at connectlOnmiddot for you said a WIth he got the PrOVIdence ~e western section of the synod frleId and someone else sug- Jlother on the phone and gave

I rgested Mr Albert middotwhom the h th of b IfoBejause the Eastmiddotmiddot lterman ~ r bull er e surpnsl e~ Ie as t t t t t b Sullivans- had )mown _for

some bull

she heard her daughter s vOICeIrovernmen res riC s col ac s e- t b th d th ht f ~ E t G -P t t ts Ime u a neVlr Qug omiddot J I don t even have to go tomiddotbullween as elman ro es in _ bl If and those in the West middotthe Protmiddot =~ a ~OsSI e channe omiddot cmmu ~wansea to talk said Mrs SII~ - t t d h ld t mcatlOnwIttISpamshHO1QQras livan Mr Albert can oConnec~

flS an syno was e middotmmiddot wo llec- S l middotmiddotmiddott d M tons one in west Berliri and the T~e ul Iv~ns VISI e r~ AI~ th E tB j berts t)oIle to talk over th~ e er ~ear as er m possibility of contacting-Sister

Catholics face similar pr()b- Anne Marie~ While they were raquoems because of a divi~~d G~r- th~re he demonsthitelt hi~ equip- ~an~ The East Gelman govern- ment fishing bull around the- airshyinen~ ~has prevented thej)ishops wavesmiddot and picking up an ama-middot ~here ~ om attending meetings o~ teur in -rexas

~he G~rman Bishops Conference To his feliow ham he menshyheld iiJ the West tioned that he was looking for

Join in Praytr an operator in Spanish HOlldurasmiddot BiShop Krummacher said at

the synod that iii the preslmtmiddot criss the Protestant churches must use evelY opportunity to join with Catholics in prayer Catholics and Pwtestants he llaid are bound together b~ the word of the Lord and a common Ilesponsibility

The bisho~ said Protestants in East Germany have made every effort to obtain relief fwm antishyJeligious discrimination but govshyernment authorities have reshyjacted all appeals for action

He said such refusals of the East Gelman regime to end the assaults on religion is partmiddot of communist strategy and planshy

ming To further their objectives he said the comTIunists will pelshymstip indoctrinating children in 1lheir ideology while interfering with the consciences and rights _ tJ children and their parenti

And the next voice wemiddot heard recounted Mrs Sullivan still sounding amazed was a man saying This is Sal Pedro Sula Spanish Honduras

Not only was Jack Gaffney th r operator from Honduras in te same city as Sister Anne Marie but it developed that he lived across the street from her

convent a~d had me~ her o~ sevshyeral occaSlOns- He ImmedIately offered to r~n across ~he s~reet and prmg Sister to hiS mlcro-middot phone lgtut it turned out that sie

Wins Festival Piize NEW YOEK (NC) - The

Search produced by Father Peytons Family Theater has received an award at Monte Carlo in the annual television

competition sponsored by the International Catholic Radio and TV Association

hiS radiO eq~llPrne~t to the tel~ phone and the Sulhvans can chat

Permit Experiment In bullShared Time P9RTLAND (NC)The Port-middot ~~nd school board has approvedai shared time experiment iii -Which children from a parochial ~chool in North Portland will attend classes part time in a nearby public school -

The experi~ent will inv~lve at first only physical education classes and will extend for only two middotyears

Children fro m Immaculate Heart parish elementary schoolwill be allowed to attend gym classes in Eliot school in the Qregon corrlmunity

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Bishop Medeiros Urges Justice ~ For Workers

BROWNSVILLE (NO) ~ Bishop Humbertltgt S Medeishyros of B~wn8ville whose diocese has been the scene of lPl 10-month strike by migrant farm laborers has told farm owners to meet their demands for highe) pay and bettei living eonditions

In a pastoral letter to all Cathshyolics in the diocese-most of the population - released today the bishop said

The present plight of the mishygrant farm workers of America is a constant reproach to our way of life

lFor 1lJse of Ail

They do not ask for charity They demand what is theirs by natural right When the affluent farmers pay a just wage to the migrant workers when they make it possible for him to supshyport himself and his family in frugal comfort and to provide education for the whole family they are not making a gift of their possessions to the farm worker they are simply handilg over to him what is his for they had arrogated to themselves what had becn given in common for Ute use of all

Migrant workers in the Rio Grande vaIiey surrounding Brownsville have been strikihg the larger farms for nearly a year in an attempt to get higher wages and better living condi- tions Their action supported by thc United Farm WorkersOr- ganizing Committee followed the limited success encountered by UFWOC laborers in Califomias lrape vineyards

Precarious Existence

But the Rio Grande workers have encountcred little successshyIllthough a recently organized boycott of produce has received growing support among the states food chains

Bishop Medeilos quoted libshyerally from both Pope John XXIII and Pope Paul VIs recent encyClical On the Development of Peoples in establishing the right of farm workers to adecent Jiving

But be also took note of the plight of Amcricas farmers themselvell who live out a preshylaquoarious existence unless they constitute large enterprises sllch as corporations 01 cooperashyiives

He urged both farmers and workers to organize in their own interest

Natural Ri~ht

Given the natiol~lr and even

aioll of Agricultule ald of fa~m workClS and of manyfarm own- ers in purticular it is urgent that they be aware of thei~ right

~~~o~~o~~~~C~~~i~II~~~~h I~~~~~ of development Which in the words of Pope Priul VI signifies ]lgte~cc

We know that every man hAS a basic natural right to form and join wOIkers unions which conshytribute to economic progress by dcfending his ights he said But thc circumstances of the times the world over indicate that for the common good it is also thc duty for both migrant farm workers and for farmers to form associations

The United States he said has bull duty to its miglant laborers llnd farmers which it must fulfill by passing apPlopliate legislashytion and using other suitable and dcmocratic means of assistance so that not only our tables but thc tables of the world may be blessed with the abundance of the fruits of the earth

lLO~AIJ INTEREST NIl IUSlHIOPS MEETING Disshy W Va Bishop Connolly Bishop Humberto IS Medeiros

cussing topics between sessions are Lawrence Cardinal Brownsville Tex and Bishop Joseph Brunini NatchezshySh~han Baltimore Bishop Joseph H Hodges Whe~]jng Jackson Miss

Churches Shore Latin America Failures

LutheranSees Stumbling Blocks Ahead SPJlINGFIELD (NC) -- The

Roman Catholic and Protestant churches have both failed in the past in Latin America and both face severe stumbli6g blocks in the future a Lutheran layman from Argentina said here

Dr Leopolydo Juan Niilus of Buenos Aires director of the Argentine Department of the River Plate Centre of Christian Studies discussed the Church in Latin America at a meeting of the Lutheran World Federations

Commission on Stewardship and Evangelism

He warned the group that in

too mlIlyquarters the Roman Cath~Ii~ Church has been the main whipping boy for the Latin AmeJican backwaldness~ and there hllS been too much selfshy

Some of the things atheist marxists are doingin our conti shynent should by heritage be added have bee) done by Christians

Looking toward the future Dr Niilus said there are very seshy

were stumbling blocks ahead for our Roman Catholic brethren also

Inseparable Unity They are he said being

hysterically requested by the supporters of the status quo tobecome their defenders once

again The Roman Church failed whenLatin America waS strug- glingJor its independence n may-all of us mayfail now

wheniHs struggling for its eco- lIlomic Independence Dr Niilus said that all

complacency and self-righteous- qhurdiesin Latin America roust ness about the positive role

quickly recognize that study and commitment as an insepshyarable unity is their most urshygent task if they are to play an effective role in the future of Latin America

They must study be said ~both political and economic isshysuell amplnd their theological imshy

Cancer Study lLOST UIS (NC)-The insti shy

lute Ior J)lolecular virology at St LOUiS University here in Misshy

bull souri has b~en awarded a $265shy

101 gJant from the National Canshyeer Instilute of the U S Departshyment of Health Jducation and Welf~re whic~ will enable reshysearchers to look for viral speshyeitic genetic material in himiavl elmcer

plicAtions and must be comshymitted to providing adequate pastoral CAre to those involvel in political and economic action

Pho~ClJI Archbishop Wons Sourin Medal

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Arc~

bishop John J Krol of Philadelshyphia bas received the annual Sourin Award of thc ] 17-yearshyold Catholic Philopatrian LiteJ1shyary Institute

The presentation marked the first time the award has beelll made to a member of the hieJ1shyarchy ]t is ordinarily given w a distinguished Catholic layman The Archbishop was cited 100 confident and courageous leadshyers~jP

played by the Protegttants in Latiq American social andeco N~w Music nomiltdeve~opment 1 PURCHAS~ (NC)-The Pius

Protestants be said have a X School of Litlllgical Music of share and~ responsibility in the Manhattanville College of the WHITE SPA creation of seriougt structural Sacred Heal1 here received maladjustments - both economic $20000 in grants from Charl~ and moral~ in Latin America ~nd Arthur Morgan Of New

York and John Morgan oi Most of the things our pro-Rockville Centre N Y to stimushy

gressive Roman Catholic bret~shy iae new music for the new BANQUETS bull WEDIl)~NG5imiddot P~RTIESilltc~national deprc~sed middotcondi-middot ie are doing today i~Latin m~rgy

America shouldbyheritage he -COMMUNION BREAKfASTSai~ have beel~~~nepygtrotes tants [ 11M3 PLEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

JEFFREY E SULLIVAN 993-778GFer~ Dome

MEMPHIS (NC)~Bi~tiopJoshySishopo~~~ed

550 Locust Street seph A Durick apostolic admin lFall River Mass istrator of the Nashville diocese received the first annual Human 672-2391 Relations Award from the Memshy Iltose E Sullivan CONVENIENT BANKINGphis Catholic Human Relations

Jeglrey E SullivallCouncil He was cited for his WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMSstands on human dignity and

at theequal job opportunities He reshycently instituted Project Equalshyity in Tennessee SlADES FERRY TRUST COMPANY

SOMERSET MASS

llhe most friendly democra~ic BANK offeringCORREIA amp SONS ONE STOP Complete One-Stop Banking

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Member Federal Deposit Insurance CorporotiBy the Village Green Since 18217middot354

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-11lun Apr 20 1961 12 - )

Irish Emigronts Concern B~hops inmiddot Pgstoral

DUBLIN (NC)-Thespiritual and social needs of Irish 0trtifirants and the importance of preparing them for their new life in other countries were major concerns of the

Irish hierarchy at its meeti~g here in- Maynooth In a pas~ toFal on emigration it wasmiddotmiddot pointed out that while de- parture of Irish people foigt residence in other cuiitries is on the decline those who do leave ~can be an enormous force formiddotgoodmiddotin the lands they go to if they have the right ideals and motLves and abilities properly developed

Without these the pastoral adds the alien enironment in which they find themselves may presen~ serious dangers to the spiritual and moral wenfare ~

the weaker ones Education and religious formashy

tion of young people by the bullbull schools and by the clergy coopshy

erating with teachers were cited as most effective contriilgtutiona

to the formation of those likely to emigrate

Among recommendations made in the pastoral for properly pi-eshyparing potential emigrants for livingin other lands were

Young people should be enshycouraied to remain in schooias long as they can benefit from H

Emphasis on the virtue of tem perance

The utilization of youth club activities (discussion clubs and

guiles) to help young members to acquire healthy and natural

sOcial graces and habits The aid of priests in helping

the young people to grow up to

confident maturity Counse by priests on expected

problems of housing suitable

I

REV ALBERT F SHOVELTON

Priest to Spe(l]llc At Seminar

Rev Albert E fShovelton dishy

rector of Sl Mary Home New Bedford will speak as a represhy

sentative of the Diocesan Comshy employment dangersmiddot to health Unity atNClline Committe~ longhours of work in other the75th anniversary celebration

countries advanced atrange- at Holy Trinity LutheranTo SurveyCU mentS with Catholic welfaeChurchNorth Easton Thursday agencies in countries 9f their April 27

CHIltAGO (NC) - The board choice and the provision of in Father Shoveltons talk ~iU of trusteesof the Catholic Uni-formlltion concerning facilities be part of aseroinar middotHe wili be versity of America Washing- abroad for emigrantS preceded by Rev Dr Nils Ehtenshyton D9middot his est~blished it ne~ ~he h6ldin~ Of Irisit~nhlli~middot 8~rom Boston University School survey and ogtlectlODs ~()mmlttee lft llt1rge centers lt ~ Theology whose subject will headed br ~ St ~OU~1l1(ly~a~ Aparishnewsletter s~nt be Ecun1eni~m in Protestant to study ~he funct~op and plaOl th I fmiddot h middotmiddotf g Perspective Today f th Cmiddotth li U -Of Of Dl0n y rom omemiddot 10 Or1ll1O ~ a 0 r ~vterslY~ lt the emigrants bfuricti6ns inFathel ShovElltons suoject will m~nqa ~r~o ern a hoh~ - the local parishes at Chri~tmaiJbe ~EcumeJ1ismin Roman Cllthshy

laCatton on middota national scale d thO t f th h oljc PerspectiveToday A dis-Th middottt an 0 er lmes 0 e yearw en JJ

e cozpml ee~~made up U4 they mightmiddot possibly be home~uss)n period will follow SIX laymen and four archbIshops ) The audience will be comshyall of whom ar~ pr~sent trustees _ prised of the Lutheran parisa o~ the u~lverslty Formatu~n at Southern PrOVince cmgregation the townspeople ~he conrrutteewasannounce by ~ _ the towns clergy and the stll~ FrancII Cardinal Spellman of Favors DIGcoraate ~ dents at Holy Cross Fathenl New york ch~rman of the MIAMI CNC)Bishops of the Seminary Catholic Urnverslty board province of Atlanta have giyen Pastor of Holy Trjnity is Rev

The appointment of the com- p~sts in the six-ctiocese area Kenneth E Bjorklund

nlission for Christian

SAVE DOLLARS

with the MERCHANlS

84EconomOO

Auto Loan Pian

mittee came against a backshyground of reports that the U S bishops might transfer its Ionshytrol of CatJlolic University to 11 group of laymen The univershysitys rector Bishop William J McDonald has denied the middotreshyports but the chairman of the

new commi~ee Dr Ca~roU Hochwalt SaId the commIttee has been given the widest posshysible mandate from which nothshying will be excluded Our assignment Dr Hochshy

walt saidis the most farshyreaching one possible We are to take a reaiistic look at every aspec~ of the university all it has developed under its original directive since 1889 and at its potential for the forseeable

gt futule It is obviously the trusshyteef desire to leave no qtiestfon unanswered which may aftect the unfyersityas anational-hlsti tution 1its ~aculty students ~d

permission to hear confessions in the entire province and they have also asked the National Brothers VOuDlltee~ Conference of Catholic BishoPs As firefilllhters

to consider restoring the perma- nent diaconate in dioceses that want it

The two decisions were ~~_ nounced after the Bishops held their annual meeting in Miami

Archbls~OP P~ul J Hallman of A~lanta SaId l~ IS cus~omary ~or prtests t~ receIve theIr faculties from theIr own dl~cese and they h~ve been restncted o use wlthn that diocese EffectlVelmshy

II NORTHBROOK (NC) - Four

of the 34 men in the Northbrook volunteer fire department here are religious Brothers They are assigned to the national headshyquarters of the Society ofmiddot the Divine Word at nearby Techny Ill

The Brothrs are on call any time the Northbrook first stashytion standby has two or less men on duty for all general

the Cliurcli and the nation ift ~ J llmohgihemthejt haVe fouglU serves~ ( I i) middotClosingmiddotMeasure middotisome 50fires lti

j middot5T PAUL (NC)4AbilLban

Dedicate Monment ~ing ~l)e sale pf spe~iti~mtr 0ROURKtr chandise on Sundays has heen ~

To adFe Serra middot houses bullbull FunealHomepassed b)-both of the j

medl~telY all pne~ts In good alaons and for any fire or emershystandmg may nw he~r the con- gency when additional personnel fesslOns of Iemtents 10 the A- are needed Their volunteering la~ta archdIOcese ~nd th~ 41- was approved by the superiors oces~ of Sva~nah Charleston andmiddot the seminary bought them II ~alelgh MIami and St Augus- veh~C1e to expedite transportmshy

tine tion when they answer a fire ~ ca~I

Solons pass Sun JI n y The Brothers estaimat~ that

S_CRAMENTO (NC) dDme MinrElsota legislatureGov~aJ monument of Padre runipero old LeVander of Minnesota was Serra OFMwassolemnly ded- exPected to sign it into law icated on the grounds of tille The legislation forbids the sale State Capitol here Saturday OIl Sundays and six holidays

The formal ceremonies were (New Years Day Memorial Day qonducted by officials of the Independence Day Labor Day state alld by officers of the Nll- Thapksgiving and Christmas) of tive Sf ns and Daughters of the cameras musical instruments Golden West The project haa phonographs and tape recorders been sponsored by the California radios and television sets jewel-State Legislature and the fra- ry clocks and watches furs terrial ~ orders who provided furni~ure and other home furshymatching funds to finance its nishings including appliances executi~n middotmiddotmiddotAlso wearing apparel ()all

S7J ~c~nd St~~ef

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Father Noel F Moholy OFMkinds including footwear lug- 469 LOCUST STREIE1T vice postulator for the canorlizashy gage lawnmowers and 9ther tion of Ithe Franciscan friar who outdvor machinery and equipshy FAU RIVER MASS bas been hailed as Californias ment hardware and tools paints 672-3381 First Citizen and Greatest Pio-Illeer W3 the principal speakeII at the ded~cation

varnishes wallpaper and re-middot lated tools lumber and other buildine materials and supplies

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Suburban Parishes Should H~lp Save City Parishes

WASHINGTON (NC)-Archbishop Patrick A YBoy1e of Washington appealed here to ~ubJrbanCatholic parisbes to come to the aid of poverty-stricken parishes in the inner city At least 10 Catholic parishes in the inner city need financial help to continue to ismiddotmiddoth d d - ize t II h told C Has ave ecrease s exlS e a ommumon though the schools have contimshy

breakfast of the St Vincent ued to operate at fun capacity de Paul Society and the Whll~ parish income has faUellil only way we can give it iI off school costs have risen ~ through our suburban parishes cause of increased salaries em-

Suburban parishes are hard ployment of lay teachers and pressed themselves he said with higher maintenance costs for most of them deepiy in debt 00- older buildings cause of new constru~tion and expansion Nevertheless they must inaiJpirit of true charity share their resources with our poor parishes

The archbishop said that one of the reasons flr the poor fi shynancial condition of the inner city parishes was the cost of operating their schools but said emphatically that none of these schools would be given up

If we didnt have to support our schools Archbishop OBoyle said nearly all Of our parishes couldmiddot take care of their basic needs But we are not going to giv~ up any of our schools as long as we can get Ii dime to support them

Not mentioning which parish was concerned he stated thatmiddot one middotitmner city parish received $54000 from archdiocesan funds las~ year

Msgr Thomas W Lyons Arch diocesanmiddot Director of Educatiot1 said th~t before the whije middotmigramiddot tionmiddot to the suburbs CathoUa constituted about 22 per cent 01 the Washington Population The Negr~ who replaced the whitea are only about JO per cent Cathshyolic The result is that the par

Parochial school tuiti6n which averages about $4 a month haa not kept pace with costs Msgr Lyons explained

The St Vincent de Paul Soclshyety-here recently announced a twinning program in whicb sOlue of the more affluent parshyishes adopt inner city parisheo and provide for their needs

Offers Folk Mass For Vocations

HOUSTON (NC)-Bishop John L Morkowsky of Galveston- Houston offered a special foUt MaSs for youth on World Day oL Pr~yer for Vocations at Sacred Heart co-cathedral here

Father William Steele diocshyesan vocation director said the folk Mass is being offered to atshytract the young people middotThemiddot homily duringmiddot the Mass dealt with vocations

Contemporarymiddot folk musiC composed by Ray Repp nation ally known folk song writer was played during the Mass Guitar aceompaniment was proshyvided by seminarians from St MaryoS Seminary here

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Cardinal Cushing Sees Decrease In Seminaries

BOSTON (NC)-The numshyber of Catholic seminaries in the United States will deshycrease because of the diffi shyculty of obtaining top-flight scholars to staH them Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston preshydicted here

Addressing the New England Conference of the Catholic Hosshypital Association the cardinal told some 680 nuns priests and

laymen that schools of theology both Catholic and Protestant will become more closely identi shyfied with the great colleges and universities of this country a system not unlike that of Oxford in England

Sharing the platform with Archbishop Cushing was Bishop Fulton J Sheen of Rochester N Y who urged Catholic hosshypitals to go outside their own walls to bring social and medical help to the poor

Go out into the slums he said Give two or three hours a day visiting poor families for healing and counseling

He also suggested that Cathoshylic hospitals in this country adopt hospitals in poor counshytries

In A Rut We can certainly afford to

have someone put up a hut in the poor world We have the spirit but we have gotten into a rut the bishop said

Bishop Sheen told the confershyence the hallmark of a Catholic hospital is that we serve each patient as we would serve Christ

Cardinal Cushing also preshydicted that rising costs of care of the sick will induce the fedshyeral government to become more closely identified in hosshypital administration

I was told he added that in some hospitals the cost of a bed per day is almost $100 There must be a ceiling somewhere

Salons to Study Divorce Laws

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey State Assembly has unanimously approved a resolushytion to establish a commission to study the states divorce laws The measure already passed by the Senate is expected to be signed quickly by Gov Richard J Hughes

Thp commission described by Governor Hughes as an effort to strengthen marriage has al shyready encountered the opposishytion of -the Monitor the Trenton laquoiocesan newspaper But the bIShOps of the states three other Oatholic dioceses have reserved comment -

Boih Governor Hughes and the commissions sponsor Sen Jereshymiah F OConnor are Catholics And while Senator OConnor would like to see the commission recommend liberalization of the states di~orce law - desertion adultery and extreme cruelty are the only grounds at present-he would also like other changes made

Among them are a- family eourt which would serve as

counseling agency as well as divorce court lengthening of the present three-day waiting period as a1 obstacle to quick marriages and anr a warning to young PershySODS of the seriousness of marshyriqe

Senate Election PROVIDENCE (NC)-Sixteen

members of the 26-member senshyate of priests for the Providence dJocese have been elected in the first part of the senates twoshyatage elections

REV PATRICK 3 ONEILL

NCIEA Appoints Fr ONeiU

Rev Patrick J ONeill Supershyintendent of Schools in the Dioshycese of Fall River has been apshypointed by the Superintendents Department of the National Catholic Educational Association to serve as a member of the nashytional committee concerning tbe shygrowth and development of diocshyesan and parish school boards

This committee under the chairman Rt Rev Msgr ONeill DAmour will serv() as an adshyvisory unit It will gather and distribute information concernshying the development growth and function of school boards

Father ONeill made an extenshysive study of functioning school boards throughout the country His work in organizing our Diocshyesan Board of Education and working with it during the past year has been commended

Newman Chaplains School at IHCJJlvOlId

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Newman Chaplains Asshysociation has added a second training school for priests and Sisters entering Newman work It will be conducted at Harvard University

As in past years a school will be held at the University of Colshyorado in Boulder Dates for both schools are June 113 to July 2

The Newman Chaplains School prepares priests and nuns asshysigned to the secular campus The faculty has been chosen on the basis of experience in the Newman apostolate and speciali shyzation in theology -philosophy script~reand counseliJ)g _

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 13

Family Care Program forO Children The Paul A Dever State by the psychologists and pre-placement visits with the

School Taunton under the sponsorship of the Departshyment of Mental Health has recently begun a Family Care Program in an attempt tomiddot proshyvide some of its children with the experience of family life

screened by the social workers have all been approved by the schools physicians for the proshygram

These children are ready and able to enter into the commushynity said Dr John L Smalldon superintendent of the Dever

child to the prospective foster parents to determine the comshypatibility of the youngster with the family Once settled within the family the child will also be periodically visited by a schooi social worker to assist in the adjustment The youngsters

The program is initially seekshying to place approximately 20 selected youngsters in homes in

school Provides Funds

This program with its emphashy

would attend special educatiOD classes in public schoolll throughout the South Shore

the South Shore area These chidren have been selected for their advanced capacities for edshyucation and training and their abilities to adjust to a home enshyvironment

These children reconmmended

sis on the advantages of the proper fa mil y environment seeks through a gradual process to assimilate the child within the community

The Social Service Department at the Dever School will conduct

The Department of Mental Health which sponsorsmiddot similar Family Care Programs in sevshyeral other schools in the state is providing funds for the supshyport of the children

What do you do when you live on a Take a good look at your everyday very small island with over three and a - surroundings You are apart of the 20 half million people-say Hong Kong of theworlds populati~nthat has access Move to the suburbs But what if the to 80 of the worlds food That means suburb is Red China The only answer that the other 80 of the world must be is this-and rbe hundreds of thousands content with the remaining ~O Of who crowd these house- boats are lucky course you can read this and say So Ovlaquo half die people of the world ani But You cannot say to someone who taorneless-and most live in Asia is hungry come tomorrow We must

When we hear that three-fourths ol act today because tomorrow may be too cbe human race lives inpoverty or below late (pope Paul VI) Feed the man the subsist~ level these are the peo- dying of hunger if you have not fed pie we are talking about Do we know him you have killed h1m (Vatican II) what it feels like to subsist to know no Dear Monsignor OMeara 1 am attachshyother feeling but that of hunger It is ing my gilt 0 $__ to help right the impossible or we could never spend over imbalance in our world Please use it so 100 billion dollars annually on arma- that a missionary can feed the starving ments while 10000 die each day from name---------- shyyenJldernouri8bment address _~____

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THE ANCHOR~Diocese ofFa River-Thursbull Apr 20 19M

middotSocial Revolutmiddotion Is Needed In latin America Lands

From Social Revohitiiolll iin the New Latin America Edited by John 3 Considine MM

The possibility of orientating regional planning toward an overall solution of the pressing problems that concern more than one Latin nation could well engage Christian initiative writes Rene Atero The most typical example of this kind he sa)s concerns Social Revolution in Latin-~ershythe region of the Andean ica Most Rev Mark GMcshyMountains where peasants Grath CSC says Barbara numbering more than five Ward widely read Catholic

million live in thee different economist begins her book enshyltcountries possessing basically titled The Rich Nations and the

Poor Nations with the flat stateshy similar pro b- ment I suppose we are all lems Our asso- aware of the fact that we live in ciation with na- the most catastrophically revolushy~ional orgariiza- tionary age that men have ever

tions concerned fced middotmiddotwith deyelop- Social Revolution ment planning Vice-President Hubert Humshyin no way im- phrey who honored this meeting plies the im- with his presence last year proper subordi- writes in a recent issue of Forshynation of enti- eign Affairs Although the obshytie sund e r servation that Latin America is Church s p 0 n- in the midst of a political ecoshysorship to less effectual accom- nomic and social revolution has plishment under the state become a commonplace it is

On the contrary it is a ques- true tion of becoming involved in a The influential Chilean magashynew front in which Christian zine Mensaje published by the action is not only indispensable Jesuit Fathers dedicated an enshybut will be most efficacious in tire issue in December of 1962 to helping to enlist sectors of Latin the theme Revolution in Latin American society of top impor- America and followed this up

middottance for national dEvelopment withmiddot another special issue in With reference to the actual bctober 1963 on Revolutionary implementation of plans through Reforms in Latin America

well elaborated projectS we Early in 1964 the Civilta Catshyshould make certain that iden- tolica published in Rome by the tification and recognition as an Jesuits carried a critique of important part of the national these two issues of Mensaje by effort are given to current Father Jarlot which questioned Church activities already oper- the prudence of using the terio ating numerous projects of social revolution in a Christian conshydevelopment throughout the text pointing out that itia ltcontinent loaded with Marxist overtones

For example with regard to Not only does it signify rapid education we should lteall atten- c structural changes Father Jarlot tion to the fact that there aremiddot in asserts but also connotes vioshy

lence and some measure of hate Latin America about 5000 pri- and class warfare He would vate ed~cational insttutions pre- prefer the term evolution pared to share in current eduea- tional programs throughout the Social Revolution oontinent Mr Humphrey in the article

The private univemities andmiddot already mentioned asks the eenters of technical training inmiddot question Is it appropriate te the fields of agriculture labor define Alliance (for Progress) and cooperatives couY-a double policy as favoring social revolll shythe potential for plofessional tion - or should this word be and technical trainin1 if they avoided in favor of evolution 01 would participate on D national some other expression basis ir serving the more press- He anwers Evolution if ing needs of society carefully examined proves to be

Broad Horizons inadequate for it implies an un-We must work also in the pres- conscious non-deliberate change

ervation of the progress which that is slow and gradual has been achieved in the areas- What is required is conscious of social welfare now b~ing em- rapid change in the socioshyphasized (housing education economic structure a process public health) Lay groups such that can correctly and precisely as Catholic Action in different be called a revolutionmiddot If used spheres _ Legion of Mary St not as a slogan but in itS precise Vincent de Paul Carita3-which sense the policy of peaceful s0shy

up to now have directed their -cial and economic revolution is efforts mainly towards religion agtcorrect~haracterizatio~ofmiddot il~

t hid limce policy d If t middot an we are ac IVlless ou eJmiddot We should not hesitaietoi pand theIr programs a11d focus d tf l th t m some of their work on ilrojects I e~ I y o~rse ~es WI I ~i planned by specialists J JatmAmencaiJust ~ Presldcnt

This would permit the cltanel ~ohnson ~ssoclated hunseU WIth it in hIS war on poverty I~ng of theIr ~eal t~elr ~rga~l~a- throughout the world whenhe gtcent

tIOn and theIr splnt of saCrIfIce tl k d Iffit b bull recen y remar e a peaceshyas power u resources 0 e put f lItmiddot th i5 at the disposal of society Among u re~bo u IOn ~n ese areas such works surely programs of ~mossl Ie a VIolent revolutIon

IS mevltable community improvement will be especially attractive to tlhese lay groups

Thus the Church might con- sider putting its knowledge and resources to more effective use in preparing programs and projshyects for adaptation to national and regional needs

They should select carefully those with the capacity to fulfill so that they may obtain financing from national or international sources to complement their own eontributions thus enlarging the scope of their activities

In a study of The Church and

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Theres muchthat$ new at Firat National these days~ bullbull and this sign atthe meat oaeels one of the most exoltlng~

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Weve always enjoyed a great reputation formiddotmeat have always sold the pIck of oholce meats as Ih$p~cted and graded by the USDepartment of Agrloulture (USDA)

But now with our YouCome First policy our meat casel have taken on ~ new look

Our finicky p~IIQy~t~~reotlng oniy the ohoicest of the

oholce c has beoome believe It middotor not evet1lmiddotmol-e-flnlokye The trlmnilng and outtlng leoloser and mQre~a~e(ld ~ e bull to etJlv~ you th0 gie~tGstm~at vaYu9middotand most flavorful meats In lF~r2~ National hIS~O[y OLill oounters are the cieanes~ and our butohers mor~ eager than ever to lend you aweloomemiddotrneal tpia8lnlng Idea~

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Arguments For Celibacy Outweigh Those Against

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Arguments urging that the requirement of eeHbacy of priests be set aside as an obshystacle to increasing vooationsare not sufficient Archbi-shop Gabriel Garribe pro-prefect of the Congregation of Semishynaries and Universities told a pressconfelence here My personal answer is that the arguments for celibacy cd the clergy are stronger than those against it He said he beshylieved there should be a firm affirmation in this respect and that it would maintain celibacy in the Latin Church

By doing so he said the quality ofpriesUy candidates will grow and through the quaUy of its priests the Church will harvest an increase in the quantity of candidates

The drop in the number of vocations the Archbishop stated Is due in part at least to the new attitude of todays youth and therefore requires changes_ in the traditional seminary formation

The prelate told the press that todays youth is much more fully aware of the whole world and far more sensitive to its problems than in the past Those responsible for seminary training must realize the importance of education and be capable of understanding the new generashytion of admiring them and of discovering for them the mission of the Church

StatistiCs Given Archbishop Garrone not e d

tj~at although there has been a falilng off in vocations generally there have been some surprising exceptions He singled out 1be

Dominican Work Continued from Page One

means that the approach will be intellectual rather than devoshytional and the emphasis win rest on accuracy on the truth of a statement rather than on whether it is opportune

In performing such a task mistakes 1n the form of partisan statements ~ld ill-balanced reshymarks are sometimes inevitable Father Hislop said

He affirmed the Dominicans loyalty to the Church but noted that it is often difficult for a vanguard intellectual group to express itself in terms that win not be misunderstood by the majority of Catholics

CCD Talks Continued from Page One

Tauntol as the speaker Mrs Mary Fuller of Buzzards

Bay will speak at the meetiDll in Bishop Stang High School North Dartmouth

At Bishop CasSidy High School Taunton the speaker will be Edward McDonagh-Of North Attleboro

Thomas Flangheddy of Taunshyton will address the meeting at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

The Cape area meeting will be held at Holy Trinity West Hallshywich with Miss Patricia llIIakle as speaker

Seek More funds WASHINGTON (NC) -Two

members of Marylands congresshysional delegation have introshyduced a bill which would make the government spend $75 milshylion annually for birth eontrol aid in the U ~ by 1973 The bin introduced by Sen Joseph Ty ings and Rep Samuel Freidel would propose $20 million the fkst year rising to $75 million bIV the fifth )ear Sta1e and loeal governments would provide _ edditiODal $25 mDJiclID br )87J

extraordinary development of vocations in Mexicp and in Yugoslavia and the stable continuity of recruitment in Poland

Among the statistics provided at the conference were the fact that the latest Church figures count 234000 Diocesan priests and 168000 Religious priests There are in addition 166400 Religious who are not ordained priests

One of the most heartening things in the vocational world picture it was pointed out hasshybeen the increase of priestly vocations in Africa Asia and Oceania

The growth of the local clergy has been a phenomenon of the last 40 years Today in Africa and Asia approximately 500 orshydinations take place every year

~regregampfsect ~ITOW(QJtfreg

$e~~ Aod WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep

Clement J Zablocki of Wisconshysin has introduced a proposal to correct U a defense education gap in American schools

Zablockis bill wo~ld amend the National Defense Education Act (NDEA) to provide federal grants for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment which could be used by children and teachers In parochial and private schools

In a statement on themiddot flOor Of the House of Representatives Zablocki pointed to inequities In

the present NDEA progra~ which Congress passed In 1958 to strengthen instruction in scishyence mathematics foreign lanshyguages and related subjects

An important provision of the act Zablocki said is Title III which provides matching grants to public schools for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment Non-public schools now are eligible only for loans for that purpose

Under Zablockis bill public authorities could obtain federal funds to buy laboratory and other special equipment which eould then be provided for use in non-public schools

In order to comply with matching provisions of the NDEA the non-public schools or groups of such schools would be required to prove they had spent an equal amount thenr selves for such eqUipment from private funds

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FALL RIVER AUXllLhARY AT MEETING Bishop Gerrard Auxiliary lBishop of the Diocese of Fall River is pictured at one of the sessions of the Spring meeting of the Bishops of theU Sheld in Ohicago NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 h A priI 20T urs 1967

Say~ ~Q~~OIP No SIQ7(~ ~ lovell

KANSAS CITY (NC) - The new role of a Bishop in the era of renewal has been spelled out here by Bishop Charles H Helmshysing of Kansas City-St Joseph

In addition to the age-old role of teacher Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop today must read stud) and apply the teachings of the Second Vatican Council the Gosshypels expressed to meet the needs of the modern world In short Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop must be a slave of love to serve as Christ served mankind

Bishop Helmsil1g spoke at the consecration of Auxiliary Bishop Joseph V Sullivan 45 of Kansas City-St Joseph

Bishop Sullivan is the fir~

native of this Missouri city eleshyvated to the hierarchy He was ordained to the priesthood June 1 1946 has served as chancellor of the diocese since 1957 and was named Bishop by Pope Paul VI last month

MarltqJ MregGGreg TJ~ ~~i MILWAUKEE (NC)-ALuthshy

eran scholar will teach Lutheran theology to graduate students at Marquette University here start shying next September Dr Kenneth G Hagen assistant professor of religion at Concordia College Moorhead MinJl will be the Marquet~e theology departmentu first full-time visiting scholra unshyder a grant from the Louis Calshyder Foundation in New York

-THREE LOCATIONS bull youre lookIng for the best in banking se~lce come 011J in to The NationalBank With the opening of our Stafford Square Office were now nearer to even more of you rOll the Greater Fall River area and each of our offices has Just aboUt every service you could want for yourself andl your family We mean M when we say were your FuID lervice BankPft

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t6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~n River-Thurs~ Apr 201967

Friend~2 [iJescribes Stru~g~ For QM~gtLy in T~~regwo~~~

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Rennedy When Fred W Friendly resigned from the Columbia

Broadcasting System in 1966 he ended a 16-year association with that network His trials in broadcast journalism are tbe subject of his new book Due To Circumstances Beyond Our Control Control bull Managements obligation is toRandom House $695 457 protect the interests of these Madison Avenue New York stockho~ders

NY 10022) But this volume But Mr Friendly is concprned is far more than a personal about the other stockholders memoir It is the story of th~ the 195 million citizens who

grant CBS and the other broadshybattle a losing casters the franchise to use theirbattle of course air for quality in

FCC Gutlesscommercial tel shyOne might naively expect that

~vision The the Federal Communications

main point is Commission would effectivelythat the story is here told by an insider Mr Friendlys middotfame criginally gprang from his close associashytion with the late Edward R Murrow He was Murrows partner in the prepashyntion of such pioneering and still unparalleled series as Se~ lil Now and CBS Reports

After Murrow left CBS and wentmiddot into governm()nt service Mr Friendly became president

of CBS news He resigned that ~sition because of a clispute conshycerning the broadcasting of Senshyate hearings on the Vietnam war

Many ancient or recent conshyfilets over broadcasting policy are rehearsed in this hook There fta for example a detailed acshy~unt of the hassies concerning Murrows TV _program dealing with Senator McCarthy before McCarthys downfall as the reshyault of the hearings in the Spring of 1954

There are briefer accounts of other skirmishes Thflse are all interesting and instructive But the value of the book lies not so much in these reminiscences as fin Mr Friendlys knowledgeable analysis of the process whereby television has retreated more and more from public service and become a purveyor of junk and garbage littering the American Iiving room and worse the American mind with trash

Geared to Prcfit Many factors account for this

perversion The principal one is greed Television is geared to private profit not puqUc service lLast years whopping profits will not suffice this year There must be sizable increase

This is to satisfy stockholders Mr Friendly asked William Paley chairman of the board Why do we have to make more money every year The reply was We have many small shareholders across the country and within the companybullbullbullbull

Subcommittee Sets Hearings on Smut

WASHINGTON (NC) -The House Select Subcommittee on Education is holding hearings beginning today on a bill to esshytablish a National Commissionmiddot on Noxious and Obscene Matters and Materials

Subcomllittee chairman Domishynick Daniels of New Jersey is sponsor of thc bill which would provide for a 16-member panel to study the problem of obscenity and recoqunend means Clf dealing with it

On the same day that the hearshyings were announced two other congressmen Arnold Olsen of Montana and Glenn Cunningham of Nebraska introduced bills to curb the mailing of obscene matshyter Olsens bill has bpoundlen enshydorsed by the Post Office Deshy~artment

protect the interests of the other 195 milion But Mr Friendly on the basis of close observation has -no kind words and no reshyspect for the FCC For all pur- poses the agency is toothless and gutless

To make even more money for the shareholders every possible penny has to be wrung out of the advertising medium which television now essentially is This consideration governs proshygramming

It might be supposed that even if prime time at night must eco- ~

nomically go chiefly to programshyming which brings in the maxishymum advertising dollar there is ample opportunity for public service broadcasting in the dayshytime hours But no pienty of money is to be made from dayshytime advertising

Endless Re-runs Three soap companJes alone

spend $290 million a year on television advertising and a lot of this is directed at housewives during the daytime And the programming dictated by this advertising comprisesmostly old old movies and endless re-runs of stupid situation comedies

Huge profits (are) being realshyized from the use of the miracle of television as a transmission belt for retread serials soap opshyeras game shows and the like The yield from the detergent deodorant bleach or food advershytisers who possess the daytime schedule (whose annualexpendishytures (are) some $130000000 ) is the principal reason why no serious progtamming can be sustained for any length of time during these hours

l3y serious programming is meant such things as crittcal UN debates (for example on Vietnam) vital congressional hearings the Popes visit to the UN Churchills funeral etc) Some of these have in fact got on the air and even for a conshysiderable period oftime b~t alshyways there is a major bitter battle involved

Educational TV What may not be realized is

the power of the local station n is by no means meekly subshymissive to the network It largely gqes its own way and its wayis in search of the utmost in profits

It is this fact for example which accounts for the nonshyexistence of a good solid repre~ sentative late-evening news broadcast over the nekwork The local station prefers to put on its own scrappy superficial travesty of a news program beshycause it can get-in an excessively large number of profitable comshymercials

Perhaps there is some hope in the field of educational televishy

sion Mr Friendly is now enshygaged in exploring that possibil shyity For our sake may he be successful At any rate we must thank him for reminding us of our tolerance of the criminial misuse Qf the air waves

H E A 0 S UNIVlERSliJIY New president of St Bonashyventure University St Bonashyventure N Y is the Very Rev Reginald A Redlon

OFM formerly of St Franshycis College Rye Beach N H The university Is operated by the Holy_ Name province of the Order of Friars Minor NC Photo

Issues GlLIidelimiddotnes For IEcumenism

LITTLE ROCK (NC) - Ecushymenical guidelines dealing prinshycipally with the conduct of Catholics at Protestant functions have been issued by Bishop Alshybert L Fletcher of Lttle Rock

Composed of the diocesan ecumenical commission the gUidelines specify that Catholics may attend Protestant church services participate in the singshying and common prayer but may not act as a reader or officer of such services

The rules permit Catholics to serye in wedding parties at mar- riages in Protestant churches providing the service does not involve a Catholic or a divorceci person Attendance at baccalaushyreate services in a church or elsewhere is permitted

Under the rules Catholics may not act as sponsors at Protestantmiddot baptisms Oi confirmation nat Jlarticipate in intercommunion services The guidelines encour- age Protestant attendance at Catholic services

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Misunderstandingmiddot Faced In Ecumenical Meeting

Roman Catholic and Lutheran theologians agreed here after their fourth meeting that many misunderstandings had been overcome on the Sacrament of the Lords SuppeR -Holy Eucharist-but that further examination is necesshysary The doctrinal consulshy to the concrete worship life o1Ztation held at the headquartshy the Church ers of the Lutheran Church In a prepared statement reshyin America was the fourth leased ft the conclusion of the in a series sponsored by the closed meeting the group noted Bishops Committee for Ecumenshy that in contrat to topics disshyism and Interreligious Affairs cussed at the first two meetings of the NCCB and the USA Nashy -the Nicene Creed and Baptismtional Committee of the Luthershy -there have been historically an Wotld Federation serious disagreements between

Main themes discussed at the the confessions concerning the three-day meeting were the Eucharist Lords Supper as a sacrifice the All participants the stateshymanner of Christs presence in ment added agreed that many the Sacrament the import of the misunderstandings had beellll concept of transubstantiation overcome as a result of the latest and the relation of these issues meeting

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C Strfngless glftlil of $100 $50 $25 $11S $10 $5 $2 Bet the Sisters buy what they need

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IlJ $1 a month ($12 a yeer) gives you membershyehlp un our Damlen Club for lepers

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For our eIght edlcal Sisters In P1rappancode south India today is just a normal day Doctors bags In hand they are out In the villages eKmiddot amlnlng everyone for leprosybullbullbullbull Leprosy can be cured If diagnosed early says Sister Elizashybeth a surgeon Better yet Itcan be prevented In this case an ounce of prevention is worthten pounds of cure bullbullbull The cure is cheaper than penny nely Only $850 buys 10000 Dapsone _ mIracle tablets enough for 43 lepers for a yeerl bullbullbull The effort In Pirappancode islnternashytional German Catholics built the 25middotbed ho pital (1St Johns) French Catholics gave a workshop (for therapy) and an American friend of ours has pledged a convent and chapel Now the Sisters need medicinps a $200 microscope a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for treating children especially In farmiddotflung villages Will you help them Monsignor Nolan will acshyknowledge your gifts promptly and the Slste win pray for you aware you are helping them cure lepers as Christ did -

WHAT YOU CAN DO IJ $5000 gives the Sisters a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for fighting leprosy at Ita source (A sign on the side will featu re the name ofyour favorite saint and your name ifyou wish)

IJ $1500wlll give theSlster-surgeon an ope Instable Shes ustng akitchen table now

WOULDc $575 buys a whirlpool beth $100 a sterilizer

NEED C $300 pays In full ~or the two-year training 01 IF a native Slsternurse She will write to you

YOU WERI C $240 ($5 a Week) takes care of bull fuMmiddottlme

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NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN PresIdent

MSGR JOHN G NOLAN Natlonal8ecretaIJ Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc S30 Madison Avenuemiddot New York NY 1001 T~one 212yUkOft 6-5840

rHf ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Apr 20 196717

CATHOLIC (HAR~l~~S AP~EAL SILVER JUBILEE YEAR

MAY 7-17

What does it mean to you The opportunity to raise your sights to the level of a $2500 Jubilee Gift

An act of aratitude for 25 years of Charitable Seice

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THE ANCHORshy~18 Top East C~ast College Hoopsters middotPlay )Sees SociaI EquityThurs April 20 1967

Still Lagging Anglicalfj)~ ~teview At I(ennedy Center For P C Alumni In Spain Antii Cali~~i~ By Patricia Francis MALAGA (NC) - Spain

was taken to task for lagging1562 C~~lireglf A full house crowd saw some o( the East Coasts top collegIate basketball players behind many other countriesLONDON (NC) _ The demonstrate last week how basketball should be played Occasion was the 8th annual hi the development of a

ehurch of England has set Scholarship Basketball Game sponsored by the Providence College Alumni Club of New just Christian social and ecoshyup a permanent commission Bedford at Kennedy Youth Center in New Bedford Initiated in 1959 to - raise nomic life at the 26th Spanish C1)n Christian Docbine with tis first task to consider recastshying or replacing that churchs historic charter of the Thirtyshy~Hne Articles of Religion which

are strongly anti-Catholic In tOne

They are regarded by many as o stumbling block to Christian ~ity The articles drawn up in 1562

for the avoiding of diversities $pound opinions and for the establishshyhtg of consent touching truereli shygion must be publicly accepted py the clergy at ordination

They have become a matter of ~increasing objection lind some

Anglican clergymen now feel talat they should not be called Upon to subscribe to doctrinal definitions which reflect views formed in the 16th oentury aarship is a $2400 one paid at the time of extreme and bitter reli- rate of $600 a year to the winner gious controversy Next award will be made in

The articles denounce the 1970 TheRevEdwardC Duffy eurohurch of Rome as erroneous in chairman of- the scholarship matters of faith and declare games and recruiter of the among other things that theplaye~s who participate emphashyBishop of Rome hath no jurisdic- sizes the scholarship is open middotto tion in this -realm of Englandany deserving boy who has been Some prominent Anglican clergymen have blal1led the sharp declfnein ordination canshy

Qlidates on a reluctance to subshy~ribe to this document

Consider Advis( The new commission was apshy

pointed by Anglican Archbishops Michael Ramsey of Canterbury and Donald Coggan of York It consists of 17 members most of them theological professors repshyzesenting different schools of thought in the Anglican Church

Anglican Bishop Iar Ramsey of Durham is chairman The commissions general terms of reference say that it is

to consider and advise upon doctrinal questions submitted to it from time to time by the archshybishops and to plan when deshyslrable the investigation of

I ~uestions by other groups Its first task will be to conshy

sider the place of the Thirty- lege University of Rhode Island Nine Articles in the Anglican St Josephs of Philadelphia Bosshy

tradition and the question of ton College and Holy Cross subscription and assentto them There were Bill Blair Jim

Benedict Bob Kavolski and Bill Lasher of PC Mike FitzgeraldReligious Influence (of Mattapoisett) Henry Carey

In US on Wan~ -7- NEW YORK (NC)-Although

a majority of all Americans exshypressed the belief that 11eligion is losing its influence in the

United States in the latest Gallup Poll Catholics declined to-give majority assent to the opinion

The national survey showed tilat 57 per cent of all Americans in 1967 believe religion is losing its influence Only 14 per cent expressed this opinion in 1957

Among Protestants 60 per cent In 1967 compared with L7 per eent in 1957 said religion was losing its influence Forty-eight

per-cent of Catholics agreed in the latest survey compared with Beven per cent in 1957

Get Federal Funds PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A

Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyect under the auspices of Philashydelppia Archbishop John J Krols Commjssion on Economic Oppi)rtunity Programs hlils reshyceived $267980 from the federal government It was one of 74 Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyects in 30 states approved by Secretary of Labor W Willard Wirtz

accepted as a freshman at Provshyidence College regardless of the high school he attended

Primary Method William F Doyle president of

the NE Bedford club says the games are the alumnis primary method of raising money for the schoJarship fund

Since it was first held the game has attracted a following of avid fans-who help swell the scholshyarship treasury

Father Duffy feels it is the top post-season game in New England arid cites as proof the fact that his long time friend Bob Cousy Hoiy Cross All- Anierican and Boston Celtic great played in it himself two years ago It was his last game

Players who participated in this years money-for-scholarshyships game-all college seniors

represented Providence Colshy

scholarship funds for deserv- ing gr~duates of area high

schools the game profits enabled presentation of the first Edward J Tucker Memorial Scholarship of $2000 to Clifford Marr of New Bedford in 1962 Marr a graduate of Holy Family High was graduated from Provishydence College in 1966 and curshyrently is an Army lieutenant on duty in Korea

The second scholarship---named for the late 1r Tucker of Fairshyhaven a Providence College

graduate and one of the charter members of the New Bedford club--was awarded last year to Michael Doherty of New Bedshyford also a Holy Family gradushyate

Currently the four-year scholshy

Steve Chubin and Bob Boehm of the U of RI Richie Murphy and Greg Hochstein of Holy Cross John Austin and Ed Hock- enbury of Boston College and

f~nll lHoMsnln1~ fLaw Olhoc City EI1il(Jlcts

SPRIfiGFIELD (NC) - By unanimous vote of its five city commissioners this city has enshyacted a fair housing ordinance

The ordinance the third of its kind in OhiO becomes effecshytive May 3 Considerably strongshyer than the fair housing legisia- tion enacted by the Ohio Legisshylature in 1965 it outlaws disshycrimination in the sale or rental of any housing excepting only dwellings for members of reli shygious organizations or housing established for one sex only

Springfields new ordinance came as the res~lt of an improved climate of racial harmony The citys mayor Robert C Henry is a Negro whose performance of his duties has won wide reshyspect In recent years an Urban League has been launched and has made considerable progress A Human Relations Commission is functioning

PROVIDENCE COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP In atshytendance at PC Scholarship Fund Basketball Game in New Bedford were William Doyle presidentof the PC Club of New Bedford and Michael Doherty present scholarship recipient

Billy Oakes Marty Ford and Tom Duff of st Josephs the nations fifth-ranked_ team

Sees lay Teachers

Form Asso~iataon CLEVELAND (NC)-Groundshy

work for a diocesan lay teachers asso~iation was laid at a meeting of representatives of 21 diocesan high schools here

shy Patrick Bruening teacher at St Josephs high school and temshyporary chairman of the new unit said the association is an organshyization of professional people seekint professional growth

He added Only after we have proven ourselves as professionshyals with a professional attitude

about our job can we ask for and hope to get professional consideration I

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lhe players enjoyed demonshystrating th~ir proficiency The fans enjoyed watching the demonstration ~ and the scholar shipfund of the Providence Colshylege Alumni Club of New Bedshy~ord teaped tbebenef~il ~fboth

~ Population Control WASHINGTON (NC) - U s

Sen J W Fulbright of Arkansas has asked for aCongressional appropdation of $150 million for increased population coritior asshysistanCe to developIng countries

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Social Week here Angel Cardinal Herrera y

Oria former archbishop of Mashylaga in a letter to the Social Week sessions deplored what he called a deficiency of Catholic influence in Spanish public lilfe declaring that Spain a Catholic nation was far from being a model of social justice

No Dialogue Earlier Auxiliary Bishop Rashy

fael Gonzalez Moralejo of Valenshycia ecclesiastical moderator of the SocialWeek sounded a simshyilar note declaring that where there is no dialogue between citizens and their government there is no democracy and such a society cannot call itself Christian

Cardinal Herrera said that ahead of Spain are nations who

have learned how to organize their natioJlallif~ according to the norms of justice which are the daughters of consciElnce Sweden has progressed in the social and pOlitlclll o~der to such an extent that the ~ope

could state that its public ~n~ishy tutions are in harmonywith the teachings of the Seco~dVatican Council he said

1[Jpper ~Iasses Cardinal Herrera lirged the

upper classes of -the countryto contribute toward the formation of a sound and realistic public opinion by which religious conshycepts would be applied to the economic and social life of Spain

It is necessary he said to diminish the differences in classes to work toward Unity not only in the economic order but also in i~ the education and

c~vic department

The Best

Car

Georgell Cluh Olf to Good Start mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Apr 20 1967

Taunton High Is Surprise In County Diamond loop former FltrrJDD Riweff CYOer on Scholagslvop ltltIt PIl1Jf$~ns

By PETE~ BARTEK Norton High Coach

Coach BiD Georges Taunton High diamond aggreg~

tion is the early season surprise in the Bristol County schoolboy league now in ita second week of the eampaign The pennant race appeam ~ be developing into one of the most exciting in many years Five clubs are battling of Ule better area clubs year fOIl the coveted flag And after year

Coach Harold (Chet) Haneshywhile action is fast and fm-shywichs Bishop Feehan High teamiOWl in the BCL the eight N3rshyof Attleboro has tucked awayragansett League teams are early season wins over Northgetting I e Q d y Attleboro and New Bedford Voshy

lor the chamshy cational The latter two will pionship race m probably fight it out fornext-toshytheir COmpetishy the-last place in the final standshytion Delayed ing as they seek to avoid theboth by rain and cellar Ii old weather The two top contests on nextCOaches h a v e Mondays BCL card will seebeen reminding Coyle playing Durfelte at Alumnitheir charges of Field in Fall River while Taunshythe pitfalls of ton journeys to North Dartmoutheareless loose to clash with stang Two northernplay and also Peter eounty rivals Attleboro andthe IOOmmission Bartek Feehan meet at the formers of Deedless errors which ean field next Monday when North relegatea club to an early Deeshy Attleboro travels to New Bedshyond diviaion berth from which it ford to take 0111 Vocatlonal win be bard to emerge as 1M Nury Contests oompetition progresses Meanwhile the Narragansett

Chausse and JlaJkut loop is comple~ing its first week The Herring City Orange and of play Its still a little early to

Black pulled the big surprise of make 8 judgment as to how thebe young season when it held clubs will stand at the end of thethe always strong Dullfee High

lI~mpaign team of Fall River to a 2-2 tie in Four Narry tilts are on tap for11 innings The prognosticators next Tuesdaybad been writing off the Georgeshy Coach Jack McCartys Caseeoached clan solely because they High Cardinals of Swansea willfelt Taunton would be unable to face Coach Jack Harts DimanJeplace Artmiddot Koska lost by gradshy Vocational team in Fall River uation in what looms as one of the

But Scott Chawrse impressed most interesting early seasonin his confrontation with the Fan games Coach Doug Baxendales River Hilltoppelll aDd now the Msgr Prevost High team of Fall same pundits who had relegated River will be at Dighton to meet Taunton to a lowly apot 8re the Coach Eddie Texeiras D - ~ first to admit that things will be Regionals Coach Ed Bibeau will much more pleasant for the lead his W~port High aggr~gashyTauntonians this Spring tion to Seekonk to middotvh( with

Stro~ Coyle Offense Coach Roger Hills charges The Admittedly an the doubting fourth Narry contest next Tuesshy

Thomases were not convinced day will see Coach Jack Brenshyon the basis of a single performshy nans Holy Family High teain of ance So Joe Majkut and Chausse New Bedford meeting Coach Jim Ulen eombined to throw a no-hit Sullivans Somersetmiddot High teamwin over Coach Dick Joyces at the latters field Attleboro High team Even the

Lanllers Ready most skeptical then conceded that Taunton must be reckoned On Ca~ Cod n nip-~pd~tuck

in the flag race battle is going on in that areas While Taunton High has heeD eon1erence schedule Four conshy

eGualling the early season attenshy tests are listed for the Capeway tion unexpected results have eircuit next Monday They are eccurred in several other diashy Oldmiddot Rochester (Mattapoisett) mond eontests Attleboro which at Barnstable Bourne at Wareshydid DOt seem destined lor gfeat bam Dartmouth middotat Dennis-Yarshythings this Spring provided the mouth and Fairhaven vs Lawshyfirst surprise w~en it toppled rence High at Falmouth Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Norton High in the Clover Stang High of North Dartmouth Valley Conference plays its first

Taunton then proved its mettle league game at home against when it defeated surprising Millis next Monday The Purple Attleboro Hickey has talent at - and White Lancers travel to Stang but his problem has heeD Medfield next Wednesday tv properly align his best playem Apparently they were not in the Score Governmentright spots when they went down to defeat at the hands of Coach On Lab~r Problems Jim Burns Msgr Coyle High

BUENOS AIRES (NC) -TwonJne of Taunton which has Catholic organizations have isshycwuted its way to two one~sided sued a joint manifesto criticizingviet(lries Coyles strength is in thlte Argentine government sayshyits offensive attack but it also ing it has failed to protect workshy

has a capable defense and pitch ers basic rightsJng staff to make a real run for Issued by the Catholic Youngthe BCL crown Workers (JOC) and Catholic _ Feehans Auspicious Start Action Workers Movement

Durfee while it may have been (MOAC) the statement alsotemporarily halted by Taunton called upon the bishops to be enpects to be among the leaders aware of the needs and goals of before the end of the week The young workers and the labor Hilltoppers looked good in winshy class and to be brave in ltexshy

double-header from Pil-shyning a pressing the Churchs doctrine grim High of Rhode Island last as applied to real-life situations weekend CoachJoe Lewis feelsmiddot It said that the government his boys can now maintain the which calls itself Christian but momentum they have generated is anything but Christian has in the non-league affairs It goes nothing to do with the Gospelalmost without saying that one or Christs teachings or with the off-day is not going to thwart Churchs doctrines as defined by the Hilltopperll wbo produce ODe the Second Vatican Councit

By JOE MIRANDA A Parsons College senior JRobshy

eli Bonalewicz of Fall River is -nearIng the end of a most sucshycessful college career both athshyletically and academically

Bob is attending Parsons in Fairfield Iowa on a baseball scholarship and has started bis third season as the colleges first strong catcher

neans List Student A Physical Education major

Bob has a minor in History and during the last marking period was named to the Deans List at Parsons -

A member of St PatrIcks Parshyish Bonny is a 1963 graduate of Durfee High School where he participated in football basketshyball and baseball

The son of Mr and Mrs Mathew Bonalewicz of 50 Chapshylin Street he is oile of five chil shydren ald has not yet decided upon a vocation

Bonny has two older brotherll a lieutenant and Mathew Jr II

staff sergeant both in the Air Force and stationed ubroad Bob also has two sisters Kathleen II student at Durfee High and Ma) Ann a grammar school pupil

Has f80 Average Bonalewicz recently returned

from a Southern baseball trip end gained excellent commendashytions from his coach Duane Banks for his performance as the Wildcats won 11 of 13 games

The Fall River player batted 430 belted three homers had nine runs-batted-in and seltlred 10 during Parsons first 13 games

Bonalewicz a 22-year-old 175shyJ)ound 5-8 giant enjoys playing baseball and so does his coach who scheduled 89 games last seashyson to set a ollegiate record fur the most games played in one year

Ankle IBjUlY

With the former Durfee backshystop handling the brunt of the catching duties until a knee inshyjury forced him to the sidelines Parsons won 72 lost 15 and twice finished in ti~d games called beshyca~se of darkness

The former St Patricks star in the CYO baseball program started poory this season finshyis middotng off the Southern trip with an ankle sprain but entering this week the ankle was in good shape and Bonny expected to take his regular spot behind the plate

Federal Agency Has Inter-Faith Advisors

WASHINGTON (NC)- A Catholic priest a Methodist minshyister and a Jewish rabbi have been appointed religious advishyBors to the United States Inforshymation Agency here

Msgr George G Higgins clIishyrector of the Social Action Deshypartment U S Catholic Confershyence the Rev Edward G Cu-middot roll superintendent of the Washshyington Northwest District ol the Methodist Baltimore Conference and Rabbi Richard G Hirsch dishyrector of the Relgious Action Center Union of American Heshybrew Congregations have been named to the USIA advisory panel

Officials of the agency noted that while it has had religious advisors since its inception this marks the first time an interfaith panel had been established

The purpose of the panel offi shycials said is to assure that the agencys handling of religious matters serves the best intlterest of the nation and its dlveraity of faiths

Bonalewicz also played for St Patricks T)iocesan championship team and for the Fall River Mershychants in the Newport Sunse~ League

As a senior at DUrfee Bonny was awarded the 1963 George Kaplan Memorial Trophy as the Hilltoppers best senior basketshyball player

His hustle and determination while performing for Durfee at Bostcm Garden during the anshynual Eastern Massachusetts Tecb tournament gained him the reshyspect and admiration of all that witnessed his efforts

Bonalewicz recently completed a practice teaching tour in an Iowa Junior High School and while tere coached the eighth grade team to a league chamshypionship

Earlier in the college year Bob_ was a member of the Parsons intramural flag football progmiddotam and received a trophy for his performan J

Despite the heavy bnsebaU schedule Bob has manged to keep hi grades above average and after the Fall semestershyshowed his prowess in the classshyroom by being named to the Deans List for the second time

DeMatha Winner In Hoop Tourney

WASHINGTON (NC) - DeshyMatha High of suburban Hyattsshyville Md scored an upset cliff shyhanger victory to cop the 12th national high sChool basketballl tournament sponsored by thE local Knights of Columbus J017 the fifth straight time

DeMatha avenged two regula17 season defeats by Mackin High Washington Catholic League

champ with its last minute 70-68 victory Mount Carmel of Chiengo took

third place with a 47-45 overshytime win over DePaul Acndemy of Chicago Northeast Cnthrt1ie of Philadelphia took fifth pIhce with a 77-74 win over St Petertl

B(~ BONALEWICZ of New Brunswick N J Catheshydral High of Trenton NJ Inpound

The oung catcher has been Dwight School of New York alslaquo) long known for his bullet like participated tlnrowlr arm and gained conshy Aubrey Nash DeMatha junloY siderable praise from opponents wall named the tournnmentl in 111gh school amateur and colshy most valuable player lege eompetitions for his savvy A 5-11 junior John Somogyftbehind the plate set three tournament records-shy

Three-Letter Man 40 field goals 108 points in threE Bonalewicz played football for games and 43 points in one game Don MontIe basketb~ll for Tom and tied another record ll-forshyKaram and baseball for middotJoe 11 from the foul line Lewis while at Durfee and also performed for Lewis Chathammiddot team in the Cape Cod League

The Fall Riverite cannot get FAIRHAVENenough baseball according to his mother Mrs Bonalewicz recalls LUMBER a game at Alumni Field when

COMPANYDurfee bested a Venezuelan team sponsored by the Peoplesshyto-Peoples program Bob was inshy Complete linejured and taken -to the hospital Mrs Bonalewicz remembers Building Materials then came back to finish the game hitting a home run to win I SPRING ST FAIRHAVENmiddotit for the Hilltoppers He wall voted the outstanding player in 993-2611the gameo

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I

THEANCHOR()ioltese of Fan ~tv~r-Thurs ApO 1967 ~ ~ middot-middotmiddotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ middot20

AT BISEIOPS CONFERENCE Facilities for offering Mass were provided by the Archdiocese of Chicago when 230 U S bishops met in semi-annual conference In left photo nine othel prelates concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Joseph TRyan of Anchorage Alaska In right

photo are Archbishop John F Dearde~ of Detroit at left president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and at right Archbishop Johl1l F Cody of Chicago conference host Bishops Connolly and Gerrard attended from the Fall River Diocese NC Photos

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Page 7: 04.20.67

7 Diocesan Sc~oots Students Reap Honors Aplenty as Senior Year Enters Into Final Phase

Honors aplenty are being garne~d by Diocesan students among them Andrea Trczinski a senior at Tauntons Bishop Cassidy High whos been selected as one of 15 New England students to participate in the 1967 Youth Science Congress jointly sponsored by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the National Science Teachers Association

In the course of the two and a half day congress now in progshyress at the NASA Electronics Research Center in Boston Anshydrea like the other participants will present a 15 minute oral

report of the project which gained her inclusion in the

event

Duck Fond The presentations say conshy

gress officials are not comPetishytive but will give listening scishyentists and teachers the opporshytunity to evalute them and offer guidance to the students

Andreas project is an arehaeshyological and geological investigashytion of an early American potshytery works The Duck Pond Site It has already won her many awards in state and reshygional science fairs

Students from Stang and from St Anthony and Holy Family high schools in New Bedford were participants in an essay eontest sponsored by the New Bedford Serra Club on The Role of the Priest and Nun in the Christian Community

First place winner was Cidhshyerine Giammalvo of Stang and cliiIdren at st Josephs Home to mnners-up were Mary Black a~ outing Sunda) while NBSers also of Stang and Michael at Mt St Marys have elected Tames of St Anthony Stang their officers for next year inshyalso won a plaque for baving the eluding Martha Nugent presi- most entrants in the contest dent Judith Doolan vice-presi-

At Stang theyre congratu- dent Susan Bernier s~cretary lating Cynthia Curry named to Diane Berger treasurer represent ber school on an area -Speed reading is the word at department stores teen fashion Sacred Hearts Fall River where board Mt St Mary Academys some 30 students are devoting representative to the same board th~ hours eery Saturday is Elaine Chaves The lucky gals mo~ing to a reading improve will receive modeling instruc- ment course Reading power tiona in connection withmiddot their ~ed and word study are em- appointments and will also be phasized in the 10 week course given the clothes they model which began April 1 Again at Stang word has Also at SHA varsity and jayshyreached the office that John vee teams in volleyball and basshyGolenski a 65 grad and now s ketball honored Mrs GeGrge Be sophomore has received a Snyder their coach at a surprise grant for Summer study in dinner Well they might since

EuroSePbe hi A ta Mrs Snyder has led them to olani PB coop nees Narry League championships in

Still very much in the newa ~t~ sports are notices of college scholar-middotmiddot Honoi lroviJiclai ships and acceptances At Doshyminican Academy Fall River Jesus-Mary students honored Elarne Fisette has been accepted the Mother Provincial of the lReshyat Southern Conn State College ligiousf Jes~s-Mary at ~ eer-middot powet supplied to them occupied Briana Doherty Linda Guill Diane Giasson at SMTI and Sue emony mcludmg ~e readmg of the bishops The NCCB will furshy mette and Mary Wynne Gagnon at Bryant while Jerome lIl~ ad~ress by PaulIne Dumas ther study the matter

Mancini has received a full tul- s~hool preSident the presenta- Oth b t h h th b h f f1 er su Jec s w IC e is shytion grant from St Annesmiddot~os- tion 0 owers anll gIfts and a ops treated were communica- pitaI School of Nursing ana a pe~orrnance by the g~et C~U tions between the bishops and

padial grant from the Utlion OccasIOn was the Provmcial smiddot tmiddott tmiddotmiddotmiddot f p hi 1 bullbull t t d Colle Ins 1 u IOns 0 Ig er earnshyosplmiddottal dItto annua VISit 0 heaca emy 1 middotmiddotmiddottmiddotiUmiddot S h n J bullbull Ilg In bullbulle c anges In pershy Receiving annual renewable ChristIan Youth Movement mission middotformiddot the alienation of

Scholarships at Jesus middotlVlary m~mbe~ of Prevost and JM~ churchproperty increased edushy J

Academy Fall River are Su- Wlll VISIt Nazareth Hall thiS cation onthe threats of abortionshyianne Lagarde awarded a $2300middotmiddot month and will also sJonsor a cooperation with the YMCA ami grant from Fordham University cake sale Sunday AprIl 30 A YWCA better coordination with and Yvonne L Berger recipient vigil service is set for Monday ihe usce celebration of the ()f three grants from Northeast- em University totaling $2180 Suzanne previously received a $2500 scholarship from Northshye~tern ~nd Yvonne is a semishyfinalist In the Rhode Island State Scholarship Program

Prevost reports that Gerry Ferris has been accepted at Bridgewater State College and Cassidy notes that Rita Donnelly has received a full scholarshiJ) fto Johnson and Wales Business School

Chess Tournamenamp Prevost students arent giving

their gray matter a rest this vacation week In progress is a schoolwide chess tou~ament

IIDd the winner will receive a tro~nv

On the agenda at Cassidy is a Junior College Day slated for Thursday April 27 a Couples Dance Saturday April 29 and a father-daughter night Wednesshyday May 3

lPRan lltetJreat

Mt St Mary students will helli a taUt by Rev Bernard Sullivan Friday April 28 in preparation for the retreat theyll be making the first three days ox May Also to speak at Mount on the same day is Mother Mary Martha Assistant General of the Sisters of St Joan of Arc whose topic will be vocations The Sisters of St Joan of Arc care for rectories bishops houses and seminaries

Still in the vocation line Sister Mary LaSalette of the Mount faculty will attend a meeting at Bristol Community College Wednesday April 26 Subject Vocations

Dominican Academy students will enjoy their senior prom Frishyday June 9 at the Hearthstone restaurant and congratulations are in order for DAs student council moderator Sister Mary Agnes who has been offered a

graduate assistantship at the University of Wisconsin Prevost members of the Nashy

tional Honor Society treated

April 24 and members will hold Year orFaith in connection with their year-end banquet Saturday the 1900th anniversary of the June 3 _ martyrdom of Ss Peter and Paul

Prevost debaters are preparing celebration of Communications for the JFK tournament to be Day May 7 held at Cassidy in May Thus far the Prevost team has chalked up an 8-5 record

(ASA BLANCA Just Across The

Coggeshall St Bridge Fairhaven Mass

Finest Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anywhere - Also STEAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

MOTHER PARKERS famous for OLD FASHIONED DOUGHNUTS

QUALITY and baked by your Sunbeam Baker SERVICE

CONTESTS WINNElRS Winners of New Bedford Serra Club essay contest on roles of priest nun in Christian community are from left runners-up Mary Black Stang High and Michael James St Anthony High and first prize winner Catherine Giammalvo Stang High Stang also won plaque for having most entrants in contest

Parent-Teacher Night is sched- duties for many of the Cassidy uled for Tuesday April 25 at students meanS more time to JMA and will feature as a profit byvarlous e~ucational opshyspeaker Dr Betty-Anne Metz of portunities At the Mass State

Bristol County Community Col- Science Fair Friday April 21 lege through Sunday April 23 Cheryl

And Prevost students are anti- McCaffrey top winner in the cipating a dance Friday April school SCience Fair and chosen 28 at St Annes Audit6rium The one of the 25 representatives Torquays will play from the Fall River Regional

This isNational Library Week will repr~sent Cassidy High toshyand mixt week is Secretaries gether WIth Pamela Candee Week so maybe everyone should The Massachusetts Youth Cit shyreld a book about secretaries izenship Conference at Bndg~shyAt any rjlte Cassidy Future Sec- water sc~eduled ~or tod~y ~Ill retaries of America will tour a attract the follOWIng 10 JUnIors North Dighton plant and visit chosen as representatives Donna Wheaton College Also pn their Cole M~y Fenton Kathl~en agenda isa reception on Sunday Hanna Eb~beth Laffan Paulme and aluncheon next Wednesday Lecuyer

Cassidy Go Despite Vaeatlon Also Carolyn McCaffrey Joshy anne Orchekowski Margarita

Free time from regular class Procopio Anne Marie Sullivan and Donna White The subject of this years Conference is ValuesU SmiddotmiddotBishopmiddots in a Changing World

Continued frQm Page Six At EmmailUel College Friday hiterdiocesan Offices April 21 three of Cassidys lanshy

An extended discussion on guage students will compete in sueD agencies might be best the annual French Contest for strUctured and adequate manshy High School Students They are

fHE ANCHORshylhun April 20 1967

Labor Statement Wins Approval

SAN ANTONIO (NC) Farm labor leaders hailed the Catholic bishops of Texas for issuing a statement supshyporting the right of farm workshyers to form unions and urging national legislation to protec~ this right

Spokesmen of farm associashytions responded that they do no~

oppose field workers joining unions but withheld comment pending a study of the bishops pronouncement

The bishops declared that among the basic rights of a human person is the right of freely founding associations or unions for working people and that all should have the right of freely taking part in the activities of these unions without risk of reprisal

The statement was issued at the conclusion of a two-day meeting of the board of directors of the Texas Catholic Confershyence It was approved by the bishops of the 10 Texas dioceses

Farm workers in the Rio Grande City area of south Texas have been on strike since last June and their efforts had been endorsed previously by Archshybisho Robert E Lucey of Sam Antonio and Bishop Humberto Medeiros of Brownsville

Leading the praise for the bishops was Cesar Chavez of Delano Calif national director ofthe United Farm Workers Organizing Committee whose Local No2 is striking in Rio Grande City

Chavez termed the statement very powerful and very charshyitable lle said he thinks the declaration is an answer to the prayers of thousands and thoushysands of farm workers in the Southwest asking that their Church and Church leaders stand with them in their struggle to ~ure social -justice as ennunshyciated toy the popes in the many encyclicals~

DEBROSS OIL co

Heating Oils and Burners

365 NORTH FRONT STREET NEW BEDFORD

992-5534

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 Medical Gr9uP Inducts Nun

Spring Cleaning Reveals WASHINGTON (NC) - The first nun was inducted as a fel shylow of the American College ClI Obsttricians and Gynecologists at its 15th annual clinical here

Hoards of Yardgoods lBy Mary Tinley Daly The honor went to SiBtel

Spring housecleaning is like a great white light revealshy Miriam Paul Klaus of the Me~

ing all Its not just dust in the bedsprings and radiators cal Mission Sisters who have headquarters in Philadelphi~the great unwashed slats of Venetian blinds gummy glasses dlJring the coJeges session~stashed away on an upper shelf finding of borrowed books Sister Miriam Paul was nlaquolI

too long unreturned These are what i call honest misshytakes chores you dont mind having household help help you with like doing floors walls windows rugs furniture

This is orthodox Spring cleaning such as every housewife can t a c k 1e have done with and point to with pride No the nuisances at least at our house are the secret sins jobs weve really anticipatshyed getting at one of these days but the llPecific day never seems to come And nobody but nobody can help in this department

Moms Hobby Shll)p For instance theres the used

furniture corner of the attic sOmetimes laughingly referredto as Moms Hobby Shop Theres the dresser bench Mom b going to cane when and if Mom learns how to cane an art supposed to be lotS of fun There ure two perlectly good boudoir chairs or iiI be perfectly good when theyre recovered And the little stand picked up at uuction waiting patiently to be antiqued when and if Mom learns how to antique another touted fun hobby bull

What the good-natured ribbers of Moms Hobby Shop dont know is that another secret cache of to-be-dones awaits in one corner of the basement the touch of a little hand pktures to be framed along with a framshying kit which any child can master another kit of clear plastic resin ideal for embedshyding coins flowers leaves rocks shells pictures novelties jewshyelry So far efforts have reshysulted in the embedding of one penny askew and far from ornashymental Theres also ever~thing

you need to wire a lamp everyshything but the skill that is

A strong-minded woman would become a Jill of all trades masshy1er skills necessary and do away with the jobs one at a time or else give away all t1e maIdngs ~~t then a str~))~gmil)d~ woman probably wouldnt have gotten

intothisfixin the first place With springcleani~goncoming

lik~ the inevitable tinie and taxes we decided to dean around the undones in attic and

basement facl up to legitimate eatchiills like the ~drponlClos~ etsbull

Dougherty High Band Wins Festival Honor

WASHINGTON (NC)-In this middot ease to the victors it was a mix- ture of cherry blpssoms and roses

The members of the Cardinal Dougherty High School Band of

Phiiadelphia marched ltYff with first place honors in the band

middot eompetitlon at the annual Cherry Blossom Festival _parade -an event which attracts tens of

middotthousands of visitors annually 10 the nations capital

The vIctory was nothing new to the bandsmen - and girls They won first prize two years ago and last March 17 won middotfirst prize in New Yorks St Patricks Day paralaquoe

present to receive the honor PelshyThere not in one not in two but in every closet we were sonally She is stationed at the

communitys Holy Family Heampfaced with the nemesis a box or pital in Dacca East Pakistan a bag or apile of yardgoods

The college accepts as fello~Forgotten IItems physicians who specialize in obshyThe sewing center has been stetrics and gynecology and aregoing pretty full tilt at our house judged competent and ethical byrecently what with a bedroom their colleagues Sister Miriamwhere we can set up the mashy Paul took the written examinashychine the ironing board sew tions for the American Boardseveral hours every day walk of Obstetrics and Gynecology iQout shut the door and come back Pakistan in 1965middot and the oralto undisturbed work the followshy examination in Chicago in Apriling day 1966

Matter of fact we thought She is a native of Viennasmugly we were getting all

Allstria a naturalized U S citi shysewed up tents and jumpers zen and a convert to the Cathoshyand miniskirts for the young

suits skirts hats for the more NO ATTLEBORO ART WINNERS Pauline Lemieux lic Faith from Judaism She joined the Medical Mission Sisshyconservative first grade William Midon eighth grade Cecile Parent ters in 1957 after completing herWe even felt no compunction sixth grade were the leading artists in the contest conshy medical education at the Univerin indulging a long-standing ducted in Sacred Heart School No Attleboro sity of Louisville Ky and herhabit of visiting a yardgoods residency at Barnes Generalcenter quite often picking up an Hospital in St Louis She haGirresistible bargain in cloth seshy

~spent six years at the sisteplecting a pattern and actually hoods hospitals in Pakistaneompleting garments

The sewing room Markie~ Sister Mary Luke Gray an- erstwhile bedroom was in reshy o~her Medical Mission physician markably good shape as a proshy has also passed _the AniericaD duction center and could eVeR IMAGE-MAKING Board of 0bstl~tricsand Gyne suffer the pangs of Spring houseshy

In this ever-changing worldcleaning with mere picking up of scraps setting 10 rights and a horough cleaning

But those unearthed forgotshyten treasures in the other closshyets Why there was enough mashyterial here to keep Us chained 10 that sewing machine as was Proshymetheus to his rock

Now what had we intended 10 do with that short length of pink flannel Oh yes wed picked it up for the proverbial song at a visit to a mill in South Caroshylina would have it until the folshylowing spring and make a coat for Mary Daly Brennan (Mary is now nine years old and this pink bit wouldnt even make a coat for her little sister) MUs~ lin broadcloth velvet tweedshyyou name it we have it -

Out into the clear with every item from every box bag and pile

Io more saving no more stashing away no more visits 10 remnant counters

The Head of the House paying one of his rare visits to our sew- ing center viewed the miniature mill-end display

By the way he asked hows about putting a new pocket in these trousers And sOme shirt buttons that have popped

OK First t~ings first

Baltirnor~ Nun to Head C()lIeg~ Advisory Unit

PITTSBURGH (NC) -Sister M Cleophas Costello of Balti shymore will serve as chairman of the newly formed Commission on Higher Education of the Fedshyeration of the Sisters of Mercy

The commission will serve in an advisory capacity in mat~ers concerning the 15 colleges opershyated by the order The federashytion numbers 15000 nUDll throughout the United states Canada and Lat~n America

New President LOS ANGELEE (NC)-5ister

Cecilia Louise Moore will beshycome president of Mount St Marys College here in Califorshynia ~)D Aug 15 next succeeding Sister Mary Rebecca who haS headed the womens liberal aris college since 1961

where what is in one moment is obsolete the next there is nothing more changeable than

the image of the ideal woman This image that stamps itself on the minds of millions causes fashion design- ers to change styles and forces females alI over the world to rush to the beauty facshytories to be turned out as its carbon copies is created in many ways Sometimes it starts with a particular model that hits the publics fancy or a cinema star that reaches her audience or even as in the case of Mrs Kennedy with the rise and public acclaim of a woman associated with politics

However whatever the reason or manner or time that creates an idol of this woman 8Jl idol she is at least until someone else more exciting comes along ~ cpallenge her place

This phenomenon of one womshyan or tyPe of woman leading alI others is nothing new Im sure there has been an ideal type of beauty since Neanderthal man dragged his mate by her long thick tresses into his cave (eer- tainly no short-haired eave girl wOuld have shone m prehistoric times)

Charles Dana Gibson pPOVided the image of the goddess of the

Protestants to Speck At Catholic Retreats

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - At least one Protestant minister Or layman ~ill appear as guest

speaker at retreats held in the San Antonio area during the coming year an archdiocesan committtee OIl lay ecumenism has decided

The ecUmenical aspects of the retreat program win carry over into a 1967 Ecumenical Diashylogue scheduled for June 29 UI July 1 at St J~ephs retreat bouse here Selected ministers

priest Sisters Brothers and laity will be speakers

cology examinations and win 1900s with heavenly sketches of return to Pakistan to continue a dark haired question mark her practice coiffured beauty with Ii lOng 11gt

graceful swanlike neck Immediateiy all fashion-con-

csious females of that day rushed out to the local emporiums to purchase henna rinses and rats (the hair peces of the 90s) to puff out their skimpy pompashydOlUS

The tWihkling 20s had no sooner been born than the It Girl Clara Bow caused the daughters of the aforementioned females to toss away their rats head for the nearest barber and expose their ears as well as their knees

Not a decade later these knees were encased in satin lounging pajamas and the ears hidden under the marcelled curls that Jean Harlow sported

And such has been the tide of fashion everchanging and generally influenced by circumshystances from the short skirts of the material-rationed war years through the New Look that welcomed the advent of peace

TOdays Qlieen

What of our present fashion Queen Who is the woman ofshythe 60s who isthe darii~goft~ fashion press and fashion de- signers oddly enough in this age of affluencemiddot it seems that the female wile outshines an others is ~ long-legged wideshyeyed British model who looks like an ad for Care packages and answers to the improbable name of Twiggy ~sley ~ornby (the name on

Twiggys birth certificate) is a 11 year old pathetically thin ex- schoolgirl who has been sky- rocketed to fame and fortune through the efforts of her Sven laquoali -her manager

Her waif-like face shining Jrom the cOvers of hundreds of magazines haS inspired young females everywhere ie nmtfgt their hairdress~rs ~ ) g~miR eut paint theirmiddot lower lashes_ like those of a kewpie don and push away t~at dessert pla1e Twiggy is apparently the JleW

idol of the fashion world - at l~ast until next season

9 Nows RightTime to Plant Peas for Early Enjoyment

By J~ aridlfan1ynRoderiek It is a eustom in New England to serve salmon and peas

00 the Fourth of July Years back this was the time when thresh salmon showed up Jin New England fish markets and Jllative peas could be found ~t the corner store Now we have frozen peas year round and amp Imon may be had throug~- ~t most of the year Thll3 lm-as taken the special delight (iJlJt of native foods but we can G1tfll appreciate fresh vegetabtea limd fish made much morepaia-~ oble by being put on a tablel 3

day or so after it is caught If you want fresh peas fortne

~ourth of July you can sow your creed about the third week of llIlay We prefer ours a little ear_I ~er and so we get the seeci ~lanted by the second or third week in April 00 that the planta will be well on their way before ~e cold weather is gone and (he warm weather arrives By QlllIll reckoning the peas we planted last week will be ready ~ the second week of June

Peas are simple to grow and Ililave nO special difficulties They Ilteed sun moisture and good s6il A row of peas may be planted fulna matter of 10 minutes ahd OOten forgotten until it ia tiine

Th k Si te h d th IIS wee s rae c ass act out the sacrainent to go along with their lesson in the religious Workbqok My daughter came homedelirious with joy because she was chosen to bring in the baby

We unearthed a doll that we ilelt was closest to newborn baby size and Grandma helped by finding the baptismal garments that were stored in her house and by dressing the fortunate stand-in while she explained to Meryl and Melissa that this was the same dress that they wore when they became members of the Church

In fact the children were awed as I further explained that actually four children had used these baptismal garments Meryl ~gan making plans immediateshyly Ann Marie is going to be the father (this in our all-girl ochool) Wendy is the godmother and Karen is going to be the ptiest because her new little

~r pickinlt b~othe was christened Sunday Jrirst tum the soil over to il a~d she knows jllst what to do

ilepth of about six inches or ~ Innoeent DIscussion and break up the clods Make ~ Even Melissa got into the act twrrow about an inch deep~~tl as she proceeded to spiel off m drop the peas into the furrow list of names that she thought iellst an inch and a half a~a~lt t~~ dfl~lshould be given Meryl eovel the furrow water ~~~ si~ e~pIiil1edto her that salt would ~ack a~d wait In 50 days or so dlependmg on the varIety of seed ~u ~se the peas wi1l be ready faj plckmg and ~atmg

Plant Anywhere )peas may be planted in rows

lMlt they may also be planted aishylllillost anywh~re they will get the IgtUUn I planted two little roWlJ ~tween some raspberry bushes raquolaquolother row in front of a flowe ~ where my wife will be able 00 get to them and still another JIlandful of seed in a foundation ~ianting in front of the house

This latter may seem to be goshyl1mg a little too far but by the ~me the annuals a~e in bloom le peas will have been con~

d oome the plants pulled up and DO one will be the wiser

The point is that one does not Thlave to make a big project out ~ growing a packet of seeds mnce half the pleasure is to be

flound in doing a minimum of work while reaping deliciolw nesults

In the Kitchen Most middot0f the books which conshy 1 thltOOJlI emse ves with heading

lIUr children in the right direc_ (tioqas living thinking Chrlsshyllians recommend that middotthebestW4yOOle Sacrament of Baptism is to Ilaye them attend an actual cer+ ~ony This is quite true as we

~rvotlCnced when Jason WM lgtavtized and Meryl and Melis Were allowed to attend

We were fortunate in that the l)lliest who performed the cereshyIlllOny was a personal friend who _plained clearly to the childreUll _actly wha~ he was doing rOIl liIUre this made a lasting impres-Ilion but I also feel that theii IlIIllnds were on the celebratiollll

be Pllt on the dolls tongue to preserve her from the sins of the Yorld and to give her III

atlste for wisdom It was delightful to hear them

discussing the sacrament in such inn~cent and childlike ways and yet witlt understanding that demonstrated wisdom far beyond their years The following incishyde~~ occurred at about the time this was happening and demon- strates the feeling of some chishydrep arid the naive wisdom they possess For two or three days last week Joe had seen a female rabbit in the yard and he had pointed it out to the children

th t itsayIng a appeared ready to have a litter Sure enough the rabbit did have a litter under the mulch around one of the rose bushes The children were thrilled but

f un ortunately a neighbors dog found the litter and killed the tiny newborn rabbits When

~~~~JIiCheese Gingerbread l3~ounee package ere a JllIl

cheese l cup molasses 2 eggs

1 cups sifted all-purpose ftOtllfi teaspoon baking soda

1 teaspoons baking powdeR 1 teaspoon cinnamon

OOnat was to take place at home 1 teaspoon ginger smd on all the people who were t~aspoon cloves ltllllming to help them celebrate 1-8 teasp~n salt

llhis in itself wasnt bad as it IIgt boiling water lB alsoimportant that they ~al- 1) Beat the cream cheese urim koo th~t a baptism is aiQytul Ce- ~BOft andfluftly then gradually llWliori which should be shared beatit the molasses Ytdh others butwith the confu- 2~ Beat- in the eggs one at Cl

CATHOLIC WOMEN HONOR BISHOP Welcoming Most Rev James L Connolly to the Annual Bishops Night Sponsored by the New BedfordCathoJic Womens Club are Mrs John W Glenn left president and Mrs Daniel F Dwyer first vice-president

Receiver Takes Over FHA Starts Foreclos~te lProcee~ings

Against Retirem~rjfttoriu~ MOUNT ANGEL (NC) - A

oourt-appointed receiver hall taken over operation of Mount Angel Towers a $34 million reshytirement home completed scarceshyy more than a year ago

The receiver-Portland attorshyney John R Fawt Jr - was named less than a month after the Federal Housing Administrashytion announced that it was start shying foreclosure proceedings against the home here in Oregon

Mount Angel Towers built on Beven acres of land donated to it

Sch001 Honors Chaplain

Killed in Vietnam PLEIKU (NC)-A new wing

has been added to St Pauls

School here in memory of Father (Maj) William J Barragy of the Dubuque archdiocese who was

killed in a helicopter crash inVietnam May 4 1966

A brass plaque on the office wall states Rev William J

Melissa appeared on -the scene Barragy (Major U S Army)boni October 13 1923ordained

she said realistically New life May 22 1948 dled In VIetnamI k p un and its all over Just May 4 1966 like Jesus born at Christmas

The new wing has five classshy dead at Easter rooms all on the ground floor

Last year when my oldest St Pauls is in the charge of the to teachyoungstersabout daitghier received the sacrament I Sisters ofSt Paul de Chartres

of tfie HolyEucharist for the first who alsohave anorphahge near tim~~ wil celebrated With a fam the iichoOtmiddot Thereare 1000 Viet ililgtru~ch Ali lt~~ everyon~ namese children receiving pri seeffied to enjoy was warm mar an -secondary educatmiddot10n i~

a bullbull ging~tbread the schOOL

by theilelghobririg Mount Angel Benedictine Abbey was billed on its completion in 1965 as the nations first Catholic retirement home

it was not the most prosperous however and by JIeb 7 when the mortgage-holder assigned the mortgage to FHA which had inshysured it the 207-unit six-story building had only 80 residents in 61 apartments

Appointment of a receiver was the first step in FHAs machinery toward eventual sale of the propshy~rty to another private operator

The home will be run as beshyfore according to the FHA Portshyland office until it can be sold to a suitable organization to maintain its operation as housing for senior citizens

FHAs office in Washington said Mount Angel Towers was one of about 20 such projectsshynot all Catholic - which had failed since 1960 when FHA mortgage insurance became available to them More than 200 have been built

llHE ANCHOR-Thurs April 20 1967

Sisters Assume Pasroral Duties

AKRON (NC)-Priests visit flBl administer the sacraments bu~

day by day the ordinary passhytoral duties are performed bsr nuns in Brazilian parishesmiddot il1l Natal and Salvador administered by the Daughters of Divine Charity

Their duties which includ~ the distribution of Holy Comshymunion were described here bV Mother M Fidelis Weninger who worked in Brazil for 21 years prior to her election in 1965 as mother general of th0 community

The Daughters of Divine Charity she said care for those parishes just as though they were priests Of course we cant administer the sacraments but we handle everything elseshysuch as pre-marriage instructionD and parish visitations

Permission for the nuns t distribute Communion was obshytained from Pope Paul vr through Bishop Eugenio de Araujo Sales apastolic adminisshytrator of Sao Salvador de Bahia she explained

Sister Mother Fidelis ordeli has been working in Brazil sincia 1919 and now has 460 nuns there aUexcept 18 of whom are Brashyzilians

The order has 1900 membero serVing in 10 countries throug~shyout the world with headquartern

in Vienna Mother Fidelis U1 completing a five-month visiia tion of the orders 37 convents in the United States

Greater Boston Sister Gets Fulbright Award

MEDFORD (NC) - SistCll Madeline Marie Nevins a gradushyate student at Tufts University has been awarded a Fulbright Fellowship to study medievaD French literature at the Univershysity of Paris France

The Mass Sister of St Josep~

will complete her doctoral wor at Tufts after her year abroad

BROOKLAWN fUNERAL HOME INC

a MllrCOI Roy - G lorralno RG1 lIoger laFranco

FUNERAL DIRECTORS IS tllVington C~

995-5166 lN~w Bedfo8cIl

Schedules Convocation 1 bull

On Council Documents WILMINGTON (NC)- A dayshy

llong session of lectures and disshyICUssions on the Wilmington dioshyease and the post-council er81 will be conducted here

Some 600 clergy and laity are ~From anOlde English recipe - expected to attend the meeting

which is being sponsored by a Plumper rounderp bullarollp of ~concerned Catholics illl th~Wg~ing~on piocese fuller muffins~

batter is smooth 5) Gently stir in the boiling

Dn of the party it was difficul Um~~ water bull ascertain just how much the7 3) s~tt tltgether the flour bak- 6) Pourinto a greased 7 by ~ learned With this in mincll Ang ooda baking powdei ~ H pan Sunbeam English Muffins ~ were delighted when 1ft andspice~ f) Bake in a 350 oven 40 to lIound that Meryl was studying 41) Add the dry ingredients te 45 mlhutes] add about cup Olf Baked by your Sunbeam Baker _tism in 8daoo1 l1he cheese mixtu-l0 GUlring watilll Jl3iBins but this is optionaL

-

bullbull

HAPPINESS IS FAMILY REUNION A weekly radio reunion is Sula Spanish Honduras L~ft Barton Albert ham radio operator middot)liIl

enjoyed by Mr and Mrs Bernard Sullivan Holy Name parish Fall River Swansea connects the Sullivans with their daughter Right InSart Pedro

with their daughter Sister Anne Marie RSM missioned to San Pedro Sula Jack Gaffney performs the same service for Sister Anne Marie

Monastery VisitsSt~esses Serio~smiddot Ham Oplr~t~rs Arrangemiddot We~k~yRadiQ C1tat~ ChmiddoturchSituatilon CRAWFORDSVILLE (NC)C bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbull bull bull bullbull bull

bull bull 0In East -Germany BERLINmiddot (NC)-Christiari

ehurches in communist-ruled lEast Germa~y are suff(~ring from government harrassshymentand restrictions a Luthershy1m bishop told the eastern sec-

For Fa11 RiverParents Missionary Sistet Dr Eric Dean chairman of the religion and philosophy departshy

ments at Wabash College here Thursdays the most important day in the week to Mr and Mrs Bernard Sullivan in middotIndiana plans extended visits

of Holy NameparishFall River Its the day they talk to their daughter Sister Anne to severalmiddot Benedictine monas- shyMarie RSM assigned since last August to missi)n work middotin San Pedro Sula Spanish teries this year The visits Wt)ll

H h kl

onduras T emiddot wee y db

conversatIon is arrange y two h d

am ra W)

operators Jack Gaffshy be financed by a Carnegie gran~

receivedmiddot through the GreatLak~ ney in San Pedro Sula and Colleges Association Harton Albert of Swansea was on retreat However arshy with Sister from their livjng

tion oflt the synod of Germanys It came about tl)rough 3 rangements were made on the middotroommiddot ~eceptiori is excep~nt Protestant Church Council sPot for the first of the weekly noted Mrs Sullivan fully 88 middot~iiJbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbulliIbullbullbull_

The clergyman Bishop Fried- series of coincidences that conv~sations good as a local telephoriecallmiddot bull III rich Wilhem krummachet of Mrs SuliivaIi ascribesld the The luck extended to a fellow Another beneficiary ofthmiddot 11I11I J B ~ East Geimany said that SChool iuck6f the Irish and had its religious of Sister Anne Marie weekly radio reunion is REvmiddot bull ii ~~ld~~a~I~~V~~ti~~~~bel~~~~~~ ~t~~A~~~n~a~~nC~~i~~~~~~~ ~~~~~i~o~Sre~~~~r~~~~~~i~~~d~~~~~=~tOfS~tat~~~ ILUMBER CO beliefs 1 - $140 teleph~rie bill talkinllto ly appointment ~nd asked Mrs Mariesbrother bull bull

Lut~eranBish~~ ~~t Fr~liz th~~o~~~~g~~~riotin~~ri li~~tmiddote~r$Ullivan t if hSheWtohUld ~ewla~t a FOImiddotwonderlnmiddotg friends of the 11I 5middot0middot Dortmoutmiddothmiddot ~harf of Berlin chairman of th~ ~~SSl1g~ 0 er JTIQ er ar a Fall River Sister be it notedltGe~man Protestant C h u r c hmiddot rlidlO o~erator middotwho darra~ge a mmu~e slud MrAI~~rt r0rt~7 that she has middotexercisedmiddotthe name- and yan~ismiddot Council made similar charges at connectlOnmiddot for you said a WIth he got the PrOVIdence ~e western section of the synod frleId and someone else sug- Jlother on the phone and gave

I rgested Mr Albert middotwhom the h th of b IfoBejause the Eastmiddotmiddot lterman ~ r bull er e surpnsl e~ Ie as t t t t t b Sullivans- had )mown _for

some bull

she heard her daughter s vOICeIrovernmen res riC s col ac s e- t b th d th ht f ~ E t G -P t t ts Ime u a neVlr Qug omiddot J I don t even have to go tomiddotbullween as elman ro es in _ bl If and those in the West middotthe Protmiddot =~ a ~OsSI e channe omiddot cmmu ~wansea to talk said Mrs SII~ - t t d h ld t mcatlOnwIttISpamshHO1QQras livan Mr Albert can oConnec~

flS an syno was e middotmmiddot wo llec- S l middotmiddotmiddott d M tons one in west Berliri and the T~e ul Iv~ns VISI e r~ AI~ th E tB j berts t)oIle to talk over th~ e er ~ear as er m possibility of contacting-Sister

Catholics face similar pr()b- Anne Marie~ While they were raquoems because of a divi~~d G~r- th~re he demonsthitelt hi~ equip- ~an~ The East Gelman govern- ment fishing bull around the- airshyinen~ ~has prevented thej)ishops wavesmiddot and picking up an ama-middot ~here ~ om attending meetings o~ teur in -rexas

~he G~rman Bishops Conference To his feliow ham he menshyheld iiJ the West tioned that he was looking for

Join in Praytr an operator in Spanish HOlldurasmiddot BiShop Krummacher said at

the synod that iii the preslmtmiddot criss the Protestant churches must use evelY opportunity to join with Catholics in prayer Catholics and Pwtestants he llaid are bound together b~ the word of the Lord and a common Ilesponsibility

The bisho~ said Protestants in East Germany have made every effort to obtain relief fwm antishyJeligious discrimination but govshyernment authorities have reshyjacted all appeals for action

He said such refusals of the East Gelman regime to end the assaults on religion is partmiddot of communist strategy and planshy

ming To further their objectives he said the comTIunists will pelshymstip indoctrinating children in 1lheir ideology while interfering with the consciences and rights _ tJ children and their parenti

And the next voice wemiddot heard recounted Mrs Sullivan still sounding amazed was a man saying This is Sal Pedro Sula Spanish Honduras

Not only was Jack Gaffney th r operator from Honduras in te same city as Sister Anne Marie but it developed that he lived across the street from her

convent a~d had me~ her o~ sevshyeral occaSlOns- He ImmedIately offered to r~n across ~he s~reet and prmg Sister to hiS mlcro-middot phone lgtut it turned out that sie

Wins Festival Piize NEW YOEK (NC) - The

Search produced by Father Peytons Family Theater has received an award at Monte Carlo in the annual television

competition sponsored by the International Catholic Radio and TV Association

hiS radiO eq~llPrne~t to the tel~ phone and the Sulhvans can chat

Permit Experiment In bullShared Time P9RTLAND (NC)The Port-middot ~~nd school board has approvedai shared time experiment iii -Which children from a parochial ~chool in North Portland will attend classes part time in a nearby public school -

The experi~ent will inv~lve at first only physical education classes and will extend for only two middotyears

Children fro m Immaculate Heart parish elementary schoolwill be allowed to attend gym classes in Eliot school in the Qregon corrlmunity

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Bishop Medeiros Urges Justice ~ For Workers

BROWNSVILLE (NO) ~ Bishop Humbertltgt S Medeishyros of B~wn8ville whose diocese has been the scene of lPl 10-month strike by migrant farm laborers has told farm owners to meet their demands for highe) pay and bettei living eonditions

In a pastoral letter to all Cathshyolics in the diocese-most of the population - released today the bishop said

The present plight of the mishygrant farm workers of America is a constant reproach to our way of life

lFor 1lJse of Ail

They do not ask for charity They demand what is theirs by natural right When the affluent farmers pay a just wage to the migrant workers when they make it possible for him to supshyport himself and his family in frugal comfort and to provide education for the whole family they are not making a gift of their possessions to the farm worker they are simply handilg over to him what is his for they had arrogated to themselves what had becn given in common for Ute use of all

Migrant workers in the Rio Grande vaIiey surrounding Brownsville have been strikihg the larger farms for nearly a year in an attempt to get higher wages and better living condi- tions Their action supported by thc United Farm WorkersOr- ganizing Committee followed the limited success encountered by UFWOC laborers in Califomias lrape vineyards

Precarious Existence

But the Rio Grande workers have encountcred little successshyIllthough a recently organized boycott of produce has received growing support among the states food chains

Bishop Medeilos quoted libshyerally from both Pope John XXIII and Pope Paul VIs recent encyClical On the Development of Peoples in establishing the right of farm workers to adecent Jiving

But be also took note of the plight of Amcricas farmers themselvell who live out a preshylaquoarious existence unless they constitute large enterprises sllch as corporations 01 cooperashyiives

He urged both farmers and workers to organize in their own interest

Natural Ri~ht

Given the natiol~lr and even

aioll of Agricultule ald of fa~m workClS and of manyfarm own- ers in purticular it is urgent that they be aware of thei~ right

~~~o~~o~~~~C~~~i~II~~~~h I~~~~~ of development Which in the words of Pope Priul VI signifies ]lgte~cc

We know that every man hAS a basic natural right to form and join wOIkers unions which conshytribute to economic progress by dcfending his ights he said But thc circumstances of the times the world over indicate that for the common good it is also thc duty for both migrant farm workers and for farmers to form associations

The United States he said has bull duty to its miglant laborers llnd farmers which it must fulfill by passing apPlopliate legislashytion and using other suitable and dcmocratic means of assistance so that not only our tables but thc tables of the world may be blessed with the abundance of the fruits of the earth

lLO~AIJ INTEREST NIl IUSlHIOPS MEETING Disshy W Va Bishop Connolly Bishop Humberto IS Medeiros

cussing topics between sessions are Lawrence Cardinal Brownsville Tex and Bishop Joseph Brunini NatchezshySh~han Baltimore Bishop Joseph H Hodges Whe~]jng Jackson Miss

Churches Shore Latin America Failures

LutheranSees Stumbling Blocks Ahead SPJlINGFIELD (NC) -- The

Roman Catholic and Protestant churches have both failed in the past in Latin America and both face severe stumbli6g blocks in the future a Lutheran layman from Argentina said here

Dr Leopolydo Juan Niilus of Buenos Aires director of the Argentine Department of the River Plate Centre of Christian Studies discussed the Church in Latin America at a meeting of the Lutheran World Federations

Commission on Stewardship and Evangelism

He warned the group that in

too mlIlyquarters the Roman Cath~Ii~ Church has been the main whipping boy for the Latin AmeJican backwaldness~ and there hllS been too much selfshy

Some of the things atheist marxists are doingin our conti shynent should by heritage be added have bee) done by Christians

Looking toward the future Dr Niilus said there are very seshy

were stumbling blocks ahead for our Roman Catholic brethren also

Inseparable Unity They are he said being

hysterically requested by the supporters of the status quo tobecome their defenders once

again The Roman Church failed whenLatin America waS strug- glingJor its independence n may-all of us mayfail now

wheniHs struggling for its eco- lIlomic Independence Dr Niilus said that all

complacency and self-righteous- qhurdiesin Latin America roust ness about the positive role

quickly recognize that study and commitment as an insepshyarable unity is their most urshygent task if they are to play an effective role in the future of Latin America

They must study be said ~both political and economic isshysuell amplnd their theological imshy

Cancer Study lLOST UIS (NC)-The insti shy

lute Ior J)lolecular virology at St LOUiS University here in Misshy

bull souri has b~en awarded a $265shy

101 gJant from the National Canshyeer Instilute of the U S Departshyment of Health Jducation and Welf~re whic~ will enable reshysearchers to look for viral speshyeitic genetic material in himiavl elmcer

plicAtions and must be comshymitted to providing adequate pastoral CAre to those involvel in political and economic action

Pho~ClJI Archbishop Wons Sourin Medal

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Arc~

bishop John J Krol of Philadelshyphia bas received the annual Sourin Award of thc ] 17-yearshyold Catholic Philopatrian LiteJ1shyary Institute

The presentation marked the first time the award has beelll made to a member of the hieJ1shyarchy ]t is ordinarily given w a distinguished Catholic layman The Archbishop was cited 100 confident and courageous leadshyers~jP

played by the Protegttants in Latiq American social andeco N~w Music nomiltdeve~opment 1 PURCHAS~ (NC)-The Pius

Protestants be said have a X School of Litlllgical Music of share and~ responsibility in the Manhattanville College of the WHITE SPA creation of seriougt structural Sacred Heal1 here received maladjustments - both economic $20000 in grants from Charl~ and moral~ in Latin America ~nd Arthur Morgan Of New

York and John Morgan oi Most of the things our pro-Rockville Centre N Y to stimushy

gressive Roman Catholic bret~shy iae new music for the new BANQUETS bull WEDIl)~NG5imiddot P~RTIESilltc~national deprc~sed middotcondi-middot ie are doing today i~Latin m~rgy

America shouldbyheritage he -COMMUNION BREAKfASTSai~ have beel~~~nepygtrotes tants [ 11M3 PLEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

JEFFREY E SULLIVAN 993-778GFer~ Dome

MEMPHIS (NC)~Bi~tiopJoshySishopo~~~ed

550 Locust Street seph A Durick apostolic admin lFall River Mass istrator of the Nashville diocese received the first annual Human 672-2391 Relations Award from the Memshy Iltose E Sullivan CONVENIENT BANKINGphis Catholic Human Relations

Jeglrey E SullivallCouncil He was cited for his WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMSstands on human dignity and

at theequal job opportunities He reshycently instituted Project Equalshyity in Tennessee SlADES FERRY TRUST COMPANY

SOMERSET MASS

llhe most friendly democra~ic BANK offeringCORREIA amp SONS ONE STOP Complete One-Stop Banking

SHOPPING CENTER Clubmiddot Accounts Auto Loans Checking Accounts Business Loansbull Televisiolll _ Furniture SllDvings Accounts lleaiEstate Loansbull Appliances _ Grocery

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Member Federal Deposit Insurance CorporotiBy the Village Green Since 18217middot354

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-11lun Apr 20 1961 12 - )

Irish Emigronts Concern B~hops inmiddot Pgstoral

DUBLIN (NC)-Thespiritual and social needs of Irish 0trtifirants and the importance of preparing them for their new life in other countries were major concerns of the

Irish hierarchy at its meeti~g here in- Maynooth In a pas~ toFal on emigration it wasmiddotmiddot pointed out that while de- parture of Irish people foigt residence in other cuiitries is on the decline those who do leave ~can be an enormous force formiddotgoodmiddotin the lands they go to if they have the right ideals and motLves and abilities properly developed

Without these the pastoral adds the alien enironment in which they find themselves may presen~ serious dangers to the spiritual and moral wenfare ~

the weaker ones Education and religious formashy

tion of young people by the bullbull schools and by the clergy coopshy

erating with teachers were cited as most effective contriilgtutiona

to the formation of those likely to emigrate

Among recommendations made in the pastoral for properly pi-eshyparing potential emigrants for livingin other lands were

Young people should be enshycouraied to remain in schooias long as they can benefit from H

Emphasis on the virtue of tem perance

The utilization of youth club activities (discussion clubs and

guiles) to help young members to acquire healthy and natural

sOcial graces and habits The aid of priests in helping

the young people to grow up to

confident maturity Counse by priests on expected

problems of housing suitable

I

REV ALBERT F SHOVELTON

Priest to Spe(l]llc At Seminar

Rev Albert E fShovelton dishy

rector of Sl Mary Home New Bedford will speak as a represhy

sentative of the Diocesan Comshy employment dangersmiddot to health Unity atNClline Committe~ longhours of work in other the75th anniversary celebration

countries advanced atrange- at Holy Trinity LutheranTo SurveyCU mentS with Catholic welfaeChurchNorth Easton Thursday agencies in countries 9f their April 27

CHIltAGO (NC) - The board choice and the provision of in Father Shoveltons talk ~iU of trusteesof the Catholic Uni-formlltion concerning facilities be part of aseroinar middotHe wili be versity of America Washing- abroad for emigrantS preceded by Rev Dr Nils Ehtenshyton D9middot his est~blished it ne~ ~he h6ldin~ Of Irisit~nhlli~middot 8~rom Boston University School survey and ogtlectlODs ~()mmlttee lft llt1rge centers lt ~ Theology whose subject will headed br ~ St ~OU~1l1(ly~a~ Aparishnewsletter s~nt be Ecun1eni~m in Protestant to study ~he funct~op and plaOl th I fmiddot h middotmiddotf g Perspective Today f th Cmiddotth li U -Of Of Dl0n y rom omemiddot 10 Or1ll1O ~ a 0 r ~vterslY~ lt the emigrants bfuricti6ns inFathel ShovElltons suoject will m~nqa ~r~o ern a hoh~ - the local parishes at Chri~tmaiJbe ~EcumeJ1ismin Roman Cllthshy

laCatton on middota national scale d thO t f th h oljc PerspectiveToday A dis-Th middottt an 0 er lmes 0 e yearw en JJ

e cozpml ee~~made up U4 they mightmiddot possibly be home~uss)n period will follow SIX laymen and four archbIshops ) The audience will be comshyall of whom ar~ pr~sent trustees _ prised of the Lutheran parisa o~ the u~lverslty Formatu~n at Southern PrOVince cmgregation the townspeople ~he conrrutteewasannounce by ~ _ the towns clergy and the stll~ FrancII Cardinal Spellman of Favors DIGcoraate ~ dents at Holy Cross Fathenl New york ch~rman of the MIAMI CNC)Bishops of the Seminary Catholic Urnverslty board province of Atlanta have giyen Pastor of Holy Trjnity is Rev

The appointment of the com- p~sts in the six-ctiocese area Kenneth E Bjorklund

nlission for Christian

SAVE DOLLARS

with the MERCHANlS

84EconomOO

Auto Loan Pian

mittee came against a backshyground of reports that the U S bishops might transfer its Ionshytrol of CatJlolic University to 11 group of laymen The univershysitys rector Bishop William J McDonald has denied the middotreshyports but the chairman of the

new commi~ee Dr Ca~roU Hochwalt SaId the commIttee has been given the widest posshysible mandate from which nothshying will be excluded Our assignment Dr Hochshy

walt saidis the most farshyreaching one possible We are to take a reaiistic look at every aspec~ of the university all it has developed under its original directive since 1889 and at its potential for the forseeable

gt futule It is obviously the trusshyteef desire to leave no qtiestfon unanswered which may aftect the unfyersityas anational-hlsti tution 1its ~aculty students ~d

permission to hear confessions in the entire province and they have also asked the National Brothers VOuDlltee~ Conference of Catholic BishoPs As firefilllhters

to consider restoring the perma- nent diaconate in dioceses that want it

The two decisions were ~~_ nounced after the Bishops held their annual meeting in Miami

Archbls~OP P~ul J Hallman of A~lanta SaId l~ IS cus~omary ~or prtests t~ receIve theIr faculties from theIr own dl~cese and they h~ve been restncted o use wlthn that diocese EffectlVelmshy

II NORTHBROOK (NC) - Four

of the 34 men in the Northbrook volunteer fire department here are religious Brothers They are assigned to the national headshyquarters of the Society ofmiddot the Divine Word at nearby Techny Ill

The Brothrs are on call any time the Northbrook first stashytion standby has two or less men on duty for all general

the Cliurcli and the nation ift ~ J llmohgihemthejt haVe fouglU serves~ ( I i) middotClosingmiddotMeasure middotisome 50fires lti

j middot5T PAUL (NC)4AbilLban

Dedicate Monment ~ing ~l)e sale pf spe~iti~mtr 0ROURKtr chandise on Sundays has heen ~

To adFe Serra middot houses bullbull FunealHomepassed b)-both of the j

medl~telY all pne~ts In good alaons and for any fire or emershystandmg may nw he~r the con- gency when additional personnel fesslOns of Iemtents 10 the A- are needed Their volunteering la~ta archdIOcese ~nd th~ 41- was approved by the superiors oces~ of Sva~nah Charleston andmiddot the seminary bought them II ~alelgh MIami and St Augus- veh~C1e to expedite transportmshy

tine tion when they answer a fire ~ ca~I

Solons pass Sun JI n y The Brothers estaimat~ that

S_CRAMENTO (NC) dDme MinrElsota legislatureGov~aJ monument of Padre runipero old LeVander of Minnesota was Serra OFMwassolemnly ded- exPected to sign it into law icated on the grounds of tille The legislation forbids the sale State Capitol here Saturday OIl Sundays and six holidays

The formal ceremonies were (New Years Day Memorial Day qonducted by officials of the Independence Day Labor Day state alld by officers of the Nll- Thapksgiving and Christmas) of tive Sf ns and Daughters of the cameras musical instruments Golden West The project haa phonographs and tape recorders been sponsored by the California radios and television sets jewel-State Legislature and the fra- ry clocks and watches furs terrial ~ orders who provided furni~ure and other home furshymatching funds to finance its nishings including appliances executi~n middotmiddotmiddotAlso wearing apparel ()all

S7J ~c~nd St~~ef

Fall River MOIss_ 679-6072

MICHAEL J McMAHON Licensed Funeral Director Regisfered Embalmer

D D II- bull _ 5u Ivan amp Sons

FUNERAL HOME

Father Noel F Moholy OFMkinds including footwear lug- 469 LOCUST STREIE1T vice postulator for the canorlizashy gage lawnmowers and 9ther tion of Ithe Franciscan friar who outdvor machinery and equipshy FAU RIVER MASS bas been hailed as Californias ment hardware and tools paints 672-3381 First Citizen and Greatest Pio-Illeer W3 the principal speakeII at the ded~cation

varnishes wallpaper and re-middot lated tools lumber and other buildine materials and supplies

Wilfred e~

Driscollmiddot

James IE

Sullivan Jr

Suburban Parishes Should H~lp Save City Parishes

WASHINGTON (NC)-Archbishop Patrick A YBoy1e of Washington appealed here to ~ubJrbanCatholic parisbes to come to the aid of poverty-stricken parishes in the inner city At least 10 Catholic parishes in the inner city need financial help to continue to ismiddotmiddoth d d - ize t II h told C Has ave ecrease s exlS e a ommumon though the schools have contimshy

breakfast of the St Vincent ued to operate at fun capacity de Paul Society and the Whll~ parish income has faUellil only way we can give it iI off school costs have risen ~ through our suburban parishes cause of increased salaries em-

Suburban parishes are hard ployment of lay teachers and pressed themselves he said with higher maintenance costs for most of them deepiy in debt 00- older buildings cause of new constru~tion and expansion Nevertheless they must inaiJpirit of true charity share their resources with our poor parishes

The archbishop said that one of the reasons flr the poor fi shynancial condition of the inner city parishes was the cost of operating their schools but said emphatically that none of these schools would be given up

If we didnt have to support our schools Archbishop OBoyle said nearly all Of our parishes couldmiddot take care of their basic needs But we are not going to giv~ up any of our schools as long as we can get Ii dime to support them

Not mentioning which parish was concerned he stated thatmiddot one middotitmner city parish received $54000 from archdiocesan funds las~ year

Msgr Thomas W Lyons Arch diocesanmiddot Director of Educatiot1 said th~t before the whije middotmigramiddot tionmiddot to the suburbs CathoUa constituted about 22 per cent 01 the Washington Population The Negr~ who replaced the whitea are only about JO per cent Cathshyolic The result is that the par

Parochial school tuiti6n which averages about $4 a month haa not kept pace with costs Msgr Lyons explained

The St Vincent de Paul Soclshyety-here recently announced a twinning program in whicb sOlue of the more affluent parshyishes adopt inner city parisheo and provide for their needs

Offers Folk Mass For Vocations

HOUSTON (NC)-Bishop John L Morkowsky of Galveston- Houston offered a special foUt MaSs for youth on World Day oL Pr~yer for Vocations at Sacred Heart co-cathedral here

Father William Steele diocshyesan vocation director said the folk Mass is being offered to atshytract the young people middotThemiddot homily duringmiddot the Mass dealt with vocations

Contemporarymiddot folk musiC composed by Ray Repp nation ally known folk song writer was played during the Mass Guitar aceompaniment was proshyvided by seminarians from St MaryoS Seminary here

ct HOME IMPROV~MENl LOANS

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bull VACATIONmiddot LoANS ONE $10 COMPlm BANKI~GSERVICEAl Atlaquo

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DRIVE-IN SERVICE AT AU BANKS

Cardinal Cushing Sees Decrease In Seminaries

BOSTON (NC)-The numshyber of Catholic seminaries in the United States will deshycrease because of the diffi shyculty of obtaining top-flight scholars to staH them Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston preshydicted here

Addressing the New England Conference of the Catholic Hosshypital Association the cardinal told some 680 nuns priests and

laymen that schools of theology both Catholic and Protestant will become more closely identi shyfied with the great colleges and universities of this country a system not unlike that of Oxford in England

Sharing the platform with Archbishop Cushing was Bishop Fulton J Sheen of Rochester N Y who urged Catholic hosshypitals to go outside their own walls to bring social and medical help to the poor

Go out into the slums he said Give two or three hours a day visiting poor families for healing and counseling

He also suggested that Cathoshylic hospitals in this country adopt hospitals in poor counshytries

In A Rut We can certainly afford to

have someone put up a hut in the poor world We have the spirit but we have gotten into a rut the bishop said

Bishop Sheen told the confershyence the hallmark of a Catholic hospital is that we serve each patient as we would serve Christ

Cardinal Cushing also preshydicted that rising costs of care of the sick will induce the fedshyeral government to become more closely identified in hosshypital administration

I was told he added that in some hospitals the cost of a bed per day is almost $100 There must be a ceiling somewhere

Salons to Study Divorce Laws

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey State Assembly has unanimously approved a resolushytion to establish a commission to study the states divorce laws The measure already passed by the Senate is expected to be signed quickly by Gov Richard J Hughes

Thp commission described by Governor Hughes as an effort to strengthen marriage has al shyready encountered the opposishytion of -the Monitor the Trenton laquoiocesan newspaper But the bIShOps of the states three other Oatholic dioceses have reserved comment -

Boih Governor Hughes and the commissions sponsor Sen Jereshymiah F OConnor are Catholics And while Senator OConnor would like to see the commission recommend liberalization of the states di~orce law - desertion adultery and extreme cruelty are the only grounds at present-he would also like other changes made

Among them are a- family eourt which would serve as

counseling agency as well as divorce court lengthening of the present three-day waiting period as a1 obstacle to quick marriages and anr a warning to young PershySODS of the seriousness of marshyriqe

Senate Election PROVIDENCE (NC)-Sixteen

members of the 26-member senshyate of priests for the Providence dJocese have been elected in the first part of the senates twoshyatage elections

REV PATRICK 3 ONEILL

NCIEA Appoints Fr ONeiU

Rev Patrick J ONeill Supershyintendent of Schools in the Dioshycese of Fall River has been apshypointed by the Superintendents Department of the National Catholic Educational Association to serve as a member of the nashytional committee concerning tbe shygrowth and development of diocshyesan and parish school boards

This committee under the chairman Rt Rev Msgr ONeill DAmour will serv() as an adshyvisory unit It will gather and distribute information concernshying the development growth and function of school boards

Father ONeill made an extenshysive study of functioning school boards throughout the country His work in organizing our Diocshyesan Board of Education and working with it during the past year has been commended

Newman Chaplains School at IHCJJlvOlId

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Newman Chaplains Asshysociation has added a second training school for priests and Sisters entering Newman work It will be conducted at Harvard University

As in past years a school will be held at the University of Colshyorado in Boulder Dates for both schools are June 113 to July 2

The Newman Chaplains School prepares priests and nuns asshysigned to the secular campus The faculty has been chosen on the basis of experience in the Newman apostolate and speciali shyzation in theology -philosophy script~reand counseliJ)g _

Wlhere A GOODNAME

Means A GREAT DEAL

GEO-OHARA CHEVROLET

1001 Kings Hwy

NEW BEDFORD

Open Evenings

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 13

Family Care Program forO Children The Paul A Dever State by the psychologists and pre-placement visits with the

School Taunton under the sponsorship of the Departshyment of Mental Health has recently begun a Family Care Program in an attempt tomiddot proshyvide some of its children with the experience of family life

screened by the social workers have all been approved by the schools physicians for the proshygram

These children are ready and able to enter into the commushynity said Dr John L Smalldon superintendent of the Dever

child to the prospective foster parents to determine the comshypatibility of the youngster with the family Once settled within the family the child will also be periodically visited by a schooi social worker to assist in the adjustment The youngsters

The program is initially seekshying to place approximately 20 selected youngsters in homes in

school Provides Funds

This program with its emphashy

would attend special educatiOD classes in public schoolll throughout the South Shore

the South Shore area These chidren have been selected for their advanced capacities for edshyucation and training and their abilities to adjust to a home enshyvironment

These children reconmmended

sis on the advantages of the proper fa mil y environment seeks through a gradual process to assimilate the child within the community

The Social Service Department at the Dever School will conduct

The Department of Mental Health which sponsorsmiddot similar Family Care Programs in sevshyeral other schools in the state is providing funds for the supshyport of the children

What do you do when you live on a Take a good look at your everyday very small island with over three and a - surroundings You are apart of the 20 half million people-say Hong Kong of theworlds populati~nthat has access Move to the suburbs But what if the to 80 of the worlds food That means suburb is Red China The only answer that the other 80 of the world must be is this-and rbe hundreds of thousands content with the remaining ~O Of who crowd these house- boats are lucky course you can read this and say So Ovlaquo half die people of the world ani But You cannot say to someone who taorneless-and most live in Asia is hungry come tomorrow We must

When we hear that three-fourths ol act today because tomorrow may be too cbe human race lives inpoverty or below late (pope Paul VI) Feed the man the subsist~ level these are the peo- dying of hunger if you have not fed pie we are talking about Do we know him you have killed h1m (Vatican II) what it feels like to subsist to know no Dear Monsignor OMeara 1 am attachshyother feeling but that of hunger It is ing my gilt 0 $__ to help right the impossible or we could never spend over imbalance in our world Please use it so 100 billion dollars annually on arma- that a missionary can feed the starving ments while 10000 die each day from name---------- shyyenJldernouri8bment address _~____

THE HOLYFATHER~S

FUND FOR THE POOR RT REV EDWARD T OmiddotMEARA NAT~NAL DIRECTOR THE SOCIETY POR THE PROPAGATION Of THE FMTH 36e 5TH AVE NYbull NY 10001

IN PALL RIVER YOUR DIRECTOR e RT REV RAYMOND CONSIDINE 868 N MAIN ST

THE ANCHOR~Diocese ofFa River-Thursbull Apr 20 19M

middotSocial Revolutmiddotion Is Needed In latin America Lands

From Social Revohitiiolll iin the New Latin America Edited by John 3 Considine MM

The possibility of orientating regional planning toward an overall solution of the pressing problems that concern more than one Latin nation could well engage Christian initiative writes Rene Atero The most typical example of this kind he sa)s concerns Social Revolution in Latin-~ershythe region of the Andean ica Most Rev Mark GMcshyMountains where peasants Grath CSC says Barbara numbering more than five Ward widely read Catholic

million live in thee different economist begins her book enshyltcountries possessing basically titled The Rich Nations and the

Poor Nations with the flat stateshy similar pro b- ment I suppose we are all lems Our asso- aware of the fact that we live in ciation with na- the most catastrophically revolushy~ional orgariiza- tionary age that men have ever

tions concerned fced middotmiddotwith deyelop- Social Revolution ment planning Vice-President Hubert Humshyin no way im- phrey who honored this meeting plies the im- with his presence last year proper subordi- writes in a recent issue of Forshynation of enti- eign Affairs Although the obshytie sund e r servation that Latin America is Church s p 0 n- in the midst of a political ecoshysorship to less effectual accom- nomic and social revolution has plishment under the state become a commonplace it is

On the contrary it is a ques- true tion of becoming involved in a The influential Chilean magashynew front in which Christian zine Mensaje published by the action is not only indispensable Jesuit Fathers dedicated an enshybut will be most efficacious in tire issue in December of 1962 to helping to enlist sectors of Latin the theme Revolution in Latin American society of top impor- America and followed this up

middottance for national dEvelopment withmiddot another special issue in With reference to the actual bctober 1963 on Revolutionary implementation of plans through Reforms in Latin America

well elaborated projectS we Early in 1964 the Civilta Catshyshould make certain that iden- tolica published in Rome by the tification and recognition as an Jesuits carried a critique of important part of the national these two issues of Mensaje by effort are given to current Father Jarlot which questioned Church activities already oper- the prudence of using the terio ating numerous projects of social revolution in a Christian conshydevelopment throughout the text pointing out that itia ltcontinent loaded with Marxist overtones

For example with regard to Not only does it signify rapid education we should lteall atten- c structural changes Father Jarlot tion to the fact that there aremiddot in asserts but also connotes vioshy

lence and some measure of hate Latin America about 5000 pri- and class warfare He would vate ed~cational insttutions pre- prefer the term evolution pared to share in current eduea- tional programs throughout the Social Revolution oontinent Mr Humphrey in the article

The private univemities andmiddot already mentioned asks the eenters of technical training inmiddot question Is it appropriate te the fields of agriculture labor define Alliance (for Progress) and cooperatives couY-a double policy as favoring social revolll shythe potential for plofessional tion - or should this word be and technical trainin1 if they avoided in favor of evolution 01 would participate on D national some other expression basis ir serving the more press- He anwers Evolution if ing needs of society carefully examined proves to be

Broad Horizons inadequate for it implies an un-We must work also in the pres- conscious non-deliberate change

ervation of the progress which that is slow and gradual has been achieved in the areas- What is required is conscious of social welfare now b~ing em- rapid change in the socioshyphasized (housing education economic structure a process public health) Lay groups such that can correctly and precisely as Catholic Action in different be called a revolutionmiddot If used spheres _ Legion of Mary St not as a slogan but in itS precise Vincent de Paul Carita3-which sense the policy of peaceful s0shy

up to now have directed their -cial and economic revolution is efforts mainly towards religion agtcorrect~haracterizatio~ofmiddot il~

t hid limce policy d If t middot an we are ac IVlless ou eJmiddot We should not hesitaietoi pand theIr programs a11d focus d tf l th t m some of their work on ilrojects I e~ I y o~rse ~es WI I ~i planned by specialists J JatmAmencaiJust ~ Presldcnt

This would permit the cltanel ~ohnson ~ssoclated hunseU WIth it in hIS war on poverty I~ng of theIr ~eal t~elr ~rga~l~a- throughout the world whenhe gtcent

tIOn and theIr splnt of saCrIfIce tl k d Iffit b bull recen y remar e a peaceshyas power u resources 0 e put f lItmiddot th i5 at the disposal of society Among u re~bo u IOn ~n ese areas such works surely programs of ~mossl Ie a VIolent revolutIon

IS mevltable community improvement will be especially attractive to tlhese lay groups

Thus the Church might con- sider putting its knowledge and resources to more effective use in preparing programs and projshyects for adaptation to national and regional needs

They should select carefully those with the capacity to fulfill so that they may obtain financing from national or international sources to complement their own eontributions thus enlarging the scope of their activities

In a study of The Church and

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Theres muchthat$ new at Firat National these days~ bullbull and this sign atthe meat oaeels one of the most exoltlng~

But- dont tlhlnk~ for a moment~ FIRST CHOICE MEAT I merely a n~w name If yo havntshopped our meat case Oa~ely youre In for happy 8urprlse~

Weve always enjoyed a great reputation formiddotmeat have always sold the pIck of oholce meats as Ih$p~cted and graded by the USDepartment of Agrloulture (USDA)

But now with our YouCome First policy our meat casel have taken on ~ new look

Our finicky p~IIQy~t~~reotlng oniy the ohoicest of the

oholce c has beoome believe It middotor not evet1lmiddotmol-e-flnlokye The trlmnilng and outtlng leoloser and mQre~a~e(ld ~ e bull to etJlv~ you th0 gie~tGstm~at vaYu9middotand most flavorful meats In lF~r2~ National hIS~O[y OLill oounters are the cieanes~ and our butohers mor~ eager than ever to lend you aweloomemiddotrneal tpia8lnlng Idea~

tiuohs gre~~ InQwsplrlt demanded a great new name II

fiRST CHOlom MEAT AU-

USDA graded and Inspeoted bull ann thel very plok of the oholce eaoh and every cut the best yoo oan buy~ Arnothefr way we provemiddot

Youconaflrst at Ilrlt National

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Arguments For Celibacy Outweigh Those Against

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Arguments urging that the requirement of eeHbacy of priests be set aside as an obshystacle to increasing vooationsare not sufficient Archbi-shop Gabriel Garribe pro-prefect of the Congregation of Semishynaries and Universities told a pressconfelence here My personal answer is that the arguments for celibacy cd the clergy are stronger than those against it He said he beshylieved there should be a firm affirmation in this respect and that it would maintain celibacy in the Latin Church

By doing so he said the quality ofpriesUy candidates will grow and through the quaUy of its priests the Church will harvest an increase in the quantity of candidates

The drop in the number of vocations the Archbishop stated Is due in part at least to the new attitude of todays youth and therefore requires changes_ in the traditional seminary formation

The prelate told the press that todays youth is much more fully aware of the whole world and far more sensitive to its problems than in the past Those responsible for seminary training must realize the importance of education and be capable of understanding the new generashytion of admiring them and of discovering for them the mission of the Church

StatistiCs Given Archbishop Garrone not e d

tj~at although there has been a falilng off in vocations generally there have been some surprising exceptions He singled out 1be

Dominican Work Continued from Page One

means that the approach will be intellectual rather than devoshytional and the emphasis win rest on accuracy on the truth of a statement rather than on whether it is opportune

In performing such a task mistakes 1n the form of partisan statements ~ld ill-balanced reshymarks are sometimes inevitable Father Hislop said

He affirmed the Dominicans loyalty to the Church but noted that it is often difficult for a vanguard intellectual group to express itself in terms that win not be misunderstood by the majority of Catholics

CCD Talks Continued from Page One

Tauntol as the speaker Mrs Mary Fuller of Buzzards

Bay will speak at the meetiDll in Bishop Stang High School North Dartmouth

At Bishop CasSidy High School Taunton the speaker will be Edward McDonagh-Of North Attleboro

Thomas Flangheddy of Taunshyton will address the meeting at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

The Cape area meeting will be held at Holy Trinity West Hallshywich with Miss Patricia llIIakle as speaker

Seek More funds WASHINGTON (NC) -Two

members of Marylands congresshysional delegation have introshyduced a bill which would make the government spend $75 milshylion annually for birth eontrol aid in the U ~ by 1973 The bin introduced by Sen Joseph Ty ings and Rep Samuel Freidel would propose $20 million the fkst year rising to $75 million bIV the fifth )ear Sta1e and loeal governments would provide _ edditiODal $25 mDJiclID br )87J

extraordinary development of vocations in Mexicp and in Yugoslavia and the stable continuity of recruitment in Poland

Among the statistics provided at the conference were the fact that the latest Church figures count 234000 Diocesan priests and 168000 Religious priests There are in addition 166400 Religious who are not ordained priests

One of the most heartening things in the vocational world picture it was pointed out hasshybeen the increase of priestly vocations in Africa Asia and Oceania

The growth of the local clergy has been a phenomenon of the last 40 years Today in Africa and Asia approximately 500 orshydinations take place every year

~regregampfsect ~ITOW(QJtfreg

$e~~ Aod WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep

Clement J Zablocki of Wisconshysin has introduced a proposal to correct U a defense education gap in American schools

Zablockis bill wo~ld amend the National Defense Education Act (NDEA) to provide federal grants for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment which could be used by children and teachers In parochial and private schools

In a statement on themiddot flOor Of the House of Representatives Zablocki pointed to inequities In

the present NDEA progra~ which Congress passed In 1958 to strengthen instruction in scishyence mathematics foreign lanshyguages and related subjects

An important provision of the act Zablocki said is Title III which provides matching grants to public schools for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment Non-public schools now are eligible only for loans for that purpose

Under Zablockis bill public authorities could obtain federal funds to buy laboratory and other special equipment which eould then be provided for use in non-public schools

In order to comply with matching provisions of the NDEA the non-public schools or groups of such schools would be required to prove they had spent an equal amount thenr selves for such eqUipment from private funds

Montie Plumbing amp Heating Co Inc

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FALL RIVER AUXllLhARY AT MEETING Bishop Gerrard Auxiliary lBishop of the Diocese of Fall River is pictured at one of the sessions of the Spring meeting of the Bishops of theU Sheld in Ohicago NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 h A priI 20T urs 1967

Say~ ~Q~~OIP No SIQ7(~ ~ lovell

KANSAS CITY (NC) - The new role of a Bishop in the era of renewal has been spelled out here by Bishop Charles H Helmshysing of Kansas City-St Joseph

In addition to the age-old role of teacher Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop today must read stud) and apply the teachings of the Second Vatican Council the Gosshypels expressed to meet the needs of the modern world In short Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop must be a slave of love to serve as Christ served mankind

Bishop Helmsil1g spoke at the consecration of Auxiliary Bishop Joseph V Sullivan 45 of Kansas City-St Joseph

Bishop Sullivan is the fir~

native of this Missouri city eleshyvated to the hierarchy He was ordained to the priesthood June 1 1946 has served as chancellor of the diocese since 1957 and was named Bishop by Pope Paul VI last month

MarltqJ MregGGreg TJ~ ~~i MILWAUKEE (NC)-ALuthshy

eran scholar will teach Lutheran theology to graduate students at Marquette University here start shying next September Dr Kenneth G Hagen assistant professor of religion at Concordia College Moorhead MinJl will be the Marquet~e theology departmentu first full-time visiting scholra unshyder a grant from the Louis Calshyder Foundation in New York

-THREE LOCATIONS bull youre lookIng for the best in banking se~lce come 011J in to The NationalBank With the opening of our Stafford Square Office were now nearer to even more of you rOll the Greater Fall River area and each of our offices has Just aboUt every service you could want for yourself andl your family We mean M when we say were your FuID lervice BankPft

THE FALLmiddot RIVER

NATIDNAL BmiddotANK MINBIlR FEDERAL IlIEPDSIT INIlURANCE CORPDRATIIIM

55 NORTH MAIN ST bull 163 SOUTH MAIN ST bull 1001 PLEASANT ST

shy

t6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~n River-Thurs~ Apr 201967

Friend~2 [iJescribes Stru~g~ For QM~gtLy in T~~regwo~~~

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Rennedy When Fred W Friendly resigned from the Columbia

Broadcasting System in 1966 he ended a 16-year association with that network His trials in broadcast journalism are tbe subject of his new book Due To Circumstances Beyond Our Control Control bull Managements obligation is toRandom House $695 457 protect the interests of these Madison Avenue New York stockho~ders

NY 10022) But this volume But Mr Friendly is concprned is far more than a personal about the other stockholders memoir It is the story of th~ the 195 million citizens who

grant CBS and the other broadshybattle a losing casters the franchise to use theirbattle of course air for quality in

FCC Gutlesscommercial tel shyOne might naively expect that

~vision The the Federal Communications

main point is Commission would effectivelythat the story is here told by an insider Mr Friendlys middotfame criginally gprang from his close associashytion with the late Edward R Murrow He was Murrows partner in the prepashyntion of such pioneering and still unparalleled series as Se~ lil Now and CBS Reports

After Murrow left CBS and wentmiddot into governm()nt service Mr Friendly became president

of CBS news He resigned that ~sition because of a clispute conshycerning the broadcasting of Senshyate hearings on the Vietnam war

Many ancient or recent conshyfilets over broadcasting policy are rehearsed in this hook There fta for example a detailed acshy~unt of the hassies concerning Murrows TV _program dealing with Senator McCarthy before McCarthys downfall as the reshyault of the hearings in the Spring of 1954

There are briefer accounts of other skirmishes Thflse are all interesting and instructive But the value of the book lies not so much in these reminiscences as fin Mr Friendlys knowledgeable analysis of the process whereby television has retreated more and more from public service and become a purveyor of junk and garbage littering the American Iiving room and worse the American mind with trash

Geared to Prcfit Many factors account for this

perversion The principal one is greed Television is geared to private profit not puqUc service lLast years whopping profits will not suffice this year There must be sizable increase

This is to satisfy stockholders Mr Friendly asked William Paley chairman of the board Why do we have to make more money every year The reply was We have many small shareholders across the country and within the companybullbullbullbull

Subcommittee Sets Hearings on Smut

WASHINGTON (NC) -The House Select Subcommittee on Education is holding hearings beginning today on a bill to esshytablish a National Commissionmiddot on Noxious and Obscene Matters and Materials

Subcomllittee chairman Domishynick Daniels of New Jersey is sponsor of thc bill which would provide for a 16-member panel to study the problem of obscenity and recoqunend means Clf dealing with it

On the same day that the hearshyings were announced two other congressmen Arnold Olsen of Montana and Glenn Cunningham of Nebraska introduced bills to curb the mailing of obscene matshyter Olsens bill has bpoundlen enshydorsed by the Post Office Deshy~artment

protect the interests of the other 195 milion But Mr Friendly on the basis of close observation has -no kind words and no reshyspect for the FCC For all pur- poses the agency is toothless and gutless

To make even more money for the shareholders every possible penny has to be wrung out of the advertising medium which television now essentially is This consideration governs proshygramming

It might be supposed that even if prime time at night must eco- ~

nomically go chiefly to programshyming which brings in the maxishymum advertising dollar there is ample opportunity for public service broadcasting in the dayshytime hours But no pienty of money is to be made from dayshytime advertising

Endless Re-runs Three soap companJes alone

spend $290 million a year on television advertising and a lot of this is directed at housewives during the daytime And the programming dictated by this advertising comprisesmostly old old movies and endless re-runs of stupid situation comedies

Huge profits (are) being realshyized from the use of the miracle of television as a transmission belt for retread serials soap opshyeras game shows and the like The yield from the detergent deodorant bleach or food advershytisers who possess the daytime schedule (whose annualexpendishytures (are) some $130000000 ) is the principal reason why no serious progtamming can be sustained for any length of time during these hours

l3y serious programming is meant such things as crittcal UN debates (for example on Vietnam) vital congressional hearings the Popes visit to the UN Churchills funeral etc) Some of these have in fact got on the air and even for a conshysiderable period oftime b~t alshyways there is a major bitter battle involved

Educational TV What may not be realized is

the power of the local station n is by no means meekly subshymissive to the network It largely gqes its own way and its wayis in search of the utmost in profits

It is this fact for example which accounts for the nonshyexistence of a good solid repre~ sentative late-evening news broadcast over the nekwork The local station prefers to put on its own scrappy superficial travesty of a news program beshycause it can get-in an excessively large number of profitable comshymercials

Perhaps there is some hope in the field of educational televishy

sion Mr Friendly is now enshygaged in exploring that possibil shyity For our sake may he be successful At any rate we must thank him for reminding us of our tolerance of the criminial misuse Qf the air waves

H E A 0 S UNIVlERSliJIY New president of St Bonashyventure University St Bonashyventure N Y is the Very Rev Reginald A Redlon

OFM formerly of St Franshycis College Rye Beach N H The university Is operated by the Holy_ Name province of the Order of Friars Minor NC Photo

Issues GlLIidelimiddotnes For IEcumenism

LITTLE ROCK (NC) - Ecushymenical guidelines dealing prinshycipally with the conduct of Catholics at Protestant functions have been issued by Bishop Alshybert L Fletcher of Lttle Rock

Composed of the diocesan ecumenical commission the gUidelines specify that Catholics may attend Protestant church services participate in the singshying and common prayer but may not act as a reader or officer of such services

The rules permit Catholics to serye in wedding parties at mar- riages in Protestant churches providing the service does not involve a Catholic or a divorceci person Attendance at baccalaushyreate services in a church or elsewhere is permitted

Under the rules Catholics may not act as sponsors at Protestantmiddot baptisms Oi confirmation nat Jlarticipate in intercommunion services The guidelines encour- age Protestant attendance at Catholic services

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Misunderstandingmiddot Faced In Ecumenical Meeting

Roman Catholic and Lutheran theologians agreed here after their fourth meeting that many misunderstandings had been overcome on the Sacrament of the Lords SuppeR -Holy Eucharist-but that further examination is necesshysary The doctrinal consulshy to the concrete worship life o1Ztation held at the headquartshy the Church ers of the Lutheran Church In a prepared statement reshyin America was the fourth leased ft the conclusion of the in a series sponsored by the closed meeting the group noted Bishops Committee for Ecumenshy that in contrat to topics disshyism and Interreligious Affairs cussed at the first two meetings of the NCCB and the USA Nashy -the Nicene Creed and Baptismtional Committee of the Luthershy -there have been historically an Wotld Federation serious disagreements between

Main themes discussed at the the confessions concerning the three-day meeting were the Eucharist Lords Supper as a sacrifice the All participants the stateshymanner of Christs presence in ment added agreed that many the Sacrament the import of the misunderstandings had beellll concept of transubstantiation overcome as a result of the latest and the relation of these issues meeting

HOW TDCURE LEPERS

THIi HilLY FATHERS MIBSIDNAID TD THI ORIIlNTAL CHURCH

THE PILLS

ARE CHEAPER

THAN PENNY CANDY

THESE

ARE THII

YOU

A LEPER IN~

Dear Itoklm

IPlesll0 li9tum coupon

with your t9fferlng

IIBATHaLiU

patient for a year

C Strfngless glftlil of $100 $50 $25 $11S $10 $5 $2 Bet the Sisters buy what they need

IiJ $850 equals 10000 Dapsone tablets

IlJ $1 a month ($12 a yeer) gives you membershyehlp un our Damlen Club for lepers

---~~---~~-------shy CO INCLOSIm PIJlA8Ul FIND $~======_

1J1OR==========~=-=-==-

NAMlaa====~~~==~_~==-

QTRIlllT====~~==---~===shy

For our eIght edlcal Sisters In P1rappancode south India today is just a normal day Doctors bags In hand they are out In the villages eKmiddot amlnlng everyone for leprosybullbullbullbull Leprosy can be cured If diagnosed early says Sister Elizashybeth a surgeon Better yet Itcan be prevented In this case an ounce of prevention is worthten pounds of cure bullbullbull The cure is cheaper than penny nely Only $850 buys 10000 Dapsone _ mIracle tablets enough for 43 lepers for a yeerl bullbullbull The effort In Pirappancode islnternashytional German Catholics built the 25middotbed ho pital (1St Johns) French Catholics gave a workshop (for therapy) and an American friend of ours has pledged a convent and chapel Now the Sisters need medicinps a $200 microscope a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for treating children especially In farmiddotflung villages Will you help them Monsignor Nolan will acshyknowledge your gifts promptly and the Slste win pray for you aware you are helping them cure lepers as Christ did -

WHAT YOU CAN DO IJ $5000 gives the Sisters a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for fighting leprosy at Ita source (A sign on the side will featu re the name ofyour favorite saint and your name ifyou wish)

IJ $1500wlll give theSlster-surgeon an ope Instable Shes ustng akitchen table now

WOULDc $575 buys a whirlpool beth $100 a sterilizer

NEED C $300 pays In full ~or the two-year training 01 IF a native Slsternurse She will write to you

YOU WERI C $240 ($5 a Week) takes care of bull fuMmiddottlme

~IlAII IA8T WlILflARIi ASBDelATIGN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN PresIdent

MSGR JOHN G NOLAN Natlonal8ecretaIJ Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc S30 Madison Avenuemiddot New York NY 1001 T~one 212yUkOft 6-5840

rHf ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Apr 20 196717

CATHOLIC (HAR~l~~S AP~EAL SILVER JUBILEE YEAR

MAY 7-17

What does it mean to you The opportunity to raise your sights to the level of a $2500 Jubilee Gift

An act of aratitude for 25 years of Charitable Seice

Bishop Connollys love for exceptionoillhiidren cannot be

described in words-but this picture D5 beyond description

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This Message

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THE ANCHORshy~18 Top East C~ast College Hoopsters middotPlay )Sees SociaI EquityThurs April 20 1967

Still Lagging Anglicalfj)~ ~teview At I(ennedy Center For P C Alumni In Spain Antii Cali~~i~ By Patricia Francis MALAGA (NC) - Spain

was taken to task for lagging1562 C~~lireglf A full house crowd saw some o( the East Coasts top collegIate basketball players behind many other countriesLONDON (NC) _ The demonstrate last week how basketball should be played Occasion was the 8th annual hi the development of a

ehurch of England has set Scholarship Basketball Game sponsored by the Providence College Alumni Club of New just Christian social and ecoshyup a permanent commission Bedford at Kennedy Youth Center in New Bedford Initiated in 1959 to - raise nomic life at the 26th Spanish C1)n Christian Docbine with tis first task to consider recastshying or replacing that churchs historic charter of the Thirtyshy~Hne Articles of Religion which

are strongly anti-Catholic In tOne

They are regarded by many as o stumbling block to Christian ~ity The articles drawn up in 1562

for the avoiding of diversities $pound opinions and for the establishshyhtg of consent touching truereli shygion must be publicly accepted py the clergy at ordination

They have become a matter of ~increasing objection lind some

Anglican clergymen now feel talat they should not be called Upon to subscribe to doctrinal definitions which reflect views formed in the 16th oentury aarship is a $2400 one paid at the time of extreme and bitter reli- rate of $600 a year to the winner gious controversy Next award will be made in

The articles denounce the 1970 TheRevEdwardC Duffy eurohurch of Rome as erroneous in chairman of- the scholarship matters of faith and declare games and recruiter of the among other things that theplaye~s who participate emphashyBishop of Rome hath no jurisdic- sizes the scholarship is open middotto tion in this -realm of Englandany deserving boy who has been Some prominent Anglican clergymen have blal1led the sharp declfnein ordination canshy

Qlidates on a reluctance to subshy~ribe to this document

Consider Advis( The new commission was apshy

pointed by Anglican Archbishops Michael Ramsey of Canterbury and Donald Coggan of York It consists of 17 members most of them theological professors repshyzesenting different schools of thought in the Anglican Church

Anglican Bishop Iar Ramsey of Durham is chairman The commissions general terms of reference say that it is

to consider and advise upon doctrinal questions submitted to it from time to time by the archshybishops and to plan when deshyslrable the investigation of

I ~uestions by other groups Its first task will be to conshy

sider the place of the Thirty- lege University of Rhode Island Nine Articles in the Anglican St Josephs of Philadelphia Bosshy

tradition and the question of ton College and Holy Cross subscription and assentto them There were Bill Blair Jim

Benedict Bob Kavolski and Bill Lasher of PC Mike FitzgeraldReligious Influence (of Mattapoisett) Henry Carey

In US on Wan~ -7- NEW YORK (NC)-Although

a majority of all Americans exshypressed the belief that 11eligion is losing its influence in the

United States in the latest Gallup Poll Catholics declined to-give majority assent to the opinion

The national survey showed tilat 57 per cent of all Americans in 1967 believe religion is losing its influence Only 14 per cent expressed this opinion in 1957

Among Protestants 60 per cent In 1967 compared with L7 per eent in 1957 said religion was losing its influence Forty-eight

per-cent of Catholics agreed in the latest survey compared with Beven per cent in 1957

Get Federal Funds PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A

Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyect under the auspices of Philashydelppia Archbishop John J Krols Commjssion on Economic Oppi)rtunity Programs hlils reshyceived $267980 from the federal government It was one of 74 Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyects in 30 states approved by Secretary of Labor W Willard Wirtz

accepted as a freshman at Provshyidence College regardless of the high school he attended

Primary Method William F Doyle president of

the NE Bedford club says the games are the alumnis primary method of raising money for the schoJarship fund

Since it was first held the game has attracted a following of avid fans-who help swell the scholshyarship treasury

Father Duffy feels it is the top post-season game in New England arid cites as proof the fact that his long time friend Bob Cousy Hoiy Cross All- Anierican and Boston Celtic great played in it himself two years ago It was his last game

Players who participated in this years money-for-scholarshyships game-all college seniors

represented Providence Colshy

scholarship funds for deserv- ing gr~duates of area high

schools the game profits enabled presentation of the first Edward J Tucker Memorial Scholarship of $2000 to Clifford Marr of New Bedford in 1962 Marr a graduate of Holy Family High was graduated from Provishydence College in 1966 and curshyrently is an Army lieutenant on duty in Korea

The second scholarship---named for the late 1r Tucker of Fairshyhaven a Providence College

graduate and one of the charter members of the New Bedford club--was awarded last year to Michael Doherty of New Bedshyford also a Holy Family gradushyate

Currently the four-year scholshy

Steve Chubin and Bob Boehm of the U of RI Richie Murphy and Greg Hochstein of Holy Cross John Austin and Ed Hock- enbury of Boston College and

f~nll lHoMsnln1~ fLaw Olhoc City EI1il(Jlcts

SPRIfiGFIELD (NC) - By unanimous vote of its five city commissioners this city has enshyacted a fair housing ordinance

The ordinance the third of its kind in OhiO becomes effecshytive May 3 Considerably strongshyer than the fair housing legisia- tion enacted by the Ohio Legisshylature in 1965 it outlaws disshycrimination in the sale or rental of any housing excepting only dwellings for members of reli shygious organizations or housing established for one sex only

Springfields new ordinance came as the res~lt of an improved climate of racial harmony The citys mayor Robert C Henry is a Negro whose performance of his duties has won wide reshyspect In recent years an Urban League has been launched and has made considerable progress A Human Relations Commission is functioning

PROVIDENCE COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP In atshytendance at PC Scholarship Fund Basketball Game in New Bedford were William Doyle presidentof the PC Club of New Bedford and Michael Doherty present scholarship recipient

Billy Oakes Marty Ford and Tom Duff of st Josephs the nations fifth-ranked_ team

Sees lay Teachers

Form Asso~iataon CLEVELAND (NC)-Groundshy

work for a diocesan lay teachers asso~iation was laid at a meeting of representatives of 21 diocesan high schools here

shy Patrick Bruening teacher at St Josephs high school and temshyporary chairman of the new unit said the association is an organshyization of professional people seekint professional growth

He added Only after we have proven ourselves as professionshyals with a professional attitude

about our job can we ask for and hope to get professional consideration I

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lhe players enjoyed demonshystrating th~ir proficiency The fans enjoyed watching the demonstration ~ and the scholar shipfund of the Providence Colshylege Alumni Club of New Bedshy~ord teaped tbebenef~il ~fboth

~ Population Control WASHINGTON (NC) - U s

Sen J W Fulbright of Arkansas has asked for aCongressional appropdation of $150 million for increased population coritior asshysistanCe to developIng countries

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Social Week here Angel Cardinal Herrera y

Oria former archbishop of Mashylaga in a letter to the Social Week sessions deplored what he called a deficiency of Catholic influence in Spanish public lilfe declaring that Spain a Catholic nation was far from being a model of social justice

No Dialogue Earlier Auxiliary Bishop Rashy

fael Gonzalez Moralejo of Valenshycia ecclesiastical moderator of the SocialWeek sounded a simshyilar note declaring that where there is no dialogue between citizens and their government there is no democracy and such a society cannot call itself Christian

Cardinal Herrera said that ahead of Spain are nations who

have learned how to organize their natioJlallif~ according to the norms of justice which are the daughters of consciElnce Sweden has progressed in the social and pOlitlclll o~der to such an extent that the ~ope

could state that its public ~n~ishy tutions are in harmonywith the teachings of the Seco~dVatican Council he said

1[Jpper ~Iasses Cardinal Herrera lirged the

upper classes of -the countryto contribute toward the formation of a sound and realistic public opinion by which religious conshycepts would be applied to the economic and social life of Spain

It is necessary he said to diminish the differences in classes to work toward Unity not only in the economic order but also in i~ the education and

c~vic department

The Best

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Georgell Cluh Olf to Good Start mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Apr 20 1967

Taunton High Is Surprise In County Diamond loop former FltrrJDD Riweff CYOer on Scholagslvop ltltIt PIl1Jf$~ns

By PETE~ BARTEK Norton High Coach

Coach BiD Georges Taunton High diamond aggreg~

tion is the early season surprise in the Bristol County schoolboy league now in ita second week of the eampaign The pennant race appeam ~ be developing into one of the most exciting in many years Five clubs are battling of Ule better area clubs year fOIl the coveted flag And after year

Coach Harold (Chet) Haneshywhile action is fast and fm-shywichs Bishop Feehan High teamiOWl in the BCL the eight N3rshyof Attleboro has tucked awayragansett League teams are early season wins over Northgetting I e Q d y Attleboro and New Bedford Voshy

lor the chamshy cational The latter two will pionship race m probably fight it out fornext-toshytheir COmpetishy the-last place in the final standshytion Delayed ing as they seek to avoid theboth by rain and cellar Ii old weather The two top contests on nextCOaches h a v e Mondays BCL card will seebeen reminding Coyle playing Durfelte at Alumnitheir charges of Field in Fall River while Taunshythe pitfalls of ton journeys to North Dartmoutheareless loose to clash with stang Two northernplay and also Peter eounty rivals Attleboro andthe IOOmmission Bartek Feehan meet at the formers of Deedless errors which ean field next Monday when North relegatea club to an early Deeshy Attleboro travels to New Bedshyond diviaion berth from which it ford to take 0111 Vocatlonal win be bard to emerge as 1M Nury Contests oompetition progresses Meanwhile the Narragansett

Chausse and JlaJkut loop is comple~ing its first week The Herring City Orange and of play Its still a little early to

Black pulled the big surprise of make 8 judgment as to how thebe young season when it held clubs will stand at the end of thethe always strong Dullfee High

lI~mpaign team of Fall River to a 2-2 tie in Four Narry tilts are on tap for11 innings The prognosticators next Tuesdaybad been writing off the Georgeshy Coach Jack McCartys Caseeoached clan solely because they High Cardinals of Swansea willfelt Taunton would be unable to face Coach Jack Harts DimanJeplace Artmiddot Koska lost by gradshy Vocational team in Fall River uation in what looms as one of the

But Scott Chawrse impressed most interesting early seasonin his confrontation with the Fan games Coach Doug Baxendales River Hilltoppelll aDd now the Msgr Prevost High team of Fall same pundits who had relegated River will be at Dighton to meet Taunton to a lowly apot 8re the Coach Eddie Texeiras D - ~ first to admit that things will be Regionals Coach Ed Bibeau will much more pleasant for the lead his W~port High aggr~gashyTauntonians this Spring tion to Seekonk to middotvh( with

Stro~ Coyle Offense Coach Roger Hills charges The Admittedly an the doubting fourth Narry contest next Tuesshy

Thomases were not convinced day will see Coach Jack Brenshyon the basis of a single performshy nans Holy Family High teain of ance So Joe Majkut and Chausse New Bedford meeting Coach Jim Ulen eombined to throw a no-hit Sullivans Somersetmiddot High teamwin over Coach Dick Joyces at the latters field Attleboro High team Even the

Lanllers Ready most skeptical then conceded that Taunton must be reckoned On Ca~ Cod n nip-~pd~tuck

in the flag race battle is going on in that areas While Taunton High has heeD eon1erence schedule Four conshy

eGualling the early season attenshy tests are listed for the Capeway tion unexpected results have eircuit next Monday They are eccurred in several other diashy Oldmiddot Rochester (Mattapoisett) mond eontests Attleboro which at Barnstable Bourne at Wareshydid DOt seem destined lor gfeat bam Dartmouth middotat Dennis-Yarshythings this Spring provided the mouth and Fairhaven vs Lawshyfirst surprise w~en it toppled rence High at Falmouth Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Norton High in the Clover Stang High of North Dartmouth Valley Conference plays its first

Taunton then proved its mettle league game at home against when it defeated surprising Millis next Monday The Purple Attleboro Hickey has talent at - and White Lancers travel to Stang but his problem has heeD Medfield next Wednesday tv properly align his best playem Apparently they were not in the Score Governmentright spots when they went down to defeat at the hands of Coach On Lab~r Problems Jim Burns Msgr Coyle High

BUENOS AIRES (NC) -TwonJne of Taunton which has Catholic organizations have isshycwuted its way to two one~sided sued a joint manifesto criticizingviet(lries Coyles strength is in thlte Argentine government sayshyits offensive attack but it also ing it has failed to protect workshy

has a capable defense and pitch ers basic rightsJng staff to make a real run for Issued by the Catholic Youngthe BCL crown Workers (JOC) and Catholic _ Feehans Auspicious Start Action Workers Movement

Durfee while it may have been (MOAC) the statement alsotemporarily halted by Taunton called upon the bishops to be enpects to be among the leaders aware of the needs and goals of before the end of the week The young workers and the labor Hilltoppers looked good in winshy class and to be brave in ltexshy

double-header from Pil-shyning a pressing the Churchs doctrine grim High of Rhode Island last as applied to real-life situations weekend CoachJoe Lewis feelsmiddot It said that the government his boys can now maintain the which calls itself Christian but momentum they have generated is anything but Christian has in the non-league affairs It goes nothing to do with the Gospelalmost without saying that one or Christs teachings or with the off-day is not going to thwart Churchs doctrines as defined by the Hilltopperll wbo produce ODe the Second Vatican Councit

By JOE MIRANDA A Parsons College senior JRobshy

eli Bonalewicz of Fall River is -nearIng the end of a most sucshycessful college career both athshyletically and academically

Bob is attending Parsons in Fairfield Iowa on a baseball scholarship and has started bis third season as the colleges first strong catcher

neans List Student A Physical Education major

Bob has a minor in History and during the last marking period was named to the Deans List at Parsons -

A member of St PatrIcks Parshyish Bonny is a 1963 graduate of Durfee High School where he participated in football basketshyball and baseball

The son of Mr and Mrs Mathew Bonalewicz of 50 Chapshylin Street he is oile of five chil shydren ald has not yet decided upon a vocation

Bonny has two older brotherll a lieutenant and Mathew Jr II

staff sergeant both in the Air Force and stationed ubroad Bob also has two sisters Kathleen II student at Durfee High and Ma) Ann a grammar school pupil

Has f80 Average Bonalewicz recently returned

from a Southern baseball trip end gained excellent commendashytions from his coach Duane Banks for his performance as the Wildcats won 11 of 13 games

The Fall River player batted 430 belted three homers had nine runs-batted-in and seltlred 10 during Parsons first 13 games

Bonalewicz a 22-year-old 175shyJ)ound 5-8 giant enjoys playing baseball and so does his coach who scheduled 89 games last seashyson to set a ollegiate record fur the most games played in one year

Ankle IBjUlY

With the former Durfee backshystop handling the brunt of the catching duties until a knee inshyjury forced him to the sidelines Parsons won 72 lost 15 and twice finished in ti~d games called beshyca~se of darkness

The former St Patricks star in the CYO baseball program started poory this season finshyis middotng off the Southern trip with an ankle sprain but entering this week the ankle was in good shape and Bonny expected to take his regular spot behind the plate

Federal Agency Has Inter-Faith Advisors

WASHINGTON (NC)- A Catholic priest a Methodist minshyister and a Jewish rabbi have been appointed religious advishyBors to the United States Inforshymation Agency here

Msgr George G Higgins clIishyrector of the Social Action Deshypartment U S Catholic Confershyence the Rev Edward G Cu-middot roll superintendent of the Washshyington Northwest District ol the Methodist Baltimore Conference and Rabbi Richard G Hirsch dishyrector of the Relgious Action Center Union of American Heshybrew Congregations have been named to the USIA advisory panel

Officials of the agency noted that while it has had religious advisors since its inception this marks the first time an interfaith panel had been established

The purpose of the panel offi shycials said is to assure that the agencys handling of religious matters serves the best intlterest of the nation and its dlveraity of faiths

Bonalewicz also played for St Patricks T)iocesan championship team and for the Fall River Mershychants in the Newport Sunse~ League

As a senior at DUrfee Bonny was awarded the 1963 George Kaplan Memorial Trophy as the Hilltoppers best senior basketshyball player

His hustle and determination while performing for Durfee at Bostcm Garden during the anshynual Eastern Massachusetts Tecb tournament gained him the reshyspect and admiration of all that witnessed his efforts

Bonalewicz recently completed a practice teaching tour in an Iowa Junior High School and while tere coached the eighth grade team to a league chamshypionship

Earlier in the college year Bob_ was a member of the Parsons intramural flag football progmiddotam and received a trophy for his performan J

Despite the heavy bnsebaU schedule Bob has manged to keep hi grades above average and after the Fall semestershyshowed his prowess in the classshyroom by being named to the Deans List for the second time

DeMatha Winner In Hoop Tourney

WASHINGTON (NC) - DeshyMatha High of suburban Hyattsshyville Md scored an upset cliff shyhanger victory to cop the 12th national high sChool basketballl tournament sponsored by thE local Knights of Columbus J017 the fifth straight time

DeMatha avenged two regula17 season defeats by Mackin High Washington Catholic League

champ with its last minute 70-68 victory Mount Carmel of Chiengo took

third place with a 47-45 overshytime win over DePaul Acndemy of Chicago Northeast Cnthrt1ie of Philadelphia took fifth pIhce with a 77-74 win over St Petertl

B(~ BONALEWICZ of New Brunswick N J Catheshydral High of Trenton NJ Inpound

The oung catcher has been Dwight School of New York alslaquo) long known for his bullet like participated tlnrowlr arm and gained conshy Aubrey Nash DeMatha junloY siderable praise from opponents wall named the tournnmentl in 111gh school amateur and colshy most valuable player lege eompetitions for his savvy A 5-11 junior John Somogyftbehind the plate set three tournament records-shy

Three-Letter Man 40 field goals 108 points in threE Bonalewicz played football for games and 43 points in one game Don MontIe basketb~ll for Tom and tied another record ll-forshyKaram and baseball for middotJoe 11 from the foul line Lewis while at Durfee and also performed for Lewis Chathammiddot team in the Cape Cod League

The Fall Riverite cannot get FAIRHAVENenough baseball according to his mother Mrs Bonalewicz recalls LUMBER a game at Alumni Field when

COMPANYDurfee bested a Venezuelan team sponsored by the Peoplesshyto-Peoples program Bob was inshy Complete linejured and taken -to the hospital Mrs Bonalewicz remembers Building Materials then came back to finish the game hitting a home run to win I SPRING ST FAIRHAVENmiddotit for the Hilltoppers He wall voted the outstanding player in 993-2611the gameo

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THEANCHOR()ioltese of Fan ~tv~r-Thurs ApO 1967 ~ ~ middot-middotmiddotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ middot20

AT BISEIOPS CONFERENCE Facilities for offering Mass were provided by the Archdiocese of Chicago when 230 U S bishops met in semi-annual conference In left photo nine othel prelates concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Joseph TRyan of Anchorage Alaska In right

photo are Archbishop John F Dearde~ of Detroit at left president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and at right Archbishop Johl1l F Cody of Chicago conference host Bishops Connolly and Gerrard attended from the Fall River Diocese NC Photos

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Page 8: 04.20.67

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 Medical Gr9uP Inducts Nun

Spring Cleaning Reveals WASHINGTON (NC) - The first nun was inducted as a fel shylow of the American College ClI Obsttricians and Gynecologists at its 15th annual clinical here

Hoards of Yardgoods lBy Mary Tinley Daly The honor went to SiBtel

Spring housecleaning is like a great white light revealshy Miriam Paul Klaus of the Me~

ing all Its not just dust in the bedsprings and radiators cal Mission Sisters who have headquarters in Philadelphi~the great unwashed slats of Venetian blinds gummy glasses dlJring the coJeges session~stashed away on an upper shelf finding of borrowed books Sister Miriam Paul was nlaquolI

too long unreturned These are what i call honest misshytakes chores you dont mind having household help help you with like doing floors walls windows rugs furniture

This is orthodox Spring cleaning such as every housewife can t a c k 1e have done with and point to with pride No the nuisances at least at our house are the secret sins jobs weve really anticipatshyed getting at one of these days but the llPecific day never seems to come And nobody but nobody can help in this department

Moms Hobby Shll)p For instance theres the used

furniture corner of the attic sOmetimes laughingly referredto as Moms Hobby Shop Theres the dresser bench Mom b going to cane when and if Mom learns how to cane an art supposed to be lotS of fun There ure two perlectly good boudoir chairs or iiI be perfectly good when theyre recovered And the little stand picked up at uuction waiting patiently to be antiqued when and if Mom learns how to antique another touted fun hobby bull

What the good-natured ribbers of Moms Hobby Shop dont know is that another secret cache of to-be-dones awaits in one corner of the basement the touch of a little hand pktures to be framed along with a framshying kit which any child can master another kit of clear plastic resin ideal for embedshyding coins flowers leaves rocks shells pictures novelties jewshyelry So far efforts have reshysulted in the embedding of one penny askew and far from ornashymental Theres also ever~thing

you need to wire a lamp everyshything but the skill that is

A strong-minded woman would become a Jill of all trades masshy1er skills necessary and do away with the jobs one at a time or else give away all t1e maIdngs ~~t then a str~))~gmil)d~ woman probably wouldnt have gotten

intothisfixin the first place With springcleani~goncoming

lik~ the inevitable tinie and taxes we decided to dean around the undones in attic and

basement facl up to legitimate eatchiills like the ~drponlClos~ etsbull

Dougherty High Band Wins Festival Honor

WASHINGTON (NC)-In this middot ease to the victors it was a mix- ture of cherry blpssoms and roses

The members of the Cardinal Dougherty High School Band of

Phiiadelphia marched ltYff with first place honors in the band

middot eompetitlon at the annual Cherry Blossom Festival _parade -an event which attracts tens of

middotthousands of visitors annually 10 the nations capital

The vIctory was nothing new to the bandsmen - and girls They won first prize two years ago and last March 17 won middotfirst prize in New Yorks St Patricks Day paralaquoe

present to receive the honor PelshyThere not in one not in two but in every closet we were sonally She is stationed at the

communitys Holy Family Heampfaced with the nemesis a box or pital in Dacca East Pakistan a bag or apile of yardgoods

The college accepts as fello~Forgotten IItems physicians who specialize in obshyThe sewing center has been stetrics and gynecology and aregoing pretty full tilt at our house judged competent and ethical byrecently what with a bedroom their colleagues Sister Miriamwhere we can set up the mashy Paul took the written examinashychine the ironing board sew tions for the American Boardseveral hours every day walk of Obstetrics and Gynecology iQout shut the door and come back Pakistan in 1965middot and the oralto undisturbed work the followshy examination in Chicago in Apriling day 1966

Matter of fact we thought She is a native of Viennasmugly we were getting all

Allstria a naturalized U S citi shysewed up tents and jumpers zen and a convert to the Cathoshyand miniskirts for the young

suits skirts hats for the more NO ATTLEBORO ART WINNERS Pauline Lemieux lic Faith from Judaism She joined the Medical Mission Sisshyconservative first grade William Midon eighth grade Cecile Parent ters in 1957 after completing herWe even felt no compunction sixth grade were the leading artists in the contest conshy medical education at the Univerin indulging a long-standing ducted in Sacred Heart School No Attleboro sity of Louisville Ky and herhabit of visiting a yardgoods residency at Barnes Generalcenter quite often picking up an Hospital in St Louis She haGirresistible bargain in cloth seshy

~spent six years at the sisteplecting a pattern and actually hoods hospitals in Pakistaneompleting garments

The sewing room Markie~ Sister Mary Luke Gray an- erstwhile bedroom was in reshy o~her Medical Mission physician markably good shape as a proshy has also passed _the AniericaD duction center and could eVeR IMAGE-MAKING Board of 0bstl~tricsand Gyne suffer the pangs of Spring houseshy

In this ever-changing worldcleaning with mere picking up of scraps setting 10 rights and a horough cleaning

But those unearthed forgotshyten treasures in the other closshyets Why there was enough mashyterial here to keep Us chained 10 that sewing machine as was Proshymetheus to his rock

Now what had we intended 10 do with that short length of pink flannel Oh yes wed picked it up for the proverbial song at a visit to a mill in South Caroshylina would have it until the folshylowing spring and make a coat for Mary Daly Brennan (Mary is now nine years old and this pink bit wouldnt even make a coat for her little sister) MUs~ lin broadcloth velvet tweedshyyou name it we have it -

Out into the clear with every item from every box bag and pile

Io more saving no more stashing away no more visits 10 remnant counters

The Head of the House paying one of his rare visits to our sew- ing center viewed the miniature mill-end display

By the way he asked hows about putting a new pocket in these trousers And sOme shirt buttons that have popped

OK First t~ings first

Baltirnor~ Nun to Head C()lIeg~ Advisory Unit

PITTSBURGH (NC) -Sister M Cleophas Costello of Balti shymore will serve as chairman of the newly formed Commission on Higher Education of the Fedshyeration of the Sisters of Mercy

The commission will serve in an advisory capacity in mat~ers concerning the 15 colleges opershyated by the order The federashytion numbers 15000 nUDll throughout the United states Canada and Lat~n America

New President LOS ANGELEE (NC)-5ister

Cecilia Louise Moore will beshycome president of Mount St Marys College here in Califorshynia ~)D Aug 15 next succeeding Sister Mary Rebecca who haS headed the womens liberal aris college since 1961

where what is in one moment is obsolete the next there is nothing more changeable than

the image of the ideal woman This image that stamps itself on the minds of millions causes fashion design- ers to change styles and forces females alI over the world to rush to the beauty facshytories to be turned out as its carbon copies is created in many ways Sometimes it starts with a particular model that hits the publics fancy or a cinema star that reaches her audience or even as in the case of Mrs Kennedy with the rise and public acclaim of a woman associated with politics

However whatever the reason or manner or time that creates an idol of this woman 8Jl idol she is at least until someone else more exciting comes along ~ cpallenge her place

This phenomenon of one womshyan or tyPe of woman leading alI others is nothing new Im sure there has been an ideal type of beauty since Neanderthal man dragged his mate by her long thick tresses into his cave (eer- tainly no short-haired eave girl wOuld have shone m prehistoric times)

Charles Dana Gibson pPOVided the image of the goddess of the

Protestants to Speck At Catholic Retreats

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - At least one Protestant minister Or layman ~ill appear as guest

speaker at retreats held in the San Antonio area during the coming year an archdiocesan committtee OIl lay ecumenism has decided

The ecUmenical aspects of the retreat program win carry over into a 1967 Ecumenical Diashylogue scheduled for June 29 UI July 1 at St J~ephs retreat bouse here Selected ministers

priest Sisters Brothers and laity will be speakers

cology examinations and win 1900s with heavenly sketches of return to Pakistan to continue a dark haired question mark her practice coiffured beauty with Ii lOng 11gt

graceful swanlike neck Immediateiy all fashion-con-

csious females of that day rushed out to the local emporiums to purchase henna rinses and rats (the hair peces of the 90s) to puff out their skimpy pompashydOlUS

The tWihkling 20s had no sooner been born than the It Girl Clara Bow caused the daughters of the aforementioned females to toss away their rats head for the nearest barber and expose their ears as well as their knees

Not a decade later these knees were encased in satin lounging pajamas and the ears hidden under the marcelled curls that Jean Harlow sported

And such has been the tide of fashion everchanging and generally influenced by circumshystances from the short skirts of the material-rationed war years through the New Look that welcomed the advent of peace

TOdays Qlieen

What of our present fashion Queen Who is the woman ofshythe 60s who isthe darii~goft~ fashion press and fashion de- signers oddly enough in this age of affluencemiddot it seems that the female wile outshines an others is ~ long-legged wideshyeyed British model who looks like an ad for Care packages and answers to the improbable name of Twiggy ~sley ~ornby (the name on

Twiggys birth certificate) is a 11 year old pathetically thin ex- schoolgirl who has been sky- rocketed to fame and fortune through the efforts of her Sven laquoali -her manager

Her waif-like face shining Jrom the cOvers of hundreds of magazines haS inspired young females everywhere ie nmtfgt their hairdress~rs ~ ) g~miR eut paint theirmiddot lower lashes_ like those of a kewpie don and push away t~at dessert pla1e Twiggy is apparently the JleW

idol of the fashion world - at l~ast until next season

9 Nows RightTime to Plant Peas for Early Enjoyment

By J~ aridlfan1ynRoderiek It is a eustom in New England to serve salmon and peas

00 the Fourth of July Years back this was the time when thresh salmon showed up Jin New England fish markets and Jllative peas could be found ~t the corner store Now we have frozen peas year round and amp Imon may be had throug~- ~t most of the year Thll3 lm-as taken the special delight (iJlJt of native foods but we can G1tfll appreciate fresh vegetabtea limd fish made much morepaia-~ oble by being put on a tablel 3

day or so after it is caught If you want fresh peas fortne

~ourth of July you can sow your creed about the third week of llIlay We prefer ours a little ear_I ~er and so we get the seeci ~lanted by the second or third week in April 00 that the planta will be well on their way before ~e cold weather is gone and (he warm weather arrives By QlllIll reckoning the peas we planted last week will be ready ~ the second week of June

Peas are simple to grow and Ililave nO special difficulties They Ilteed sun moisture and good s6il A row of peas may be planted fulna matter of 10 minutes ahd OOten forgotten until it ia tiine

Th k Si te h d th IIS wee s rae c ass act out the sacrainent to go along with their lesson in the religious Workbqok My daughter came homedelirious with joy because she was chosen to bring in the baby

We unearthed a doll that we ilelt was closest to newborn baby size and Grandma helped by finding the baptismal garments that were stored in her house and by dressing the fortunate stand-in while she explained to Meryl and Melissa that this was the same dress that they wore when they became members of the Church

In fact the children were awed as I further explained that actually four children had used these baptismal garments Meryl ~gan making plans immediateshyly Ann Marie is going to be the father (this in our all-girl ochool) Wendy is the godmother and Karen is going to be the ptiest because her new little

~r pickinlt b~othe was christened Sunday Jrirst tum the soil over to il a~d she knows jllst what to do

ilepth of about six inches or ~ Innoeent DIscussion and break up the clods Make ~ Even Melissa got into the act twrrow about an inch deep~~tl as she proceeded to spiel off m drop the peas into the furrow list of names that she thought iellst an inch and a half a~a~lt t~~ dfl~lshould be given Meryl eovel the furrow water ~~~ si~ e~pIiil1edto her that salt would ~ack a~d wait In 50 days or so dlependmg on the varIety of seed ~u ~se the peas wi1l be ready faj plckmg and ~atmg

Plant Anywhere )peas may be planted in rows

lMlt they may also be planted aishylllillost anywh~re they will get the IgtUUn I planted two little roWlJ ~tween some raspberry bushes raquolaquolother row in front of a flowe ~ where my wife will be able 00 get to them and still another JIlandful of seed in a foundation ~ianting in front of the house

This latter may seem to be goshyl1mg a little too far but by the ~me the annuals a~e in bloom le peas will have been con~

d oome the plants pulled up and DO one will be the wiser

The point is that one does not Thlave to make a big project out ~ growing a packet of seeds mnce half the pleasure is to be

flound in doing a minimum of work while reaping deliciolw nesults

In the Kitchen Most middot0f the books which conshy 1 thltOOJlI emse ves with heading

lIUr children in the right direc_ (tioqas living thinking Chrlsshyllians recommend that middotthebestW4yOOle Sacrament of Baptism is to Ilaye them attend an actual cer+ ~ony This is quite true as we

~rvotlCnced when Jason WM lgtavtized and Meryl and Melis Were allowed to attend

We were fortunate in that the l)lliest who performed the cereshyIlllOny was a personal friend who _plained clearly to the childreUll _actly wha~ he was doing rOIl liIUre this made a lasting impres-Ilion but I also feel that theii IlIIllnds were on the celebratiollll

be Pllt on the dolls tongue to preserve her from the sins of the Yorld and to give her III

atlste for wisdom It was delightful to hear them

discussing the sacrament in such inn~cent and childlike ways and yet witlt understanding that demonstrated wisdom far beyond their years The following incishyde~~ occurred at about the time this was happening and demon- strates the feeling of some chishydrep arid the naive wisdom they possess For two or three days last week Joe had seen a female rabbit in the yard and he had pointed it out to the children

th t itsayIng a appeared ready to have a litter Sure enough the rabbit did have a litter under the mulch around one of the rose bushes The children were thrilled but

f un ortunately a neighbors dog found the litter and killed the tiny newborn rabbits When

~~~~JIiCheese Gingerbread l3~ounee package ere a JllIl

cheese l cup molasses 2 eggs

1 cups sifted all-purpose ftOtllfi teaspoon baking soda

1 teaspoons baking powdeR 1 teaspoon cinnamon

OOnat was to take place at home 1 teaspoon ginger smd on all the people who were t~aspoon cloves ltllllming to help them celebrate 1-8 teasp~n salt

llhis in itself wasnt bad as it IIgt boiling water lB alsoimportant that they ~al- 1) Beat the cream cheese urim koo th~t a baptism is aiQytul Ce- ~BOft andfluftly then gradually llWliori which should be shared beatit the molasses Ytdh others butwith the confu- 2~ Beat- in the eggs one at Cl

CATHOLIC WOMEN HONOR BISHOP Welcoming Most Rev James L Connolly to the Annual Bishops Night Sponsored by the New BedfordCathoJic Womens Club are Mrs John W Glenn left president and Mrs Daniel F Dwyer first vice-president

Receiver Takes Over FHA Starts Foreclos~te lProcee~ings

Against Retirem~rjfttoriu~ MOUNT ANGEL (NC) - A

oourt-appointed receiver hall taken over operation of Mount Angel Towers a $34 million reshytirement home completed scarceshyy more than a year ago

The receiver-Portland attorshyney John R Fawt Jr - was named less than a month after the Federal Housing Administrashytion announced that it was start shying foreclosure proceedings against the home here in Oregon

Mount Angel Towers built on Beven acres of land donated to it

Sch001 Honors Chaplain

Killed in Vietnam PLEIKU (NC)-A new wing

has been added to St Pauls

School here in memory of Father (Maj) William J Barragy of the Dubuque archdiocese who was

killed in a helicopter crash inVietnam May 4 1966

A brass plaque on the office wall states Rev William J

Melissa appeared on -the scene Barragy (Major U S Army)boni October 13 1923ordained

she said realistically New life May 22 1948 dled In VIetnamI k p un and its all over Just May 4 1966 like Jesus born at Christmas

The new wing has five classshy dead at Easter rooms all on the ground floor

Last year when my oldest St Pauls is in the charge of the to teachyoungstersabout daitghier received the sacrament I Sisters ofSt Paul de Chartres

of tfie HolyEucharist for the first who alsohave anorphahge near tim~~ wil celebrated With a fam the iichoOtmiddot Thereare 1000 Viet ililgtru~ch Ali lt~~ everyon~ namese children receiving pri seeffied to enjoy was warm mar an -secondary educatmiddot10n i~

a bullbull ging~tbread the schOOL

by theilelghobririg Mount Angel Benedictine Abbey was billed on its completion in 1965 as the nations first Catholic retirement home

it was not the most prosperous however and by JIeb 7 when the mortgage-holder assigned the mortgage to FHA which had inshysured it the 207-unit six-story building had only 80 residents in 61 apartments

Appointment of a receiver was the first step in FHAs machinery toward eventual sale of the propshy~rty to another private operator

The home will be run as beshyfore according to the FHA Portshyland office until it can be sold to a suitable organization to maintain its operation as housing for senior citizens

FHAs office in Washington said Mount Angel Towers was one of about 20 such projectsshynot all Catholic - which had failed since 1960 when FHA mortgage insurance became available to them More than 200 have been built

llHE ANCHOR-Thurs April 20 1967

Sisters Assume Pasroral Duties

AKRON (NC)-Priests visit flBl administer the sacraments bu~

day by day the ordinary passhytoral duties are performed bsr nuns in Brazilian parishesmiddot il1l Natal and Salvador administered by the Daughters of Divine Charity

Their duties which includ~ the distribution of Holy Comshymunion were described here bV Mother M Fidelis Weninger who worked in Brazil for 21 years prior to her election in 1965 as mother general of th0 community

The Daughters of Divine Charity she said care for those parishes just as though they were priests Of course we cant administer the sacraments but we handle everything elseshysuch as pre-marriage instructionD and parish visitations

Permission for the nuns t distribute Communion was obshytained from Pope Paul vr through Bishop Eugenio de Araujo Sales apastolic adminisshytrator of Sao Salvador de Bahia she explained

Sister Mother Fidelis ordeli has been working in Brazil sincia 1919 and now has 460 nuns there aUexcept 18 of whom are Brashyzilians

The order has 1900 membero serVing in 10 countries throug~shyout the world with headquartern

in Vienna Mother Fidelis U1 completing a five-month visiia tion of the orders 37 convents in the United States

Greater Boston Sister Gets Fulbright Award

MEDFORD (NC) - SistCll Madeline Marie Nevins a gradushyate student at Tufts University has been awarded a Fulbright Fellowship to study medievaD French literature at the Univershysity of Paris France

The Mass Sister of St Josep~

will complete her doctoral wor at Tufts after her year abroad

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Schedules Convocation 1 bull

On Council Documents WILMINGTON (NC)- A dayshy

llong session of lectures and disshyICUssions on the Wilmington dioshyease and the post-council er81 will be conducted here

Some 600 clergy and laity are ~From anOlde English recipe - expected to attend the meeting

which is being sponsored by a Plumper rounderp bullarollp of ~concerned Catholics illl th~Wg~ing~on piocese fuller muffins~

batter is smooth 5) Gently stir in the boiling

Dn of the party it was difficul Um~~ water bull ascertain just how much the7 3) s~tt tltgether the flour bak- 6) Pourinto a greased 7 by ~ learned With this in mincll Ang ooda baking powdei ~ H pan Sunbeam English Muffins ~ were delighted when 1ft andspice~ f) Bake in a 350 oven 40 to lIound that Meryl was studying 41) Add the dry ingredients te 45 mlhutes] add about cup Olf Baked by your Sunbeam Baker _tism in 8daoo1 l1he cheese mixtu-l0 GUlring watilll Jl3iBins but this is optionaL

-

bullbull

HAPPINESS IS FAMILY REUNION A weekly radio reunion is Sula Spanish Honduras L~ft Barton Albert ham radio operator middot)liIl

enjoyed by Mr and Mrs Bernard Sullivan Holy Name parish Fall River Swansea connects the Sullivans with their daughter Right InSart Pedro

with their daughter Sister Anne Marie RSM missioned to San Pedro Sula Jack Gaffney performs the same service for Sister Anne Marie

Monastery VisitsSt~esses Serio~smiddot Ham Oplr~t~rs Arrangemiddot We~k~yRadiQ C1tat~ ChmiddoturchSituatilon CRAWFORDSVILLE (NC)C bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbull bull bull bullbull bull

bull bull 0In East -Germany BERLINmiddot (NC)-Christiari

ehurches in communist-ruled lEast Germa~y are suff(~ring from government harrassshymentand restrictions a Luthershy1m bishop told the eastern sec-

For Fa11 RiverParents Missionary Sistet Dr Eric Dean chairman of the religion and philosophy departshy

ments at Wabash College here Thursdays the most important day in the week to Mr and Mrs Bernard Sullivan in middotIndiana plans extended visits

of Holy NameparishFall River Its the day they talk to their daughter Sister Anne to severalmiddot Benedictine monas- shyMarie RSM assigned since last August to missi)n work middotin San Pedro Sula Spanish teries this year The visits Wt)ll

H h kl

onduras T emiddot wee y db

conversatIon is arrange y two h d

am ra W)

operators Jack Gaffshy be financed by a Carnegie gran~

receivedmiddot through the GreatLak~ ney in San Pedro Sula and Colleges Association Harton Albert of Swansea was on retreat However arshy with Sister from their livjng

tion oflt the synod of Germanys It came about tl)rough 3 rangements were made on the middotroommiddot ~eceptiori is excep~nt Protestant Church Council sPot for the first of the weekly noted Mrs Sullivan fully 88 middot~iiJbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbulliIbullbullbull_

The clergyman Bishop Fried- series of coincidences that conv~sations good as a local telephoriecallmiddot bull III rich Wilhem krummachet of Mrs SuliivaIi ascribesld the The luck extended to a fellow Another beneficiary ofthmiddot 11I11I J B ~ East Geimany said that SChool iuck6f the Irish and had its religious of Sister Anne Marie weekly radio reunion is REvmiddot bull ii ~~ld~~a~I~~V~~ti~~~~bel~~~~~~ ~t~~A~~~n~a~~nC~~i~~~~~~~ ~~~~~i~o~Sre~~~~r~~~~~~i~~~d~~~~~=~tOfS~tat~~~ ILUMBER CO beliefs 1 - $140 teleph~rie bill talkinllto ly appointment ~nd asked Mrs Mariesbrother bull bull

Lut~eranBish~~ ~~t Fr~liz th~~o~~~~g~~~riotin~~ri li~~tmiddote~r$Ullivan t if hSheWtohUld ~ewla~t a FOImiddotwonderlnmiddotg friends of the 11I 5middot0middot Dortmoutmiddothmiddot ~harf of Berlin chairman of th~ ~~SSl1g~ 0 er JTIQ er ar a Fall River Sister be it notedltGe~man Protestant C h u r c hmiddot rlidlO o~erator middotwho darra~ge a mmu~e slud MrAI~~rt r0rt~7 that she has middotexercisedmiddotthe name- and yan~ismiddot Council made similar charges at connectlOnmiddot for you said a WIth he got the PrOVIdence ~e western section of the synod frleId and someone else sug- Jlother on the phone and gave

I rgested Mr Albert middotwhom the h th of b IfoBejause the Eastmiddotmiddot lterman ~ r bull er e surpnsl e~ Ie as t t t t t b Sullivans- had )mown _for

some bull

she heard her daughter s vOICeIrovernmen res riC s col ac s e- t b th d th ht f ~ E t G -P t t ts Ime u a neVlr Qug omiddot J I don t even have to go tomiddotbullween as elman ro es in _ bl If and those in the West middotthe Protmiddot =~ a ~OsSI e channe omiddot cmmu ~wansea to talk said Mrs SII~ - t t d h ld t mcatlOnwIttISpamshHO1QQras livan Mr Albert can oConnec~

flS an syno was e middotmmiddot wo llec- S l middotmiddotmiddott d M tons one in west Berliri and the T~e ul Iv~ns VISI e r~ AI~ th E tB j berts t)oIle to talk over th~ e er ~ear as er m possibility of contacting-Sister

Catholics face similar pr()b- Anne Marie~ While they were raquoems because of a divi~~d G~r- th~re he demonsthitelt hi~ equip- ~an~ The East Gelman govern- ment fishing bull around the- airshyinen~ ~has prevented thej)ishops wavesmiddot and picking up an ama-middot ~here ~ om attending meetings o~ teur in -rexas

~he G~rman Bishops Conference To his feliow ham he menshyheld iiJ the West tioned that he was looking for

Join in Praytr an operator in Spanish HOlldurasmiddot BiShop Krummacher said at

the synod that iii the preslmtmiddot criss the Protestant churches must use evelY opportunity to join with Catholics in prayer Catholics and Pwtestants he llaid are bound together b~ the word of the Lord and a common Ilesponsibility

The bisho~ said Protestants in East Germany have made every effort to obtain relief fwm antishyJeligious discrimination but govshyernment authorities have reshyjacted all appeals for action

He said such refusals of the East Gelman regime to end the assaults on religion is partmiddot of communist strategy and planshy

ming To further their objectives he said the comTIunists will pelshymstip indoctrinating children in 1lheir ideology while interfering with the consciences and rights _ tJ children and their parenti

And the next voice wemiddot heard recounted Mrs Sullivan still sounding amazed was a man saying This is Sal Pedro Sula Spanish Honduras

Not only was Jack Gaffney th r operator from Honduras in te same city as Sister Anne Marie but it developed that he lived across the street from her

convent a~d had me~ her o~ sevshyeral occaSlOns- He ImmedIately offered to r~n across ~he s~reet and prmg Sister to hiS mlcro-middot phone lgtut it turned out that sie

Wins Festival Piize NEW YOEK (NC) - The

Search produced by Father Peytons Family Theater has received an award at Monte Carlo in the annual television

competition sponsored by the International Catholic Radio and TV Association

hiS radiO eq~llPrne~t to the tel~ phone and the Sulhvans can chat

Permit Experiment In bullShared Time P9RTLAND (NC)The Port-middot ~~nd school board has approvedai shared time experiment iii -Which children from a parochial ~chool in North Portland will attend classes part time in a nearby public school -

The experi~ent will inv~lve at first only physical education classes and will extend for only two middotyears

Children fro m Immaculate Heart parish elementary schoolwill be allowed to attend gym classes in Eliot school in the Qregon corrlmunity

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Bishop Medeiros Urges Justice ~ For Workers

BROWNSVILLE (NO) ~ Bishop Humbertltgt S Medeishyros of B~wn8ville whose diocese has been the scene of lPl 10-month strike by migrant farm laborers has told farm owners to meet their demands for highe) pay and bettei living eonditions

In a pastoral letter to all Cathshyolics in the diocese-most of the population - released today the bishop said

The present plight of the mishygrant farm workers of America is a constant reproach to our way of life

lFor 1lJse of Ail

They do not ask for charity They demand what is theirs by natural right When the affluent farmers pay a just wage to the migrant workers when they make it possible for him to supshyport himself and his family in frugal comfort and to provide education for the whole family they are not making a gift of their possessions to the farm worker they are simply handilg over to him what is his for they had arrogated to themselves what had becn given in common for Ute use of all

Migrant workers in the Rio Grande vaIiey surrounding Brownsville have been strikihg the larger farms for nearly a year in an attempt to get higher wages and better living condi- tions Their action supported by thc United Farm WorkersOr- ganizing Committee followed the limited success encountered by UFWOC laborers in Califomias lrape vineyards

Precarious Existence

But the Rio Grande workers have encountcred little successshyIllthough a recently organized boycott of produce has received growing support among the states food chains

Bishop Medeilos quoted libshyerally from both Pope John XXIII and Pope Paul VIs recent encyClical On the Development of Peoples in establishing the right of farm workers to adecent Jiving

But be also took note of the plight of Amcricas farmers themselvell who live out a preshylaquoarious existence unless they constitute large enterprises sllch as corporations 01 cooperashyiives

He urged both farmers and workers to organize in their own interest

Natural Ri~ht

Given the natiol~lr and even

aioll of Agricultule ald of fa~m workClS and of manyfarm own- ers in purticular it is urgent that they be aware of thei~ right

~~~o~~o~~~~C~~~i~II~~~~h I~~~~~ of development Which in the words of Pope Priul VI signifies ]lgte~cc

We know that every man hAS a basic natural right to form and join wOIkers unions which conshytribute to economic progress by dcfending his ights he said But thc circumstances of the times the world over indicate that for the common good it is also thc duty for both migrant farm workers and for farmers to form associations

The United States he said has bull duty to its miglant laborers llnd farmers which it must fulfill by passing apPlopliate legislashytion and using other suitable and dcmocratic means of assistance so that not only our tables but thc tables of the world may be blessed with the abundance of the fruits of the earth

lLO~AIJ INTEREST NIl IUSlHIOPS MEETING Disshy W Va Bishop Connolly Bishop Humberto IS Medeiros

cussing topics between sessions are Lawrence Cardinal Brownsville Tex and Bishop Joseph Brunini NatchezshySh~han Baltimore Bishop Joseph H Hodges Whe~]jng Jackson Miss

Churches Shore Latin America Failures

LutheranSees Stumbling Blocks Ahead SPJlINGFIELD (NC) -- The

Roman Catholic and Protestant churches have both failed in the past in Latin America and both face severe stumbli6g blocks in the future a Lutheran layman from Argentina said here

Dr Leopolydo Juan Niilus of Buenos Aires director of the Argentine Department of the River Plate Centre of Christian Studies discussed the Church in Latin America at a meeting of the Lutheran World Federations

Commission on Stewardship and Evangelism

He warned the group that in

too mlIlyquarters the Roman Cath~Ii~ Church has been the main whipping boy for the Latin AmeJican backwaldness~ and there hllS been too much selfshy

Some of the things atheist marxists are doingin our conti shynent should by heritage be added have bee) done by Christians

Looking toward the future Dr Niilus said there are very seshy

were stumbling blocks ahead for our Roman Catholic brethren also

Inseparable Unity They are he said being

hysterically requested by the supporters of the status quo tobecome their defenders once

again The Roman Church failed whenLatin America waS strug- glingJor its independence n may-all of us mayfail now

wheniHs struggling for its eco- lIlomic Independence Dr Niilus said that all

complacency and self-righteous- qhurdiesin Latin America roust ness about the positive role

quickly recognize that study and commitment as an insepshyarable unity is their most urshygent task if they are to play an effective role in the future of Latin America

They must study be said ~both political and economic isshysuell amplnd their theological imshy

Cancer Study lLOST UIS (NC)-The insti shy

lute Ior J)lolecular virology at St LOUiS University here in Misshy

bull souri has b~en awarded a $265shy

101 gJant from the National Canshyeer Instilute of the U S Departshyment of Health Jducation and Welf~re whic~ will enable reshysearchers to look for viral speshyeitic genetic material in himiavl elmcer

plicAtions and must be comshymitted to providing adequate pastoral CAre to those involvel in political and economic action

Pho~ClJI Archbishop Wons Sourin Medal

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Arc~

bishop John J Krol of Philadelshyphia bas received the annual Sourin Award of thc ] 17-yearshyold Catholic Philopatrian LiteJ1shyary Institute

The presentation marked the first time the award has beelll made to a member of the hieJ1shyarchy ]t is ordinarily given w a distinguished Catholic layman The Archbishop was cited 100 confident and courageous leadshyers~jP

played by the Protegttants in Latiq American social andeco N~w Music nomiltdeve~opment 1 PURCHAS~ (NC)-The Pius

Protestants be said have a X School of Litlllgical Music of share and~ responsibility in the Manhattanville College of the WHITE SPA creation of seriougt structural Sacred Heal1 here received maladjustments - both economic $20000 in grants from Charl~ and moral~ in Latin America ~nd Arthur Morgan Of New

York and John Morgan oi Most of the things our pro-Rockville Centre N Y to stimushy

gressive Roman Catholic bret~shy iae new music for the new BANQUETS bull WEDIl)~NG5imiddot P~RTIESilltc~national deprc~sed middotcondi-middot ie are doing today i~Latin m~rgy

America shouldbyheritage he -COMMUNION BREAKfASTSai~ have beel~~~nepygtrotes tants [ 11M3 PLEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

JEFFREY E SULLIVAN 993-778GFer~ Dome

MEMPHIS (NC)~Bi~tiopJoshySishopo~~~ed

550 Locust Street seph A Durick apostolic admin lFall River Mass istrator of the Nashville diocese received the first annual Human 672-2391 Relations Award from the Memshy Iltose E Sullivan CONVENIENT BANKINGphis Catholic Human Relations

Jeglrey E SullivallCouncil He was cited for his WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMSstands on human dignity and

at theequal job opportunities He reshycently instituted Project Equalshyity in Tennessee SlADES FERRY TRUST COMPANY

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-11lun Apr 20 1961 12 - )

Irish Emigronts Concern B~hops inmiddot Pgstoral

DUBLIN (NC)-Thespiritual and social needs of Irish 0trtifirants and the importance of preparing them for their new life in other countries were major concerns of the

Irish hierarchy at its meeti~g here in- Maynooth In a pas~ toFal on emigration it wasmiddotmiddot pointed out that while de- parture of Irish people foigt residence in other cuiitries is on the decline those who do leave ~can be an enormous force formiddotgoodmiddotin the lands they go to if they have the right ideals and motLves and abilities properly developed

Without these the pastoral adds the alien enironment in which they find themselves may presen~ serious dangers to the spiritual and moral wenfare ~

the weaker ones Education and religious formashy

tion of young people by the bullbull schools and by the clergy coopshy

erating with teachers were cited as most effective contriilgtutiona

to the formation of those likely to emigrate

Among recommendations made in the pastoral for properly pi-eshyparing potential emigrants for livingin other lands were

Young people should be enshycouraied to remain in schooias long as they can benefit from H

Emphasis on the virtue of tem perance

The utilization of youth club activities (discussion clubs and

guiles) to help young members to acquire healthy and natural

sOcial graces and habits The aid of priests in helping

the young people to grow up to

confident maturity Counse by priests on expected

problems of housing suitable

I

REV ALBERT F SHOVELTON

Priest to Spe(l]llc At Seminar

Rev Albert E fShovelton dishy

rector of Sl Mary Home New Bedford will speak as a represhy

sentative of the Diocesan Comshy employment dangersmiddot to health Unity atNClline Committe~ longhours of work in other the75th anniversary celebration

countries advanced atrange- at Holy Trinity LutheranTo SurveyCU mentS with Catholic welfaeChurchNorth Easton Thursday agencies in countries 9f their April 27

CHIltAGO (NC) - The board choice and the provision of in Father Shoveltons talk ~iU of trusteesof the Catholic Uni-formlltion concerning facilities be part of aseroinar middotHe wili be versity of America Washing- abroad for emigrantS preceded by Rev Dr Nils Ehtenshyton D9middot his est~blished it ne~ ~he h6ldin~ Of Irisit~nhlli~middot 8~rom Boston University School survey and ogtlectlODs ~()mmlttee lft llt1rge centers lt ~ Theology whose subject will headed br ~ St ~OU~1l1(ly~a~ Aparishnewsletter s~nt be Ecun1eni~m in Protestant to study ~he funct~op and plaOl th I fmiddot h middotmiddotf g Perspective Today f th Cmiddotth li U -Of Of Dl0n y rom omemiddot 10 Or1ll1O ~ a 0 r ~vterslY~ lt the emigrants bfuricti6ns inFathel ShovElltons suoject will m~nqa ~r~o ern a hoh~ - the local parishes at Chri~tmaiJbe ~EcumeJ1ismin Roman Cllthshy

laCatton on middota national scale d thO t f th h oljc PerspectiveToday A dis-Th middottt an 0 er lmes 0 e yearw en JJ

e cozpml ee~~made up U4 they mightmiddot possibly be home~uss)n period will follow SIX laymen and four archbIshops ) The audience will be comshyall of whom ar~ pr~sent trustees _ prised of the Lutheran parisa o~ the u~lverslty Formatu~n at Southern PrOVince cmgregation the townspeople ~he conrrutteewasannounce by ~ _ the towns clergy and the stll~ FrancII Cardinal Spellman of Favors DIGcoraate ~ dents at Holy Cross Fathenl New york ch~rman of the MIAMI CNC)Bishops of the Seminary Catholic Urnverslty board province of Atlanta have giyen Pastor of Holy Trjnity is Rev

The appointment of the com- p~sts in the six-ctiocese area Kenneth E Bjorklund

nlission for Christian

SAVE DOLLARS

with the MERCHANlS

84EconomOO

Auto Loan Pian

mittee came against a backshyground of reports that the U S bishops might transfer its Ionshytrol of CatJlolic University to 11 group of laymen The univershysitys rector Bishop William J McDonald has denied the middotreshyports but the chairman of the

new commi~ee Dr Ca~roU Hochwalt SaId the commIttee has been given the widest posshysible mandate from which nothshying will be excluded Our assignment Dr Hochshy

walt saidis the most farshyreaching one possible We are to take a reaiistic look at every aspec~ of the university all it has developed under its original directive since 1889 and at its potential for the forseeable

gt futule It is obviously the trusshyteef desire to leave no qtiestfon unanswered which may aftect the unfyersityas anational-hlsti tution 1its ~aculty students ~d

permission to hear confessions in the entire province and they have also asked the National Brothers VOuDlltee~ Conference of Catholic BishoPs As firefilllhters

to consider restoring the perma- nent diaconate in dioceses that want it

The two decisions were ~~_ nounced after the Bishops held their annual meeting in Miami

Archbls~OP P~ul J Hallman of A~lanta SaId l~ IS cus~omary ~or prtests t~ receIve theIr faculties from theIr own dl~cese and they h~ve been restncted o use wlthn that diocese EffectlVelmshy

II NORTHBROOK (NC) - Four

of the 34 men in the Northbrook volunteer fire department here are religious Brothers They are assigned to the national headshyquarters of the Society ofmiddot the Divine Word at nearby Techny Ill

The Brothrs are on call any time the Northbrook first stashytion standby has two or less men on duty for all general

the Cliurcli and the nation ift ~ J llmohgihemthejt haVe fouglU serves~ ( I i) middotClosingmiddotMeasure middotisome 50fires lti

j middot5T PAUL (NC)4AbilLban

Dedicate Monment ~ing ~l)e sale pf spe~iti~mtr 0ROURKtr chandise on Sundays has heen ~

To adFe Serra middot houses bullbull FunealHomepassed b)-both of the j

medl~telY all pne~ts In good alaons and for any fire or emershystandmg may nw he~r the con- gency when additional personnel fesslOns of Iemtents 10 the A- are needed Their volunteering la~ta archdIOcese ~nd th~ 41- was approved by the superiors oces~ of Sva~nah Charleston andmiddot the seminary bought them II ~alelgh MIami and St Augus- veh~C1e to expedite transportmshy

tine tion when they answer a fire ~ ca~I

Solons pass Sun JI n y The Brothers estaimat~ that

S_CRAMENTO (NC) dDme MinrElsota legislatureGov~aJ monument of Padre runipero old LeVander of Minnesota was Serra OFMwassolemnly ded- exPected to sign it into law icated on the grounds of tille The legislation forbids the sale State Capitol here Saturday OIl Sundays and six holidays

The formal ceremonies were (New Years Day Memorial Day qonducted by officials of the Independence Day Labor Day state alld by officers of the Nll- Thapksgiving and Christmas) of tive Sf ns and Daughters of the cameras musical instruments Golden West The project haa phonographs and tape recorders been sponsored by the California radios and television sets jewel-State Legislature and the fra- ry clocks and watches furs terrial ~ orders who provided furni~ure and other home furshymatching funds to finance its nishings including appliances executi~n middotmiddotmiddotAlso wearing apparel ()all

S7J ~c~nd St~~ef

Fall River MOIss_ 679-6072

MICHAEL J McMAHON Licensed Funeral Director Regisfered Embalmer

D D II- bull _ 5u Ivan amp Sons

FUNERAL HOME

Father Noel F Moholy OFMkinds including footwear lug- 469 LOCUST STREIE1T vice postulator for the canorlizashy gage lawnmowers and 9ther tion of Ithe Franciscan friar who outdvor machinery and equipshy FAU RIVER MASS bas been hailed as Californias ment hardware and tools paints 672-3381 First Citizen and Greatest Pio-Illeer W3 the principal speakeII at the ded~cation

varnishes wallpaper and re-middot lated tools lumber and other buildine materials and supplies

Wilfred e~

Driscollmiddot

James IE

Sullivan Jr

Suburban Parishes Should H~lp Save City Parishes

WASHINGTON (NC)-Archbishop Patrick A YBoy1e of Washington appealed here to ~ubJrbanCatholic parisbes to come to the aid of poverty-stricken parishes in the inner city At least 10 Catholic parishes in the inner city need financial help to continue to ismiddotmiddoth d d - ize t II h told C Has ave ecrease s exlS e a ommumon though the schools have contimshy

breakfast of the St Vincent ued to operate at fun capacity de Paul Society and the Whll~ parish income has faUellil only way we can give it iI off school costs have risen ~ through our suburban parishes cause of increased salaries em-

Suburban parishes are hard ployment of lay teachers and pressed themselves he said with higher maintenance costs for most of them deepiy in debt 00- older buildings cause of new constru~tion and expansion Nevertheless they must inaiJpirit of true charity share their resources with our poor parishes

The archbishop said that one of the reasons flr the poor fi shynancial condition of the inner city parishes was the cost of operating their schools but said emphatically that none of these schools would be given up

If we didnt have to support our schools Archbishop OBoyle said nearly all Of our parishes couldmiddot take care of their basic needs But we are not going to giv~ up any of our schools as long as we can get Ii dime to support them

Not mentioning which parish was concerned he stated thatmiddot one middotitmner city parish received $54000 from archdiocesan funds las~ year

Msgr Thomas W Lyons Arch diocesanmiddot Director of Educatiot1 said th~t before the whije middotmigramiddot tionmiddot to the suburbs CathoUa constituted about 22 per cent 01 the Washington Population The Negr~ who replaced the whitea are only about JO per cent Cathshyolic The result is that the par

Parochial school tuiti6n which averages about $4 a month haa not kept pace with costs Msgr Lyons explained

The St Vincent de Paul Soclshyety-here recently announced a twinning program in whicb sOlue of the more affluent parshyishes adopt inner city parisheo and provide for their needs

Offers Folk Mass For Vocations

HOUSTON (NC)-Bishop John L Morkowsky of Galveston- Houston offered a special foUt MaSs for youth on World Day oL Pr~yer for Vocations at Sacred Heart co-cathedral here

Father William Steele diocshyesan vocation director said the folk Mass is being offered to atshytract the young people middotThemiddot homily duringmiddot the Mass dealt with vocations

Contemporarymiddot folk musiC composed by Ray Repp nation ally known folk song writer was played during the Mass Guitar aceompaniment was proshyvided by seminarians from St MaryoS Seminary here

ct HOME IMPROV~MENl LOANS

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Cardinal Cushing Sees Decrease In Seminaries

BOSTON (NC)-The numshyber of Catholic seminaries in the United States will deshycrease because of the diffi shyculty of obtaining top-flight scholars to staH them Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston preshydicted here

Addressing the New England Conference of the Catholic Hosshypital Association the cardinal told some 680 nuns priests and

laymen that schools of theology both Catholic and Protestant will become more closely identi shyfied with the great colleges and universities of this country a system not unlike that of Oxford in England

Sharing the platform with Archbishop Cushing was Bishop Fulton J Sheen of Rochester N Y who urged Catholic hosshypitals to go outside their own walls to bring social and medical help to the poor

Go out into the slums he said Give two or three hours a day visiting poor families for healing and counseling

He also suggested that Cathoshylic hospitals in this country adopt hospitals in poor counshytries

In A Rut We can certainly afford to

have someone put up a hut in the poor world We have the spirit but we have gotten into a rut the bishop said

Bishop Sheen told the confershyence the hallmark of a Catholic hospital is that we serve each patient as we would serve Christ

Cardinal Cushing also preshydicted that rising costs of care of the sick will induce the fedshyeral government to become more closely identified in hosshypital administration

I was told he added that in some hospitals the cost of a bed per day is almost $100 There must be a ceiling somewhere

Salons to Study Divorce Laws

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey State Assembly has unanimously approved a resolushytion to establish a commission to study the states divorce laws The measure already passed by the Senate is expected to be signed quickly by Gov Richard J Hughes

Thp commission described by Governor Hughes as an effort to strengthen marriage has al shyready encountered the opposishytion of -the Monitor the Trenton laquoiocesan newspaper But the bIShOps of the states three other Oatholic dioceses have reserved comment -

Boih Governor Hughes and the commissions sponsor Sen Jereshymiah F OConnor are Catholics And while Senator OConnor would like to see the commission recommend liberalization of the states di~orce law - desertion adultery and extreme cruelty are the only grounds at present-he would also like other changes made

Among them are a- family eourt which would serve as

counseling agency as well as divorce court lengthening of the present three-day waiting period as a1 obstacle to quick marriages and anr a warning to young PershySODS of the seriousness of marshyriqe

Senate Election PROVIDENCE (NC)-Sixteen

members of the 26-member senshyate of priests for the Providence dJocese have been elected in the first part of the senates twoshyatage elections

REV PATRICK 3 ONEILL

NCIEA Appoints Fr ONeiU

Rev Patrick J ONeill Supershyintendent of Schools in the Dioshycese of Fall River has been apshypointed by the Superintendents Department of the National Catholic Educational Association to serve as a member of the nashytional committee concerning tbe shygrowth and development of diocshyesan and parish school boards

This committee under the chairman Rt Rev Msgr ONeill DAmour will serv() as an adshyvisory unit It will gather and distribute information concernshying the development growth and function of school boards

Father ONeill made an extenshysive study of functioning school boards throughout the country His work in organizing our Diocshyesan Board of Education and working with it during the past year has been commended

Newman Chaplains School at IHCJJlvOlId

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Newman Chaplains Asshysociation has added a second training school for priests and Sisters entering Newman work It will be conducted at Harvard University

As in past years a school will be held at the University of Colshyorado in Boulder Dates for both schools are June 113 to July 2

The Newman Chaplains School prepares priests and nuns asshysigned to the secular campus The faculty has been chosen on the basis of experience in the Newman apostolate and speciali shyzation in theology -philosophy script~reand counseliJ)g _

Wlhere A GOODNAME

Means A GREAT DEAL

GEO-OHARA CHEVROLET

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Open Evenings

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 13

Family Care Program forO Children The Paul A Dever State by the psychologists and pre-placement visits with the

School Taunton under the sponsorship of the Departshyment of Mental Health has recently begun a Family Care Program in an attempt tomiddot proshyvide some of its children with the experience of family life

screened by the social workers have all been approved by the schools physicians for the proshygram

These children are ready and able to enter into the commushynity said Dr John L Smalldon superintendent of the Dever

child to the prospective foster parents to determine the comshypatibility of the youngster with the family Once settled within the family the child will also be periodically visited by a schooi social worker to assist in the adjustment The youngsters

The program is initially seekshying to place approximately 20 selected youngsters in homes in

school Provides Funds

This program with its emphashy

would attend special educatiOD classes in public schoolll throughout the South Shore

the South Shore area These chidren have been selected for their advanced capacities for edshyucation and training and their abilities to adjust to a home enshyvironment

These children reconmmended

sis on the advantages of the proper fa mil y environment seeks through a gradual process to assimilate the child within the community

The Social Service Department at the Dever School will conduct

The Department of Mental Health which sponsorsmiddot similar Family Care Programs in sevshyeral other schools in the state is providing funds for the supshyport of the children

What do you do when you live on a Take a good look at your everyday very small island with over three and a - surroundings You are apart of the 20 half million people-say Hong Kong of theworlds populati~nthat has access Move to the suburbs But what if the to 80 of the worlds food That means suburb is Red China The only answer that the other 80 of the world must be is this-and rbe hundreds of thousands content with the remaining ~O Of who crowd these house- boats are lucky course you can read this and say So Ovlaquo half die people of the world ani But You cannot say to someone who taorneless-and most live in Asia is hungry come tomorrow We must

When we hear that three-fourths ol act today because tomorrow may be too cbe human race lives inpoverty or below late (pope Paul VI) Feed the man the subsist~ level these are the peo- dying of hunger if you have not fed pie we are talking about Do we know him you have killed h1m (Vatican II) what it feels like to subsist to know no Dear Monsignor OMeara 1 am attachshyother feeling but that of hunger It is ing my gilt 0 $__ to help right the impossible or we could never spend over imbalance in our world Please use it so 100 billion dollars annually on arma- that a missionary can feed the starving ments while 10000 die each day from name---------- shyyenJldernouri8bment address _~____

THE HOLYFATHER~S

FUND FOR THE POOR RT REV EDWARD T OmiddotMEARA NAT~NAL DIRECTOR THE SOCIETY POR THE PROPAGATION Of THE FMTH 36e 5TH AVE NYbull NY 10001

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THE ANCHOR~Diocese ofFa River-Thursbull Apr 20 19M

middotSocial Revolutmiddotion Is Needed In latin America Lands

From Social Revohitiiolll iin the New Latin America Edited by John 3 Considine MM

The possibility of orientating regional planning toward an overall solution of the pressing problems that concern more than one Latin nation could well engage Christian initiative writes Rene Atero The most typical example of this kind he sa)s concerns Social Revolution in Latin-~ershythe region of the Andean ica Most Rev Mark GMcshyMountains where peasants Grath CSC says Barbara numbering more than five Ward widely read Catholic

million live in thee different economist begins her book enshyltcountries possessing basically titled The Rich Nations and the

Poor Nations with the flat stateshy similar pro b- ment I suppose we are all lems Our asso- aware of the fact that we live in ciation with na- the most catastrophically revolushy~ional orgariiza- tionary age that men have ever

tions concerned fced middotmiddotwith deyelop- Social Revolution ment planning Vice-President Hubert Humshyin no way im- phrey who honored this meeting plies the im- with his presence last year proper subordi- writes in a recent issue of Forshynation of enti- eign Affairs Although the obshytie sund e r servation that Latin America is Church s p 0 n- in the midst of a political ecoshysorship to less effectual accom- nomic and social revolution has plishment under the state become a commonplace it is

On the contrary it is a ques- true tion of becoming involved in a The influential Chilean magashynew front in which Christian zine Mensaje published by the action is not only indispensable Jesuit Fathers dedicated an enshybut will be most efficacious in tire issue in December of 1962 to helping to enlist sectors of Latin the theme Revolution in Latin American society of top impor- America and followed this up

middottance for national dEvelopment withmiddot another special issue in With reference to the actual bctober 1963 on Revolutionary implementation of plans through Reforms in Latin America

well elaborated projectS we Early in 1964 the Civilta Catshyshould make certain that iden- tolica published in Rome by the tification and recognition as an Jesuits carried a critique of important part of the national these two issues of Mensaje by effort are given to current Father Jarlot which questioned Church activities already oper- the prudence of using the terio ating numerous projects of social revolution in a Christian conshydevelopment throughout the text pointing out that itia ltcontinent loaded with Marxist overtones

For example with regard to Not only does it signify rapid education we should lteall atten- c structural changes Father Jarlot tion to the fact that there aremiddot in asserts but also connotes vioshy

lence and some measure of hate Latin America about 5000 pri- and class warfare He would vate ed~cational insttutions pre- prefer the term evolution pared to share in current eduea- tional programs throughout the Social Revolution oontinent Mr Humphrey in the article

The private univemities andmiddot already mentioned asks the eenters of technical training inmiddot question Is it appropriate te the fields of agriculture labor define Alliance (for Progress) and cooperatives couY-a double policy as favoring social revolll shythe potential for plofessional tion - or should this word be and technical trainin1 if they avoided in favor of evolution 01 would participate on D national some other expression basis ir serving the more press- He anwers Evolution if ing needs of society carefully examined proves to be

Broad Horizons inadequate for it implies an un-We must work also in the pres- conscious non-deliberate change

ervation of the progress which that is slow and gradual has been achieved in the areas- What is required is conscious of social welfare now b~ing em- rapid change in the socioshyphasized (housing education economic structure a process public health) Lay groups such that can correctly and precisely as Catholic Action in different be called a revolutionmiddot If used spheres _ Legion of Mary St not as a slogan but in itS precise Vincent de Paul Carita3-which sense the policy of peaceful s0shy

up to now have directed their -cial and economic revolution is efforts mainly towards religion agtcorrect~haracterizatio~ofmiddot il~

t hid limce policy d If t middot an we are ac IVlless ou eJmiddot We should not hesitaietoi pand theIr programs a11d focus d tf l th t m some of their work on ilrojects I e~ I y o~rse ~es WI I ~i planned by specialists J JatmAmencaiJust ~ Presldcnt

This would permit the cltanel ~ohnson ~ssoclated hunseU WIth it in hIS war on poverty I~ng of theIr ~eal t~elr ~rga~l~a- throughout the world whenhe gtcent

tIOn and theIr splnt of saCrIfIce tl k d Iffit b bull recen y remar e a peaceshyas power u resources 0 e put f lItmiddot th i5 at the disposal of society Among u re~bo u IOn ~n ese areas such works surely programs of ~mossl Ie a VIolent revolutIon

IS mevltable community improvement will be especially attractive to tlhese lay groups

Thus the Church might con- sider putting its knowledge and resources to more effective use in preparing programs and projshyects for adaptation to national and regional needs

They should select carefully those with the capacity to fulfill so that they may obtain financing from national or international sources to complement their own eontributions thus enlarging the scope of their activities

In a study of The Church and

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Theres muchthat$ new at Firat National these days~ bullbull and this sign atthe meat oaeels one of the most exoltlng~

But- dont tlhlnk~ for a moment~ FIRST CHOICE MEAT I merely a n~w name If yo havntshopped our meat case Oa~ely youre In for happy 8urprlse~

Weve always enjoyed a great reputation formiddotmeat have always sold the pIck of oholce meats as Ih$p~cted and graded by the USDepartment of Agrloulture (USDA)

But now with our YouCome First policy our meat casel have taken on ~ new look

Our finicky p~IIQy~t~~reotlng oniy the ohoicest of the

oholce c has beoome believe It middotor not evet1lmiddotmol-e-flnlokye The trlmnilng and outtlng leoloser and mQre~a~e(ld ~ e bull to etJlv~ you th0 gie~tGstm~at vaYu9middotand most flavorful meats In lF~r2~ National hIS~O[y OLill oounters are the cieanes~ and our butohers mor~ eager than ever to lend you aweloomemiddotrneal tpia8lnlng Idea~

tiuohs gre~~ InQwsplrlt demanded a great new name II

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Arguments For Celibacy Outweigh Those Against

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Arguments urging that the requirement of eeHbacy of priests be set aside as an obshystacle to increasing vooationsare not sufficient Archbi-shop Gabriel Garribe pro-prefect of the Congregation of Semishynaries and Universities told a pressconfelence here My personal answer is that the arguments for celibacy cd the clergy are stronger than those against it He said he beshylieved there should be a firm affirmation in this respect and that it would maintain celibacy in the Latin Church

By doing so he said the quality ofpriesUy candidates will grow and through the quaUy of its priests the Church will harvest an increase in the quantity of candidates

The drop in the number of vocations the Archbishop stated Is due in part at least to the new attitude of todays youth and therefore requires changes_ in the traditional seminary formation

The prelate told the press that todays youth is much more fully aware of the whole world and far more sensitive to its problems than in the past Those responsible for seminary training must realize the importance of education and be capable of understanding the new generashytion of admiring them and of discovering for them the mission of the Church

StatistiCs Given Archbishop Garrone not e d

tj~at although there has been a falilng off in vocations generally there have been some surprising exceptions He singled out 1be

Dominican Work Continued from Page One

means that the approach will be intellectual rather than devoshytional and the emphasis win rest on accuracy on the truth of a statement rather than on whether it is opportune

In performing such a task mistakes 1n the form of partisan statements ~ld ill-balanced reshymarks are sometimes inevitable Father Hislop said

He affirmed the Dominicans loyalty to the Church but noted that it is often difficult for a vanguard intellectual group to express itself in terms that win not be misunderstood by the majority of Catholics

CCD Talks Continued from Page One

Tauntol as the speaker Mrs Mary Fuller of Buzzards

Bay will speak at the meetiDll in Bishop Stang High School North Dartmouth

At Bishop CasSidy High School Taunton the speaker will be Edward McDonagh-Of North Attleboro

Thomas Flangheddy of Taunshyton will address the meeting at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

The Cape area meeting will be held at Holy Trinity West Hallshywich with Miss Patricia llIIakle as speaker

Seek More funds WASHINGTON (NC) -Two

members of Marylands congresshysional delegation have introshyduced a bill which would make the government spend $75 milshylion annually for birth eontrol aid in the U ~ by 1973 The bin introduced by Sen Joseph Ty ings and Rep Samuel Freidel would propose $20 million the fkst year rising to $75 million bIV the fifth )ear Sta1e and loeal governments would provide _ edditiODal $25 mDJiclID br )87J

extraordinary development of vocations in Mexicp and in Yugoslavia and the stable continuity of recruitment in Poland

Among the statistics provided at the conference were the fact that the latest Church figures count 234000 Diocesan priests and 168000 Religious priests There are in addition 166400 Religious who are not ordained priests

One of the most heartening things in the vocational world picture it was pointed out hasshybeen the increase of priestly vocations in Africa Asia and Oceania

The growth of the local clergy has been a phenomenon of the last 40 years Today in Africa and Asia approximately 500 orshydinations take place every year

~regregampfsect ~ITOW(QJtfreg

$e~~ Aod WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep

Clement J Zablocki of Wisconshysin has introduced a proposal to correct U a defense education gap in American schools

Zablockis bill wo~ld amend the National Defense Education Act (NDEA) to provide federal grants for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment which could be used by children and teachers In parochial and private schools

In a statement on themiddot flOor Of the House of Representatives Zablocki pointed to inequities In

the present NDEA progra~ which Congress passed In 1958 to strengthen instruction in scishyence mathematics foreign lanshyguages and related subjects

An important provision of the act Zablocki said is Title III which provides matching grants to public schools for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment Non-public schools now are eligible only for loans for that purpose

Under Zablockis bill public authorities could obtain federal funds to buy laboratory and other special equipment which eould then be provided for use in non-public schools

In order to comply with matching provisions of the NDEA the non-public schools or groups of such schools would be required to prove they had spent an equal amount thenr selves for such eqUipment from private funds

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FALL RIVER AUXllLhARY AT MEETING Bishop Gerrard Auxiliary lBishop of the Diocese of Fall River is pictured at one of the sessions of the Spring meeting of the Bishops of theU Sheld in Ohicago NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 h A priI 20T urs 1967

Say~ ~Q~~OIP No SIQ7(~ ~ lovell

KANSAS CITY (NC) - The new role of a Bishop in the era of renewal has been spelled out here by Bishop Charles H Helmshysing of Kansas City-St Joseph

In addition to the age-old role of teacher Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop today must read stud) and apply the teachings of the Second Vatican Council the Gosshypels expressed to meet the needs of the modern world In short Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop must be a slave of love to serve as Christ served mankind

Bishop Helmsil1g spoke at the consecration of Auxiliary Bishop Joseph V Sullivan 45 of Kansas City-St Joseph

Bishop Sullivan is the fir~

native of this Missouri city eleshyvated to the hierarchy He was ordained to the priesthood June 1 1946 has served as chancellor of the diocese since 1957 and was named Bishop by Pope Paul VI last month

MarltqJ MregGGreg TJ~ ~~i MILWAUKEE (NC)-ALuthshy

eran scholar will teach Lutheran theology to graduate students at Marquette University here start shying next September Dr Kenneth G Hagen assistant professor of religion at Concordia College Moorhead MinJl will be the Marquet~e theology departmentu first full-time visiting scholra unshyder a grant from the Louis Calshyder Foundation in New York

-THREE LOCATIONS bull youre lookIng for the best in banking se~lce come 011J in to The NationalBank With the opening of our Stafford Square Office were now nearer to even more of you rOll the Greater Fall River area and each of our offices has Just aboUt every service you could want for yourself andl your family We mean M when we say were your FuID lervice BankPft

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t6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~n River-Thurs~ Apr 201967

Friend~2 [iJescribes Stru~g~ For QM~gtLy in T~~regwo~~~

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Rennedy When Fred W Friendly resigned from the Columbia

Broadcasting System in 1966 he ended a 16-year association with that network His trials in broadcast journalism are tbe subject of his new book Due To Circumstances Beyond Our Control Control bull Managements obligation is toRandom House $695 457 protect the interests of these Madison Avenue New York stockho~ders

NY 10022) But this volume But Mr Friendly is concprned is far more than a personal about the other stockholders memoir It is the story of th~ the 195 million citizens who

grant CBS and the other broadshybattle a losing casters the franchise to use theirbattle of course air for quality in

FCC Gutlesscommercial tel shyOne might naively expect that

~vision The the Federal Communications

main point is Commission would effectivelythat the story is here told by an insider Mr Friendlys middotfame criginally gprang from his close associashytion with the late Edward R Murrow He was Murrows partner in the prepashyntion of such pioneering and still unparalleled series as Se~ lil Now and CBS Reports

After Murrow left CBS and wentmiddot into governm()nt service Mr Friendly became president

of CBS news He resigned that ~sition because of a clispute conshycerning the broadcasting of Senshyate hearings on the Vietnam war

Many ancient or recent conshyfilets over broadcasting policy are rehearsed in this hook There fta for example a detailed acshy~unt of the hassies concerning Murrows TV _program dealing with Senator McCarthy before McCarthys downfall as the reshyault of the hearings in the Spring of 1954

There are briefer accounts of other skirmishes Thflse are all interesting and instructive But the value of the book lies not so much in these reminiscences as fin Mr Friendlys knowledgeable analysis of the process whereby television has retreated more and more from public service and become a purveyor of junk and garbage littering the American Iiving room and worse the American mind with trash

Geared to Prcfit Many factors account for this

perversion The principal one is greed Television is geared to private profit not puqUc service lLast years whopping profits will not suffice this year There must be sizable increase

This is to satisfy stockholders Mr Friendly asked William Paley chairman of the board Why do we have to make more money every year The reply was We have many small shareholders across the country and within the companybullbullbullbull

Subcommittee Sets Hearings on Smut

WASHINGTON (NC) -The House Select Subcommittee on Education is holding hearings beginning today on a bill to esshytablish a National Commissionmiddot on Noxious and Obscene Matters and Materials

Subcomllittee chairman Domishynick Daniels of New Jersey is sponsor of thc bill which would provide for a 16-member panel to study the problem of obscenity and recoqunend means Clf dealing with it

On the same day that the hearshyings were announced two other congressmen Arnold Olsen of Montana and Glenn Cunningham of Nebraska introduced bills to curb the mailing of obscene matshyter Olsens bill has bpoundlen enshydorsed by the Post Office Deshy~artment

protect the interests of the other 195 milion But Mr Friendly on the basis of close observation has -no kind words and no reshyspect for the FCC For all pur- poses the agency is toothless and gutless

To make even more money for the shareholders every possible penny has to be wrung out of the advertising medium which television now essentially is This consideration governs proshygramming

It might be supposed that even if prime time at night must eco- ~

nomically go chiefly to programshyming which brings in the maxishymum advertising dollar there is ample opportunity for public service broadcasting in the dayshytime hours But no pienty of money is to be made from dayshytime advertising

Endless Re-runs Three soap companJes alone

spend $290 million a year on television advertising and a lot of this is directed at housewives during the daytime And the programming dictated by this advertising comprisesmostly old old movies and endless re-runs of stupid situation comedies

Huge profits (are) being realshyized from the use of the miracle of television as a transmission belt for retread serials soap opshyeras game shows and the like The yield from the detergent deodorant bleach or food advershytisers who possess the daytime schedule (whose annualexpendishytures (are) some $130000000 ) is the principal reason why no serious progtamming can be sustained for any length of time during these hours

l3y serious programming is meant such things as crittcal UN debates (for example on Vietnam) vital congressional hearings the Popes visit to the UN Churchills funeral etc) Some of these have in fact got on the air and even for a conshysiderable period oftime b~t alshyways there is a major bitter battle involved

Educational TV What may not be realized is

the power of the local station n is by no means meekly subshymissive to the network It largely gqes its own way and its wayis in search of the utmost in profits

It is this fact for example which accounts for the nonshyexistence of a good solid repre~ sentative late-evening news broadcast over the nekwork The local station prefers to put on its own scrappy superficial travesty of a news program beshycause it can get-in an excessively large number of profitable comshymercials

Perhaps there is some hope in the field of educational televishy

sion Mr Friendly is now enshygaged in exploring that possibil shyity For our sake may he be successful At any rate we must thank him for reminding us of our tolerance of the criminial misuse Qf the air waves

H E A 0 S UNIVlERSliJIY New president of St Bonashyventure University St Bonashyventure N Y is the Very Rev Reginald A Redlon

OFM formerly of St Franshycis College Rye Beach N H The university Is operated by the Holy_ Name province of the Order of Friars Minor NC Photo

Issues GlLIidelimiddotnes For IEcumenism

LITTLE ROCK (NC) - Ecushymenical guidelines dealing prinshycipally with the conduct of Catholics at Protestant functions have been issued by Bishop Alshybert L Fletcher of Lttle Rock

Composed of the diocesan ecumenical commission the gUidelines specify that Catholics may attend Protestant church services participate in the singshying and common prayer but may not act as a reader or officer of such services

The rules permit Catholics to serye in wedding parties at mar- riages in Protestant churches providing the service does not involve a Catholic or a divorceci person Attendance at baccalaushyreate services in a church or elsewhere is permitted

Under the rules Catholics may not act as sponsors at Protestantmiddot baptisms Oi confirmation nat Jlarticipate in intercommunion services The guidelines encour- age Protestant attendance at Catholic services

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Misunderstandingmiddot Faced In Ecumenical Meeting

Roman Catholic and Lutheran theologians agreed here after their fourth meeting that many misunderstandings had been overcome on the Sacrament of the Lords SuppeR -Holy Eucharist-but that further examination is necesshysary The doctrinal consulshy to the concrete worship life o1Ztation held at the headquartshy the Church ers of the Lutheran Church In a prepared statement reshyin America was the fourth leased ft the conclusion of the in a series sponsored by the closed meeting the group noted Bishops Committee for Ecumenshy that in contrat to topics disshyism and Interreligious Affairs cussed at the first two meetings of the NCCB and the USA Nashy -the Nicene Creed and Baptismtional Committee of the Luthershy -there have been historically an Wotld Federation serious disagreements between

Main themes discussed at the the confessions concerning the three-day meeting were the Eucharist Lords Supper as a sacrifice the All participants the stateshymanner of Christs presence in ment added agreed that many the Sacrament the import of the misunderstandings had beellll concept of transubstantiation overcome as a result of the latest and the relation of these issues meeting

HOW TDCURE LEPERS

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C Strfngless glftlil of $100 $50 $25 $11S $10 $5 $2 Bet the Sisters buy what they need

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IlJ $1 a month ($12 a yeer) gives you membershyehlp un our Damlen Club for lepers

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For our eIght edlcal Sisters In P1rappancode south India today is just a normal day Doctors bags In hand they are out In the villages eKmiddot amlnlng everyone for leprosybullbullbullbull Leprosy can be cured If diagnosed early says Sister Elizashybeth a surgeon Better yet Itcan be prevented In this case an ounce of prevention is worthten pounds of cure bullbullbull The cure is cheaper than penny nely Only $850 buys 10000 Dapsone _ mIracle tablets enough for 43 lepers for a yeerl bullbullbull The effort In Pirappancode islnternashytional German Catholics built the 25middotbed ho pital (1St Johns) French Catholics gave a workshop (for therapy) and an American friend of ours has pledged a convent and chapel Now the Sisters need medicinps a $200 microscope a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for treating children especially In farmiddotflung villages Will you help them Monsignor Nolan will acshyknowledge your gifts promptly and the Slste win pray for you aware you are helping them cure lepers as Christ did -

WHAT YOU CAN DO IJ $5000 gives the Sisters a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for fighting leprosy at Ita source (A sign on the side will featu re the name ofyour favorite saint and your name ifyou wish)

IJ $1500wlll give theSlster-surgeon an ope Instable Shes ustng akitchen table now

WOULDc $575 buys a whirlpool beth $100 a sterilizer

NEED C $300 pays In full ~or the two-year training 01 IF a native Slsternurse She will write to you

YOU WERI C $240 ($5 a Week) takes care of bull fuMmiddottlme

~IlAII IA8T WlILflARIi ASBDelATIGN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN PresIdent

MSGR JOHN G NOLAN Natlonal8ecretaIJ Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc S30 Madison Avenuemiddot New York NY 1001 T~one 212yUkOft 6-5840

rHf ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Apr 20 196717

CATHOLIC (HAR~l~~S AP~EAL SILVER JUBILEE YEAR

MAY 7-17

What does it mean to you The opportunity to raise your sights to the level of a $2500 Jubilee Gift

An act of aratitude for 25 years of Charitable Seice

Bishop Connollys love for exceptionoillhiidren cannot be

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THE ANCHORshy~18 Top East C~ast College Hoopsters middotPlay )Sees SociaI EquityThurs April 20 1967

Still Lagging Anglicalfj)~ ~teview At I(ennedy Center For P C Alumni In Spain Antii Cali~~i~ By Patricia Francis MALAGA (NC) - Spain

was taken to task for lagging1562 C~~lireglf A full house crowd saw some o( the East Coasts top collegIate basketball players behind many other countriesLONDON (NC) _ The demonstrate last week how basketball should be played Occasion was the 8th annual hi the development of a

ehurch of England has set Scholarship Basketball Game sponsored by the Providence College Alumni Club of New just Christian social and ecoshyup a permanent commission Bedford at Kennedy Youth Center in New Bedford Initiated in 1959 to - raise nomic life at the 26th Spanish C1)n Christian Docbine with tis first task to consider recastshying or replacing that churchs historic charter of the Thirtyshy~Hne Articles of Religion which

are strongly anti-Catholic In tOne

They are regarded by many as o stumbling block to Christian ~ity The articles drawn up in 1562

for the avoiding of diversities $pound opinions and for the establishshyhtg of consent touching truereli shygion must be publicly accepted py the clergy at ordination

They have become a matter of ~increasing objection lind some

Anglican clergymen now feel talat they should not be called Upon to subscribe to doctrinal definitions which reflect views formed in the 16th oentury aarship is a $2400 one paid at the time of extreme and bitter reli- rate of $600 a year to the winner gious controversy Next award will be made in

The articles denounce the 1970 TheRevEdwardC Duffy eurohurch of Rome as erroneous in chairman of- the scholarship matters of faith and declare games and recruiter of the among other things that theplaye~s who participate emphashyBishop of Rome hath no jurisdic- sizes the scholarship is open middotto tion in this -realm of Englandany deserving boy who has been Some prominent Anglican clergymen have blal1led the sharp declfnein ordination canshy

Qlidates on a reluctance to subshy~ribe to this document

Consider Advis( The new commission was apshy

pointed by Anglican Archbishops Michael Ramsey of Canterbury and Donald Coggan of York It consists of 17 members most of them theological professors repshyzesenting different schools of thought in the Anglican Church

Anglican Bishop Iar Ramsey of Durham is chairman The commissions general terms of reference say that it is

to consider and advise upon doctrinal questions submitted to it from time to time by the archshybishops and to plan when deshyslrable the investigation of

I ~uestions by other groups Its first task will be to conshy

sider the place of the Thirty- lege University of Rhode Island Nine Articles in the Anglican St Josephs of Philadelphia Bosshy

tradition and the question of ton College and Holy Cross subscription and assentto them There were Bill Blair Jim

Benedict Bob Kavolski and Bill Lasher of PC Mike FitzgeraldReligious Influence (of Mattapoisett) Henry Carey

In US on Wan~ -7- NEW YORK (NC)-Although

a majority of all Americans exshypressed the belief that 11eligion is losing its influence in the

United States in the latest Gallup Poll Catholics declined to-give majority assent to the opinion

The national survey showed tilat 57 per cent of all Americans in 1967 believe religion is losing its influence Only 14 per cent expressed this opinion in 1957

Among Protestants 60 per cent In 1967 compared with L7 per eent in 1957 said religion was losing its influence Forty-eight

per-cent of Catholics agreed in the latest survey compared with Beven per cent in 1957

Get Federal Funds PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A

Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyect under the auspices of Philashydelppia Archbishop John J Krols Commjssion on Economic Oppi)rtunity Programs hlils reshyceived $267980 from the federal government It was one of 74 Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyects in 30 states approved by Secretary of Labor W Willard Wirtz

accepted as a freshman at Provshyidence College regardless of the high school he attended

Primary Method William F Doyle president of

the NE Bedford club says the games are the alumnis primary method of raising money for the schoJarship fund

Since it was first held the game has attracted a following of avid fans-who help swell the scholshyarship treasury

Father Duffy feels it is the top post-season game in New England arid cites as proof the fact that his long time friend Bob Cousy Hoiy Cross All- Anierican and Boston Celtic great played in it himself two years ago It was his last game

Players who participated in this years money-for-scholarshyships game-all college seniors

represented Providence Colshy

scholarship funds for deserv- ing gr~duates of area high

schools the game profits enabled presentation of the first Edward J Tucker Memorial Scholarship of $2000 to Clifford Marr of New Bedford in 1962 Marr a graduate of Holy Family High was graduated from Provishydence College in 1966 and curshyrently is an Army lieutenant on duty in Korea

The second scholarship---named for the late 1r Tucker of Fairshyhaven a Providence College

graduate and one of the charter members of the New Bedford club--was awarded last year to Michael Doherty of New Bedshyford also a Holy Family gradushyate

Currently the four-year scholshy

Steve Chubin and Bob Boehm of the U of RI Richie Murphy and Greg Hochstein of Holy Cross John Austin and Ed Hock- enbury of Boston College and

f~nll lHoMsnln1~ fLaw Olhoc City EI1il(Jlcts

SPRIfiGFIELD (NC) - By unanimous vote of its five city commissioners this city has enshyacted a fair housing ordinance

The ordinance the third of its kind in OhiO becomes effecshytive May 3 Considerably strongshyer than the fair housing legisia- tion enacted by the Ohio Legisshylature in 1965 it outlaws disshycrimination in the sale or rental of any housing excepting only dwellings for members of reli shygious organizations or housing established for one sex only

Springfields new ordinance came as the res~lt of an improved climate of racial harmony The citys mayor Robert C Henry is a Negro whose performance of his duties has won wide reshyspect In recent years an Urban League has been launched and has made considerable progress A Human Relations Commission is functioning

PROVIDENCE COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP In atshytendance at PC Scholarship Fund Basketball Game in New Bedford were William Doyle presidentof the PC Club of New Bedford and Michael Doherty present scholarship recipient

Billy Oakes Marty Ford and Tom Duff of st Josephs the nations fifth-ranked_ team

Sees lay Teachers

Form Asso~iataon CLEVELAND (NC)-Groundshy

work for a diocesan lay teachers asso~iation was laid at a meeting of representatives of 21 diocesan high schools here

shy Patrick Bruening teacher at St Josephs high school and temshyporary chairman of the new unit said the association is an organshyization of professional people seekint professional growth

He added Only after we have proven ourselves as professionshyals with a professional attitude

about our job can we ask for and hope to get professional consideration I

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lhe players enjoyed demonshystrating th~ir proficiency The fans enjoyed watching the demonstration ~ and the scholar shipfund of the Providence Colshylege Alumni Club of New Bedshy~ord teaped tbebenef~il ~fboth

~ Population Control WASHINGTON (NC) - U s

Sen J W Fulbright of Arkansas has asked for aCongressional appropdation of $150 million for increased population coritior asshysistanCe to developIng countries

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Social Week here Angel Cardinal Herrera y

Oria former archbishop of Mashylaga in a letter to the Social Week sessions deplored what he called a deficiency of Catholic influence in Spanish public lilfe declaring that Spain a Catholic nation was far from being a model of social justice

No Dialogue Earlier Auxiliary Bishop Rashy

fael Gonzalez Moralejo of Valenshycia ecclesiastical moderator of the SocialWeek sounded a simshyilar note declaring that where there is no dialogue between citizens and their government there is no democracy and such a society cannot call itself Christian

Cardinal Herrera said that ahead of Spain are nations who

have learned how to organize their natioJlallif~ according to the norms of justice which are the daughters of consciElnce Sweden has progressed in the social and pOlitlclll o~der to such an extent that the ~ope

could state that its public ~n~ishy tutions are in harmonywith the teachings of the Seco~dVatican Council he said

1[Jpper ~Iasses Cardinal Herrera lirged the

upper classes of -the countryto contribute toward the formation of a sound and realistic public opinion by which religious conshycepts would be applied to the economic and social life of Spain

It is necessary he said to diminish the differences in classes to work toward Unity not only in the economic order but also in i~ the education and

c~vic department

The Best

Car

Georgell Cluh Olf to Good Start mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Apr 20 1967

Taunton High Is Surprise In County Diamond loop former FltrrJDD Riweff CYOer on Scholagslvop ltltIt PIl1Jf$~ns

By PETE~ BARTEK Norton High Coach

Coach BiD Georges Taunton High diamond aggreg~

tion is the early season surprise in the Bristol County schoolboy league now in ita second week of the eampaign The pennant race appeam ~ be developing into one of the most exciting in many years Five clubs are battling of Ule better area clubs year fOIl the coveted flag And after year

Coach Harold (Chet) Haneshywhile action is fast and fm-shywichs Bishop Feehan High teamiOWl in the BCL the eight N3rshyof Attleboro has tucked awayragansett League teams are early season wins over Northgetting I e Q d y Attleboro and New Bedford Voshy

lor the chamshy cational The latter two will pionship race m probably fight it out fornext-toshytheir COmpetishy the-last place in the final standshytion Delayed ing as they seek to avoid theboth by rain and cellar Ii old weather The two top contests on nextCOaches h a v e Mondays BCL card will seebeen reminding Coyle playing Durfelte at Alumnitheir charges of Field in Fall River while Taunshythe pitfalls of ton journeys to North Dartmoutheareless loose to clash with stang Two northernplay and also Peter eounty rivals Attleboro andthe IOOmmission Bartek Feehan meet at the formers of Deedless errors which ean field next Monday when North relegatea club to an early Deeshy Attleboro travels to New Bedshyond diviaion berth from which it ford to take 0111 Vocatlonal win be bard to emerge as 1M Nury Contests oompetition progresses Meanwhile the Narragansett

Chausse and JlaJkut loop is comple~ing its first week The Herring City Orange and of play Its still a little early to

Black pulled the big surprise of make 8 judgment as to how thebe young season when it held clubs will stand at the end of thethe always strong Dullfee High

lI~mpaign team of Fall River to a 2-2 tie in Four Narry tilts are on tap for11 innings The prognosticators next Tuesdaybad been writing off the Georgeshy Coach Jack McCartys Caseeoached clan solely because they High Cardinals of Swansea willfelt Taunton would be unable to face Coach Jack Harts DimanJeplace Artmiddot Koska lost by gradshy Vocational team in Fall River uation in what looms as one of the

But Scott Chawrse impressed most interesting early seasonin his confrontation with the Fan games Coach Doug Baxendales River Hilltoppelll aDd now the Msgr Prevost High team of Fall same pundits who had relegated River will be at Dighton to meet Taunton to a lowly apot 8re the Coach Eddie Texeiras D - ~ first to admit that things will be Regionals Coach Ed Bibeau will much more pleasant for the lead his W~port High aggr~gashyTauntonians this Spring tion to Seekonk to middotvh( with

Stro~ Coyle Offense Coach Roger Hills charges The Admittedly an the doubting fourth Narry contest next Tuesshy

Thomases were not convinced day will see Coach Jack Brenshyon the basis of a single performshy nans Holy Family High teain of ance So Joe Majkut and Chausse New Bedford meeting Coach Jim Ulen eombined to throw a no-hit Sullivans Somersetmiddot High teamwin over Coach Dick Joyces at the latters field Attleboro High team Even the

Lanllers Ready most skeptical then conceded that Taunton must be reckoned On Ca~ Cod n nip-~pd~tuck

in the flag race battle is going on in that areas While Taunton High has heeD eon1erence schedule Four conshy

eGualling the early season attenshy tests are listed for the Capeway tion unexpected results have eircuit next Monday They are eccurred in several other diashy Oldmiddot Rochester (Mattapoisett) mond eontests Attleboro which at Barnstable Bourne at Wareshydid DOt seem destined lor gfeat bam Dartmouth middotat Dennis-Yarshythings this Spring provided the mouth and Fairhaven vs Lawshyfirst surprise w~en it toppled rence High at Falmouth Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Norton High in the Clover Stang High of North Dartmouth Valley Conference plays its first

Taunton then proved its mettle league game at home against when it defeated surprising Millis next Monday The Purple Attleboro Hickey has talent at - and White Lancers travel to Stang but his problem has heeD Medfield next Wednesday tv properly align his best playem Apparently they were not in the Score Governmentright spots when they went down to defeat at the hands of Coach On Lab~r Problems Jim Burns Msgr Coyle High

BUENOS AIRES (NC) -TwonJne of Taunton which has Catholic organizations have isshycwuted its way to two one~sided sued a joint manifesto criticizingviet(lries Coyles strength is in thlte Argentine government sayshyits offensive attack but it also ing it has failed to protect workshy

has a capable defense and pitch ers basic rightsJng staff to make a real run for Issued by the Catholic Youngthe BCL crown Workers (JOC) and Catholic _ Feehans Auspicious Start Action Workers Movement

Durfee while it may have been (MOAC) the statement alsotemporarily halted by Taunton called upon the bishops to be enpects to be among the leaders aware of the needs and goals of before the end of the week The young workers and the labor Hilltoppers looked good in winshy class and to be brave in ltexshy

double-header from Pil-shyning a pressing the Churchs doctrine grim High of Rhode Island last as applied to real-life situations weekend CoachJoe Lewis feelsmiddot It said that the government his boys can now maintain the which calls itself Christian but momentum they have generated is anything but Christian has in the non-league affairs It goes nothing to do with the Gospelalmost without saying that one or Christs teachings or with the off-day is not going to thwart Churchs doctrines as defined by the Hilltopperll wbo produce ODe the Second Vatican Councit

By JOE MIRANDA A Parsons College senior JRobshy

eli Bonalewicz of Fall River is -nearIng the end of a most sucshycessful college career both athshyletically and academically

Bob is attending Parsons in Fairfield Iowa on a baseball scholarship and has started bis third season as the colleges first strong catcher

neans List Student A Physical Education major

Bob has a minor in History and during the last marking period was named to the Deans List at Parsons -

A member of St PatrIcks Parshyish Bonny is a 1963 graduate of Durfee High School where he participated in football basketshyball and baseball

The son of Mr and Mrs Mathew Bonalewicz of 50 Chapshylin Street he is oile of five chil shydren ald has not yet decided upon a vocation

Bonny has two older brotherll a lieutenant and Mathew Jr II

staff sergeant both in the Air Force and stationed ubroad Bob also has two sisters Kathleen II student at Durfee High and Ma) Ann a grammar school pupil

Has f80 Average Bonalewicz recently returned

from a Southern baseball trip end gained excellent commendashytions from his coach Duane Banks for his performance as the Wildcats won 11 of 13 games

The Fall River player batted 430 belted three homers had nine runs-batted-in and seltlred 10 during Parsons first 13 games

Bonalewicz a 22-year-old 175shyJ)ound 5-8 giant enjoys playing baseball and so does his coach who scheduled 89 games last seashyson to set a ollegiate record fur the most games played in one year

Ankle IBjUlY

With the former Durfee backshystop handling the brunt of the catching duties until a knee inshyjury forced him to the sidelines Parsons won 72 lost 15 and twice finished in ti~d games called beshyca~se of darkness

The former St Patricks star in the CYO baseball program started poory this season finshyis middotng off the Southern trip with an ankle sprain but entering this week the ankle was in good shape and Bonny expected to take his regular spot behind the plate

Federal Agency Has Inter-Faith Advisors

WASHINGTON (NC)- A Catholic priest a Methodist minshyister and a Jewish rabbi have been appointed religious advishyBors to the United States Inforshymation Agency here

Msgr George G Higgins clIishyrector of the Social Action Deshypartment U S Catholic Confershyence the Rev Edward G Cu-middot roll superintendent of the Washshyington Northwest District ol the Methodist Baltimore Conference and Rabbi Richard G Hirsch dishyrector of the Relgious Action Center Union of American Heshybrew Congregations have been named to the USIA advisory panel

Officials of the agency noted that while it has had religious advisors since its inception this marks the first time an interfaith panel had been established

The purpose of the panel offi shycials said is to assure that the agencys handling of religious matters serves the best intlterest of the nation and its dlveraity of faiths

Bonalewicz also played for St Patricks T)iocesan championship team and for the Fall River Mershychants in the Newport Sunse~ League

As a senior at DUrfee Bonny was awarded the 1963 George Kaplan Memorial Trophy as the Hilltoppers best senior basketshyball player

His hustle and determination while performing for Durfee at Bostcm Garden during the anshynual Eastern Massachusetts Tecb tournament gained him the reshyspect and admiration of all that witnessed his efforts

Bonalewicz recently completed a practice teaching tour in an Iowa Junior High School and while tere coached the eighth grade team to a league chamshypionship

Earlier in the college year Bob_ was a member of the Parsons intramural flag football progmiddotam and received a trophy for his performan J

Despite the heavy bnsebaU schedule Bob has manged to keep hi grades above average and after the Fall semestershyshowed his prowess in the classshyroom by being named to the Deans List for the second time

DeMatha Winner In Hoop Tourney

WASHINGTON (NC) - DeshyMatha High of suburban Hyattsshyville Md scored an upset cliff shyhanger victory to cop the 12th national high sChool basketballl tournament sponsored by thE local Knights of Columbus J017 the fifth straight time

DeMatha avenged two regula17 season defeats by Mackin High Washington Catholic League

champ with its last minute 70-68 victory Mount Carmel of Chiengo took

third place with a 47-45 overshytime win over DePaul Acndemy of Chicago Northeast Cnthrt1ie of Philadelphia took fifth pIhce with a 77-74 win over St Petertl

B(~ BONALEWICZ of New Brunswick N J Catheshydral High of Trenton NJ Inpound

The oung catcher has been Dwight School of New York alslaquo) long known for his bullet like participated tlnrowlr arm and gained conshy Aubrey Nash DeMatha junloY siderable praise from opponents wall named the tournnmentl in 111gh school amateur and colshy most valuable player lege eompetitions for his savvy A 5-11 junior John Somogyftbehind the plate set three tournament records-shy

Three-Letter Man 40 field goals 108 points in threE Bonalewicz played football for games and 43 points in one game Don MontIe basketb~ll for Tom and tied another record ll-forshyKaram and baseball for middotJoe 11 from the foul line Lewis while at Durfee and also performed for Lewis Chathammiddot team in the Cape Cod League

The Fall Riverite cannot get FAIRHAVENenough baseball according to his mother Mrs Bonalewicz recalls LUMBER a game at Alumni Field when

COMPANYDurfee bested a Venezuelan team sponsored by the Peoplesshyto-Peoples program Bob was inshy Complete linejured and taken -to the hospital Mrs Bonalewicz remembers Building Materials then came back to finish the game hitting a home run to win I SPRING ST FAIRHAVENmiddotit for the Hilltoppers He wall voted the outstanding player in 993-2611the gameo

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sect Increase the Use sect ~ of Fish ~ I ~~e ~ Fomily Diet ~

middot1 UN~~~ ~ _ 1 ~IUllIIllIllllllIllUlllutJUJHIJJJJlllllllllill IIIJlIlIIampIUIltIllHWlUlnmJWnIUlWIIJJllllllllliIllIIlIUIIIIII~

I

THEANCHOR()ioltese of Fan ~tv~r-Thurs ApO 1967 ~ ~ middot-middotmiddotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ middot20

AT BISEIOPS CONFERENCE Facilities for offering Mass were provided by the Archdiocese of Chicago when 230 U S bishops met in semi-annual conference In left photo nine othel prelates concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Joseph TRyan of Anchorage Alaska In right

photo are Archbishop John F Dearde~ of Detroit at left president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and at right Archbishop Johl1l F Cody of Chicago conference host Bishops Connolly and Gerrard attended from the Fall River Diocese NC Photos

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Page 9: 04.20.67

9 Nows RightTime to Plant Peas for Early Enjoyment

By J~ aridlfan1ynRoderiek It is a eustom in New England to serve salmon and peas

00 the Fourth of July Years back this was the time when thresh salmon showed up Jin New England fish markets and Jllative peas could be found ~t the corner store Now we have frozen peas year round and amp Imon may be had throug~- ~t most of the year Thll3 lm-as taken the special delight (iJlJt of native foods but we can G1tfll appreciate fresh vegetabtea limd fish made much morepaia-~ oble by being put on a tablel 3

day or so after it is caught If you want fresh peas fortne

~ourth of July you can sow your creed about the third week of llIlay We prefer ours a little ear_I ~er and so we get the seeci ~lanted by the second or third week in April 00 that the planta will be well on their way before ~e cold weather is gone and (he warm weather arrives By QlllIll reckoning the peas we planted last week will be ready ~ the second week of June

Peas are simple to grow and Ililave nO special difficulties They Ilteed sun moisture and good s6il A row of peas may be planted fulna matter of 10 minutes ahd OOten forgotten until it ia tiine

Th k Si te h d th IIS wee s rae c ass act out the sacrainent to go along with their lesson in the religious Workbqok My daughter came homedelirious with joy because she was chosen to bring in the baby

We unearthed a doll that we ilelt was closest to newborn baby size and Grandma helped by finding the baptismal garments that were stored in her house and by dressing the fortunate stand-in while she explained to Meryl and Melissa that this was the same dress that they wore when they became members of the Church

In fact the children were awed as I further explained that actually four children had used these baptismal garments Meryl ~gan making plans immediateshyly Ann Marie is going to be the father (this in our all-girl ochool) Wendy is the godmother and Karen is going to be the ptiest because her new little

~r pickinlt b~othe was christened Sunday Jrirst tum the soil over to il a~d she knows jllst what to do

ilepth of about six inches or ~ Innoeent DIscussion and break up the clods Make ~ Even Melissa got into the act twrrow about an inch deep~~tl as she proceeded to spiel off m drop the peas into the furrow list of names that she thought iellst an inch and a half a~a~lt t~~ dfl~lshould be given Meryl eovel the furrow water ~~~ si~ e~pIiil1edto her that salt would ~ack a~d wait In 50 days or so dlependmg on the varIety of seed ~u ~se the peas wi1l be ready faj plckmg and ~atmg

Plant Anywhere )peas may be planted in rows

lMlt they may also be planted aishylllillost anywh~re they will get the IgtUUn I planted two little roWlJ ~tween some raspberry bushes raquolaquolother row in front of a flowe ~ where my wife will be able 00 get to them and still another JIlandful of seed in a foundation ~ianting in front of the house

This latter may seem to be goshyl1mg a little too far but by the ~me the annuals a~e in bloom le peas will have been con~

d oome the plants pulled up and DO one will be the wiser

The point is that one does not Thlave to make a big project out ~ growing a packet of seeds mnce half the pleasure is to be

flound in doing a minimum of work while reaping deliciolw nesults

In the Kitchen Most middot0f the books which conshy 1 thltOOJlI emse ves with heading

lIUr children in the right direc_ (tioqas living thinking Chrlsshyllians recommend that middotthebestW4yOOle Sacrament of Baptism is to Ilaye them attend an actual cer+ ~ony This is quite true as we

~rvotlCnced when Jason WM lgtavtized and Meryl and Melis Were allowed to attend

We were fortunate in that the l)lliest who performed the cereshyIlllOny was a personal friend who _plained clearly to the childreUll _actly wha~ he was doing rOIl liIUre this made a lasting impres-Ilion but I also feel that theii IlIIllnds were on the celebratiollll

be Pllt on the dolls tongue to preserve her from the sins of the Yorld and to give her III

atlste for wisdom It was delightful to hear them

discussing the sacrament in such inn~cent and childlike ways and yet witlt understanding that demonstrated wisdom far beyond their years The following incishyde~~ occurred at about the time this was happening and demon- strates the feeling of some chishydrep arid the naive wisdom they possess For two or three days last week Joe had seen a female rabbit in the yard and he had pointed it out to the children

th t itsayIng a appeared ready to have a litter Sure enough the rabbit did have a litter under the mulch around one of the rose bushes The children were thrilled but

f un ortunately a neighbors dog found the litter and killed the tiny newborn rabbits When

~~~~JIiCheese Gingerbread l3~ounee package ere a JllIl

cheese l cup molasses 2 eggs

1 cups sifted all-purpose ftOtllfi teaspoon baking soda

1 teaspoons baking powdeR 1 teaspoon cinnamon

OOnat was to take place at home 1 teaspoon ginger smd on all the people who were t~aspoon cloves ltllllming to help them celebrate 1-8 teasp~n salt

llhis in itself wasnt bad as it IIgt boiling water lB alsoimportant that they ~al- 1) Beat the cream cheese urim koo th~t a baptism is aiQytul Ce- ~BOft andfluftly then gradually llWliori which should be shared beatit the molasses Ytdh others butwith the confu- 2~ Beat- in the eggs one at Cl

CATHOLIC WOMEN HONOR BISHOP Welcoming Most Rev James L Connolly to the Annual Bishops Night Sponsored by the New BedfordCathoJic Womens Club are Mrs John W Glenn left president and Mrs Daniel F Dwyer first vice-president

Receiver Takes Over FHA Starts Foreclos~te lProcee~ings

Against Retirem~rjfttoriu~ MOUNT ANGEL (NC) - A

oourt-appointed receiver hall taken over operation of Mount Angel Towers a $34 million reshytirement home completed scarceshyy more than a year ago

The receiver-Portland attorshyney John R Fawt Jr - was named less than a month after the Federal Housing Administrashytion announced that it was start shying foreclosure proceedings against the home here in Oregon

Mount Angel Towers built on Beven acres of land donated to it

Sch001 Honors Chaplain

Killed in Vietnam PLEIKU (NC)-A new wing

has been added to St Pauls

School here in memory of Father (Maj) William J Barragy of the Dubuque archdiocese who was

killed in a helicopter crash inVietnam May 4 1966

A brass plaque on the office wall states Rev William J

Melissa appeared on -the scene Barragy (Major U S Army)boni October 13 1923ordained

she said realistically New life May 22 1948 dled In VIetnamI k p un and its all over Just May 4 1966 like Jesus born at Christmas

The new wing has five classshy dead at Easter rooms all on the ground floor

Last year when my oldest St Pauls is in the charge of the to teachyoungstersabout daitghier received the sacrament I Sisters ofSt Paul de Chartres

of tfie HolyEucharist for the first who alsohave anorphahge near tim~~ wil celebrated With a fam the iichoOtmiddot Thereare 1000 Viet ililgtru~ch Ali lt~~ everyon~ namese children receiving pri seeffied to enjoy was warm mar an -secondary educatmiddot10n i~

a bullbull ging~tbread the schOOL

by theilelghobririg Mount Angel Benedictine Abbey was billed on its completion in 1965 as the nations first Catholic retirement home

it was not the most prosperous however and by JIeb 7 when the mortgage-holder assigned the mortgage to FHA which had inshysured it the 207-unit six-story building had only 80 residents in 61 apartments

Appointment of a receiver was the first step in FHAs machinery toward eventual sale of the propshy~rty to another private operator

The home will be run as beshyfore according to the FHA Portshyland office until it can be sold to a suitable organization to maintain its operation as housing for senior citizens

FHAs office in Washington said Mount Angel Towers was one of about 20 such projectsshynot all Catholic - which had failed since 1960 when FHA mortgage insurance became available to them More than 200 have been built

llHE ANCHOR-Thurs April 20 1967

Sisters Assume Pasroral Duties

AKRON (NC)-Priests visit flBl administer the sacraments bu~

day by day the ordinary passhytoral duties are performed bsr nuns in Brazilian parishesmiddot il1l Natal and Salvador administered by the Daughters of Divine Charity

Their duties which includ~ the distribution of Holy Comshymunion were described here bV Mother M Fidelis Weninger who worked in Brazil for 21 years prior to her election in 1965 as mother general of th0 community

The Daughters of Divine Charity she said care for those parishes just as though they were priests Of course we cant administer the sacraments but we handle everything elseshysuch as pre-marriage instructionD and parish visitations

Permission for the nuns t distribute Communion was obshytained from Pope Paul vr through Bishop Eugenio de Araujo Sales apastolic adminisshytrator of Sao Salvador de Bahia she explained

Sister Mother Fidelis ordeli has been working in Brazil sincia 1919 and now has 460 nuns there aUexcept 18 of whom are Brashyzilians

The order has 1900 membero serVing in 10 countries throug~shyout the world with headquartern

in Vienna Mother Fidelis U1 completing a five-month visiia tion of the orders 37 convents in the United States

Greater Boston Sister Gets Fulbright Award

MEDFORD (NC) - SistCll Madeline Marie Nevins a gradushyate student at Tufts University has been awarded a Fulbright Fellowship to study medievaD French literature at the Univershysity of Paris France

The Mass Sister of St Josep~

will complete her doctoral wor at Tufts after her year abroad

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Schedules Convocation 1 bull

On Council Documents WILMINGTON (NC)- A dayshy

llong session of lectures and disshyICUssions on the Wilmington dioshyease and the post-council er81 will be conducted here

Some 600 clergy and laity are ~From anOlde English recipe - expected to attend the meeting

which is being sponsored by a Plumper rounderp bullarollp of ~concerned Catholics illl th~Wg~ing~on piocese fuller muffins~

batter is smooth 5) Gently stir in the boiling

Dn of the party it was difficul Um~~ water bull ascertain just how much the7 3) s~tt tltgether the flour bak- 6) Pourinto a greased 7 by ~ learned With this in mincll Ang ooda baking powdei ~ H pan Sunbeam English Muffins ~ were delighted when 1ft andspice~ f) Bake in a 350 oven 40 to lIound that Meryl was studying 41) Add the dry ingredients te 45 mlhutes] add about cup Olf Baked by your Sunbeam Baker _tism in 8daoo1 l1he cheese mixtu-l0 GUlring watilll Jl3iBins but this is optionaL

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HAPPINESS IS FAMILY REUNION A weekly radio reunion is Sula Spanish Honduras L~ft Barton Albert ham radio operator middot)liIl

enjoyed by Mr and Mrs Bernard Sullivan Holy Name parish Fall River Swansea connects the Sullivans with their daughter Right InSart Pedro

with their daughter Sister Anne Marie RSM missioned to San Pedro Sula Jack Gaffney performs the same service for Sister Anne Marie

Monastery VisitsSt~esses Serio~smiddot Ham Oplr~t~rs Arrangemiddot We~k~yRadiQ C1tat~ ChmiddoturchSituatilon CRAWFORDSVILLE (NC)C bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbull bull bull bullbull bull

bull bull 0In East -Germany BERLINmiddot (NC)-Christiari

ehurches in communist-ruled lEast Germa~y are suff(~ring from government harrassshymentand restrictions a Luthershy1m bishop told the eastern sec-

For Fa11 RiverParents Missionary Sistet Dr Eric Dean chairman of the religion and philosophy departshy

ments at Wabash College here Thursdays the most important day in the week to Mr and Mrs Bernard Sullivan in middotIndiana plans extended visits

of Holy NameparishFall River Its the day they talk to their daughter Sister Anne to severalmiddot Benedictine monas- shyMarie RSM assigned since last August to missi)n work middotin San Pedro Sula Spanish teries this year The visits Wt)ll

H h kl

onduras T emiddot wee y db

conversatIon is arrange y two h d

am ra W)

operators Jack Gaffshy be financed by a Carnegie gran~

receivedmiddot through the GreatLak~ ney in San Pedro Sula and Colleges Association Harton Albert of Swansea was on retreat However arshy with Sister from their livjng

tion oflt the synod of Germanys It came about tl)rough 3 rangements were made on the middotroommiddot ~eceptiori is excep~nt Protestant Church Council sPot for the first of the weekly noted Mrs Sullivan fully 88 middot~iiJbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbulliIbullbullbull_

The clergyman Bishop Fried- series of coincidences that conv~sations good as a local telephoriecallmiddot bull III rich Wilhem krummachet of Mrs SuliivaIi ascribesld the The luck extended to a fellow Another beneficiary ofthmiddot 11I11I J B ~ East Geimany said that SChool iuck6f the Irish and had its religious of Sister Anne Marie weekly radio reunion is REvmiddot bull ii ~~ld~~a~I~~V~~ti~~~~bel~~~~~~ ~t~~A~~~n~a~~nC~~i~~~~~~~ ~~~~~i~o~Sre~~~~r~~~~~~i~~~d~~~~~=~tOfS~tat~~~ ILUMBER CO beliefs 1 - $140 teleph~rie bill talkinllto ly appointment ~nd asked Mrs Mariesbrother bull bull

Lut~eranBish~~ ~~t Fr~liz th~~o~~~~g~~~riotin~~ri li~~tmiddote~r$Ullivan t if hSheWtohUld ~ewla~t a FOImiddotwonderlnmiddotg friends of the 11I 5middot0middot Dortmoutmiddothmiddot ~harf of Berlin chairman of th~ ~~SSl1g~ 0 er JTIQ er ar a Fall River Sister be it notedltGe~man Protestant C h u r c hmiddot rlidlO o~erator middotwho darra~ge a mmu~e slud MrAI~~rt r0rt~7 that she has middotexercisedmiddotthe name- and yan~ismiddot Council made similar charges at connectlOnmiddot for you said a WIth he got the PrOVIdence ~e western section of the synod frleId and someone else sug- Jlother on the phone and gave

I rgested Mr Albert middotwhom the h th of b IfoBejause the Eastmiddotmiddot lterman ~ r bull er e surpnsl e~ Ie as t t t t t b Sullivans- had )mown _for

some bull

she heard her daughter s vOICeIrovernmen res riC s col ac s e- t b th d th ht f ~ E t G -P t t ts Ime u a neVlr Qug omiddot J I don t even have to go tomiddotbullween as elman ro es in _ bl If and those in the West middotthe Protmiddot =~ a ~OsSI e channe omiddot cmmu ~wansea to talk said Mrs SII~ - t t d h ld t mcatlOnwIttISpamshHO1QQras livan Mr Albert can oConnec~

flS an syno was e middotmmiddot wo llec- S l middotmiddotmiddott d M tons one in west Berliri and the T~e ul Iv~ns VISI e r~ AI~ th E tB j berts t)oIle to talk over th~ e er ~ear as er m possibility of contacting-Sister

Catholics face similar pr()b- Anne Marie~ While they were raquoems because of a divi~~d G~r- th~re he demonsthitelt hi~ equip- ~an~ The East Gelman govern- ment fishing bull around the- airshyinen~ ~has prevented thej)ishops wavesmiddot and picking up an ama-middot ~here ~ om attending meetings o~ teur in -rexas

~he G~rman Bishops Conference To his feliow ham he menshyheld iiJ the West tioned that he was looking for

Join in Praytr an operator in Spanish HOlldurasmiddot BiShop Krummacher said at

the synod that iii the preslmtmiddot criss the Protestant churches must use evelY opportunity to join with Catholics in prayer Catholics and Pwtestants he llaid are bound together b~ the word of the Lord and a common Ilesponsibility

The bisho~ said Protestants in East Germany have made every effort to obtain relief fwm antishyJeligious discrimination but govshyernment authorities have reshyjacted all appeals for action

He said such refusals of the East Gelman regime to end the assaults on religion is partmiddot of communist strategy and planshy

ming To further their objectives he said the comTIunists will pelshymstip indoctrinating children in 1lheir ideology while interfering with the consciences and rights _ tJ children and their parenti

And the next voice wemiddot heard recounted Mrs Sullivan still sounding amazed was a man saying This is Sal Pedro Sula Spanish Honduras

Not only was Jack Gaffney th r operator from Honduras in te same city as Sister Anne Marie but it developed that he lived across the street from her

convent a~d had me~ her o~ sevshyeral occaSlOns- He ImmedIately offered to r~n across ~he s~reet and prmg Sister to hiS mlcro-middot phone lgtut it turned out that sie

Wins Festival Piize NEW YOEK (NC) - The

Search produced by Father Peytons Family Theater has received an award at Monte Carlo in the annual television

competition sponsored by the International Catholic Radio and TV Association

hiS radiO eq~llPrne~t to the tel~ phone and the Sulhvans can chat

Permit Experiment In bullShared Time P9RTLAND (NC)The Port-middot ~~nd school board has approvedai shared time experiment iii -Which children from a parochial ~chool in North Portland will attend classes part time in a nearby public school -

The experi~ent will inv~lve at first only physical education classes and will extend for only two middotyears

Children fro m Immaculate Heart parish elementary schoolwill be allowed to attend gym classes in Eliot school in the Qregon corrlmunity

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Bishop Medeiros Urges Justice ~ For Workers

BROWNSVILLE (NO) ~ Bishop Humbertltgt S Medeishyros of B~wn8ville whose diocese has been the scene of lPl 10-month strike by migrant farm laborers has told farm owners to meet their demands for highe) pay and bettei living eonditions

In a pastoral letter to all Cathshyolics in the diocese-most of the population - released today the bishop said

The present plight of the mishygrant farm workers of America is a constant reproach to our way of life

lFor 1lJse of Ail

They do not ask for charity They demand what is theirs by natural right When the affluent farmers pay a just wage to the migrant workers when they make it possible for him to supshyport himself and his family in frugal comfort and to provide education for the whole family they are not making a gift of their possessions to the farm worker they are simply handilg over to him what is his for they had arrogated to themselves what had becn given in common for Ute use of all

Migrant workers in the Rio Grande vaIiey surrounding Brownsville have been strikihg the larger farms for nearly a year in an attempt to get higher wages and better living condi- tions Their action supported by thc United Farm WorkersOr- ganizing Committee followed the limited success encountered by UFWOC laborers in Califomias lrape vineyards

Precarious Existence

But the Rio Grande workers have encountcred little successshyIllthough a recently organized boycott of produce has received growing support among the states food chains

Bishop Medeilos quoted libshyerally from both Pope John XXIII and Pope Paul VIs recent encyClical On the Development of Peoples in establishing the right of farm workers to adecent Jiving

But be also took note of the plight of Amcricas farmers themselvell who live out a preshylaquoarious existence unless they constitute large enterprises sllch as corporations 01 cooperashyiives

He urged both farmers and workers to organize in their own interest

Natural Ri~ht

Given the natiol~lr and even

aioll of Agricultule ald of fa~m workClS and of manyfarm own- ers in purticular it is urgent that they be aware of thei~ right

~~~o~~o~~~~C~~~i~II~~~~h I~~~~~ of development Which in the words of Pope Priul VI signifies ]lgte~cc

We know that every man hAS a basic natural right to form and join wOIkers unions which conshytribute to economic progress by dcfending his ights he said But thc circumstances of the times the world over indicate that for the common good it is also thc duty for both migrant farm workers and for farmers to form associations

The United States he said has bull duty to its miglant laborers llnd farmers which it must fulfill by passing apPlopliate legislashytion and using other suitable and dcmocratic means of assistance so that not only our tables but thc tables of the world may be blessed with the abundance of the fruits of the earth

lLO~AIJ INTEREST NIl IUSlHIOPS MEETING Disshy W Va Bishop Connolly Bishop Humberto IS Medeiros

cussing topics between sessions are Lawrence Cardinal Brownsville Tex and Bishop Joseph Brunini NatchezshySh~han Baltimore Bishop Joseph H Hodges Whe~]jng Jackson Miss

Churches Shore Latin America Failures

LutheranSees Stumbling Blocks Ahead SPJlINGFIELD (NC) -- The

Roman Catholic and Protestant churches have both failed in the past in Latin America and both face severe stumbli6g blocks in the future a Lutheran layman from Argentina said here

Dr Leopolydo Juan Niilus of Buenos Aires director of the Argentine Department of the River Plate Centre of Christian Studies discussed the Church in Latin America at a meeting of the Lutheran World Federations

Commission on Stewardship and Evangelism

He warned the group that in

too mlIlyquarters the Roman Cath~Ii~ Church has been the main whipping boy for the Latin AmeJican backwaldness~ and there hllS been too much selfshy

Some of the things atheist marxists are doingin our conti shynent should by heritage be added have bee) done by Christians

Looking toward the future Dr Niilus said there are very seshy

were stumbling blocks ahead for our Roman Catholic brethren also

Inseparable Unity They are he said being

hysterically requested by the supporters of the status quo tobecome their defenders once

again The Roman Church failed whenLatin America waS strug- glingJor its independence n may-all of us mayfail now

wheniHs struggling for its eco- lIlomic Independence Dr Niilus said that all

complacency and self-righteous- qhurdiesin Latin America roust ness about the positive role

quickly recognize that study and commitment as an insepshyarable unity is their most urshygent task if they are to play an effective role in the future of Latin America

They must study be said ~both political and economic isshysuell amplnd their theological imshy

Cancer Study lLOST UIS (NC)-The insti shy

lute Ior J)lolecular virology at St LOUiS University here in Misshy

bull souri has b~en awarded a $265shy

101 gJant from the National Canshyeer Instilute of the U S Departshyment of Health Jducation and Welf~re whic~ will enable reshysearchers to look for viral speshyeitic genetic material in himiavl elmcer

plicAtions and must be comshymitted to providing adequate pastoral CAre to those involvel in political and economic action

Pho~ClJI Archbishop Wons Sourin Medal

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Arc~

bishop John J Krol of Philadelshyphia bas received the annual Sourin Award of thc ] 17-yearshyold Catholic Philopatrian LiteJ1shyary Institute

The presentation marked the first time the award has beelll made to a member of the hieJ1shyarchy ]t is ordinarily given w a distinguished Catholic layman The Archbishop was cited 100 confident and courageous leadshyers~jP

played by the Protegttants in Latiq American social andeco N~w Music nomiltdeve~opment 1 PURCHAS~ (NC)-The Pius

Protestants be said have a X School of Litlllgical Music of share and~ responsibility in the Manhattanville College of the WHITE SPA creation of seriougt structural Sacred Heal1 here received maladjustments - both economic $20000 in grants from Charl~ and moral~ in Latin America ~nd Arthur Morgan Of New

York and John Morgan oi Most of the things our pro-Rockville Centre N Y to stimushy

gressive Roman Catholic bret~shy iae new music for the new BANQUETS bull WEDIl)~NG5imiddot P~RTIESilltc~national deprc~sed middotcondi-middot ie are doing today i~Latin m~rgy

America shouldbyheritage he -COMMUNION BREAKfASTSai~ have beel~~~nepygtrotes tants [ 11M3 PLEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

JEFFREY E SULLIVAN 993-778GFer~ Dome

MEMPHIS (NC)~Bi~tiopJoshySishopo~~~ed

550 Locust Street seph A Durick apostolic admin lFall River Mass istrator of the Nashville diocese received the first annual Human 672-2391 Relations Award from the Memshy Iltose E Sullivan CONVENIENT BANKINGphis Catholic Human Relations

Jeglrey E SullivallCouncil He was cited for his WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMSstands on human dignity and

at theequal job opportunities He reshycently instituted Project Equalshyity in Tennessee SlADES FERRY TRUST COMPANY

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llhe most friendly democra~ic BANK offeringCORREIA amp SONS ONE STOP Complete One-Stop Banking

SHOPPING CENTER Clubmiddot Accounts Auto Loans Checking Accounts Business Loansbull Televisiolll _ Furniture SllDvings Accounts lleaiEstate Loansbull Appliances _ Grocery

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Member Federal Deposit Insurance CorporotiBy the Village Green Since 18217middot354

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-11lun Apr 20 1961 12 - )

Irish Emigronts Concern B~hops inmiddot Pgstoral

DUBLIN (NC)-Thespiritual and social needs of Irish 0trtifirants and the importance of preparing them for their new life in other countries were major concerns of the

Irish hierarchy at its meeti~g here in- Maynooth In a pas~ toFal on emigration it wasmiddotmiddot pointed out that while de- parture of Irish people foigt residence in other cuiitries is on the decline those who do leave ~can be an enormous force formiddotgoodmiddotin the lands they go to if they have the right ideals and motLves and abilities properly developed

Without these the pastoral adds the alien enironment in which they find themselves may presen~ serious dangers to the spiritual and moral wenfare ~

the weaker ones Education and religious formashy

tion of young people by the bullbull schools and by the clergy coopshy

erating with teachers were cited as most effective contriilgtutiona

to the formation of those likely to emigrate

Among recommendations made in the pastoral for properly pi-eshyparing potential emigrants for livingin other lands were

Young people should be enshycouraied to remain in schooias long as they can benefit from H

Emphasis on the virtue of tem perance

The utilization of youth club activities (discussion clubs and

guiles) to help young members to acquire healthy and natural

sOcial graces and habits The aid of priests in helping

the young people to grow up to

confident maturity Counse by priests on expected

problems of housing suitable

I

REV ALBERT F SHOVELTON

Priest to Spe(l]llc At Seminar

Rev Albert E fShovelton dishy

rector of Sl Mary Home New Bedford will speak as a represhy

sentative of the Diocesan Comshy employment dangersmiddot to health Unity atNClline Committe~ longhours of work in other the75th anniversary celebration

countries advanced atrange- at Holy Trinity LutheranTo SurveyCU mentS with Catholic welfaeChurchNorth Easton Thursday agencies in countries 9f their April 27

CHIltAGO (NC) - The board choice and the provision of in Father Shoveltons talk ~iU of trusteesof the Catholic Uni-formlltion concerning facilities be part of aseroinar middotHe wili be versity of America Washing- abroad for emigrantS preceded by Rev Dr Nils Ehtenshyton D9middot his est~blished it ne~ ~he h6ldin~ Of Irisit~nhlli~middot 8~rom Boston University School survey and ogtlectlODs ~()mmlttee lft llt1rge centers lt ~ Theology whose subject will headed br ~ St ~OU~1l1(ly~a~ Aparishnewsletter s~nt be Ecun1eni~m in Protestant to study ~he funct~op and plaOl th I fmiddot h middotmiddotf g Perspective Today f th Cmiddotth li U -Of Of Dl0n y rom omemiddot 10 Or1ll1O ~ a 0 r ~vterslY~ lt the emigrants bfuricti6ns inFathel ShovElltons suoject will m~nqa ~r~o ern a hoh~ - the local parishes at Chri~tmaiJbe ~EcumeJ1ismin Roman Cllthshy

laCatton on middota national scale d thO t f th h oljc PerspectiveToday A dis-Th middottt an 0 er lmes 0 e yearw en JJ

e cozpml ee~~made up U4 they mightmiddot possibly be home~uss)n period will follow SIX laymen and four archbIshops ) The audience will be comshyall of whom ar~ pr~sent trustees _ prised of the Lutheran parisa o~ the u~lverslty Formatu~n at Southern PrOVince cmgregation the townspeople ~he conrrutteewasannounce by ~ _ the towns clergy and the stll~ FrancII Cardinal Spellman of Favors DIGcoraate ~ dents at Holy Cross Fathenl New york ch~rman of the MIAMI CNC)Bishops of the Seminary Catholic Urnverslty board province of Atlanta have giyen Pastor of Holy Trjnity is Rev

The appointment of the com- p~sts in the six-ctiocese area Kenneth E Bjorklund

nlission for Christian

SAVE DOLLARS

with the MERCHANlS

84EconomOO

Auto Loan Pian

mittee came against a backshyground of reports that the U S bishops might transfer its Ionshytrol of CatJlolic University to 11 group of laymen The univershysitys rector Bishop William J McDonald has denied the middotreshyports but the chairman of the

new commi~ee Dr Ca~roU Hochwalt SaId the commIttee has been given the widest posshysible mandate from which nothshying will be excluded Our assignment Dr Hochshy

walt saidis the most farshyreaching one possible We are to take a reaiistic look at every aspec~ of the university all it has developed under its original directive since 1889 and at its potential for the forseeable

gt futule It is obviously the trusshyteef desire to leave no qtiestfon unanswered which may aftect the unfyersityas anational-hlsti tution 1its ~aculty students ~d

permission to hear confessions in the entire province and they have also asked the National Brothers VOuDlltee~ Conference of Catholic BishoPs As firefilllhters

to consider restoring the perma- nent diaconate in dioceses that want it

The two decisions were ~~_ nounced after the Bishops held their annual meeting in Miami

Archbls~OP P~ul J Hallman of A~lanta SaId l~ IS cus~omary ~or prtests t~ receIve theIr faculties from theIr own dl~cese and they h~ve been restncted o use wlthn that diocese EffectlVelmshy

II NORTHBROOK (NC) - Four

of the 34 men in the Northbrook volunteer fire department here are religious Brothers They are assigned to the national headshyquarters of the Society ofmiddot the Divine Word at nearby Techny Ill

The Brothrs are on call any time the Northbrook first stashytion standby has two or less men on duty for all general

the Cliurcli and the nation ift ~ J llmohgihemthejt haVe fouglU serves~ ( I i) middotClosingmiddotMeasure middotisome 50fires lti

j middot5T PAUL (NC)4AbilLban

Dedicate Monment ~ing ~l)e sale pf spe~iti~mtr 0ROURKtr chandise on Sundays has heen ~

To adFe Serra middot houses bullbull FunealHomepassed b)-both of the j

medl~telY all pne~ts In good alaons and for any fire or emershystandmg may nw he~r the con- gency when additional personnel fesslOns of Iemtents 10 the A- are needed Their volunteering la~ta archdIOcese ~nd th~ 41- was approved by the superiors oces~ of Sva~nah Charleston andmiddot the seminary bought them II ~alelgh MIami and St Augus- veh~C1e to expedite transportmshy

tine tion when they answer a fire ~ ca~I

Solons pass Sun JI n y The Brothers estaimat~ that

S_CRAMENTO (NC) dDme MinrElsota legislatureGov~aJ monument of Padre runipero old LeVander of Minnesota was Serra OFMwassolemnly ded- exPected to sign it into law icated on the grounds of tille The legislation forbids the sale State Capitol here Saturday OIl Sundays and six holidays

The formal ceremonies were (New Years Day Memorial Day qonducted by officials of the Independence Day Labor Day state alld by officers of the Nll- Thapksgiving and Christmas) of tive Sf ns and Daughters of the cameras musical instruments Golden West The project haa phonographs and tape recorders been sponsored by the California radios and television sets jewel-State Legislature and the fra- ry clocks and watches furs terrial ~ orders who provided furni~ure and other home furshymatching funds to finance its nishings including appliances executi~n middotmiddotmiddotAlso wearing apparel ()all

S7J ~c~nd St~~ef

Fall River MOIss_ 679-6072

MICHAEL J McMAHON Licensed Funeral Director Regisfered Embalmer

D D II- bull _ 5u Ivan amp Sons

FUNERAL HOME

Father Noel F Moholy OFMkinds including footwear lug- 469 LOCUST STREIE1T vice postulator for the canorlizashy gage lawnmowers and 9ther tion of Ithe Franciscan friar who outdvor machinery and equipshy FAU RIVER MASS bas been hailed as Californias ment hardware and tools paints 672-3381 First Citizen and Greatest Pio-Illeer W3 the principal speakeII at the ded~cation

varnishes wallpaper and re-middot lated tools lumber and other buildine materials and supplies

Wilfred e~

Driscollmiddot

James IE

Sullivan Jr

Suburban Parishes Should H~lp Save City Parishes

WASHINGTON (NC)-Archbishop Patrick A YBoy1e of Washington appealed here to ~ubJrbanCatholic parisbes to come to the aid of poverty-stricken parishes in the inner city At least 10 Catholic parishes in the inner city need financial help to continue to ismiddotmiddoth d d - ize t II h told C Has ave ecrease s exlS e a ommumon though the schools have contimshy

breakfast of the St Vincent ued to operate at fun capacity de Paul Society and the Whll~ parish income has faUellil only way we can give it iI off school costs have risen ~ through our suburban parishes cause of increased salaries em-

Suburban parishes are hard ployment of lay teachers and pressed themselves he said with higher maintenance costs for most of them deepiy in debt 00- older buildings cause of new constru~tion and expansion Nevertheless they must inaiJpirit of true charity share their resources with our poor parishes

The archbishop said that one of the reasons flr the poor fi shynancial condition of the inner city parishes was the cost of operating their schools but said emphatically that none of these schools would be given up

If we didnt have to support our schools Archbishop OBoyle said nearly all Of our parishes couldmiddot take care of their basic needs But we are not going to giv~ up any of our schools as long as we can get Ii dime to support them

Not mentioning which parish was concerned he stated thatmiddot one middotitmner city parish received $54000 from archdiocesan funds las~ year

Msgr Thomas W Lyons Arch diocesanmiddot Director of Educatiot1 said th~t before the whije middotmigramiddot tionmiddot to the suburbs CathoUa constituted about 22 per cent 01 the Washington Population The Negr~ who replaced the whitea are only about JO per cent Cathshyolic The result is that the par

Parochial school tuiti6n which averages about $4 a month haa not kept pace with costs Msgr Lyons explained

The St Vincent de Paul Soclshyety-here recently announced a twinning program in whicb sOlue of the more affluent parshyishes adopt inner city parisheo and provide for their needs

Offers Folk Mass For Vocations

HOUSTON (NC)-Bishop John L Morkowsky of Galveston- Houston offered a special foUt MaSs for youth on World Day oL Pr~yer for Vocations at Sacred Heart co-cathedral here

Father William Steele diocshyesan vocation director said the folk Mass is being offered to atshytract the young people middotThemiddot homily duringmiddot the Mass dealt with vocations

Contemporarymiddot folk musiC composed by Ray Repp nation ally known folk song writer was played during the Mass Guitar aceompaniment was proshyvided by seminarians from St MaryoS Seminary here

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DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near RockdCiieA- N~RTH BANK-Acushnet Ave at CoHin Ave CENTER BANK-Purchase and WilliamSts

DRIVE-IN SERVICE AT AU BANKS

Cardinal Cushing Sees Decrease In Seminaries

BOSTON (NC)-The numshyber of Catholic seminaries in the United States will deshycrease because of the diffi shyculty of obtaining top-flight scholars to staH them Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston preshydicted here

Addressing the New England Conference of the Catholic Hosshypital Association the cardinal told some 680 nuns priests and

laymen that schools of theology both Catholic and Protestant will become more closely identi shyfied with the great colleges and universities of this country a system not unlike that of Oxford in England

Sharing the platform with Archbishop Cushing was Bishop Fulton J Sheen of Rochester N Y who urged Catholic hosshypitals to go outside their own walls to bring social and medical help to the poor

Go out into the slums he said Give two or three hours a day visiting poor families for healing and counseling

He also suggested that Cathoshylic hospitals in this country adopt hospitals in poor counshytries

In A Rut We can certainly afford to

have someone put up a hut in the poor world We have the spirit but we have gotten into a rut the bishop said

Bishop Sheen told the confershyence the hallmark of a Catholic hospital is that we serve each patient as we would serve Christ

Cardinal Cushing also preshydicted that rising costs of care of the sick will induce the fedshyeral government to become more closely identified in hosshypital administration

I was told he added that in some hospitals the cost of a bed per day is almost $100 There must be a ceiling somewhere

Salons to Study Divorce Laws

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey State Assembly has unanimously approved a resolushytion to establish a commission to study the states divorce laws The measure already passed by the Senate is expected to be signed quickly by Gov Richard J Hughes

Thp commission described by Governor Hughes as an effort to strengthen marriage has al shyready encountered the opposishytion of -the Monitor the Trenton laquoiocesan newspaper But the bIShOps of the states three other Oatholic dioceses have reserved comment -

Boih Governor Hughes and the commissions sponsor Sen Jereshymiah F OConnor are Catholics And while Senator OConnor would like to see the commission recommend liberalization of the states di~orce law - desertion adultery and extreme cruelty are the only grounds at present-he would also like other changes made

Among them are a- family eourt which would serve as

counseling agency as well as divorce court lengthening of the present three-day waiting period as a1 obstacle to quick marriages and anr a warning to young PershySODS of the seriousness of marshyriqe

Senate Election PROVIDENCE (NC)-Sixteen

members of the 26-member senshyate of priests for the Providence dJocese have been elected in the first part of the senates twoshyatage elections

REV PATRICK 3 ONEILL

NCIEA Appoints Fr ONeiU

Rev Patrick J ONeill Supershyintendent of Schools in the Dioshycese of Fall River has been apshypointed by the Superintendents Department of the National Catholic Educational Association to serve as a member of the nashytional committee concerning tbe shygrowth and development of diocshyesan and parish school boards

This committee under the chairman Rt Rev Msgr ONeill DAmour will serv() as an adshyvisory unit It will gather and distribute information concernshying the development growth and function of school boards

Father ONeill made an extenshysive study of functioning school boards throughout the country His work in organizing our Diocshyesan Board of Education and working with it during the past year has been commended

Newman Chaplains School at IHCJJlvOlId

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Newman Chaplains Asshysociation has added a second training school for priests and Sisters entering Newman work It will be conducted at Harvard University

As in past years a school will be held at the University of Colshyorado in Boulder Dates for both schools are June 113 to July 2

The Newman Chaplains School prepares priests and nuns asshysigned to the secular campus The faculty has been chosen on the basis of experience in the Newman apostolate and speciali shyzation in theology -philosophy script~reand counseliJ)g _

Wlhere A GOODNAME

Means A GREAT DEAL

GEO-OHARA CHEVROLET

1001 Kings Hwy

NEW BEDFORD

Open Evenings

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 13

Family Care Program forO Children The Paul A Dever State by the psychologists and pre-placement visits with the

School Taunton under the sponsorship of the Departshyment of Mental Health has recently begun a Family Care Program in an attempt tomiddot proshyvide some of its children with the experience of family life

screened by the social workers have all been approved by the schools physicians for the proshygram

These children are ready and able to enter into the commushynity said Dr John L Smalldon superintendent of the Dever

child to the prospective foster parents to determine the comshypatibility of the youngster with the family Once settled within the family the child will also be periodically visited by a schooi social worker to assist in the adjustment The youngsters

The program is initially seekshying to place approximately 20 selected youngsters in homes in

school Provides Funds

This program with its emphashy

would attend special educatiOD classes in public schoolll throughout the South Shore

the South Shore area These chidren have been selected for their advanced capacities for edshyucation and training and their abilities to adjust to a home enshyvironment

These children reconmmended

sis on the advantages of the proper fa mil y environment seeks through a gradual process to assimilate the child within the community

The Social Service Department at the Dever School will conduct

The Department of Mental Health which sponsorsmiddot similar Family Care Programs in sevshyeral other schools in the state is providing funds for the supshyport of the children

What do you do when you live on a Take a good look at your everyday very small island with over three and a - surroundings You are apart of the 20 half million people-say Hong Kong of theworlds populati~nthat has access Move to the suburbs But what if the to 80 of the worlds food That means suburb is Red China The only answer that the other 80 of the world must be is this-and rbe hundreds of thousands content with the remaining ~O Of who crowd these house- boats are lucky course you can read this and say So Ovlaquo half die people of the world ani But You cannot say to someone who taorneless-and most live in Asia is hungry come tomorrow We must

When we hear that three-fourths ol act today because tomorrow may be too cbe human race lives inpoverty or below late (pope Paul VI) Feed the man the subsist~ level these are the peo- dying of hunger if you have not fed pie we are talking about Do we know him you have killed h1m (Vatican II) what it feels like to subsist to know no Dear Monsignor OMeara 1 am attachshyother feeling but that of hunger It is ing my gilt 0 $__ to help right the impossible or we could never spend over imbalance in our world Please use it so 100 billion dollars annually on arma- that a missionary can feed the starving ments while 10000 die each day from name---------- shyyenJldernouri8bment address _~____

THE HOLYFATHER~S

FUND FOR THE POOR RT REV EDWARD T OmiddotMEARA NAT~NAL DIRECTOR THE SOCIETY POR THE PROPAGATION Of THE FMTH 36e 5TH AVE NYbull NY 10001

IN PALL RIVER YOUR DIRECTOR e RT REV RAYMOND CONSIDINE 868 N MAIN ST

THE ANCHOR~Diocese ofFa River-Thursbull Apr 20 19M

middotSocial Revolutmiddotion Is Needed In latin America Lands

From Social Revohitiiolll iin the New Latin America Edited by John 3 Considine MM

The possibility of orientating regional planning toward an overall solution of the pressing problems that concern more than one Latin nation could well engage Christian initiative writes Rene Atero The most typical example of this kind he sa)s concerns Social Revolution in Latin-~ershythe region of the Andean ica Most Rev Mark GMcshyMountains where peasants Grath CSC says Barbara numbering more than five Ward widely read Catholic

million live in thee different economist begins her book enshyltcountries possessing basically titled The Rich Nations and the

Poor Nations with the flat stateshy similar pro b- ment I suppose we are all lems Our asso- aware of the fact that we live in ciation with na- the most catastrophically revolushy~ional orgariiza- tionary age that men have ever

tions concerned fced middotmiddotwith deyelop- Social Revolution ment planning Vice-President Hubert Humshyin no way im- phrey who honored this meeting plies the im- with his presence last year proper subordi- writes in a recent issue of Forshynation of enti- eign Affairs Although the obshytie sund e r servation that Latin America is Church s p 0 n- in the midst of a political ecoshysorship to less effectual accom- nomic and social revolution has plishment under the state become a commonplace it is

On the contrary it is a ques- true tion of becoming involved in a The influential Chilean magashynew front in which Christian zine Mensaje published by the action is not only indispensable Jesuit Fathers dedicated an enshybut will be most efficacious in tire issue in December of 1962 to helping to enlist sectors of Latin the theme Revolution in Latin American society of top impor- America and followed this up

middottance for national dEvelopment withmiddot another special issue in With reference to the actual bctober 1963 on Revolutionary implementation of plans through Reforms in Latin America

well elaborated projectS we Early in 1964 the Civilta Catshyshould make certain that iden- tolica published in Rome by the tification and recognition as an Jesuits carried a critique of important part of the national these two issues of Mensaje by effort are given to current Father Jarlot which questioned Church activities already oper- the prudence of using the terio ating numerous projects of social revolution in a Christian conshydevelopment throughout the text pointing out that itia ltcontinent loaded with Marxist overtones

For example with regard to Not only does it signify rapid education we should lteall atten- c structural changes Father Jarlot tion to the fact that there aremiddot in asserts but also connotes vioshy

lence and some measure of hate Latin America about 5000 pri- and class warfare He would vate ed~cational insttutions pre- prefer the term evolution pared to share in current eduea- tional programs throughout the Social Revolution oontinent Mr Humphrey in the article

The private univemities andmiddot already mentioned asks the eenters of technical training inmiddot question Is it appropriate te the fields of agriculture labor define Alliance (for Progress) and cooperatives couY-a double policy as favoring social revolll shythe potential for plofessional tion - or should this word be and technical trainin1 if they avoided in favor of evolution 01 would participate on D national some other expression basis ir serving the more press- He anwers Evolution if ing needs of society carefully examined proves to be

Broad Horizons inadequate for it implies an un-We must work also in the pres- conscious non-deliberate change

ervation of the progress which that is slow and gradual has been achieved in the areas- What is required is conscious of social welfare now b~ing em- rapid change in the socioshyphasized (housing education economic structure a process public health) Lay groups such that can correctly and precisely as Catholic Action in different be called a revolutionmiddot If used spheres _ Legion of Mary St not as a slogan but in itS precise Vincent de Paul Carita3-which sense the policy of peaceful s0shy

up to now have directed their -cial and economic revolution is efforts mainly towards religion agtcorrect~haracterizatio~ofmiddot il~

t hid limce policy d If t middot an we are ac IVlless ou eJmiddot We should not hesitaietoi pand theIr programs a11d focus d tf l th t m some of their work on ilrojects I e~ I y o~rse ~es WI I ~i planned by specialists J JatmAmencaiJust ~ Presldcnt

This would permit the cltanel ~ohnson ~ssoclated hunseU WIth it in hIS war on poverty I~ng of theIr ~eal t~elr ~rga~l~a- throughout the world whenhe gtcent

tIOn and theIr splnt of saCrIfIce tl k d Iffit b bull recen y remar e a peaceshyas power u resources 0 e put f lItmiddot th i5 at the disposal of society Among u re~bo u IOn ~n ese areas such works surely programs of ~mossl Ie a VIolent revolutIon

IS mevltable community improvement will be especially attractive to tlhese lay groups

Thus the Church might con- sider putting its knowledge and resources to more effective use in preparing programs and projshyects for adaptation to national and regional needs

They should select carefully those with the capacity to fulfill so that they may obtain financing from national or international sources to complement their own eontributions thus enlarging the scope of their activities

In a study of The Church and

IELECVIltUCAL Ccntrac1lol$

944 County St

NeVi Bedford

I

Theres muchthat$ new at Firat National these days~ bullbull and this sign atthe meat oaeels one of the most exoltlng~

But- dont tlhlnk~ for a moment~ FIRST CHOICE MEAT I merely a n~w name If yo havntshopped our meat case Oa~ely youre In for happy 8urprlse~

Weve always enjoyed a great reputation formiddotmeat have always sold the pIck of oholce meats as Ih$p~cted and graded by the USDepartment of Agrloulture (USDA)

But now with our YouCome First policy our meat casel have taken on ~ new look

Our finicky p~IIQy~t~~reotlng oniy the ohoicest of the

oholce c has beoome believe It middotor not evet1lmiddotmol-e-flnlokye The trlmnilng and outtlng leoloser and mQre~a~e(ld ~ e bull to etJlv~ you th0 gie~tGstm~at vaYu9middotand most flavorful meats In lF~r2~ National hIS~O[y OLill oounters are the cieanes~ and our butohers mor~ eager than ever to lend you aweloomemiddotrneal tpia8lnlng Idea~

tiuohs gre~~ InQwsplrlt demanded a great new name II

fiRST CHOlom MEAT AU-

USDA graded and Inspeoted bull ann thel very plok of the oholce eaoh and every cut the best yoo oan buy~ Arnothefr way we provemiddot

Youconaflrst at Ilrlt National

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Arguments For Celibacy Outweigh Those Against

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Arguments urging that the requirement of eeHbacy of priests be set aside as an obshystacle to increasing vooationsare not sufficient Archbi-shop Gabriel Garribe pro-prefect of the Congregation of Semishynaries and Universities told a pressconfelence here My personal answer is that the arguments for celibacy cd the clergy are stronger than those against it He said he beshylieved there should be a firm affirmation in this respect and that it would maintain celibacy in the Latin Church

By doing so he said the quality ofpriesUy candidates will grow and through the quaUy of its priests the Church will harvest an increase in the quantity of candidates

The drop in the number of vocations the Archbishop stated Is due in part at least to the new attitude of todays youth and therefore requires changes_ in the traditional seminary formation

The prelate told the press that todays youth is much more fully aware of the whole world and far more sensitive to its problems than in the past Those responsible for seminary training must realize the importance of education and be capable of understanding the new generashytion of admiring them and of discovering for them the mission of the Church

StatistiCs Given Archbishop Garrone not e d

tj~at although there has been a falilng off in vocations generally there have been some surprising exceptions He singled out 1be

Dominican Work Continued from Page One

means that the approach will be intellectual rather than devoshytional and the emphasis win rest on accuracy on the truth of a statement rather than on whether it is opportune

In performing such a task mistakes 1n the form of partisan statements ~ld ill-balanced reshymarks are sometimes inevitable Father Hislop said

He affirmed the Dominicans loyalty to the Church but noted that it is often difficult for a vanguard intellectual group to express itself in terms that win not be misunderstood by the majority of Catholics

CCD Talks Continued from Page One

Tauntol as the speaker Mrs Mary Fuller of Buzzards

Bay will speak at the meetiDll in Bishop Stang High School North Dartmouth

At Bishop CasSidy High School Taunton the speaker will be Edward McDonagh-Of North Attleboro

Thomas Flangheddy of Taunshyton will address the meeting at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

The Cape area meeting will be held at Holy Trinity West Hallshywich with Miss Patricia llIIakle as speaker

Seek More funds WASHINGTON (NC) -Two

members of Marylands congresshysional delegation have introshyduced a bill which would make the government spend $75 milshylion annually for birth eontrol aid in the U ~ by 1973 The bin introduced by Sen Joseph Ty ings and Rep Samuel Freidel would propose $20 million the fkst year rising to $75 million bIV the fifth )ear Sta1e and loeal governments would provide _ edditiODal $25 mDJiclID br )87J

extraordinary development of vocations in Mexicp and in Yugoslavia and the stable continuity of recruitment in Poland

Among the statistics provided at the conference were the fact that the latest Church figures count 234000 Diocesan priests and 168000 Religious priests There are in addition 166400 Religious who are not ordained priests

One of the most heartening things in the vocational world picture it was pointed out hasshybeen the increase of priestly vocations in Africa Asia and Oceania

The growth of the local clergy has been a phenomenon of the last 40 years Today in Africa and Asia approximately 500 orshydinations take place every year

~regregampfsect ~ITOW(QJtfreg

$e~~ Aod WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep

Clement J Zablocki of Wisconshysin has introduced a proposal to correct U a defense education gap in American schools

Zablockis bill wo~ld amend the National Defense Education Act (NDEA) to provide federal grants for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment which could be used by children and teachers In parochial and private schools

In a statement on themiddot flOor Of the House of Representatives Zablocki pointed to inequities In

the present NDEA progra~ which Congress passed In 1958 to strengthen instruction in scishyence mathematics foreign lanshyguages and related subjects

An important provision of the act Zablocki said is Title III which provides matching grants to public schools for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment Non-public schools now are eligible only for loans for that purpose

Under Zablockis bill public authorities could obtain federal funds to buy laboratory and other special equipment which eould then be provided for use in non-public schools

In order to comply with matching provisions of the NDEA the non-public schools or groups of such schools would be required to prove they had spent an equal amount thenr selves for such eqUipment from private funds

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FALL RIVER AUXllLhARY AT MEETING Bishop Gerrard Auxiliary lBishop of the Diocese of Fall River is pictured at one of the sessions of the Spring meeting of the Bishops of theU Sheld in Ohicago NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 h A priI 20T urs 1967

Say~ ~Q~~OIP No SIQ7(~ ~ lovell

KANSAS CITY (NC) - The new role of a Bishop in the era of renewal has been spelled out here by Bishop Charles H Helmshysing of Kansas City-St Joseph

In addition to the age-old role of teacher Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop today must read stud) and apply the teachings of the Second Vatican Council the Gosshypels expressed to meet the needs of the modern world In short Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop must be a slave of love to serve as Christ served mankind

Bishop Helmsil1g spoke at the consecration of Auxiliary Bishop Joseph V Sullivan 45 of Kansas City-St Joseph

Bishop Sullivan is the fir~

native of this Missouri city eleshyvated to the hierarchy He was ordained to the priesthood June 1 1946 has served as chancellor of the diocese since 1957 and was named Bishop by Pope Paul VI last month

MarltqJ MregGGreg TJ~ ~~i MILWAUKEE (NC)-ALuthshy

eran scholar will teach Lutheran theology to graduate students at Marquette University here start shying next September Dr Kenneth G Hagen assistant professor of religion at Concordia College Moorhead MinJl will be the Marquet~e theology departmentu first full-time visiting scholra unshyder a grant from the Louis Calshyder Foundation in New York

-THREE LOCATIONS bull youre lookIng for the best in banking se~lce come 011J in to The NationalBank With the opening of our Stafford Square Office were now nearer to even more of you rOll the Greater Fall River area and each of our offices has Just aboUt every service you could want for yourself andl your family We mean M when we say were your FuID lervice BankPft

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t6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~n River-Thurs~ Apr 201967

Friend~2 [iJescribes Stru~g~ For QM~gtLy in T~~regwo~~~

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Rennedy When Fred W Friendly resigned from the Columbia

Broadcasting System in 1966 he ended a 16-year association with that network His trials in broadcast journalism are tbe subject of his new book Due To Circumstances Beyond Our Control Control bull Managements obligation is toRandom House $695 457 protect the interests of these Madison Avenue New York stockho~ders

NY 10022) But this volume But Mr Friendly is concprned is far more than a personal about the other stockholders memoir It is the story of th~ the 195 million citizens who

grant CBS and the other broadshybattle a losing casters the franchise to use theirbattle of course air for quality in

FCC Gutlesscommercial tel shyOne might naively expect that

~vision The the Federal Communications

main point is Commission would effectivelythat the story is here told by an insider Mr Friendlys middotfame criginally gprang from his close associashytion with the late Edward R Murrow He was Murrows partner in the prepashyntion of such pioneering and still unparalleled series as Se~ lil Now and CBS Reports

After Murrow left CBS and wentmiddot into governm()nt service Mr Friendly became president

of CBS news He resigned that ~sition because of a clispute conshycerning the broadcasting of Senshyate hearings on the Vietnam war

Many ancient or recent conshyfilets over broadcasting policy are rehearsed in this hook There fta for example a detailed acshy~unt of the hassies concerning Murrows TV _program dealing with Senator McCarthy before McCarthys downfall as the reshyault of the hearings in the Spring of 1954

There are briefer accounts of other skirmishes Thflse are all interesting and instructive But the value of the book lies not so much in these reminiscences as fin Mr Friendlys knowledgeable analysis of the process whereby television has retreated more and more from public service and become a purveyor of junk and garbage littering the American Iiving room and worse the American mind with trash

Geared to Prcfit Many factors account for this

perversion The principal one is greed Television is geared to private profit not puqUc service lLast years whopping profits will not suffice this year There must be sizable increase

This is to satisfy stockholders Mr Friendly asked William Paley chairman of the board Why do we have to make more money every year The reply was We have many small shareholders across the country and within the companybullbullbullbull

Subcommittee Sets Hearings on Smut

WASHINGTON (NC) -The House Select Subcommittee on Education is holding hearings beginning today on a bill to esshytablish a National Commissionmiddot on Noxious and Obscene Matters and Materials

Subcomllittee chairman Domishynick Daniels of New Jersey is sponsor of thc bill which would provide for a 16-member panel to study the problem of obscenity and recoqunend means Clf dealing with it

On the same day that the hearshyings were announced two other congressmen Arnold Olsen of Montana and Glenn Cunningham of Nebraska introduced bills to curb the mailing of obscene matshyter Olsens bill has bpoundlen enshydorsed by the Post Office Deshy~artment

protect the interests of the other 195 milion But Mr Friendly on the basis of close observation has -no kind words and no reshyspect for the FCC For all pur- poses the agency is toothless and gutless

To make even more money for the shareholders every possible penny has to be wrung out of the advertising medium which television now essentially is This consideration governs proshygramming

It might be supposed that even if prime time at night must eco- ~

nomically go chiefly to programshyming which brings in the maxishymum advertising dollar there is ample opportunity for public service broadcasting in the dayshytime hours But no pienty of money is to be made from dayshytime advertising

Endless Re-runs Three soap companJes alone

spend $290 million a year on television advertising and a lot of this is directed at housewives during the daytime And the programming dictated by this advertising comprisesmostly old old movies and endless re-runs of stupid situation comedies

Huge profits (are) being realshyized from the use of the miracle of television as a transmission belt for retread serials soap opshyeras game shows and the like The yield from the detergent deodorant bleach or food advershytisers who possess the daytime schedule (whose annualexpendishytures (are) some $130000000 ) is the principal reason why no serious progtamming can be sustained for any length of time during these hours

l3y serious programming is meant such things as crittcal UN debates (for example on Vietnam) vital congressional hearings the Popes visit to the UN Churchills funeral etc) Some of these have in fact got on the air and even for a conshysiderable period oftime b~t alshyways there is a major bitter battle involved

Educational TV What may not be realized is

the power of the local station n is by no means meekly subshymissive to the network It largely gqes its own way and its wayis in search of the utmost in profits

It is this fact for example which accounts for the nonshyexistence of a good solid repre~ sentative late-evening news broadcast over the nekwork The local station prefers to put on its own scrappy superficial travesty of a news program beshycause it can get-in an excessively large number of profitable comshymercials

Perhaps there is some hope in the field of educational televishy

sion Mr Friendly is now enshygaged in exploring that possibil shyity For our sake may he be successful At any rate we must thank him for reminding us of our tolerance of the criminial misuse Qf the air waves

H E A 0 S UNIVlERSliJIY New president of St Bonashyventure University St Bonashyventure N Y is the Very Rev Reginald A Redlon

OFM formerly of St Franshycis College Rye Beach N H The university Is operated by the Holy_ Name province of the Order of Friars Minor NC Photo

Issues GlLIidelimiddotnes For IEcumenism

LITTLE ROCK (NC) - Ecushymenical guidelines dealing prinshycipally with the conduct of Catholics at Protestant functions have been issued by Bishop Alshybert L Fletcher of Lttle Rock

Composed of the diocesan ecumenical commission the gUidelines specify that Catholics may attend Protestant church services participate in the singshying and common prayer but may not act as a reader or officer of such services

The rules permit Catholics to serye in wedding parties at mar- riages in Protestant churches providing the service does not involve a Catholic or a divorceci person Attendance at baccalaushyreate services in a church or elsewhere is permitted

Under the rules Catholics may not act as sponsors at Protestantmiddot baptisms Oi confirmation nat Jlarticipate in intercommunion services The guidelines encour- age Protestant attendance at Catholic services

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Misunderstandingmiddot Faced In Ecumenical Meeting

Roman Catholic and Lutheran theologians agreed here after their fourth meeting that many misunderstandings had been overcome on the Sacrament of the Lords SuppeR -Holy Eucharist-but that further examination is necesshysary The doctrinal consulshy to the concrete worship life o1Ztation held at the headquartshy the Church ers of the Lutheran Church In a prepared statement reshyin America was the fourth leased ft the conclusion of the in a series sponsored by the closed meeting the group noted Bishops Committee for Ecumenshy that in contrat to topics disshyism and Interreligious Affairs cussed at the first two meetings of the NCCB and the USA Nashy -the Nicene Creed and Baptismtional Committee of the Luthershy -there have been historically an Wotld Federation serious disagreements between

Main themes discussed at the the confessions concerning the three-day meeting were the Eucharist Lords Supper as a sacrifice the All participants the stateshymanner of Christs presence in ment added agreed that many the Sacrament the import of the misunderstandings had beellll concept of transubstantiation overcome as a result of the latest and the relation of these issues meeting

HOW TDCURE LEPERS

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For our eIght edlcal Sisters In P1rappancode south India today is just a normal day Doctors bags In hand they are out In the villages eKmiddot amlnlng everyone for leprosybullbullbullbull Leprosy can be cured If diagnosed early says Sister Elizashybeth a surgeon Better yet Itcan be prevented In this case an ounce of prevention is worthten pounds of cure bullbullbull The cure is cheaper than penny nely Only $850 buys 10000 Dapsone _ mIracle tablets enough for 43 lepers for a yeerl bullbullbull The effort In Pirappancode islnternashytional German Catholics built the 25middotbed ho pital (1St Johns) French Catholics gave a workshop (for therapy) and an American friend of ours has pledged a convent and chapel Now the Sisters need medicinps a $200 microscope a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for treating children especially In farmiddotflung villages Will you help them Monsignor Nolan will acshyknowledge your gifts promptly and the Slste win pray for you aware you are helping them cure lepers as Christ did -

WHAT YOU CAN DO IJ $5000 gives the Sisters a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for fighting leprosy at Ita source (A sign on the side will featu re the name ofyour favorite saint and your name ifyou wish)

IJ $1500wlll give theSlster-surgeon an ope Instable Shes ustng akitchen table now

WOULDc $575 buys a whirlpool beth $100 a sterilizer

NEED C $300 pays In full ~or the two-year training 01 IF a native Slsternurse She will write to you

YOU WERI C $240 ($5 a Week) takes care of bull fuMmiddottlme

~IlAII IA8T WlILflARIi ASBDelATIGN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN PresIdent

MSGR JOHN G NOLAN Natlonal8ecretaIJ Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc S30 Madison Avenuemiddot New York NY 1001 T~one 212yUkOft 6-5840

rHf ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Apr 20 196717

CATHOLIC (HAR~l~~S AP~EAL SILVER JUBILEE YEAR

MAY 7-17

What does it mean to you The opportunity to raise your sights to the level of a $2500 Jubilee Gift

An act of aratitude for 25 years of Charitable Seice

Bishop Connollys love for exceptionoillhiidren cannot be

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THE ANCHORshy~18 Top East C~ast College Hoopsters middotPlay )Sees SociaI EquityThurs April 20 1967

Still Lagging Anglicalfj)~ ~teview At I(ennedy Center For P C Alumni In Spain Antii Cali~~i~ By Patricia Francis MALAGA (NC) - Spain

was taken to task for lagging1562 C~~lireglf A full house crowd saw some o( the East Coasts top collegIate basketball players behind many other countriesLONDON (NC) _ The demonstrate last week how basketball should be played Occasion was the 8th annual hi the development of a

ehurch of England has set Scholarship Basketball Game sponsored by the Providence College Alumni Club of New just Christian social and ecoshyup a permanent commission Bedford at Kennedy Youth Center in New Bedford Initiated in 1959 to - raise nomic life at the 26th Spanish C1)n Christian Docbine with tis first task to consider recastshying or replacing that churchs historic charter of the Thirtyshy~Hne Articles of Religion which

are strongly anti-Catholic In tOne

They are regarded by many as o stumbling block to Christian ~ity The articles drawn up in 1562

for the avoiding of diversities $pound opinions and for the establishshyhtg of consent touching truereli shygion must be publicly accepted py the clergy at ordination

They have become a matter of ~increasing objection lind some

Anglican clergymen now feel talat they should not be called Upon to subscribe to doctrinal definitions which reflect views formed in the 16th oentury aarship is a $2400 one paid at the time of extreme and bitter reli- rate of $600 a year to the winner gious controversy Next award will be made in

The articles denounce the 1970 TheRevEdwardC Duffy eurohurch of Rome as erroneous in chairman of- the scholarship matters of faith and declare games and recruiter of the among other things that theplaye~s who participate emphashyBishop of Rome hath no jurisdic- sizes the scholarship is open middotto tion in this -realm of Englandany deserving boy who has been Some prominent Anglican clergymen have blal1led the sharp declfnein ordination canshy

Qlidates on a reluctance to subshy~ribe to this document

Consider Advis( The new commission was apshy

pointed by Anglican Archbishops Michael Ramsey of Canterbury and Donald Coggan of York It consists of 17 members most of them theological professors repshyzesenting different schools of thought in the Anglican Church

Anglican Bishop Iar Ramsey of Durham is chairman The commissions general terms of reference say that it is

to consider and advise upon doctrinal questions submitted to it from time to time by the archshybishops and to plan when deshyslrable the investigation of

I ~uestions by other groups Its first task will be to conshy

sider the place of the Thirty- lege University of Rhode Island Nine Articles in the Anglican St Josephs of Philadelphia Bosshy

tradition and the question of ton College and Holy Cross subscription and assentto them There were Bill Blair Jim

Benedict Bob Kavolski and Bill Lasher of PC Mike FitzgeraldReligious Influence (of Mattapoisett) Henry Carey

In US on Wan~ -7- NEW YORK (NC)-Although

a majority of all Americans exshypressed the belief that 11eligion is losing its influence in the

United States in the latest Gallup Poll Catholics declined to-give majority assent to the opinion

The national survey showed tilat 57 per cent of all Americans in 1967 believe religion is losing its influence Only 14 per cent expressed this opinion in 1957

Among Protestants 60 per cent In 1967 compared with L7 per eent in 1957 said religion was losing its influence Forty-eight

per-cent of Catholics agreed in the latest survey compared with Beven per cent in 1957

Get Federal Funds PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A

Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyect under the auspices of Philashydelppia Archbishop John J Krols Commjssion on Economic Oppi)rtunity Programs hlils reshyceived $267980 from the federal government It was one of 74 Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyects in 30 states approved by Secretary of Labor W Willard Wirtz

accepted as a freshman at Provshyidence College regardless of the high school he attended

Primary Method William F Doyle president of

the NE Bedford club says the games are the alumnis primary method of raising money for the schoJarship fund

Since it was first held the game has attracted a following of avid fans-who help swell the scholshyarship treasury

Father Duffy feels it is the top post-season game in New England arid cites as proof the fact that his long time friend Bob Cousy Hoiy Cross All- Anierican and Boston Celtic great played in it himself two years ago It was his last game

Players who participated in this years money-for-scholarshyships game-all college seniors

represented Providence Colshy

scholarship funds for deserv- ing gr~duates of area high

schools the game profits enabled presentation of the first Edward J Tucker Memorial Scholarship of $2000 to Clifford Marr of New Bedford in 1962 Marr a graduate of Holy Family High was graduated from Provishydence College in 1966 and curshyrently is an Army lieutenant on duty in Korea

The second scholarship---named for the late 1r Tucker of Fairshyhaven a Providence College

graduate and one of the charter members of the New Bedford club--was awarded last year to Michael Doherty of New Bedshyford also a Holy Family gradushyate

Currently the four-year scholshy

Steve Chubin and Bob Boehm of the U of RI Richie Murphy and Greg Hochstein of Holy Cross John Austin and Ed Hock- enbury of Boston College and

f~nll lHoMsnln1~ fLaw Olhoc City EI1il(Jlcts

SPRIfiGFIELD (NC) - By unanimous vote of its five city commissioners this city has enshyacted a fair housing ordinance

The ordinance the third of its kind in OhiO becomes effecshytive May 3 Considerably strongshyer than the fair housing legisia- tion enacted by the Ohio Legisshylature in 1965 it outlaws disshycrimination in the sale or rental of any housing excepting only dwellings for members of reli shygious organizations or housing established for one sex only

Springfields new ordinance came as the res~lt of an improved climate of racial harmony The citys mayor Robert C Henry is a Negro whose performance of his duties has won wide reshyspect In recent years an Urban League has been launched and has made considerable progress A Human Relations Commission is functioning

PROVIDENCE COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP In atshytendance at PC Scholarship Fund Basketball Game in New Bedford were William Doyle presidentof the PC Club of New Bedford and Michael Doherty present scholarship recipient

Billy Oakes Marty Ford and Tom Duff of st Josephs the nations fifth-ranked_ team

Sees lay Teachers

Form Asso~iataon CLEVELAND (NC)-Groundshy

work for a diocesan lay teachers asso~iation was laid at a meeting of representatives of 21 diocesan high schools here

shy Patrick Bruening teacher at St Josephs high school and temshyporary chairman of the new unit said the association is an organshyization of professional people seekint professional growth

He added Only after we have proven ourselves as professionshyals with a professional attitude

about our job can we ask for and hope to get professional consideration I

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lhe players enjoyed demonshystrating th~ir proficiency The fans enjoyed watching the demonstration ~ and the scholar shipfund of the Providence Colshylege Alumni Club of New Bedshy~ord teaped tbebenef~il ~fboth

~ Population Control WASHINGTON (NC) - U s

Sen J W Fulbright of Arkansas has asked for aCongressional appropdation of $150 million for increased population coritior asshysistanCe to developIng countries

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Social Week here Angel Cardinal Herrera y

Oria former archbishop of Mashylaga in a letter to the Social Week sessions deplored what he called a deficiency of Catholic influence in Spanish public lilfe declaring that Spain a Catholic nation was far from being a model of social justice

No Dialogue Earlier Auxiliary Bishop Rashy

fael Gonzalez Moralejo of Valenshycia ecclesiastical moderator of the SocialWeek sounded a simshyilar note declaring that where there is no dialogue between citizens and their government there is no democracy and such a society cannot call itself Christian

Cardinal Herrera said that ahead of Spain are nations who

have learned how to organize their natioJlallif~ according to the norms of justice which are the daughters of consciElnce Sweden has progressed in the social and pOlitlclll o~der to such an extent that the ~ope

could state that its public ~n~ishy tutions are in harmonywith the teachings of the Seco~dVatican Council he said

1[Jpper ~Iasses Cardinal Herrera lirged the

upper classes of -the countryto contribute toward the formation of a sound and realistic public opinion by which religious conshycepts would be applied to the economic and social life of Spain

It is necessary he said to diminish the differences in classes to work toward Unity not only in the economic order but also in i~ the education and

c~vic department

The Best

Car

Georgell Cluh Olf to Good Start mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Apr 20 1967

Taunton High Is Surprise In County Diamond loop former FltrrJDD Riweff CYOer on Scholagslvop ltltIt PIl1Jf$~ns

By PETE~ BARTEK Norton High Coach

Coach BiD Georges Taunton High diamond aggreg~

tion is the early season surprise in the Bristol County schoolboy league now in ita second week of the eampaign The pennant race appeam ~ be developing into one of the most exciting in many years Five clubs are battling of Ule better area clubs year fOIl the coveted flag And after year

Coach Harold (Chet) Haneshywhile action is fast and fm-shywichs Bishop Feehan High teamiOWl in the BCL the eight N3rshyof Attleboro has tucked awayragansett League teams are early season wins over Northgetting I e Q d y Attleboro and New Bedford Voshy

lor the chamshy cational The latter two will pionship race m probably fight it out fornext-toshytheir COmpetishy the-last place in the final standshytion Delayed ing as they seek to avoid theboth by rain and cellar Ii old weather The two top contests on nextCOaches h a v e Mondays BCL card will seebeen reminding Coyle playing Durfelte at Alumnitheir charges of Field in Fall River while Taunshythe pitfalls of ton journeys to North Dartmoutheareless loose to clash with stang Two northernplay and also Peter eounty rivals Attleboro andthe IOOmmission Bartek Feehan meet at the formers of Deedless errors which ean field next Monday when North relegatea club to an early Deeshy Attleboro travels to New Bedshyond diviaion berth from which it ford to take 0111 Vocatlonal win be bard to emerge as 1M Nury Contests oompetition progresses Meanwhile the Narragansett

Chausse and JlaJkut loop is comple~ing its first week The Herring City Orange and of play Its still a little early to

Black pulled the big surprise of make 8 judgment as to how thebe young season when it held clubs will stand at the end of thethe always strong Dullfee High

lI~mpaign team of Fall River to a 2-2 tie in Four Narry tilts are on tap for11 innings The prognosticators next Tuesdaybad been writing off the Georgeshy Coach Jack McCartys Caseeoached clan solely because they High Cardinals of Swansea willfelt Taunton would be unable to face Coach Jack Harts DimanJeplace Artmiddot Koska lost by gradshy Vocational team in Fall River uation in what looms as one of the

But Scott Chawrse impressed most interesting early seasonin his confrontation with the Fan games Coach Doug Baxendales River Hilltoppelll aDd now the Msgr Prevost High team of Fall same pundits who had relegated River will be at Dighton to meet Taunton to a lowly apot 8re the Coach Eddie Texeiras D - ~ first to admit that things will be Regionals Coach Ed Bibeau will much more pleasant for the lead his W~port High aggr~gashyTauntonians this Spring tion to Seekonk to middotvh( with

Stro~ Coyle Offense Coach Roger Hills charges The Admittedly an the doubting fourth Narry contest next Tuesshy

Thomases were not convinced day will see Coach Jack Brenshyon the basis of a single performshy nans Holy Family High teain of ance So Joe Majkut and Chausse New Bedford meeting Coach Jim Ulen eombined to throw a no-hit Sullivans Somersetmiddot High teamwin over Coach Dick Joyces at the latters field Attleboro High team Even the

Lanllers Ready most skeptical then conceded that Taunton must be reckoned On Ca~ Cod n nip-~pd~tuck

in the flag race battle is going on in that areas While Taunton High has heeD eon1erence schedule Four conshy

eGualling the early season attenshy tests are listed for the Capeway tion unexpected results have eircuit next Monday They are eccurred in several other diashy Oldmiddot Rochester (Mattapoisett) mond eontests Attleboro which at Barnstable Bourne at Wareshydid DOt seem destined lor gfeat bam Dartmouth middotat Dennis-Yarshythings this Spring provided the mouth and Fairhaven vs Lawshyfirst surprise w~en it toppled rence High at Falmouth Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Norton High in the Clover Stang High of North Dartmouth Valley Conference plays its first

Taunton then proved its mettle league game at home against when it defeated surprising Millis next Monday The Purple Attleboro Hickey has talent at - and White Lancers travel to Stang but his problem has heeD Medfield next Wednesday tv properly align his best playem Apparently they were not in the Score Governmentright spots when they went down to defeat at the hands of Coach On Lab~r Problems Jim Burns Msgr Coyle High

BUENOS AIRES (NC) -TwonJne of Taunton which has Catholic organizations have isshycwuted its way to two one~sided sued a joint manifesto criticizingviet(lries Coyles strength is in thlte Argentine government sayshyits offensive attack but it also ing it has failed to protect workshy

has a capable defense and pitch ers basic rightsJng staff to make a real run for Issued by the Catholic Youngthe BCL crown Workers (JOC) and Catholic _ Feehans Auspicious Start Action Workers Movement

Durfee while it may have been (MOAC) the statement alsotemporarily halted by Taunton called upon the bishops to be enpects to be among the leaders aware of the needs and goals of before the end of the week The young workers and the labor Hilltoppers looked good in winshy class and to be brave in ltexshy

double-header from Pil-shyning a pressing the Churchs doctrine grim High of Rhode Island last as applied to real-life situations weekend CoachJoe Lewis feelsmiddot It said that the government his boys can now maintain the which calls itself Christian but momentum they have generated is anything but Christian has in the non-league affairs It goes nothing to do with the Gospelalmost without saying that one or Christs teachings or with the off-day is not going to thwart Churchs doctrines as defined by the Hilltopperll wbo produce ODe the Second Vatican Councit

By JOE MIRANDA A Parsons College senior JRobshy

eli Bonalewicz of Fall River is -nearIng the end of a most sucshycessful college career both athshyletically and academically

Bob is attending Parsons in Fairfield Iowa on a baseball scholarship and has started bis third season as the colleges first strong catcher

neans List Student A Physical Education major

Bob has a minor in History and during the last marking period was named to the Deans List at Parsons -

A member of St PatrIcks Parshyish Bonny is a 1963 graduate of Durfee High School where he participated in football basketshyball and baseball

The son of Mr and Mrs Mathew Bonalewicz of 50 Chapshylin Street he is oile of five chil shydren ald has not yet decided upon a vocation

Bonny has two older brotherll a lieutenant and Mathew Jr II

staff sergeant both in the Air Force and stationed ubroad Bob also has two sisters Kathleen II student at Durfee High and Ma) Ann a grammar school pupil

Has f80 Average Bonalewicz recently returned

from a Southern baseball trip end gained excellent commendashytions from his coach Duane Banks for his performance as the Wildcats won 11 of 13 games

The Fall River player batted 430 belted three homers had nine runs-batted-in and seltlred 10 during Parsons first 13 games

Bonalewicz a 22-year-old 175shyJ)ound 5-8 giant enjoys playing baseball and so does his coach who scheduled 89 games last seashyson to set a ollegiate record fur the most games played in one year

Ankle IBjUlY

With the former Durfee backshystop handling the brunt of the catching duties until a knee inshyjury forced him to the sidelines Parsons won 72 lost 15 and twice finished in ti~d games called beshyca~se of darkness

The former St Patricks star in the CYO baseball program started poory this season finshyis middotng off the Southern trip with an ankle sprain but entering this week the ankle was in good shape and Bonny expected to take his regular spot behind the plate

Federal Agency Has Inter-Faith Advisors

WASHINGTON (NC)- A Catholic priest a Methodist minshyister and a Jewish rabbi have been appointed religious advishyBors to the United States Inforshymation Agency here

Msgr George G Higgins clIishyrector of the Social Action Deshypartment U S Catholic Confershyence the Rev Edward G Cu-middot roll superintendent of the Washshyington Northwest District ol the Methodist Baltimore Conference and Rabbi Richard G Hirsch dishyrector of the Relgious Action Center Union of American Heshybrew Congregations have been named to the USIA advisory panel

Officials of the agency noted that while it has had religious advisors since its inception this marks the first time an interfaith panel had been established

The purpose of the panel offi shycials said is to assure that the agencys handling of religious matters serves the best intlterest of the nation and its dlveraity of faiths

Bonalewicz also played for St Patricks T)iocesan championship team and for the Fall River Mershychants in the Newport Sunse~ League

As a senior at DUrfee Bonny was awarded the 1963 George Kaplan Memorial Trophy as the Hilltoppers best senior basketshyball player

His hustle and determination while performing for Durfee at Bostcm Garden during the anshynual Eastern Massachusetts Tecb tournament gained him the reshyspect and admiration of all that witnessed his efforts

Bonalewicz recently completed a practice teaching tour in an Iowa Junior High School and while tere coached the eighth grade team to a league chamshypionship

Earlier in the college year Bob_ was a member of the Parsons intramural flag football progmiddotam and received a trophy for his performan J

Despite the heavy bnsebaU schedule Bob has manged to keep hi grades above average and after the Fall semestershyshowed his prowess in the classshyroom by being named to the Deans List for the second time

DeMatha Winner In Hoop Tourney

WASHINGTON (NC) - DeshyMatha High of suburban Hyattsshyville Md scored an upset cliff shyhanger victory to cop the 12th national high sChool basketballl tournament sponsored by thE local Knights of Columbus J017 the fifth straight time

DeMatha avenged two regula17 season defeats by Mackin High Washington Catholic League

champ with its last minute 70-68 victory Mount Carmel of Chiengo took

third place with a 47-45 overshytime win over DePaul Acndemy of Chicago Northeast Cnthrt1ie of Philadelphia took fifth pIhce with a 77-74 win over St Petertl

B(~ BONALEWICZ of New Brunswick N J Catheshydral High of Trenton NJ Inpound

The oung catcher has been Dwight School of New York alslaquo) long known for his bullet like participated tlnrowlr arm and gained conshy Aubrey Nash DeMatha junloY siderable praise from opponents wall named the tournnmentl in 111gh school amateur and colshy most valuable player lege eompetitions for his savvy A 5-11 junior John Somogyftbehind the plate set three tournament records-shy

Three-Letter Man 40 field goals 108 points in threE Bonalewicz played football for games and 43 points in one game Don MontIe basketb~ll for Tom and tied another record ll-forshyKaram and baseball for middotJoe 11 from the foul line Lewis while at Durfee and also performed for Lewis Chathammiddot team in the Cape Cod League

The Fall Riverite cannot get FAIRHAVENenough baseball according to his mother Mrs Bonalewicz recalls LUMBER a game at Alumni Field when

COMPANYDurfee bested a Venezuelan team sponsored by the Peoplesshyto-Peoples program Bob was inshy Complete linejured and taken -to the hospital Mrs Bonalewicz remembers Building Materials then came back to finish the game hitting a home run to win I SPRING ST FAIRHAVENmiddotit for the Hilltoppers He wall voted the outstanding player in 993-2611the gameo

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I

THEANCHOR()ioltese of Fan ~tv~r-Thurs ApO 1967 ~ ~ middot-middotmiddotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ middot20

AT BISEIOPS CONFERENCE Facilities for offering Mass were provided by the Archdiocese of Chicago when 230 U S bishops met in semi-annual conference In left photo nine othel prelates concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Joseph TRyan of Anchorage Alaska In right

photo are Archbishop John F Dearde~ of Detroit at left president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and at right Archbishop Johl1l F Cody of Chicago conference host Bishops Connolly and Gerrard attended from the Fall River Diocese NC Photos

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HAPPINESS IS FAMILY REUNION A weekly radio reunion is Sula Spanish Honduras L~ft Barton Albert ham radio operator middot)liIl

enjoyed by Mr and Mrs Bernard Sullivan Holy Name parish Fall River Swansea connects the Sullivans with their daughter Right InSart Pedro

with their daughter Sister Anne Marie RSM missioned to San Pedro Sula Jack Gaffney performs the same service for Sister Anne Marie

Monastery VisitsSt~esses Serio~smiddot Ham Oplr~t~rs Arrangemiddot We~k~yRadiQ C1tat~ ChmiddoturchSituatilon CRAWFORDSVILLE (NC)C bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbull bull bull bullbull bull

bull bull 0In East -Germany BERLINmiddot (NC)-Christiari

ehurches in communist-ruled lEast Germa~y are suff(~ring from government harrassshymentand restrictions a Luthershy1m bishop told the eastern sec-

For Fa11 RiverParents Missionary Sistet Dr Eric Dean chairman of the religion and philosophy departshy

ments at Wabash College here Thursdays the most important day in the week to Mr and Mrs Bernard Sullivan in middotIndiana plans extended visits

of Holy NameparishFall River Its the day they talk to their daughter Sister Anne to severalmiddot Benedictine monas- shyMarie RSM assigned since last August to missi)n work middotin San Pedro Sula Spanish teries this year The visits Wt)ll

H h kl

onduras T emiddot wee y db

conversatIon is arrange y two h d

am ra W)

operators Jack Gaffshy be financed by a Carnegie gran~

receivedmiddot through the GreatLak~ ney in San Pedro Sula and Colleges Association Harton Albert of Swansea was on retreat However arshy with Sister from their livjng

tion oflt the synod of Germanys It came about tl)rough 3 rangements were made on the middotroommiddot ~eceptiori is excep~nt Protestant Church Council sPot for the first of the weekly noted Mrs Sullivan fully 88 middot~iiJbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbulliIbullbullbull_

The clergyman Bishop Fried- series of coincidences that conv~sations good as a local telephoriecallmiddot bull III rich Wilhem krummachet of Mrs SuliivaIi ascribesld the The luck extended to a fellow Another beneficiary ofthmiddot 11I11I J B ~ East Geimany said that SChool iuck6f the Irish and had its religious of Sister Anne Marie weekly radio reunion is REvmiddot bull ii ~~ld~~a~I~~V~~ti~~~~bel~~~~~~ ~t~~A~~~n~a~~nC~~i~~~~~~~ ~~~~~i~o~Sre~~~~r~~~~~~i~~~d~~~~~=~tOfS~tat~~~ ILUMBER CO beliefs 1 - $140 teleph~rie bill talkinllto ly appointment ~nd asked Mrs Mariesbrother bull bull

Lut~eranBish~~ ~~t Fr~liz th~~o~~~~g~~~riotin~~ri li~~tmiddote~r$Ullivan t if hSheWtohUld ~ewla~t a FOImiddotwonderlnmiddotg friends of the 11I 5middot0middot Dortmoutmiddothmiddot ~harf of Berlin chairman of th~ ~~SSl1g~ 0 er JTIQ er ar a Fall River Sister be it notedltGe~man Protestant C h u r c hmiddot rlidlO o~erator middotwho darra~ge a mmu~e slud MrAI~~rt r0rt~7 that she has middotexercisedmiddotthe name- and yan~ismiddot Council made similar charges at connectlOnmiddot for you said a WIth he got the PrOVIdence ~e western section of the synod frleId and someone else sug- Jlother on the phone and gave

I rgested Mr Albert middotwhom the h th of b IfoBejause the Eastmiddotmiddot lterman ~ r bull er e surpnsl e~ Ie as t t t t t b Sullivans- had )mown _for

some bull

she heard her daughter s vOICeIrovernmen res riC s col ac s e- t b th d th ht f ~ E t G -P t t ts Ime u a neVlr Qug omiddot J I don t even have to go tomiddotbullween as elman ro es in _ bl If and those in the West middotthe Protmiddot =~ a ~OsSI e channe omiddot cmmu ~wansea to talk said Mrs SII~ - t t d h ld t mcatlOnwIttISpamshHO1QQras livan Mr Albert can oConnec~

flS an syno was e middotmmiddot wo llec- S l middotmiddotmiddott d M tons one in west Berliri and the T~e ul Iv~ns VISI e r~ AI~ th E tB j berts t)oIle to talk over th~ e er ~ear as er m possibility of contacting-Sister

Catholics face similar pr()b- Anne Marie~ While they were raquoems because of a divi~~d G~r- th~re he demonsthitelt hi~ equip- ~an~ The East Gelman govern- ment fishing bull around the- airshyinen~ ~has prevented thej)ishops wavesmiddot and picking up an ama-middot ~here ~ om attending meetings o~ teur in -rexas

~he G~rman Bishops Conference To his feliow ham he menshyheld iiJ the West tioned that he was looking for

Join in Praytr an operator in Spanish HOlldurasmiddot BiShop Krummacher said at

the synod that iii the preslmtmiddot criss the Protestant churches must use evelY opportunity to join with Catholics in prayer Catholics and Pwtestants he llaid are bound together b~ the word of the Lord and a common Ilesponsibility

The bisho~ said Protestants in East Germany have made every effort to obtain relief fwm antishyJeligious discrimination but govshyernment authorities have reshyjacted all appeals for action

He said such refusals of the East Gelman regime to end the assaults on religion is partmiddot of communist strategy and planshy

ming To further their objectives he said the comTIunists will pelshymstip indoctrinating children in 1lheir ideology while interfering with the consciences and rights _ tJ children and their parenti

And the next voice wemiddot heard recounted Mrs Sullivan still sounding amazed was a man saying This is Sal Pedro Sula Spanish Honduras

Not only was Jack Gaffney th r operator from Honduras in te same city as Sister Anne Marie but it developed that he lived across the street from her

convent a~d had me~ her o~ sevshyeral occaSlOns- He ImmedIately offered to r~n across ~he s~reet and prmg Sister to hiS mlcro-middot phone lgtut it turned out that sie

Wins Festival Piize NEW YOEK (NC) - The

Search produced by Father Peytons Family Theater has received an award at Monte Carlo in the annual television

competition sponsored by the International Catholic Radio and TV Association

hiS radiO eq~llPrne~t to the tel~ phone and the Sulhvans can chat

Permit Experiment In bullShared Time P9RTLAND (NC)The Port-middot ~~nd school board has approvedai shared time experiment iii -Which children from a parochial ~chool in North Portland will attend classes part time in a nearby public school -

The experi~ent will inv~lve at first only physical education classes and will extend for only two middotyears

Children fro m Immaculate Heart parish elementary schoolwill be allowed to attend gym classes in Eliot school in the Qregon corrlmunity

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Bishop Medeiros Urges Justice ~ For Workers

BROWNSVILLE (NO) ~ Bishop Humbertltgt S Medeishyros of B~wn8ville whose diocese has been the scene of lPl 10-month strike by migrant farm laborers has told farm owners to meet their demands for highe) pay and bettei living eonditions

In a pastoral letter to all Cathshyolics in the diocese-most of the population - released today the bishop said

The present plight of the mishygrant farm workers of America is a constant reproach to our way of life

lFor 1lJse of Ail

They do not ask for charity They demand what is theirs by natural right When the affluent farmers pay a just wage to the migrant workers when they make it possible for him to supshyport himself and his family in frugal comfort and to provide education for the whole family they are not making a gift of their possessions to the farm worker they are simply handilg over to him what is his for they had arrogated to themselves what had becn given in common for Ute use of all

Migrant workers in the Rio Grande vaIiey surrounding Brownsville have been strikihg the larger farms for nearly a year in an attempt to get higher wages and better living condi- tions Their action supported by thc United Farm WorkersOr- ganizing Committee followed the limited success encountered by UFWOC laborers in Califomias lrape vineyards

Precarious Existence

But the Rio Grande workers have encountcred little successshyIllthough a recently organized boycott of produce has received growing support among the states food chains

Bishop Medeilos quoted libshyerally from both Pope John XXIII and Pope Paul VIs recent encyClical On the Development of Peoples in establishing the right of farm workers to adecent Jiving

But be also took note of the plight of Amcricas farmers themselvell who live out a preshylaquoarious existence unless they constitute large enterprises sllch as corporations 01 cooperashyiives

He urged both farmers and workers to organize in their own interest

Natural Ri~ht

Given the natiol~lr and even

aioll of Agricultule ald of fa~m workClS and of manyfarm own- ers in purticular it is urgent that they be aware of thei~ right

~~~o~~o~~~~C~~~i~II~~~~h I~~~~~ of development Which in the words of Pope Priul VI signifies ]lgte~cc

We know that every man hAS a basic natural right to form and join wOIkers unions which conshytribute to economic progress by dcfending his ights he said But thc circumstances of the times the world over indicate that for the common good it is also thc duty for both migrant farm workers and for farmers to form associations

The United States he said has bull duty to its miglant laborers llnd farmers which it must fulfill by passing apPlopliate legislashytion and using other suitable and dcmocratic means of assistance so that not only our tables but thc tables of the world may be blessed with the abundance of the fruits of the earth

lLO~AIJ INTEREST NIl IUSlHIOPS MEETING Disshy W Va Bishop Connolly Bishop Humberto IS Medeiros

cussing topics between sessions are Lawrence Cardinal Brownsville Tex and Bishop Joseph Brunini NatchezshySh~han Baltimore Bishop Joseph H Hodges Whe~]jng Jackson Miss

Churches Shore Latin America Failures

LutheranSees Stumbling Blocks Ahead SPJlINGFIELD (NC) -- The

Roman Catholic and Protestant churches have both failed in the past in Latin America and both face severe stumbli6g blocks in the future a Lutheran layman from Argentina said here

Dr Leopolydo Juan Niilus of Buenos Aires director of the Argentine Department of the River Plate Centre of Christian Studies discussed the Church in Latin America at a meeting of the Lutheran World Federations

Commission on Stewardship and Evangelism

He warned the group that in

too mlIlyquarters the Roman Cath~Ii~ Church has been the main whipping boy for the Latin AmeJican backwaldness~ and there hllS been too much selfshy

Some of the things atheist marxists are doingin our conti shynent should by heritage be added have bee) done by Christians

Looking toward the future Dr Niilus said there are very seshy

were stumbling blocks ahead for our Roman Catholic brethren also

Inseparable Unity They are he said being

hysterically requested by the supporters of the status quo tobecome their defenders once

again The Roman Church failed whenLatin America waS strug- glingJor its independence n may-all of us mayfail now

wheniHs struggling for its eco- lIlomic Independence Dr Niilus said that all

complacency and self-righteous- qhurdiesin Latin America roust ness about the positive role

quickly recognize that study and commitment as an insepshyarable unity is their most urshygent task if they are to play an effective role in the future of Latin America

They must study be said ~both political and economic isshysuell amplnd their theological imshy

Cancer Study lLOST UIS (NC)-The insti shy

lute Ior J)lolecular virology at St LOUiS University here in Misshy

bull souri has b~en awarded a $265shy

101 gJant from the National Canshyeer Instilute of the U S Departshyment of Health Jducation and Welf~re whic~ will enable reshysearchers to look for viral speshyeitic genetic material in himiavl elmcer

plicAtions and must be comshymitted to providing adequate pastoral CAre to those involvel in political and economic action

Pho~ClJI Archbishop Wons Sourin Medal

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Arc~

bishop John J Krol of Philadelshyphia bas received the annual Sourin Award of thc ] 17-yearshyold Catholic Philopatrian LiteJ1shyary Institute

The presentation marked the first time the award has beelll made to a member of the hieJ1shyarchy ]t is ordinarily given w a distinguished Catholic layman The Archbishop was cited 100 confident and courageous leadshyers~jP

played by the Protegttants in Latiq American social andeco N~w Music nomiltdeve~opment 1 PURCHAS~ (NC)-The Pius

Protestants be said have a X School of Litlllgical Music of share and~ responsibility in the Manhattanville College of the WHITE SPA creation of seriougt structural Sacred Heal1 here received maladjustments - both economic $20000 in grants from Charl~ and moral~ in Latin America ~nd Arthur Morgan Of New

York and John Morgan oi Most of the things our pro-Rockville Centre N Y to stimushy

gressive Roman Catholic bret~shy iae new music for the new BANQUETS bull WEDIl)~NG5imiddot P~RTIESilltc~national deprc~sed middotcondi-middot ie are doing today i~Latin m~rgy

America shouldbyheritage he -COMMUNION BREAKfASTSai~ have beel~~~nepygtrotes tants [ 11M3 PLEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

JEFFREY E SULLIVAN 993-778GFer~ Dome

MEMPHIS (NC)~Bi~tiopJoshySishopo~~~ed

550 Locust Street seph A Durick apostolic admin lFall River Mass istrator of the Nashville diocese received the first annual Human 672-2391 Relations Award from the Memshy Iltose E Sullivan CONVENIENT BANKINGphis Catholic Human Relations

Jeglrey E SullivallCouncil He was cited for his WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMSstands on human dignity and

at theequal job opportunities He reshycently instituted Project Equalshyity in Tennessee SlADES FERRY TRUST COMPANY

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llhe most friendly democra~ic BANK offeringCORREIA amp SONS ONE STOP Complete One-Stop Banking

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AfJ Somerset Shopping Arellll-BroSJhtman St BridgeThe IFIlDmouth National BankMM ABDen $t New Bedforcll FlIlMOUTH MASS

Member Federal Deposit Insurance CorporotiBy the Village Green Since 18217middot354

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-11lun Apr 20 1961 12 - )

Irish Emigronts Concern B~hops inmiddot Pgstoral

DUBLIN (NC)-Thespiritual and social needs of Irish 0trtifirants and the importance of preparing them for their new life in other countries were major concerns of the

Irish hierarchy at its meeti~g here in- Maynooth In a pas~ toFal on emigration it wasmiddotmiddot pointed out that while de- parture of Irish people foigt residence in other cuiitries is on the decline those who do leave ~can be an enormous force formiddotgoodmiddotin the lands they go to if they have the right ideals and motLves and abilities properly developed

Without these the pastoral adds the alien enironment in which they find themselves may presen~ serious dangers to the spiritual and moral wenfare ~

the weaker ones Education and religious formashy

tion of young people by the bullbull schools and by the clergy coopshy

erating with teachers were cited as most effective contriilgtutiona

to the formation of those likely to emigrate

Among recommendations made in the pastoral for properly pi-eshyparing potential emigrants for livingin other lands were

Young people should be enshycouraied to remain in schooias long as they can benefit from H

Emphasis on the virtue of tem perance

The utilization of youth club activities (discussion clubs and

guiles) to help young members to acquire healthy and natural

sOcial graces and habits The aid of priests in helping

the young people to grow up to

confident maturity Counse by priests on expected

problems of housing suitable

I

REV ALBERT F SHOVELTON

Priest to Spe(l]llc At Seminar

Rev Albert E fShovelton dishy

rector of Sl Mary Home New Bedford will speak as a represhy

sentative of the Diocesan Comshy employment dangersmiddot to health Unity atNClline Committe~ longhours of work in other the75th anniversary celebration

countries advanced atrange- at Holy Trinity LutheranTo SurveyCU mentS with Catholic welfaeChurchNorth Easton Thursday agencies in countries 9f their April 27

CHIltAGO (NC) - The board choice and the provision of in Father Shoveltons talk ~iU of trusteesof the Catholic Uni-formlltion concerning facilities be part of aseroinar middotHe wili be versity of America Washing- abroad for emigrantS preceded by Rev Dr Nils Ehtenshyton D9middot his est~blished it ne~ ~he h6ldin~ Of Irisit~nhlli~middot 8~rom Boston University School survey and ogtlectlODs ~()mmlttee lft llt1rge centers lt ~ Theology whose subject will headed br ~ St ~OU~1l1(ly~a~ Aparishnewsletter s~nt be Ecun1eni~m in Protestant to study ~he funct~op and plaOl th I fmiddot h middotmiddotf g Perspective Today f th Cmiddotth li U -Of Of Dl0n y rom omemiddot 10 Or1ll1O ~ a 0 r ~vterslY~ lt the emigrants bfuricti6ns inFathel ShovElltons suoject will m~nqa ~r~o ern a hoh~ - the local parishes at Chri~tmaiJbe ~EcumeJ1ismin Roman Cllthshy

laCatton on middota national scale d thO t f th h oljc PerspectiveToday A dis-Th middottt an 0 er lmes 0 e yearw en JJ

e cozpml ee~~made up U4 they mightmiddot possibly be home~uss)n period will follow SIX laymen and four archbIshops ) The audience will be comshyall of whom ar~ pr~sent trustees _ prised of the Lutheran parisa o~ the u~lverslty Formatu~n at Southern PrOVince cmgregation the townspeople ~he conrrutteewasannounce by ~ _ the towns clergy and the stll~ FrancII Cardinal Spellman of Favors DIGcoraate ~ dents at Holy Cross Fathenl New york ch~rman of the MIAMI CNC)Bishops of the Seminary Catholic Urnverslty board province of Atlanta have giyen Pastor of Holy Trjnity is Rev

The appointment of the com- p~sts in the six-ctiocese area Kenneth E Bjorklund

nlission for Christian

SAVE DOLLARS

with the MERCHANlS

84EconomOO

Auto Loan Pian

mittee came against a backshyground of reports that the U S bishops might transfer its Ionshytrol of CatJlolic University to 11 group of laymen The univershysitys rector Bishop William J McDonald has denied the middotreshyports but the chairman of the

new commi~ee Dr Ca~roU Hochwalt SaId the commIttee has been given the widest posshysible mandate from which nothshying will be excluded Our assignment Dr Hochshy

walt saidis the most farshyreaching one possible We are to take a reaiistic look at every aspec~ of the university all it has developed under its original directive since 1889 and at its potential for the forseeable

gt futule It is obviously the trusshyteef desire to leave no qtiestfon unanswered which may aftect the unfyersityas anational-hlsti tution 1its ~aculty students ~d

permission to hear confessions in the entire province and they have also asked the National Brothers VOuDlltee~ Conference of Catholic BishoPs As firefilllhters

to consider restoring the perma- nent diaconate in dioceses that want it

The two decisions were ~~_ nounced after the Bishops held their annual meeting in Miami

Archbls~OP P~ul J Hallman of A~lanta SaId l~ IS cus~omary ~or prtests t~ receIve theIr faculties from theIr own dl~cese and they h~ve been restncted o use wlthn that diocese EffectlVelmshy

II NORTHBROOK (NC) - Four

of the 34 men in the Northbrook volunteer fire department here are religious Brothers They are assigned to the national headshyquarters of the Society ofmiddot the Divine Word at nearby Techny Ill

The Brothrs are on call any time the Northbrook first stashytion standby has two or less men on duty for all general

the Cliurcli and the nation ift ~ J llmohgihemthejt haVe fouglU serves~ ( I i) middotClosingmiddotMeasure middotisome 50fires lti

j middot5T PAUL (NC)4AbilLban

Dedicate Monment ~ing ~l)e sale pf spe~iti~mtr 0ROURKtr chandise on Sundays has heen ~

To adFe Serra middot houses bullbull FunealHomepassed b)-both of the j

medl~telY all pne~ts In good alaons and for any fire or emershystandmg may nw he~r the con- gency when additional personnel fesslOns of Iemtents 10 the A- are needed Their volunteering la~ta archdIOcese ~nd th~ 41- was approved by the superiors oces~ of Sva~nah Charleston andmiddot the seminary bought them II ~alelgh MIami and St Augus- veh~C1e to expedite transportmshy

tine tion when they answer a fire ~ ca~I

Solons pass Sun JI n y The Brothers estaimat~ that

S_CRAMENTO (NC) dDme MinrElsota legislatureGov~aJ monument of Padre runipero old LeVander of Minnesota was Serra OFMwassolemnly ded- exPected to sign it into law icated on the grounds of tille The legislation forbids the sale State Capitol here Saturday OIl Sundays and six holidays

The formal ceremonies were (New Years Day Memorial Day qonducted by officials of the Independence Day Labor Day state alld by officers of the Nll- Thapksgiving and Christmas) of tive Sf ns and Daughters of the cameras musical instruments Golden West The project haa phonographs and tape recorders been sponsored by the California radios and television sets jewel-State Legislature and the fra- ry clocks and watches furs terrial ~ orders who provided furni~ure and other home furshymatching funds to finance its nishings including appliances executi~n middotmiddotmiddotAlso wearing apparel ()all

S7J ~c~nd St~~ef

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Father Noel F Moholy OFMkinds including footwear lug- 469 LOCUST STREIE1T vice postulator for the canorlizashy gage lawnmowers and 9ther tion of Ithe Franciscan friar who outdvor machinery and equipshy FAU RIVER MASS bas been hailed as Californias ment hardware and tools paints 672-3381 First Citizen and Greatest Pio-Illeer W3 the principal speakeII at the ded~cation

varnishes wallpaper and re-middot lated tools lumber and other buildine materials and supplies

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Suburban Parishes Should H~lp Save City Parishes

WASHINGTON (NC)-Archbishop Patrick A YBoy1e of Washington appealed here to ~ubJrbanCatholic parisbes to come to the aid of poverty-stricken parishes in the inner city At least 10 Catholic parishes in the inner city need financial help to continue to ismiddotmiddoth d d - ize t II h told C Has ave ecrease s exlS e a ommumon though the schools have contimshy

breakfast of the St Vincent ued to operate at fun capacity de Paul Society and the Whll~ parish income has faUellil only way we can give it iI off school costs have risen ~ through our suburban parishes cause of increased salaries em-

Suburban parishes are hard ployment of lay teachers and pressed themselves he said with higher maintenance costs for most of them deepiy in debt 00- older buildings cause of new constru~tion and expansion Nevertheless they must inaiJpirit of true charity share their resources with our poor parishes

The archbishop said that one of the reasons flr the poor fi shynancial condition of the inner city parishes was the cost of operating their schools but said emphatically that none of these schools would be given up

If we didnt have to support our schools Archbishop OBoyle said nearly all Of our parishes couldmiddot take care of their basic needs But we are not going to giv~ up any of our schools as long as we can get Ii dime to support them

Not mentioning which parish was concerned he stated thatmiddot one middotitmner city parish received $54000 from archdiocesan funds las~ year

Msgr Thomas W Lyons Arch diocesanmiddot Director of Educatiot1 said th~t before the whije middotmigramiddot tionmiddot to the suburbs CathoUa constituted about 22 per cent 01 the Washington Population The Negr~ who replaced the whitea are only about JO per cent Cathshyolic The result is that the par

Parochial school tuiti6n which averages about $4 a month haa not kept pace with costs Msgr Lyons explained

The St Vincent de Paul Soclshyety-here recently announced a twinning program in whicb sOlue of the more affluent parshyishes adopt inner city parisheo and provide for their needs

Offers Folk Mass For Vocations

HOUSTON (NC)-Bishop John L Morkowsky of Galveston- Houston offered a special foUt MaSs for youth on World Day oL Pr~yer for Vocations at Sacred Heart co-cathedral here

Father William Steele diocshyesan vocation director said the folk Mass is being offered to atshytract the young people middotThemiddot homily duringmiddot the Mass dealt with vocations

Contemporarymiddot folk musiC composed by Ray Repp nation ally known folk song writer was played during the Mass Guitar aceompaniment was proshyvided by seminarians from St MaryoS Seminary here

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Cardinal Cushing Sees Decrease In Seminaries

BOSTON (NC)-The numshyber of Catholic seminaries in the United States will deshycrease because of the diffi shyculty of obtaining top-flight scholars to staH them Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston preshydicted here

Addressing the New England Conference of the Catholic Hosshypital Association the cardinal told some 680 nuns priests and

laymen that schools of theology both Catholic and Protestant will become more closely identi shyfied with the great colleges and universities of this country a system not unlike that of Oxford in England

Sharing the platform with Archbishop Cushing was Bishop Fulton J Sheen of Rochester N Y who urged Catholic hosshypitals to go outside their own walls to bring social and medical help to the poor

Go out into the slums he said Give two or three hours a day visiting poor families for healing and counseling

He also suggested that Cathoshylic hospitals in this country adopt hospitals in poor counshytries

In A Rut We can certainly afford to

have someone put up a hut in the poor world We have the spirit but we have gotten into a rut the bishop said

Bishop Sheen told the confershyence the hallmark of a Catholic hospital is that we serve each patient as we would serve Christ

Cardinal Cushing also preshydicted that rising costs of care of the sick will induce the fedshyeral government to become more closely identified in hosshypital administration

I was told he added that in some hospitals the cost of a bed per day is almost $100 There must be a ceiling somewhere

Salons to Study Divorce Laws

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey State Assembly has unanimously approved a resolushytion to establish a commission to study the states divorce laws The measure already passed by the Senate is expected to be signed quickly by Gov Richard J Hughes

Thp commission described by Governor Hughes as an effort to strengthen marriage has al shyready encountered the opposishytion of -the Monitor the Trenton laquoiocesan newspaper But the bIShOps of the states three other Oatholic dioceses have reserved comment -

Boih Governor Hughes and the commissions sponsor Sen Jereshymiah F OConnor are Catholics And while Senator OConnor would like to see the commission recommend liberalization of the states di~orce law - desertion adultery and extreme cruelty are the only grounds at present-he would also like other changes made

Among them are a- family eourt which would serve as

counseling agency as well as divorce court lengthening of the present three-day waiting period as a1 obstacle to quick marriages and anr a warning to young PershySODS of the seriousness of marshyriqe

Senate Election PROVIDENCE (NC)-Sixteen

members of the 26-member senshyate of priests for the Providence dJocese have been elected in the first part of the senates twoshyatage elections

REV PATRICK 3 ONEILL

NCIEA Appoints Fr ONeiU

Rev Patrick J ONeill Supershyintendent of Schools in the Dioshycese of Fall River has been apshypointed by the Superintendents Department of the National Catholic Educational Association to serve as a member of the nashytional committee concerning tbe shygrowth and development of diocshyesan and parish school boards

This committee under the chairman Rt Rev Msgr ONeill DAmour will serv() as an adshyvisory unit It will gather and distribute information concernshying the development growth and function of school boards

Father ONeill made an extenshysive study of functioning school boards throughout the country His work in organizing our Diocshyesan Board of Education and working with it during the past year has been commended

Newman Chaplains School at IHCJJlvOlId

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Newman Chaplains Asshysociation has added a second training school for priests and Sisters entering Newman work It will be conducted at Harvard University

As in past years a school will be held at the University of Colshyorado in Boulder Dates for both schools are June 113 to July 2

The Newman Chaplains School prepares priests and nuns asshysigned to the secular campus The faculty has been chosen on the basis of experience in the Newman apostolate and speciali shyzation in theology -philosophy script~reand counseliJ)g _

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 13

Family Care Program forO Children The Paul A Dever State by the psychologists and pre-placement visits with the

School Taunton under the sponsorship of the Departshyment of Mental Health has recently begun a Family Care Program in an attempt tomiddot proshyvide some of its children with the experience of family life

screened by the social workers have all been approved by the schools physicians for the proshygram

These children are ready and able to enter into the commushynity said Dr John L Smalldon superintendent of the Dever

child to the prospective foster parents to determine the comshypatibility of the youngster with the family Once settled within the family the child will also be periodically visited by a schooi social worker to assist in the adjustment The youngsters

The program is initially seekshying to place approximately 20 selected youngsters in homes in

school Provides Funds

This program with its emphashy

would attend special educatiOD classes in public schoolll throughout the South Shore

the South Shore area These chidren have been selected for their advanced capacities for edshyucation and training and their abilities to adjust to a home enshyvironment

These children reconmmended

sis on the advantages of the proper fa mil y environment seeks through a gradual process to assimilate the child within the community

The Social Service Department at the Dever School will conduct

The Department of Mental Health which sponsorsmiddot similar Family Care Programs in sevshyeral other schools in the state is providing funds for the supshyport of the children

What do you do when you live on a Take a good look at your everyday very small island with over three and a - surroundings You are apart of the 20 half million people-say Hong Kong of theworlds populati~nthat has access Move to the suburbs But what if the to 80 of the worlds food That means suburb is Red China The only answer that the other 80 of the world must be is this-and rbe hundreds of thousands content with the remaining ~O Of who crowd these house- boats are lucky course you can read this and say So Ovlaquo half die people of the world ani But You cannot say to someone who taorneless-and most live in Asia is hungry come tomorrow We must

When we hear that three-fourths ol act today because tomorrow may be too cbe human race lives inpoverty or below late (pope Paul VI) Feed the man the subsist~ level these are the peo- dying of hunger if you have not fed pie we are talking about Do we know him you have killed h1m (Vatican II) what it feels like to subsist to know no Dear Monsignor OMeara 1 am attachshyother feeling but that of hunger It is ing my gilt 0 $__ to help right the impossible or we could never spend over imbalance in our world Please use it so 100 billion dollars annually on arma- that a missionary can feed the starving ments while 10000 die each day from name---------- shyyenJldernouri8bment address _~____

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THE ANCHOR~Diocese ofFa River-Thursbull Apr 20 19M

middotSocial Revolutmiddotion Is Needed In latin America Lands

From Social Revohitiiolll iin the New Latin America Edited by John 3 Considine MM

The possibility of orientating regional planning toward an overall solution of the pressing problems that concern more than one Latin nation could well engage Christian initiative writes Rene Atero The most typical example of this kind he sa)s concerns Social Revolution in Latin-~ershythe region of the Andean ica Most Rev Mark GMcshyMountains where peasants Grath CSC says Barbara numbering more than five Ward widely read Catholic

million live in thee different economist begins her book enshyltcountries possessing basically titled The Rich Nations and the

Poor Nations with the flat stateshy similar pro b- ment I suppose we are all lems Our asso- aware of the fact that we live in ciation with na- the most catastrophically revolushy~ional orgariiza- tionary age that men have ever

tions concerned fced middotmiddotwith deyelop- Social Revolution ment planning Vice-President Hubert Humshyin no way im- phrey who honored this meeting plies the im- with his presence last year proper subordi- writes in a recent issue of Forshynation of enti- eign Affairs Although the obshytie sund e r servation that Latin America is Church s p 0 n- in the midst of a political ecoshysorship to less effectual accom- nomic and social revolution has plishment under the state become a commonplace it is

On the contrary it is a ques- true tion of becoming involved in a The influential Chilean magashynew front in which Christian zine Mensaje published by the action is not only indispensable Jesuit Fathers dedicated an enshybut will be most efficacious in tire issue in December of 1962 to helping to enlist sectors of Latin the theme Revolution in Latin American society of top impor- America and followed this up

middottance for national dEvelopment withmiddot another special issue in With reference to the actual bctober 1963 on Revolutionary implementation of plans through Reforms in Latin America

well elaborated projectS we Early in 1964 the Civilta Catshyshould make certain that iden- tolica published in Rome by the tification and recognition as an Jesuits carried a critique of important part of the national these two issues of Mensaje by effort are given to current Father Jarlot which questioned Church activities already oper- the prudence of using the terio ating numerous projects of social revolution in a Christian conshydevelopment throughout the text pointing out that itia ltcontinent loaded with Marxist overtones

For example with regard to Not only does it signify rapid education we should lteall atten- c structural changes Father Jarlot tion to the fact that there aremiddot in asserts but also connotes vioshy

lence and some measure of hate Latin America about 5000 pri- and class warfare He would vate ed~cational insttutions pre- prefer the term evolution pared to share in current eduea- tional programs throughout the Social Revolution oontinent Mr Humphrey in the article

The private univemities andmiddot already mentioned asks the eenters of technical training inmiddot question Is it appropriate te the fields of agriculture labor define Alliance (for Progress) and cooperatives couY-a double policy as favoring social revolll shythe potential for plofessional tion - or should this word be and technical trainin1 if they avoided in favor of evolution 01 would participate on D national some other expression basis ir serving the more press- He anwers Evolution if ing needs of society carefully examined proves to be

Broad Horizons inadequate for it implies an un-We must work also in the pres- conscious non-deliberate change

ervation of the progress which that is slow and gradual has been achieved in the areas- What is required is conscious of social welfare now b~ing em- rapid change in the socioshyphasized (housing education economic structure a process public health) Lay groups such that can correctly and precisely as Catholic Action in different be called a revolutionmiddot If used spheres _ Legion of Mary St not as a slogan but in itS precise Vincent de Paul Carita3-which sense the policy of peaceful s0shy

up to now have directed their -cial and economic revolution is efforts mainly towards religion agtcorrect~haracterizatio~ofmiddot il~

t hid limce policy d If t middot an we are ac IVlless ou eJmiddot We should not hesitaietoi pand theIr programs a11d focus d tf l th t m some of their work on ilrojects I e~ I y o~rse ~es WI I ~i planned by specialists J JatmAmencaiJust ~ Presldcnt

This would permit the cltanel ~ohnson ~ssoclated hunseU WIth it in hIS war on poverty I~ng of theIr ~eal t~elr ~rga~l~a- throughout the world whenhe gtcent

tIOn and theIr splnt of saCrIfIce tl k d Iffit b bull recen y remar e a peaceshyas power u resources 0 e put f lItmiddot th i5 at the disposal of society Among u re~bo u IOn ~n ese areas such works surely programs of ~mossl Ie a VIolent revolutIon

IS mevltable community improvement will be especially attractive to tlhese lay groups

Thus the Church might con- sider putting its knowledge and resources to more effective use in preparing programs and projshyects for adaptation to national and regional needs

They should select carefully those with the capacity to fulfill so that they may obtain financing from national or international sources to complement their own eontributions thus enlarging the scope of their activities

In a study of The Church and

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Theres muchthat$ new at Firat National these days~ bullbull and this sign atthe meat oaeels one of the most exoltlng~

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Weve always enjoyed a great reputation formiddotmeat have always sold the pIck of oholce meats as Ih$p~cted and graded by the USDepartment of Agrloulture (USDA)

But now with our YouCome First policy our meat casel have taken on ~ new look

Our finicky p~IIQy~t~~reotlng oniy the ohoicest of the

oholce c has beoome believe It middotor not evet1lmiddotmol-e-flnlokye The trlmnilng and outtlng leoloser and mQre~a~e(ld ~ e bull to etJlv~ you th0 gie~tGstm~at vaYu9middotand most flavorful meats In lF~r2~ National hIS~O[y OLill oounters are the cieanes~ and our butohers mor~ eager than ever to lend you aweloomemiddotrneal tpia8lnlng Idea~

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Arguments For Celibacy Outweigh Those Against

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Arguments urging that the requirement of eeHbacy of priests be set aside as an obshystacle to increasing vooationsare not sufficient Archbi-shop Gabriel Garribe pro-prefect of the Congregation of Semishynaries and Universities told a pressconfelence here My personal answer is that the arguments for celibacy cd the clergy are stronger than those against it He said he beshylieved there should be a firm affirmation in this respect and that it would maintain celibacy in the Latin Church

By doing so he said the quality ofpriesUy candidates will grow and through the quaUy of its priests the Church will harvest an increase in the quantity of candidates

The drop in the number of vocations the Archbishop stated Is due in part at least to the new attitude of todays youth and therefore requires changes_ in the traditional seminary formation

The prelate told the press that todays youth is much more fully aware of the whole world and far more sensitive to its problems than in the past Those responsible for seminary training must realize the importance of education and be capable of understanding the new generashytion of admiring them and of discovering for them the mission of the Church

StatistiCs Given Archbishop Garrone not e d

tj~at although there has been a falilng off in vocations generally there have been some surprising exceptions He singled out 1be

Dominican Work Continued from Page One

means that the approach will be intellectual rather than devoshytional and the emphasis win rest on accuracy on the truth of a statement rather than on whether it is opportune

In performing such a task mistakes 1n the form of partisan statements ~ld ill-balanced reshymarks are sometimes inevitable Father Hislop said

He affirmed the Dominicans loyalty to the Church but noted that it is often difficult for a vanguard intellectual group to express itself in terms that win not be misunderstood by the majority of Catholics

CCD Talks Continued from Page One

Tauntol as the speaker Mrs Mary Fuller of Buzzards

Bay will speak at the meetiDll in Bishop Stang High School North Dartmouth

At Bishop CasSidy High School Taunton the speaker will be Edward McDonagh-Of North Attleboro

Thomas Flangheddy of Taunshyton will address the meeting at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

The Cape area meeting will be held at Holy Trinity West Hallshywich with Miss Patricia llIIakle as speaker

Seek More funds WASHINGTON (NC) -Two

members of Marylands congresshysional delegation have introshyduced a bill which would make the government spend $75 milshylion annually for birth eontrol aid in the U ~ by 1973 The bin introduced by Sen Joseph Ty ings and Rep Samuel Freidel would propose $20 million the fkst year rising to $75 million bIV the fifth )ear Sta1e and loeal governments would provide _ edditiODal $25 mDJiclID br )87J

extraordinary development of vocations in Mexicp and in Yugoslavia and the stable continuity of recruitment in Poland

Among the statistics provided at the conference were the fact that the latest Church figures count 234000 Diocesan priests and 168000 Religious priests There are in addition 166400 Religious who are not ordained priests

One of the most heartening things in the vocational world picture it was pointed out hasshybeen the increase of priestly vocations in Africa Asia and Oceania

The growth of the local clergy has been a phenomenon of the last 40 years Today in Africa and Asia approximately 500 orshydinations take place every year

~regregampfsect ~ITOW(QJtfreg

$e~~ Aod WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep

Clement J Zablocki of Wisconshysin has introduced a proposal to correct U a defense education gap in American schools

Zablockis bill wo~ld amend the National Defense Education Act (NDEA) to provide federal grants for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment which could be used by children and teachers In parochial and private schools

In a statement on themiddot flOor Of the House of Representatives Zablocki pointed to inequities In

the present NDEA progra~ which Congress passed In 1958 to strengthen instruction in scishyence mathematics foreign lanshyguages and related subjects

An important provision of the act Zablocki said is Title III which provides matching grants to public schools for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment Non-public schools now are eligible only for loans for that purpose

Under Zablockis bill public authorities could obtain federal funds to buy laboratory and other special equipment which eould then be provided for use in non-public schools

In order to comply with matching provisions of the NDEA the non-public schools or groups of such schools would be required to prove they had spent an equal amount thenr selves for such eqUipment from private funds

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FALL RIVER AUXllLhARY AT MEETING Bishop Gerrard Auxiliary lBishop of the Diocese of Fall River is pictured at one of the sessions of the Spring meeting of the Bishops of theU Sheld in Ohicago NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 h A priI 20T urs 1967

Say~ ~Q~~OIP No SIQ7(~ ~ lovell

KANSAS CITY (NC) - The new role of a Bishop in the era of renewal has been spelled out here by Bishop Charles H Helmshysing of Kansas City-St Joseph

In addition to the age-old role of teacher Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop today must read stud) and apply the teachings of the Second Vatican Council the Gosshypels expressed to meet the needs of the modern world In short Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop must be a slave of love to serve as Christ served mankind

Bishop Helmsil1g spoke at the consecration of Auxiliary Bishop Joseph V Sullivan 45 of Kansas City-St Joseph

Bishop Sullivan is the fir~

native of this Missouri city eleshyvated to the hierarchy He was ordained to the priesthood June 1 1946 has served as chancellor of the diocese since 1957 and was named Bishop by Pope Paul VI last month

MarltqJ MregGGreg TJ~ ~~i MILWAUKEE (NC)-ALuthshy

eran scholar will teach Lutheran theology to graduate students at Marquette University here start shying next September Dr Kenneth G Hagen assistant professor of religion at Concordia College Moorhead MinJl will be the Marquet~e theology departmentu first full-time visiting scholra unshyder a grant from the Louis Calshyder Foundation in New York

-THREE LOCATIONS bull youre lookIng for the best in banking se~lce come 011J in to The NationalBank With the opening of our Stafford Square Office were now nearer to even more of you rOll the Greater Fall River area and each of our offices has Just aboUt every service you could want for yourself andl your family We mean M when we say were your FuID lervice BankPft

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t6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~n River-Thurs~ Apr 201967

Friend~2 [iJescribes Stru~g~ For QM~gtLy in T~~regwo~~~

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Rennedy When Fred W Friendly resigned from the Columbia

Broadcasting System in 1966 he ended a 16-year association with that network His trials in broadcast journalism are tbe subject of his new book Due To Circumstances Beyond Our Control Control bull Managements obligation is toRandom House $695 457 protect the interests of these Madison Avenue New York stockho~ders

NY 10022) But this volume But Mr Friendly is concprned is far more than a personal about the other stockholders memoir It is the story of th~ the 195 million citizens who

grant CBS and the other broadshybattle a losing casters the franchise to use theirbattle of course air for quality in

FCC Gutlesscommercial tel shyOne might naively expect that

~vision The the Federal Communications

main point is Commission would effectivelythat the story is here told by an insider Mr Friendlys middotfame criginally gprang from his close associashytion with the late Edward R Murrow He was Murrows partner in the prepashyntion of such pioneering and still unparalleled series as Se~ lil Now and CBS Reports

After Murrow left CBS and wentmiddot into governm()nt service Mr Friendly became president

of CBS news He resigned that ~sition because of a clispute conshycerning the broadcasting of Senshyate hearings on the Vietnam war

Many ancient or recent conshyfilets over broadcasting policy are rehearsed in this hook There fta for example a detailed acshy~unt of the hassies concerning Murrows TV _program dealing with Senator McCarthy before McCarthys downfall as the reshyault of the hearings in the Spring of 1954

There are briefer accounts of other skirmishes Thflse are all interesting and instructive But the value of the book lies not so much in these reminiscences as fin Mr Friendlys knowledgeable analysis of the process whereby television has retreated more and more from public service and become a purveyor of junk and garbage littering the American Iiving room and worse the American mind with trash

Geared to Prcfit Many factors account for this

perversion The principal one is greed Television is geared to private profit not puqUc service lLast years whopping profits will not suffice this year There must be sizable increase

This is to satisfy stockholders Mr Friendly asked William Paley chairman of the board Why do we have to make more money every year The reply was We have many small shareholders across the country and within the companybullbullbullbull

Subcommittee Sets Hearings on Smut

WASHINGTON (NC) -The House Select Subcommittee on Education is holding hearings beginning today on a bill to esshytablish a National Commissionmiddot on Noxious and Obscene Matters and Materials

Subcomllittee chairman Domishynick Daniels of New Jersey is sponsor of thc bill which would provide for a 16-member panel to study the problem of obscenity and recoqunend means Clf dealing with it

On the same day that the hearshyings were announced two other congressmen Arnold Olsen of Montana and Glenn Cunningham of Nebraska introduced bills to curb the mailing of obscene matshyter Olsens bill has bpoundlen enshydorsed by the Post Office Deshy~artment

protect the interests of the other 195 milion But Mr Friendly on the basis of close observation has -no kind words and no reshyspect for the FCC For all pur- poses the agency is toothless and gutless

To make even more money for the shareholders every possible penny has to be wrung out of the advertising medium which television now essentially is This consideration governs proshygramming

It might be supposed that even if prime time at night must eco- ~

nomically go chiefly to programshyming which brings in the maxishymum advertising dollar there is ample opportunity for public service broadcasting in the dayshytime hours But no pienty of money is to be made from dayshytime advertising

Endless Re-runs Three soap companJes alone

spend $290 million a year on television advertising and a lot of this is directed at housewives during the daytime And the programming dictated by this advertising comprisesmostly old old movies and endless re-runs of stupid situation comedies

Huge profits (are) being realshyized from the use of the miracle of television as a transmission belt for retread serials soap opshyeras game shows and the like The yield from the detergent deodorant bleach or food advershytisers who possess the daytime schedule (whose annualexpendishytures (are) some $130000000 ) is the principal reason why no serious progtamming can be sustained for any length of time during these hours

l3y serious programming is meant such things as crittcal UN debates (for example on Vietnam) vital congressional hearings the Popes visit to the UN Churchills funeral etc) Some of these have in fact got on the air and even for a conshysiderable period oftime b~t alshyways there is a major bitter battle involved

Educational TV What may not be realized is

the power of the local station n is by no means meekly subshymissive to the network It largely gqes its own way and its wayis in search of the utmost in profits

It is this fact for example which accounts for the nonshyexistence of a good solid repre~ sentative late-evening news broadcast over the nekwork The local station prefers to put on its own scrappy superficial travesty of a news program beshycause it can get-in an excessively large number of profitable comshymercials

Perhaps there is some hope in the field of educational televishy

sion Mr Friendly is now enshygaged in exploring that possibil shyity For our sake may he be successful At any rate we must thank him for reminding us of our tolerance of the criminial misuse Qf the air waves

H E A 0 S UNIVlERSliJIY New president of St Bonashyventure University St Bonashyventure N Y is the Very Rev Reginald A Redlon

OFM formerly of St Franshycis College Rye Beach N H The university Is operated by the Holy_ Name province of the Order of Friars Minor NC Photo

Issues GlLIidelimiddotnes For IEcumenism

LITTLE ROCK (NC) - Ecushymenical guidelines dealing prinshycipally with the conduct of Catholics at Protestant functions have been issued by Bishop Alshybert L Fletcher of Lttle Rock

Composed of the diocesan ecumenical commission the gUidelines specify that Catholics may attend Protestant church services participate in the singshying and common prayer but may not act as a reader or officer of such services

The rules permit Catholics to serye in wedding parties at mar- riages in Protestant churches providing the service does not involve a Catholic or a divorceci person Attendance at baccalaushyreate services in a church or elsewhere is permitted

Under the rules Catholics may not act as sponsors at Protestantmiddot baptisms Oi confirmation nat Jlarticipate in intercommunion services The guidelines encour- age Protestant attendance at Catholic services

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Misunderstandingmiddot Faced In Ecumenical Meeting

Roman Catholic and Lutheran theologians agreed here after their fourth meeting that many misunderstandings had been overcome on the Sacrament of the Lords SuppeR -Holy Eucharist-but that further examination is necesshysary The doctrinal consulshy to the concrete worship life o1Ztation held at the headquartshy the Church ers of the Lutheran Church In a prepared statement reshyin America was the fourth leased ft the conclusion of the in a series sponsored by the closed meeting the group noted Bishops Committee for Ecumenshy that in contrat to topics disshyism and Interreligious Affairs cussed at the first two meetings of the NCCB and the USA Nashy -the Nicene Creed and Baptismtional Committee of the Luthershy -there have been historically an Wotld Federation serious disagreements between

Main themes discussed at the the confessions concerning the three-day meeting were the Eucharist Lords Supper as a sacrifice the All participants the stateshymanner of Christs presence in ment added agreed that many the Sacrament the import of the misunderstandings had beellll concept of transubstantiation overcome as a result of the latest and the relation of these issues meeting

HOW TDCURE LEPERS

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C Strfngless glftlil of $100 $50 $25 $11S $10 $5 $2 Bet the Sisters buy what they need

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IlJ $1 a month ($12 a yeer) gives you membershyehlp un our Damlen Club for lepers

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For our eIght edlcal Sisters In P1rappancode south India today is just a normal day Doctors bags In hand they are out In the villages eKmiddot amlnlng everyone for leprosybullbullbullbull Leprosy can be cured If diagnosed early says Sister Elizashybeth a surgeon Better yet Itcan be prevented In this case an ounce of prevention is worthten pounds of cure bullbullbull The cure is cheaper than penny nely Only $850 buys 10000 Dapsone _ mIracle tablets enough for 43 lepers for a yeerl bullbullbull The effort In Pirappancode islnternashytional German Catholics built the 25middotbed ho pital (1St Johns) French Catholics gave a workshop (for therapy) and an American friend of ours has pledged a convent and chapel Now the Sisters need medicinps a $200 microscope a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for treating children especially In farmiddotflung villages Will you help them Monsignor Nolan will acshyknowledge your gifts promptly and the Slste win pray for you aware you are helping them cure lepers as Christ did -

WHAT YOU CAN DO IJ $5000 gives the Sisters a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for fighting leprosy at Ita source (A sign on the side will featu re the name ofyour favorite saint and your name ifyou wish)

IJ $1500wlll give theSlster-surgeon an ope Instable Shes ustng akitchen table now

WOULDc $575 buys a whirlpool beth $100 a sterilizer

NEED C $300 pays In full ~or the two-year training 01 IF a native Slsternurse She will write to you

YOU WERI C $240 ($5 a Week) takes care of bull fuMmiddottlme

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NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN PresIdent

MSGR JOHN G NOLAN Natlonal8ecretaIJ Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc S30 Madison Avenuemiddot New York NY 1001 T~one 212yUkOft 6-5840

rHf ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Apr 20 196717

CATHOLIC (HAR~l~~S AP~EAL SILVER JUBILEE YEAR

MAY 7-17

What does it mean to you The opportunity to raise your sights to the level of a $2500 Jubilee Gift

An act of aratitude for 25 years of Charitable Seice

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THE ANCHORshy~18 Top East C~ast College Hoopsters middotPlay )Sees SociaI EquityThurs April 20 1967

Still Lagging Anglicalfj)~ ~teview At I(ennedy Center For P C Alumni In Spain Antii Cali~~i~ By Patricia Francis MALAGA (NC) - Spain

was taken to task for lagging1562 C~~lireglf A full house crowd saw some o( the East Coasts top collegIate basketball players behind many other countriesLONDON (NC) _ The demonstrate last week how basketball should be played Occasion was the 8th annual hi the development of a

ehurch of England has set Scholarship Basketball Game sponsored by the Providence College Alumni Club of New just Christian social and ecoshyup a permanent commission Bedford at Kennedy Youth Center in New Bedford Initiated in 1959 to - raise nomic life at the 26th Spanish C1)n Christian Docbine with tis first task to consider recastshying or replacing that churchs historic charter of the Thirtyshy~Hne Articles of Religion which

are strongly anti-Catholic In tOne

They are regarded by many as o stumbling block to Christian ~ity The articles drawn up in 1562

for the avoiding of diversities $pound opinions and for the establishshyhtg of consent touching truereli shygion must be publicly accepted py the clergy at ordination

They have become a matter of ~increasing objection lind some

Anglican clergymen now feel talat they should not be called Upon to subscribe to doctrinal definitions which reflect views formed in the 16th oentury aarship is a $2400 one paid at the time of extreme and bitter reli- rate of $600 a year to the winner gious controversy Next award will be made in

The articles denounce the 1970 TheRevEdwardC Duffy eurohurch of Rome as erroneous in chairman of- the scholarship matters of faith and declare games and recruiter of the among other things that theplaye~s who participate emphashyBishop of Rome hath no jurisdic- sizes the scholarship is open middotto tion in this -realm of Englandany deserving boy who has been Some prominent Anglican clergymen have blal1led the sharp declfnein ordination canshy

Qlidates on a reluctance to subshy~ribe to this document

Consider Advis( The new commission was apshy

pointed by Anglican Archbishops Michael Ramsey of Canterbury and Donald Coggan of York It consists of 17 members most of them theological professors repshyzesenting different schools of thought in the Anglican Church

Anglican Bishop Iar Ramsey of Durham is chairman The commissions general terms of reference say that it is

to consider and advise upon doctrinal questions submitted to it from time to time by the archshybishops and to plan when deshyslrable the investigation of

I ~uestions by other groups Its first task will be to conshy

sider the place of the Thirty- lege University of Rhode Island Nine Articles in the Anglican St Josephs of Philadelphia Bosshy

tradition and the question of ton College and Holy Cross subscription and assentto them There were Bill Blair Jim

Benedict Bob Kavolski and Bill Lasher of PC Mike FitzgeraldReligious Influence (of Mattapoisett) Henry Carey

In US on Wan~ -7- NEW YORK (NC)-Although

a majority of all Americans exshypressed the belief that 11eligion is losing its influence in the

United States in the latest Gallup Poll Catholics declined to-give majority assent to the opinion

The national survey showed tilat 57 per cent of all Americans in 1967 believe religion is losing its influence Only 14 per cent expressed this opinion in 1957

Among Protestants 60 per cent In 1967 compared with L7 per eent in 1957 said religion was losing its influence Forty-eight

per-cent of Catholics agreed in the latest survey compared with Beven per cent in 1957

Get Federal Funds PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A

Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyect under the auspices of Philashydelppia Archbishop John J Krols Commjssion on Economic Oppi)rtunity Programs hlils reshyceived $267980 from the federal government It was one of 74 Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyects in 30 states approved by Secretary of Labor W Willard Wirtz

accepted as a freshman at Provshyidence College regardless of the high school he attended

Primary Method William F Doyle president of

the NE Bedford club says the games are the alumnis primary method of raising money for the schoJarship fund

Since it was first held the game has attracted a following of avid fans-who help swell the scholshyarship treasury

Father Duffy feels it is the top post-season game in New England arid cites as proof the fact that his long time friend Bob Cousy Hoiy Cross All- Anierican and Boston Celtic great played in it himself two years ago It was his last game

Players who participated in this years money-for-scholarshyships game-all college seniors

represented Providence Colshy

scholarship funds for deserv- ing gr~duates of area high

schools the game profits enabled presentation of the first Edward J Tucker Memorial Scholarship of $2000 to Clifford Marr of New Bedford in 1962 Marr a graduate of Holy Family High was graduated from Provishydence College in 1966 and curshyrently is an Army lieutenant on duty in Korea

The second scholarship---named for the late 1r Tucker of Fairshyhaven a Providence College

graduate and one of the charter members of the New Bedford club--was awarded last year to Michael Doherty of New Bedshyford also a Holy Family gradushyate

Currently the four-year scholshy

Steve Chubin and Bob Boehm of the U of RI Richie Murphy and Greg Hochstein of Holy Cross John Austin and Ed Hock- enbury of Boston College and

f~nll lHoMsnln1~ fLaw Olhoc City EI1il(Jlcts

SPRIfiGFIELD (NC) - By unanimous vote of its five city commissioners this city has enshyacted a fair housing ordinance

The ordinance the third of its kind in OhiO becomes effecshytive May 3 Considerably strongshyer than the fair housing legisia- tion enacted by the Ohio Legisshylature in 1965 it outlaws disshycrimination in the sale or rental of any housing excepting only dwellings for members of reli shygious organizations or housing established for one sex only

Springfields new ordinance came as the res~lt of an improved climate of racial harmony The citys mayor Robert C Henry is a Negro whose performance of his duties has won wide reshyspect In recent years an Urban League has been launched and has made considerable progress A Human Relations Commission is functioning

PROVIDENCE COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP In atshytendance at PC Scholarship Fund Basketball Game in New Bedford were William Doyle presidentof the PC Club of New Bedford and Michael Doherty present scholarship recipient

Billy Oakes Marty Ford and Tom Duff of st Josephs the nations fifth-ranked_ team

Sees lay Teachers

Form Asso~iataon CLEVELAND (NC)-Groundshy

work for a diocesan lay teachers asso~iation was laid at a meeting of representatives of 21 diocesan high schools here

shy Patrick Bruening teacher at St Josephs high school and temshyporary chairman of the new unit said the association is an organshyization of professional people seekint professional growth

He added Only after we have proven ourselves as professionshyals with a professional attitude

about our job can we ask for and hope to get professional consideration I

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lhe players enjoyed demonshystrating th~ir proficiency The fans enjoyed watching the demonstration ~ and the scholar shipfund of the Providence Colshylege Alumni Club of New Bedshy~ord teaped tbebenef~il ~fboth

~ Population Control WASHINGTON (NC) - U s

Sen J W Fulbright of Arkansas has asked for aCongressional appropdation of $150 million for increased population coritior asshysistanCe to developIng countries

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Social Week here Angel Cardinal Herrera y

Oria former archbishop of Mashylaga in a letter to the Social Week sessions deplored what he called a deficiency of Catholic influence in Spanish public lilfe declaring that Spain a Catholic nation was far from being a model of social justice

No Dialogue Earlier Auxiliary Bishop Rashy

fael Gonzalez Moralejo of Valenshycia ecclesiastical moderator of the SocialWeek sounded a simshyilar note declaring that where there is no dialogue between citizens and their government there is no democracy and such a society cannot call itself Christian

Cardinal Herrera said that ahead of Spain are nations who

have learned how to organize their natioJlallif~ according to the norms of justice which are the daughters of consciElnce Sweden has progressed in the social and pOlitlclll o~der to such an extent that the ~ope

could state that its public ~n~ishy tutions are in harmonywith the teachings of the Seco~dVatican Council he said

1[Jpper ~Iasses Cardinal Herrera lirged the

upper classes of -the countryto contribute toward the formation of a sound and realistic public opinion by which religious conshycepts would be applied to the economic and social life of Spain

It is necessary he said to diminish the differences in classes to work toward Unity not only in the economic order but also in i~ the education and

c~vic department

The Best

Car

Georgell Cluh Olf to Good Start mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Apr 20 1967

Taunton High Is Surprise In County Diamond loop former FltrrJDD Riweff CYOer on Scholagslvop ltltIt PIl1Jf$~ns

By PETE~ BARTEK Norton High Coach

Coach BiD Georges Taunton High diamond aggreg~

tion is the early season surprise in the Bristol County schoolboy league now in ita second week of the eampaign The pennant race appeam ~ be developing into one of the most exciting in many years Five clubs are battling of Ule better area clubs year fOIl the coveted flag And after year

Coach Harold (Chet) Haneshywhile action is fast and fm-shywichs Bishop Feehan High teamiOWl in the BCL the eight N3rshyof Attleboro has tucked awayragansett League teams are early season wins over Northgetting I e Q d y Attleboro and New Bedford Voshy

lor the chamshy cational The latter two will pionship race m probably fight it out fornext-toshytheir COmpetishy the-last place in the final standshytion Delayed ing as they seek to avoid theboth by rain and cellar Ii old weather The two top contests on nextCOaches h a v e Mondays BCL card will seebeen reminding Coyle playing Durfelte at Alumnitheir charges of Field in Fall River while Taunshythe pitfalls of ton journeys to North Dartmoutheareless loose to clash with stang Two northernplay and also Peter eounty rivals Attleboro andthe IOOmmission Bartek Feehan meet at the formers of Deedless errors which ean field next Monday when North relegatea club to an early Deeshy Attleboro travels to New Bedshyond diviaion berth from which it ford to take 0111 Vocatlonal win be bard to emerge as 1M Nury Contests oompetition progresses Meanwhile the Narragansett

Chausse and JlaJkut loop is comple~ing its first week The Herring City Orange and of play Its still a little early to

Black pulled the big surprise of make 8 judgment as to how thebe young season when it held clubs will stand at the end of thethe always strong Dullfee High

lI~mpaign team of Fall River to a 2-2 tie in Four Narry tilts are on tap for11 innings The prognosticators next Tuesdaybad been writing off the Georgeshy Coach Jack McCartys Caseeoached clan solely because they High Cardinals of Swansea willfelt Taunton would be unable to face Coach Jack Harts DimanJeplace Artmiddot Koska lost by gradshy Vocational team in Fall River uation in what looms as one of the

But Scott Chawrse impressed most interesting early seasonin his confrontation with the Fan games Coach Doug Baxendales River Hilltoppelll aDd now the Msgr Prevost High team of Fall same pundits who had relegated River will be at Dighton to meet Taunton to a lowly apot 8re the Coach Eddie Texeiras D - ~ first to admit that things will be Regionals Coach Ed Bibeau will much more pleasant for the lead his W~port High aggr~gashyTauntonians this Spring tion to Seekonk to middotvh( with

Stro~ Coyle Offense Coach Roger Hills charges The Admittedly an the doubting fourth Narry contest next Tuesshy

Thomases were not convinced day will see Coach Jack Brenshyon the basis of a single performshy nans Holy Family High teain of ance So Joe Majkut and Chausse New Bedford meeting Coach Jim Ulen eombined to throw a no-hit Sullivans Somersetmiddot High teamwin over Coach Dick Joyces at the latters field Attleboro High team Even the

Lanllers Ready most skeptical then conceded that Taunton must be reckoned On Ca~ Cod n nip-~pd~tuck

in the flag race battle is going on in that areas While Taunton High has heeD eon1erence schedule Four conshy

eGualling the early season attenshy tests are listed for the Capeway tion unexpected results have eircuit next Monday They are eccurred in several other diashy Oldmiddot Rochester (Mattapoisett) mond eontests Attleboro which at Barnstable Bourne at Wareshydid DOt seem destined lor gfeat bam Dartmouth middotat Dennis-Yarshythings this Spring provided the mouth and Fairhaven vs Lawshyfirst surprise w~en it toppled rence High at Falmouth Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Norton High in the Clover Stang High of North Dartmouth Valley Conference plays its first

Taunton then proved its mettle league game at home against when it defeated surprising Millis next Monday The Purple Attleboro Hickey has talent at - and White Lancers travel to Stang but his problem has heeD Medfield next Wednesday tv properly align his best playem Apparently they were not in the Score Governmentright spots when they went down to defeat at the hands of Coach On Lab~r Problems Jim Burns Msgr Coyle High

BUENOS AIRES (NC) -TwonJne of Taunton which has Catholic organizations have isshycwuted its way to two one~sided sued a joint manifesto criticizingviet(lries Coyles strength is in thlte Argentine government sayshyits offensive attack but it also ing it has failed to protect workshy

has a capable defense and pitch ers basic rightsJng staff to make a real run for Issued by the Catholic Youngthe BCL crown Workers (JOC) and Catholic _ Feehans Auspicious Start Action Workers Movement

Durfee while it may have been (MOAC) the statement alsotemporarily halted by Taunton called upon the bishops to be enpects to be among the leaders aware of the needs and goals of before the end of the week The young workers and the labor Hilltoppers looked good in winshy class and to be brave in ltexshy

double-header from Pil-shyning a pressing the Churchs doctrine grim High of Rhode Island last as applied to real-life situations weekend CoachJoe Lewis feelsmiddot It said that the government his boys can now maintain the which calls itself Christian but momentum they have generated is anything but Christian has in the non-league affairs It goes nothing to do with the Gospelalmost without saying that one or Christs teachings or with the off-day is not going to thwart Churchs doctrines as defined by the Hilltopperll wbo produce ODe the Second Vatican Councit

By JOE MIRANDA A Parsons College senior JRobshy

eli Bonalewicz of Fall River is -nearIng the end of a most sucshycessful college career both athshyletically and academically

Bob is attending Parsons in Fairfield Iowa on a baseball scholarship and has started bis third season as the colleges first strong catcher

neans List Student A Physical Education major

Bob has a minor in History and during the last marking period was named to the Deans List at Parsons -

A member of St PatrIcks Parshyish Bonny is a 1963 graduate of Durfee High School where he participated in football basketshyball and baseball

The son of Mr and Mrs Mathew Bonalewicz of 50 Chapshylin Street he is oile of five chil shydren ald has not yet decided upon a vocation

Bonny has two older brotherll a lieutenant and Mathew Jr II

staff sergeant both in the Air Force and stationed ubroad Bob also has two sisters Kathleen II student at Durfee High and Ma) Ann a grammar school pupil

Has f80 Average Bonalewicz recently returned

from a Southern baseball trip end gained excellent commendashytions from his coach Duane Banks for his performance as the Wildcats won 11 of 13 games

The Fall River player batted 430 belted three homers had nine runs-batted-in and seltlred 10 during Parsons first 13 games

Bonalewicz a 22-year-old 175shyJ)ound 5-8 giant enjoys playing baseball and so does his coach who scheduled 89 games last seashyson to set a ollegiate record fur the most games played in one year

Ankle IBjUlY

With the former Durfee backshystop handling the brunt of the catching duties until a knee inshyjury forced him to the sidelines Parsons won 72 lost 15 and twice finished in ti~d games called beshyca~se of darkness

The former St Patricks star in the CYO baseball program started poory this season finshyis middotng off the Southern trip with an ankle sprain but entering this week the ankle was in good shape and Bonny expected to take his regular spot behind the plate

Federal Agency Has Inter-Faith Advisors

WASHINGTON (NC)- A Catholic priest a Methodist minshyister and a Jewish rabbi have been appointed religious advishyBors to the United States Inforshymation Agency here

Msgr George G Higgins clIishyrector of the Social Action Deshypartment U S Catholic Confershyence the Rev Edward G Cu-middot roll superintendent of the Washshyington Northwest District ol the Methodist Baltimore Conference and Rabbi Richard G Hirsch dishyrector of the Relgious Action Center Union of American Heshybrew Congregations have been named to the USIA advisory panel

Officials of the agency noted that while it has had religious advisors since its inception this marks the first time an interfaith panel had been established

The purpose of the panel offi shycials said is to assure that the agencys handling of religious matters serves the best intlterest of the nation and its dlveraity of faiths

Bonalewicz also played for St Patricks T)iocesan championship team and for the Fall River Mershychants in the Newport Sunse~ League

As a senior at DUrfee Bonny was awarded the 1963 George Kaplan Memorial Trophy as the Hilltoppers best senior basketshyball player

His hustle and determination while performing for Durfee at Bostcm Garden during the anshynual Eastern Massachusetts Tecb tournament gained him the reshyspect and admiration of all that witnessed his efforts

Bonalewicz recently completed a practice teaching tour in an Iowa Junior High School and while tere coached the eighth grade team to a league chamshypionship

Earlier in the college year Bob_ was a member of the Parsons intramural flag football progmiddotam and received a trophy for his performan J

Despite the heavy bnsebaU schedule Bob has manged to keep hi grades above average and after the Fall semestershyshowed his prowess in the classshyroom by being named to the Deans List for the second time

DeMatha Winner In Hoop Tourney

WASHINGTON (NC) - DeshyMatha High of suburban Hyattsshyville Md scored an upset cliff shyhanger victory to cop the 12th national high sChool basketballl tournament sponsored by thE local Knights of Columbus J017 the fifth straight time

DeMatha avenged two regula17 season defeats by Mackin High Washington Catholic League

champ with its last minute 70-68 victory Mount Carmel of Chiengo took

third place with a 47-45 overshytime win over DePaul Acndemy of Chicago Northeast Cnthrt1ie of Philadelphia took fifth pIhce with a 77-74 win over St Petertl

B(~ BONALEWICZ of New Brunswick N J Catheshydral High of Trenton NJ Inpound

The oung catcher has been Dwight School of New York alslaquo) long known for his bullet like participated tlnrowlr arm and gained conshy Aubrey Nash DeMatha junloY siderable praise from opponents wall named the tournnmentl in 111gh school amateur and colshy most valuable player lege eompetitions for his savvy A 5-11 junior John Somogyftbehind the plate set three tournament records-shy

Three-Letter Man 40 field goals 108 points in threE Bonalewicz played football for games and 43 points in one game Don MontIe basketb~ll for Tom and tied another record ll-forshyKaram and baseball for middotJoe 11 from the foul line Lewis while at Durfee and also performed for Lewis Chathammiddot team in the Cape Cod League

The Fall Riverite cannot get FAIRHAVENenough baseball according to his mother Mrs Bonalewicz recalls LUMBER a game at Alumni Field when

COMPANYDurfee bested a Venezuelan team sponsored by the Peoplesshyto-Peoples program Bob was inshy Complete linejured and taken -to the hospital Mrs Bonalewicz remembers Building Materials then came back to finish the game hitting a home run to win I SPRING ST FAIRHAVENmiddotit for the Hilltoppers He wall voted the outstanding player in 993-2611the gameo

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I

THEANCHOR()ioltese of Fan ~tv~r-Thurs ApO 1967 ~ ~ middot-middotmiddotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ middot20

AT BISEIOPS CONFERENCE Facilities for offering Mass were provided by the Archdiocese of Chicago when 230 U S bishops met in semi-annual conference In left photo nine othel prelates concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Joseph TRyan of Anchorage Alaska In right

photo are Archbishop John F Dearde~ of Detroit at left president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and at right Archbishop Johl1l F Cody of Chicago conference host Bishops Connolly and Gerrard attended from the Fall River Diocese NC Photos

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Page 11: 04.20.67

Bishop Medeiros Urges Justice ~ For Workers

BROWNSVILLE (NO) ~ Bishop Humbertltgt S Medeishyros of B~wn8ville whose diocese has been the scene of lPl 10-month strike by migrant farm laborers has told farm owners to meet their demands for highe) pay and bettei living eonditions

In a pastoral letter to all Cathshyolics in the diocese-most of the population - released today the bishop said

The present plight of the mishygrant farm workers of America is a constant reproach to our way of life

lFor 1lJse of Ail

They do not ask for charity They demand what is theirs by natural right When the affluent farmers pay a just wage to the migrant workers when they make it possible for him to supshyport himself and his family in frugal comfort and to provide education for the whole family they are not making a gift of their possessions to the farm worker they are simply handilg over to him what is his for they had arrogated to themselves what had becn given in common for Ute use of all

Migrant workers in the Rio Grande vaIiey surrounding Brownsville have been strikihg the larger farms for nearly a year in an attempt to get higher wages and better living condi- tions Their action supported by thc United Farm WorkersOr- ganizing Committee followed the limited success encountered by UFWOC laborers in Califomias lrape vineyards

Precarious Existence

But the Rio Grande workers have encountcred little successshyIllthough a recently organized boycott of produce has received growing support among the states food chains

Bishop Medeilos quoted libshyerally from both Pope John XXIII and Pope Paul VIs recent encyClical On the Development of Peoples in establishing the right of farm workers to adecent Jiving

But be also took note of the plight of Amcricas farmers themselvell who live out a preshylaquoarious existence unless they constitute large enterprises sllch as corporations 01 cooperashyiives

He urged both farmers and workers to organize in their own interest

Natural Ri~ht

Given the natiol~lr and even

aioll of Agricultule ald of fa~m workClS and of manyfarm own- ers in purticular it is urgent that they be aware of thei~ right

~~~o~~o~~~~C~~~i~II~~~~h I~~~~~ of development Which in the words of Pope Priul VI signifies ]lgte~cc

We know that every man hAS a basic natural right to form and join wOIkers unions which conshytribute to economic progress by dcfending his ights he said But thc circumstances of the times the world over indicate that for the common good it is also thc duty for both migrant farm workers and for farmers to form associations

The United States he said has bull duty to its miglant laborers llnd farmers which it must fulfill by passing apPlopliate legislashytion and using other suitable and dcmocratic means of assistance so that not only our tables but thc tables of the world may be blessed with the abundance of the fruits of the earth

lLO~AIJ INTEREST NIl IUSlHIOPS MEETING Disshy W Va Bishop Connolly Bishop Humberto IS Medeiros

cussing topics between sessions are Lawrence Cardinal Brownsville Tex and Bishop Joseph Brunini NatchezshySh~han Baltimore Bishop Joseph H Hodges Whe~]jng Jackson Miss

Churches Shore Latin America Failures

LutheranSees Stumbling Blocks Ahead SPJlINGFIELD (NC) -- The

Roman Catholic and Protestant churches have both failed in the past in Latin America and both face severe stumbli6g blocks in the future a Lutheran layman from Argentina said here

Dr Leopolydo Juan Niilus of Buenos Aires director of the Argentine Department of the River Plate Centre of Christian Studies discussed the Church in Latin America at a meeting of the Lutheran World Federations

Commission on Stewardship and Evangelism

He warned the group that in

too mlIlyquarters the Roman Cath~Ii~ Church has been the main whipping boy for the Latin AmeJican backwaldness~ and there hllS been too much selfshy

Some of the things atheist marxists are doingin our conti shynent should by heritage be added have bee) done by Christians

Looking toward the future Dr Niilus said there are very seshy

were stumbling blocks ahead for our Roman Catholic brethren also

Inseparable Unity They are he said being

hysterically requested by the supporters of the status quo tobecome their defenders once

again The Roman Church failed whenLatin America waS strug- glingJor its independence n may-all of us mayfail now

wheniHs struggling for its eco- lIlomic Independence Dr Niilus said that all

complacency and self-righteous- qhurdiesin Latin America roust ness about the positive role

quickly recognize that study and commitment as an insepshyarable unity is their most urshygent task if they are to play an effective role in the future of Latin America

They must study be said ~both political and economic isshysuell amplnd their theological imshy

Cancer Study lLOST UIS (NC)-The insti shy

lute Ior J)lolecular virology at St LOUiS University here in Misshy

bull souri has b~en awarded a $265shy

101 gJant from the National Canshyeer Instilute of the U S Departshyment of Health Jducation and Welf~re whic~ will enable reshysearchers to look for viral speshyeitic genetic material in himiavl elmcer

plicAtions and must be comshymitted to providing adequate pastoral CAre to those involvel in political and economic action

Pho~ClJI Archbishop Wons Sourin Medal

PHILADELPHIA (NC)-Arc~

bishop John J Krol of Philadelshyphia bas received the annual Sourin Award of thc ] 17-yearshyold Catholic Philopatrian LiteJ1shyary Institute

The presentation marked the first time the award has beelll made to a member of the hieJ1shyarchy ]t is ordinarily given w a distinguished Catholic layman The Archbishop was cited 100 confident and courageous leadshyers~jP

played by the Protegttants in Latiq American social andeco N~w Music nomiltdeve~opment 1 PURCHAS~ (NC)-The Pius

Protestants be said have a X School of Litlllgical Music of share and~ responsibility in the Manhattanville College of the WHITE SPA creation of seriougt structural Sacred Heal1 here received maladjustments - both economic $20000 in grants from Charl~ and moral~ in Latin America ~nd Arthur Morgan Of New

York and John Morgan oi Most of the things our pro-Rockville Centre N Y to stimushy

gressive Roman Catholic bret~shy iae new music for the new BANQUETS bull WEDIl)~NG5imiddot P~RTIESilltc~national deprc~sed middotcondi-middot ie are doing today i~Latin m~rgy

America shouldbyheritage he -COMMUNION BREAKfASTSai~ have beel~~~nepygtrotes tants [ 11M3 PLEASANT STREET FAll RIVER

JEFFREY E SULLIVAN 993-778GFer~ Dome

MEMPHIS (NC)~Bi~tiopJoshySishopo~~~ed

550 Locust Street seph A Durick apostolic admin lFall River Mass istrator of the Nashville diocese received the first annual Human 672-2391 Relations Award from the Memshy Iltose E Sullivan CONVENIENT BANKINGphis Catholic Human Relations

Jeglrey E SullivallCouncil He was cited for his WITHOUT TRAFFIC amp PARKING PROBLEMSstands on human dignity and

at theequal job opportunities He reshycently instituted Project Equalshyity in Tennessee SlADES FERRY TRUST COMPANY

SOMERSET MASS

llhe most friendly democra~ic BANK offeringCORREIA amp SONS ONE STOP Complete One-Stop Banking

SHOPPING CENTER Clubmiddot Accounts Auto Loans Checking Accounts Business Loansbull Televisiolll _ Furniture SllDvings Accounts lleaiEstate Loansbull Appliances _ Grocery

AfJ Somerset Shopping Arellll-BroSJhtman St BridgeThe IFIlDmouth National BankMM ABDen $t New Bedforcll FlIlMOUTH MASS

Member Federal Deposit Insurance CorporotiBy the Village Green Since 18217middot354

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-11lun Apr 20 1961 12 - )

Irish Emigronts Concern B~hops inmiddot Pgstoral

DUBLIN (NC)-Thespiritual and social needs of Irish 0trtifirants and the importance of preparing them for their new life in other countries were major concerns of the

Irish hierarchy at its meeti~g here in- Maynooth In a pas~ toFal on emigration it wasmiddotmiddot pointed out that while de- parture of Irish people foigt residence in other cuiitries is on the decline those who do leave ~can be an enormous force formiddotgoodmiddotin the lands they go to if they have the right ideals and motLves and abilities properly developed

Without these the pastoral adds the alien enironment in which they find themselves may presen~ serious dangers to the spiritual and moral wenfare ~

the weaker ones Education and religious formashy

tion of young people by the bullbull schools and by the clergy coopshy

erating with teachers were cited as most effective contriilgtutiona

to the formation of those likely to emigrate

Among recommendations made in the pastoral for properly pi-eshyparing potential emigrants for livingin other lands were

Young people should be enshycouraied to remain in schooias long as they can benefit from H

Emphasis on the virtue of tem perance

The utilization of youth club activities (discussion clubs and

guiles) to help young members to acquire healthy and natural

sOcial graces and habits The aid of priests in helping

the young people to grow up to

confident maturity Counse by priests on expected

problems of housing suitable

I

REV ALBERT F SHOVELTON

Priest to Spe(l]llc At Seminar

Rev Albert E fShovelton dishy

rector of Sl Mary Home New Bedford will speak as a represhy

sentative of the Diocesan Comshy employment dangersmiddot to health Unity atNClline Committe~ longhours of work in other the75th anniversary celebration

countries advanced atrange- at Holy Trinity LutheranTo SurveyCU mentS with Catholic welfaeChurchNorth Easton Thursday agencies in countries 9f their April 27

CHIltAGO (NC) - The board choice and the provision of in Father Shoveltons talk ~iU of trusteesof the Catholic Uni-formlltion concerning facilities be part of aseroinar middotHe wili be versity of America Washing- abroad for emigrantS preceded by Rev Dr Nils Ehtenshyton D9middot his est~blished it ne~ ~he h6ldin~ Of Irisit~nhlli~middot 8~rom Boston University School survey and ogtlectlODs ~()mmlttee lft llt1rge centers lt ~ Theology whose subject will headed br ~ St ~OU~1l1(ly~a~ Aparishnewsletter s~nt be Ecun1eni~m in Protestant to study ~he funct~op and plaOl th I fmiddot h middotmiddotf g Perspective Today f th Cmiddotth li U -Of Of Dl0n y rom omemiddot 10 Or1ll1O ~ a 0 r ~vterslY~ lt the emigrants bfuricti6ns inFathel ShovElltons suoject will m~nqa ~r~o ern a hoh~ - the local parishes at Chri~tmaiJbe ~EcumeJ1ismin Roman Cllthshy

laCatton on middota national scale d thO t f th h oljc PerspectiveToday A dis-Th middottt an 0 er lmes 0 e yearw en JJ

e cozpml ee~~made up U4 they mightmiddot possibly be home~uss)n period will follow SIX laymen and four archbIshops ) The audience will be comshyall of whom ar~ pr~sent trustees _ prised of the Lutheran parisa o~ the u~lverslty Formatu~n at Southern PrOVince cmgregation the townspeople ~he conrrutteewasannounce by ~ _ the towns clergy and the stll~ FrancII Cardinal Spellman of Favors DIGcoraate ~ dents at Holy Cross Fathenl New york ch~rman of the MIAMI CNC)Bishops of the Seminary Catholic Urnverslty board province of Atlanta have giyen Pastor of Holy Trjnity is Rev

The appointment of the com- p~sts in the six-ctiocese area Kenneth E Bjorklund

nlission for Christian

SAVE DOLLARS

with the MERCHANlS

84EconomOO

Auto Loan Pian

mittee came against a backshyground of reports that the U S bishops might transfer its Ionshytrol of CatJlolic University to 11 group of laymen The univershysitys rector Bishop William J McDonald has denied the middotreshyports but the chairman of the

new commi~ee Dr Ca~roU Hochwalt SaId the commIttee has been given the widest posshysible mandate from which nothshying will be excluded Our assignment Dr Hochshy

walt saidis the most farshyreaching one possible We are to take a reaiistic look at every aspec~ of the university all it has developed under its original directive since 1889 and at its potential for the forseeable

gt futule It is obviously the trusshyteef desire to leave no qtiestfon unanswered which may aftect the unfyersityas anational-hlsti tution 1its ~aculty students ~d

permission to hear confessions in the entire province and they have also asked the National Brothers VOuDlltee~ Conference of Catholic BishoPs As firefilllhters

to consider restoring the perma- nent diaconate in dioceses that want it

The two decisions were ~~_ nounced after the Bishops held their annual meeting in Miami

Archbls~OP P~ul J Hallman of A~lanta SaId l~ IS cus~omary ~or prtests t~ receIve theIr faculties from theIr own dl~cese and they h~ve been restncted o use wlthn that diocese EffectlVelmshy

II NORTHBROOK (NC) - Four

of the 34 men in the Northbrook volunteer fire department here are religious Brothers They are assigned to the national headshyquarters of the Society ofmiddot the Divine Word at nearby Techny Ill

The Brothrs are on call any time the Northbrook first stashytion standby has two or less men on duty for all general

the Cliurcli and the nation ift ~ J llmohgihemthejt haVe fouglU serves~ ( I i) middotClosingmiddotMeasure middotisome 50fires lti

j middot5T PAUL (NC)4AbilLban

Dedicate Monment ~ing ~l)e sale pf spe~iti~mtr 0ROURKtr chandise on Sundays has heen ~

To adFe Serra middot houses bullbull FunealHomepassed b)-both of the j

medl~telY all pne~ts In good alaons and for any fire or emershystandmg may nw he~r the con- gency when additional personnel fesslOns of Iemtents 10 the A- are needed Their volunteering la~ta archdIOcese ~nd th~ 41- was approved by the superiors oces~ of Sva~nah Charleston andmiddot the seminary bought them II ~alelgh MIami and St Augus- veh~C1e to expedite transportmshy

tine tion when they answer a fire ~ ca~I

Solons pass Sun JI n y The Brothers estaimat~ that

S_CRAMENTO (NC) dDme MinrElsota legislatureGov~aJ monument of Padre runipero old LeVander of Minnesota was Serra OFMwassolemnly ded- exPected to sign it into law icated on the grounds of tille The legislation forbids the sale State Capitol here Saturday OIl Sundays and six holidays

The formal ceremonies were (New Years Day Memorial Day qonducted by officials of the Independence Day Labor Day state alld by officers of the Nll- Thapksgiving and Christmas) of tive Sf ns and Daughters of the cameras musical instruments Golden West The project haa phonographs and tape recorders been sponsored by the California radios and television sets jewel-State Legislature and the fra- ry clocks and watches furs terrial ~ orders who provided furni~ure and other home furshymatching funds to finance its nishings including appliances executi~n middotmiddotmiddotAlso wearing apparel ()all

S7J ~c~nd St~~ef

Fall River MOIss_ 679-6072

MICHAEL J McMAHON Licensed Funeral Director Regisfered Embalmer

D D II- bull _ 5u Ivan amp Sons

FUNERAL HOME

Father Noel F Moholy OFMkinds including footwear lug- 469 LOCUST STREIE1T vice postulator for the canorlizashy gage lawnmowers and 9ther tion of Ithe Franciscan friar who outdvor machinery and equipshy FAU RIVER MASS bas been hailed as Californias ment hardware and tools paints 672-3381 First Citizen and Greatest Pio-Illeer W3 the principal speakeII at the ded~cation

varnishes wallpaper and re-middot lated tools lumber and other buildine materials and supplies

Wilfred e~

Driscollmiddot

James IE

Sullivan Jr

Suburban Parishes Should H~lp Save City Parishes

WASHINGTON (NC)-Archbishop Patrick A YBoy1e of Washington appealed here to ~ubJrbanCatholic parisbes to come to the aid of poverty-stricken parishes in the inner city At least 10 Catholic parishes in the inner city need financial help to continue to ismiddotmiddoth d d - ize t II h told C Has ave ecrease s exlS e a ommumon though the schools have contimshy

breakfast of the St Vincent ued to operate at fun capacity de Paul Society and the Whll~ parish income has faUellil only way we can give it iI off school costs have risen ~ through our suburban parishes cause of increased salaries em-

Suburban parishes are hard ployment of lay teachers and pressed themselves he said with higher maintenance costs for most of them deepiy in debt 00- older buildings cause of new constru~tion and expansion Nevertheless they must inaiJpirit of true charity share their resources with our poor parishes

The archbishop said that one of the reasons flr the poor fi shynancial condition of the inner city parishes was the cost of operating their schools but said emphatically that none of these schools would be given up

If we didnt have to support our schools Archbishop OBoyle said nearly all Of our parishes couldmiddot take care of their basic needs But we are not going to giv~ up any of our schools as long as we can get Ii dime to support them

Not mentioning which parish was concerned he stated thatmiddot one middotitmner city parish received $54000 from archdiocesan funds las~ year

Msgr Thomas W Lyons Arch diocesanmiddot Director of Educatiot1 said th~t before the whije middotmigramiddot tionmiddot to the suburbs CathoUa constituted about 22 per cent 01 the Washington Population The Negr~ who replaced the whitea are only about JO per cent Cathshyolic The result is that the par

Parochial school tuiti6n which averages about $4 a month haa not kept pace with costs Msgr Lyons explained

The St Vincent de Paul Soclshyety-here recently announced a twinning program in whicb sOlue of the more affluent parshyishes adopt inner city parisheo and provide for their needs

Offers Folk Mass For Vocations

HOUSTON (NC)-Bishop John L Morkowsky of Galveston- Houston offered a special foUt MaSs for youth on World Day oL Pr~yer for Vocations at Sacred Heart co-cathedral here

Father William Steele diocshyesan vocation director said the folk Mass is being offered to atshytract the young people middotThemiddot homily duringmiddot the Mass dealt with vocations

Contemporarymiddot folk musiC composed by Ray Repp nation ally known folk song writer was played during the Mass Guitar aceompaniment was proshyvided by seminarians from St MaryoS Seminary here

ct HOME IMPROV~MENl LOANS

bull PERSONAL LOANS

bull VACATIONmiddot LoANS ONE $10 COMPlm BANKI~GSERVICEAl Atlaquo

OF OUR 6 HAHOY IANKS

qljMERCHANTS CIatiotuieBANK

WITH SIX CONVENIEtnlY LOCATED BANKS ~

IN NEW BEDfORD $OUTH BANK-Cove St at RCltdne~F~en~h ioulevarlaquoB WEST B~NK-Ke~pton S~reet at Mill Street LUNDS CORNERBANKAcushnet Ave near Lund Comermiddot

DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street near RockdCiieA- N~RTH BANK-Acushnet Ave at CoHin Ave CENTER BANK-Purchase and WilliamSts

DRIVE-IN SERVICE AT AU BANKS

Cardinal Cushing Sees Decrease In Seminaries

BOSTON (NC)-The numshyber of Catholic seminaries in the United States will deshycrease because of the diffi shyculty of obtaining top-flight scholars to staH them Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston preshydicted here

Addressing the New England Conference of the Catholic Hosshypital Association the cardinal told some 680 nuns priests and

laymen that schools of theology both Catholic and Protestant will become more closely identi shyfied with the great colleges and universities of this country a system not unlike that of Oxford in England

Sharing the platform with Archbishop Cushing was Bishop Fulton J Sheen of Rochester N Y who urged Catholic hosshypitals to go outside their own walls to bring social and medical help to the poor

Go out into the slums he said Give two or three hours a day visiting poor families for healing and counseling

He also suggested that Cathoshylic hospitals in this country adopt hospitals in poor counshytries

In A Rut We can certainly afford to

have someone put up a hut in the poor world We have the spirit but we have gotten into a rut the bishop said

Bishop Sheen told the confershyence the hallmark of a Catholic hospital is that we serve each patient as we would serve Christ

Cardinal Cushing also preshydicted that rising costs of care of the sick will induce the fedshyeral government to become more closely identified in hosshypital administration

I was told he added that in some hospitals the cost of a bed per day is almost $100 There must be a ceiling somewhere

Salons to Study Divorce Laws

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey State Assembly has unanimously approved a resolushytion to establish a commission to study the states divorce laws The measure already passed by the Senate is expected to be signed quickly by Gov Richard J Hughes

Thp commission described by Governor Hughes as an effort to strengthen marriage has al shyready encountered the opposishytion of -the Monitor the Trenton laquoiocesan newspaper But the bIShOps of the states three other Oatholic dioceses have reserved comment -

Boih Governor Hughes and the commissions sponsor Sen Jereshymiah F OConnor are Catholics And while Senator OConnor would like to see the commission recommend liberalization of the states di~orce law - desertion adultery and extreme cruelty are the only grounds at present-he would also like other changes made

Among them are a- family eourt which would serve as

counseling agency as well as divorce court lengthening of the present three-day waiting period as a1 obstacle to quick marriages and anr a warning to young PershySODS of the seriousness of marshyriqe

Senate Election PROVIDENCE (NC)-Sixteen

members of the 26-member senshyate of priests for the Providence dJocese have been elected in the first part of the senates twoshyatage elections

REV PATRICK 3 ONEILL

NCIEA Appoints Fr ONeiU

Rev Patrick J ONeill Supershyintendent of Schools in the Dioshycese of Fall River has been apshypointed by the Superintendents Department of the National Catholic Educational Association to serve as a member of the nashytional committee concerning tbe shygrowth and development of diocshyesan and parish school boards

This committee under the chairman Rt Rev Msgr ONeill DAmour will serv() as an adshyvisory unit It will gather and distribute information concernshying the development growth and function of school boards

Father ONeill made an extenshysive study of functioning school boards throughout the country His work in organizing our Diocshyesan Board of Education and working with it during the past year has been commended

Newman Chaplains School at IHCJJlvOlId

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Newman Chaplains Asshysociation has added a second training school for priests and Sisters entering Newman work It will be conducted at Harvard University

As in past years a school will be held at the University of Colshyorado in Boulder Dates for both schools are June 113 to July 2

The Newman Chaplains School prepares priests and nuns asshysigned to the secular campus The faculty has been chosen on the basis of experience in the Newman apostolate and speciali shyzation in theology -philosophy script~reand counseliJ)g _

Wlhere A GOODNAME

Means A GREAT DEAL

GEO-OHARA CHEVROLET

1001 Kings Hwy

NEW BEDFORD

Open Evenings

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 13

Family Care Program forO Children The Paul A Dever State by the psychologists and pre-placement visits with the

School Taunton under the sponsorship of the Departshyment of Mental Health has recently begun a Family Care Program in an attempt tomiddot proshyvide some of its children with the experience of family life

screened by the social workers have all been approved by the schools physicians for the proshygram

These children are ready and able to enter into the commushynity said Dr John L Smalldon superintendent of the Dever

child to the prospective foster parents to determine the comshypatibility of the youngster with the family Once settled within the family the child will also be periodically visited by a schooi social worker to assist in the adjustment The youngsters

The program is initially seekshying to place approximately 20 selected youngsters in homes in

school Provides Funds

This program with its emphashy

would attend special educatiOD classes in public schoolll throughout the South Shore

the South Shore area These chidren have been selected for their advanced capacities for edshyucation and training and their abilities to adjust to a home enshyvironment

These children reconmmended

sis on the advantages of the proper fa mil y environment seeks through a gradual process to assimilate the child within the community

The Social Service Department at the Dever School will conduct

The Department of Mental Health which sponsorsmiddot similar Family Care Programs in sevshyeral other schools in the state is providing funds for the supshyport of the children

What do you do when you live on a Take a good look at your everyday very small island with over three and a - surroundings You are apart of the 20 half million people-say Hong Kong of theworlds populati~nthat has access Move to the suburbs But what if the to 80 of the worlds food That means suburb is Red China The only answer that the other 80 of the world must be is this-and rbe hundreds of thousands content with the remaining ~O Of who crowd these house- boats are lucky course you can read this and say So Ovlaquo half die people of the world ani But You cannot say to someone who taorneless-and most live in Asia is hungry come tomorrow We must

When we hear that three-fourths ol act today because tomorrow may be too cbe human race lives inpoverty or below late (pope Paul VI) Feed the man the subsist~ level these are the peo- dying of hunger if you have not fed pie we are talking about Do we know him you have killed h1m (Vatican II) what it feels like to subsist to know no Dear Monsignor OMeara 1 am attachshyother feeling but that of hunger It is ing my gilt 0 $__ to help right the impossible or we could never spend over imbalance in our world Please use it so 100 billion dollars annually on arma- that a missionary can feed the starving ments while 10000 die each day from name---------- shyyenJldernouri8bment address _~____

THE HOLYFATHER~S

FUND FOR THE POOR RT REV EDWARD T OmiddotMEARA NAT~NAL DIRECTOR THE SOCIETY POR THE PROPAGATION Of THE FMTH 36e 5TH AVE NYbull NY 10001

IN PALL RIVER YOUR DIRECTOR e RT REV RAYMOND CONSIDINE 868 N MAIN ST

THE ANCHOR~Diocese ofFa River-Thursbull Apr 20 19M

middotSocial Revolutmiddotion Is Needed In latin America Lands

From Social Revohitiiolll iin the New Latin America Edited by John 3 Considine MM

The possibility of orientating regional planning toward an overall solution of the pressing problems that concern more than one Latin nation could well engage Christian initiative writes Rene Atero The most typical example of this kind he sa)s concerns Social Revolution in Latin-~ershythe region of the Andean ica Most Rev Mark GMcshyMountains where peasants Grath CSC says Barbara numbering more than five Ward widely read Catholic

million live in thee different economist begins her book enshyltcountries possessing basically titled The Rich Nations and the

Poor Nations with the flat stateshy similar pro b- ment I suppose we are all lems Our asso- aware of the fact that we live in ciation with na- the most catastrophically revolushy~ional orgariiza- tionary age that men have ever

tions concerned fced middotmiddotwith deyelop- Social Revolution ment planning Vice-President Hubert Humshyin no way im- phrey who honored this meeting plies the im- with his presence last year proper subordi- writes in a recent issue of Forshynation of enti- eign Affairs Although the obshytie sund e r servation that Latin America is Church s p 0 n- in the midst of a political ecoshysorship to less effectual accom- nomic and social revolution has plishment under the state become a commonplace it is

On the contrary it is a ques- true tion of becoming involved in a The influential Chilean magashynew front in which Christian zine Mensaje published by the action is not only indispensable Jesuit Fathers dedicated an enshybut will be most efficacious in tire issue in December of 1962 to helping to enlist sectors of Latin the theme Revolution in Latin American society of top impor- America and followed this up

middottance for national dEvelopment withmiddot another special issue in With reference to the actual bctober 1963 on Revolutionary implementation of plans through Reforms in Latin America

well elaborated projectS we Early in 1964 the Civilta Catshyshould make certain that iden- tolica published in Rome by the tification and recognition as an Jesuits carried a critique of important part of the national these two issues of Mensaje by effort are given to current Father Jarlot which questioned Church activities already oper- the prudence of using the terio ating numerous projects of social revolution in a Christian conshydevelopment throughout the text pointing out that itia ltcontinent loaded with Marxist overtones

For example with regard to Not only does it signify rapid education we should lteall atten- c structural changes Father Jarlot tion to the fact that there aremiddot in asserts but also connotes vioshy

lence and some measure of hate Latin America about 5000 pri- and class warfare He would vate ed~cational insttutions pre- prefer the term evolution pared to share in current eduea- tional programs throughout the Social Revolution oontinent Mr Humphrey in the article

The private univemities andmiddot already mentioned asks the eenters of technical training inmiddot question Is it appropriate te the fields of agriculture labor define Alliance (for Progress) and cooperatives couY-a double policy as favoring social revolll shythe potential for plofessional tion - or should this word be and technical trainin1 if they avoided in favor of evolution 01 would participate on D national some other expression basis ir serving the more press- He anwers Evolution if ing needs of society carefully examined proves to be

Broad Horizons inadequate for it implies an un-We must work also in the pres- conscious non-deliberate change

ervation of the progress which that is slow and gradual has been achieved in the areas- What is required is conscious of social welfare now b~ing em- rapid change in the socioshyphasized (housing education economic structure a process public health) Lay groups such that can correctly and precisely as Catholic Action in different be called a revolutionmiddot If used spheres _ Legion of Mary St not as a slogan but in itS precise Vincent de Paul Carita3-which sense the policy of peaceful s0shy

up to now have directed their -cial and economic revolution is efforts mainly towards religion agtcorrect~haracterizatio~ofmiddot il~

t hid limce policy d If t middot an we are ac IVlless ou eJmiddot We should not hesitaietoi pand theIr programs a11d focus d tf l th t m some of their work on ilrojects I e~ I y o~rse ~es WI I ~i planned by specialists J JatmAmencaiJust ~ Presldcnt

This would permit the cltanel ~ohnson ~ssoclated hunseU WIth it in hIS war on poverty I~ng of theIr ~eal t~elr ~rga~l~a- throughout the world whenhe gtcent

tIOn and theIr splnt of saCrIfIce tl k d Iffit b bull recen y remar e a peaceshyas power u resources 0 e put f lItmiddot th i5 at the disposal of society Among u re~bo u IOn ~n ese areas such works surely programs of ~mossl Ie a VIolent revolutIon

IS mevltable community improvement will be especially attractive to tlhese lay groups

Thus the Church might con- sider putting its knowledge and resources to more effective use in preparing programs and projshyects for adaptation to national and regional needs

They should select carefully those with the capacity to fulfill so that they may obtain financing from national or international sources to complement their own eontributions thus enlarging the scope of their activities

In a study of The Church and

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Weve always enjoyed a great reputation formiddotmeat have always sold the pIck of oholce meats as Ih$p~cted and graded by the USDepartment of Agrloulture (USDA)

But now with our YouCome First policy our meat casel have taken on ~ new look

Our finicky p~IIQy~t~~reotlng oniy the ohoicest of the

oholce c has beoome believe It middotor not evet1lmiddotmol-e-flnlokye The trlmnilng and outtlng leoloser and mQre~a~e(ld ~ e bull to etJlv~ you th0 gie~tGstm~at vaYu9middotand most flavorful meats In lF~r2~ National hIS~O[y OLill oounters are the cieanes~ and our butohers mor~ eager than ever to lend you aweloomemiddotrneal tpia8lnlng Idea~

tiuohs gre~~ InQwsplrlt demanded a great new name II

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Arguments For Celibacy Outweigh Those Against

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Arguments urging that the requirement of eeHbacy of priests be set aside as an obshystacle to increasing vooationsare not sufficient Archbi-shop Gabriel Garribe pro-prefect of the Congregation of Semishynaries and Universities told a pressconfelence here My personal answer is that the arguments for celibacy cd the clergy are stronger than those against it He said he beshylieved there should be a firm affirmation in this respect and that it would maintain celibacy in the Latin Church

By doing so he said the quality ofpriesUy candidates will grow and through the quaUy of its priests the Church will harvest an increase in the quantity of candidates

The drop in the number of vocations the Archbishop stated Is due in part at least to the new attitude of todays youth and therefore requires changes_ in the traditional seminary formation

The prelate told the press that todays youth is much more fully aware of the whole world and far more sensitive to its problems than in the past Those responsible for seminary training must realize the importance of education and be capable of understanding the new generashytion of admiring them and of discovering for them the mission of the Church

StatistiCs Given Archbishop Garrone not e d

tj~at although there has been a falilng off in vocations generally there have been some surprising exceptions He singled out 1be

Dominican Work Continued from Page One

means that the approach will be intellectual rather than devoshytional and the emphasis win rest on accuracy on the truth of a statement rather than on whether it is opportune

In performing such a task mistakes 1n the form of partisan statements ~ld ill-balanced reshymarks are sometimes inevitable Father Hislop said

He affirmed the Dominicans loyalty to the Church but noted that it is often difficult for a vanguard intellectual group to express itself in terms that win not be misunderstood by the majority of Catholics

CCD Talks Continued from Page One

Tauntol as the speaker Mrs Mary Fuller of Buzzards

Bay will speak at the meetiDll in Bishop Stang High School North Dartmouth

At Bishop CasSidy High School Taunton the speaker will be Edward McDonagh-Of North Attleboro

Thomas Flangheddy of Taunshyton will address the meeting at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

The Cape area meeting will be held at Holy Trinity West Hallshywich with Miss Patricia llIIakle as speaker

Seek More funds WASHINGTON (NC) -Two

members of Marylands congresshysional delegation have introshyduced a bill which would make the government spend $75 milshylion annually for birth eontrol aid in the U ~ by 1973 The bin introduced by Sen Joseph Ty ings and Rep Samuel Freidel would propose $20 million the fkst year rising to $75 million bIV the fifth )ear Sta1e and loeal governments would provide _ edditiODal $25 mDJiclID br )87J

extraordinary development of vocations in Mexicp and in Yugoslavia and the stable continuity of recruitment in Poland

Among the statistics provided at the conference were the fact that the latest Church figures count 234000 Diocesan priests and 168000 Religious priests There are in addition 166400 Religious who are not ordained priests

One of the most heartening things in the vocational world picture it was pointed out hasshybeen the increase of priestly vocations in Africa Asia and Oceania

The growth of the local clergy has been a phenomenon of the last 40 years Today in Africa and Asia approximately 500 orshydinations take place every year

~regregampfsect ~ITOW(QJtfreg

$e~~ Aod WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep

Clement J Zablocki of Wisconshysin has introduced a proposal to correct U a defense education gap in American schools

Zablockis bill wo~ld amend the National Defense Education Act (NDEA) to provide federal grants for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment which could be used by children and teachers In parochial and private schools

In a statement on themiddot flOor Of the House of Representatives Zablocki pointed to inequities In

the present NDEA progra~ which Congress passed In 1958 to strengthen instruction in scishyence mathematics foreign lanshyguages and related subjects

An important provision of the act Zablocki said is Title III which provides matching grants to public schools for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment Non-public schools now are eligible only for loans for that purpose

Under Zablockis bill public authorities could obtain federal funds to buy laboratory and other special equipment which eould then be provided for use in non-public schools

In order to comply with matching provisions of the NDEA the non-public schools or groups of such schools would be required to prove they had spent an equal amount thenr selves for such eqUipment from private funds

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FALL RIVER AUXllLhARY AT MEETING Bishop Gerrard Auxiliary lBishop of the Diocese of Fall River is pictured at one of the sessions of the Spring meeting of the Bishops of theU Sheld in Ohicago NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 h A priI 20T urs 1967

Say~ ~Q~~OIP No SIQ7(~ ~ lovell

KANSAS CITY (NC) - The new role of a Bishop in the era of renewal has been spelled out here by Bishop Charles H Helmshysing of Kansas City-St Joseph

In addition to the age-old role of teacher Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop today must read stud) and apply the teachings of the Second Vatican Council the Gosshypels expressed to meet the needs of the modern world In short Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop must be a slave of love to serve as Christ served mankind

Bishop Helmsil1g spoke at the consecration of Auxiliary Bishop Joseph V Sullivan 45 of Kansas City-St Joseph

Bishop Sullivan is the fir~

native of this Missouri city eleshyvated to the hierarchy He was ordained to the priesthood June 1 1946 has served as chancellor of the diocese since 1957 and was named Bishop by Pope Paul VI last month

MarltqJ MregGGreg TJ~ ~~i MILWAUKEE (NC)-ALuthshy

eran scholar will teach Lutheran theology to graduate students at Marquette University here start shying next September Dr Kenneth G Hagen assistant professor of religion at Concordia College Moorhead MinJl will be the Marquet~e theology departmentu first full-time visiting scholra unshyder a grant from the Louis Calshyder Foundation in New York

-THREE LOCATIONS bull youre lookIng for the best in banking se~lce come 011J in to The NationalBank With the opening of our Stafford Square Office were now nearer to even more of you rOll the Greater Fall River area and each of our offices has Just aboUt every service you could want for yourself andl your family We mean M when we say were your FuID lervice BankPft

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t6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~n River-Thurs~ Apr 201967

Friend~2 [iJescribes Stru~g~ For QM~gtLy in T~~regwo~~~

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Rennedy When Fred W Friendly resigned from the Columbia

Broadcasting System in 1966 he ended a 16-year association with that network His trials in broadcast journalism are tbe subject of his new book Due To Circumstances Beyond Our Control Control bull Managements obligation is toRandom House $695 457 protect the interests of these Madison Avenue New York stockho~ders

NY 10022) But this volume But Mr Friendly is concprned is far more than a personal about the other stockholders memoir It is the story of th~ the 195 million citizens who

grant CBS and the other broadshybattle a losing casters the franchise to use theirbattle of course air for quality in

FCC Gutlesscommercial tel shyOne might naively expect that

~vision The the Federal Communications

main point is Commission would effectivelythat the story is here told by an insider Mr Friendlys middotfame criginally gprang from his close associashytion with the late Edward R Murrow He was Murrows partner in the prepashyntion of such pioneering and still unparalleled series as Se~ lil Now and CBS Reports

After Murrow left CBS and wentmiddot into governm()nt service Mr Friendly became president

of CBS news He resigned that ~sition because of a clispute conshycerning the broadcasting of Senshyate hearings on the Vietnam war

Many ancient or recent conshyfilets over broadcasting policy are rehearsed in this hook There fta for example a detailed acshy~unt of the hassies concerning Murrows TV _program dealing with Senator McCarthy before McCarthys downfall as the reshyault of the hearings in the Spring of 1954

There are briefer accounts of other skirmishes Thflse are all interesting and instructive But the value of the book lies not so much in these reminiscences as fin Mr Friendlys knowledgeable analysis of the process whereby television has retreated more and more from public service and become a purveyor of junk and garbage littering the American Iiving room and worse the American mind with trash

Geared to Prcfit Many factors account for this

perversion The principal one is greed Television is geared to private profit not puqUc service lLast years whopping profits will not suffice this year There must be sizable increase

This is to satisfy stockholders Mr Friendly asked William Paley chairman of the board Why do we have to make more money every year The reply was We have many small shareholders across the country and within the companybullbullbullbull

Subcommittee Sets Hearings on Smut

WASHINGTON (NC) -The House Select Subcommittee on Education is holding hearings beginning today on a bill to esshytablish a National Commissionmiddot on Noxious and Obscene Matters and Materials

Subcomllittee chairman Domishynick Daniels of New Jersey is sponsor of thc bill which would provide for a 16-member panel to study the problem of obscenity and recoqunend means Clf dealing with it

On the same day that the hearshyings were announced two other congressmen Arnold Olsen of Montana and Glenn Cunningham of Nebraska introduced bills to curb the mailing of obscene matshyter Olsens bill has bpoundlen enshydorsed by the Post Office Deshy~artment

protect the interests of the other 195 milion But Mr Friendly on the basis of close observation has -no kind words and no reshyspect for the FCC For all pur- poses the agency is toothless and gutless

To make even more money for the shareholders every possible penny has to be wrung out of the advertising medium which television now essentially is This consideration governs proshygramming

It might be supposed that even if prime time at night must eco- ~

nomically go chiefly to programshyming which brings in the maxishymum advertising dollar there is ample opportunity for public service broadcasting in the dayshytime hours But no pienty of money is to be made from dayshytime advertising

Endless Re-runs Three soap companJes alone

spend $290 million a year on television advertising and a lot of this is directed at housewives during the daytime And the programming dictated by this advertising comprisesmostly old old movies and endless re-runs of stupid situation comedies

Huge profits (are) being realshyized from the use of the miracle of television as a transmission belt for retread serials soap opshyeras game shows and the like The yield from the detergent deodorant bleach or food advershytisers who possess the daytime schedule (whose annualexpendishytures (are) some $130000000 ) is the principal reason why no serious progtamming can be sustained for any length of time during these hours

l3y serious programming is meant such things as crittcal UN debates (for example on Vietnam) vital congressional hearings the Popes visit to the UN Churchills funeral etc) Some of these have in fact got on the air and even for a conshysiderable period oftime b~t alshyways there is a major bitter battle involved

Educational TV What may not be realized is

the power of the local station n is by no means meekly subshymissive to the network It largely gqes its own way and its wayis in search of the utmost in profits

It is this fact for example which accounts for the nonshyexistence of a good solid repre~ sentative late-evening news broadcast over the nekwork The local station prefers to put on its own scrappy superficial travesty of a news program beshycause it can get-in an excessively large number of profitable comshymercials

Perhaps there is some hope in the field of educational televishy

sion Mr Friendly is now enshygaged in exploring that possibil shyity For our sake may he be successful At any rate we must thank him for reminding us of our tolerance of the criminial misuse Qf the air waves

H E A 0 S UNIVlERSliJIY New president of St Bonashyventure University St Bonashyventure N Y is the Very Rev Reginald A Redlon

OFM formerly of St Franshycis College Rye Beach N H The university Is operated by the Holy_ Name province of the Order of Friars Minor NC Photo

Issues GlLIidelimiddotnes For IEcumenism

LITTLE ROCK (NC) - Ecushymenical guidelines dealing prinshycipally with the conduct of Catholics at Protestant functions have been issued by Bishop Alshybert L Fletcher of Lttle Rock

Composed of the diocesan ecumenical commission the gUidelines specify that Catholics may attend Protestant church services participate in the singshying and common prayer but may not act as a reader or officer of such services

The rules permit Catholics to serye in wedding parties at mar- riages in Protestant churches providing the service does not involve a Catholic or a divorceci person Attendance at baccalaushyreate services in a church or elsewhere is permitted

Under the rules Catholics may not act as sponsors at Protestantmiddot baptisms Oi confirmation nat Jlarticipate in intercommunion services The guidelines encour- age Protestant attendance at Catholic services

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Misunderstandingmiddot Faced In Ecumenical Meeting

Roman Catholic and Lutheran theologians agreed here after their fourth meeting that many misunderstandings had been overcome on the Sacrament of the Lords SuppeR -Holy Eucharist-but that further examination is necesshysary The doctrinal consulshy to the concrete worship life o1Ztation held at the headquartshy the Church ers of the Lutheran Church In a prepared statement reshyin America was the fourth leased ft the conclusion of the in a series sponsored by the closed meeting the group noted Bishops Committee for Ecumenshy that in contrat to topics disshyism and Interreligious Affairs cussed at the first two meetings of the NCCB and the USA Nashy -the Nicene Creed and Baptismtional Committee of the Luthershy -there have been historically an Wotld Federation serious disagreements between

Main themes discussed at the the confessions concerning the three-day meeting were the Eucharist Lords Supper as a sacrifice the All participants the stateshymanner of Christs presence in ment added agreed that many the Sacrament the import of the misunderstandings had beellll concept of transubstantiation overcome as a result of the latest and the relation of these issues meeting

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IlJ $1 a month ($12 a yeer) gives you membershyehlp un our Damlen Club for lepers

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For our eIght edlcal Sisters In P1rappancode south India today is just a normal day Doctors bags In hand they are out In the villages eKmiddot amlnlng everyone for leprosybullbullbullbull Leprosy can be cured If diagnosed early says Sister Elizashybeth a surgeon Better yet Itcan be prevented In this case an ounce of prevention is worthten pounds of cure bullbullbull The cure is cheaper than penny nely Only $850 buys 10000 Dapsone _ mIracle tablets enough for 43 lepers for a yeerl bullbullbull The effort In Pirappancode islnternashytional German Catholics built the 25middotbed ho pital (1St Johns) French Catholics gave a workshop (for therapy) and an American friend of ours has pledged a convent and chapel Now the Sisters need medicinps a $200 microscope a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for treating children especially In farmiddotflung villages Will you help them Monsignor Nolan will acshyknowledge your gifts promptly and the Slste win pray for you aware you are helping them cure lepers as Christ did -

WHAT YOU CAN DO IJ $5000 gives the Sisters a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for fighting leprosy at Ita source (A sign on the side will featu re the name ofyour favorite saint and your name ifyou wish)

IJ $1500wlll give theSlster-surgeon an ope Instable Shes ustng akitchen table now

WOULDc $575 buys a whirlpool beth $100 a sterilizer

NEED C $300 pays In full ~or the two-year training 01 IF a native Slsternurse She will write to you

YOU WERI C $240 ($5 a Week) takes care of bull fuMmiddottlme

~IlAII IA8T WlILflARIi ASBDelATIGN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN PresIdent

MSGR JOHN G NOLAN Natlonal8ecretaIJ Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc S30 Madison Avenuemiddot New York NY 1001 T~one 212yUkOft 6-5840

rHf ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Apr 20 196717

CATHOLIC (HAR~l~~S AP~EAL SILVER JUBILEE YEAR

MAY 7-17

What does it mean to you The opportunity to raise your sights to the level of a $2500 Jubilee Gift

An act of aratitude for 25 years of Charitable Seice

Bishop Connollys love for exceptionoillhiidren cannot be

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THE ANCHORshy~18 Top East C~ast College Hoopsters middotPlay )Sees SociaI EquityThurs April 20 1967

Still Lagging Anglicalfj)~ ~teview At I(ennedy Center For P C Alumni In Spain Antii Cali~~i~ By Patricia Francis MALAGA (NC) - Spain

was taken to task for lagging1562 C~~lireglf A full house crowd saw some o( the East Coasts top collegIate basketball players behind many other countriesLONDON (NC) _ The demonstrate last week how basketball should be played Occasion was the 8th annual hi the development of a

ehurch of England has set Scholarship Basketball Game sponsored by the Providence College Alumni Club of New just Christian social and ecoshyup a permanent commission Bedford at Kennedy Youth Center in New Bedford Initiated in 1959 to - raise nomic life at the 26th Spanish C1)n Christian Docbine with tis first task to consider recastshying or replacing that churchs historic charter of the Thirtyshy~Hne Articles of Religion which

are strongly anti-Catholic In tOne

They are regarded by many as o stumbling block to Christian ~ity The articles drawn up in 1562

for the avoiding of diversities $pound opinions and for the establishshyhtg of consent touching truereli shygion must be publicly accepted py the clergy at ordination

They have become a matter of ~increasing objection lind some

Anglican clergymen now feel talat they should not be called Upon to subscribe to doctrinal definitions which reflect views formed in the 16th oentury aarship is a $2400 one paid at the time of extreme and bitter reli- rate of $600 a year to the winner gious controversy Next award will be made in

The articles denounce the 1970 TheRevEdwardC Duffy eurohurch of Rome as erroneous in chairman of- the scholarship matters of faith and declare games and recruiter of the among other things that theplaye~s who participate emphashyBishop of Rome hath no jurisdic- sizes the scholarship is open middotto tion in this -realm of Englandany deserving boy who has been Some prominent Anglican clergymen have blal1led the sharp declfnein ordination canshy

Qlidates on a reluctance to subshy~ribe to this document

Consider Advis( The new commission was apshy

pointed by Anglican Archbishops Michael Ramsey of Canterbury and Donald Coggan of York It consists of 17 members most of them theological professors repshyzesenting different schools of thought in the Anglican Church

Anglican Bishop Iar Ramsey of Durham is chairman The commissions general terms of reference say that it is

to consider and advise upon doctrinal questions submitted to it from time to time by the archshybishops and to plan when deshyslrable the investigation of

I ~uestions by other groups Its first task will be to conshy

sider the place of the Thirty- lege University of Rhode Island Nine Articles in the Anglican St Josephs of Philadelphia Bosshy

tradition and the question of ton College and Holy Cross subscription and assentto them There were Bill Blair Jim

Benedict Bob Kavolski and Bill Lasher of PC Mike FitzgeraldReligious Influence (of Mattapoisett) Henry Carey

In US on Wan~ -7- NEW YORK (NC)-Although

a majority of all Americans exshypressed the belief that 11eligion is losing its influence in the

United States in the latest Gallup Poll Catholics declined to-give majority assent to the opinion

The national survey showed tilat 57 per cent of all Americans in 1967 believe religion is losing its influence Only 14 per cent expressed this opinion in 1957

Among Protestants 60 per cent In 1967 compared with L7 per eent in 1957 said religion was losing its influence Forty-eight

per-cent of Catholics agreed in the latest survey compared with Beven per cent in 1957

Get Federal Funds PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A

Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyect under the auspices of Philashydelppia Archbishop John J Krols Commjssion on Economic Oppi)rtunity Programs hlils reshyceived $267980 from the federal government It was one of 74 Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyects in 30 states approved by Secretary of Labor W Willard Wirtz

accepted as a freshman at Provshyidence College regardless of the high school he attended

Primary Method William F Doyle president of

the NE Bedford club says the games are the alumnis primary method of raising money for the schoJarship fund

Since it was first held the game has attracted a following of avid fans-who help swell the scholshyarship treasury

Father Duffy feels it is the top post-season game in New England arid cites as proof the fact that his long time friend Bob Cousy Hoiy Cross All- Anierican and Boston Celtic great played in it himself two years ago It was his last game

Players who participated in this years money-for-scholarshyships game-all college seniors

represented Providence Colshy

scholarship funds for deserv- ing gr~duates of area high

schools the game profits enabled presentation of the first Edward J Tucker Memorial Scholarship of $2000 to Clifford Marr of New Bedford in 1962 Marr a graduate of Holy Family High was graduated from Provishydence College in 1966 and curshyrently is an Army lieutenant on duty in Korea

The second scholarship---named for the late 1r Tucker of Fairshyhaven a Providence College

graduate and one of the charter members of the New Bedford club--was awarded last year to Michael Doherty of New Bedshyford also a Holy Family gradushyate

Currently the four-year scholshy

Steve Chubin and Bob Boehm of the U of RI Richie Murphy and Greg Hochstein of Holy Cross John Austin and Ed Hock- enbury of Boston College and

f~nll lHoMsnln1~ fLaw Olhoc City EI1il(Jlcts

SPRIfiGFIELD (NC) - By unanimous vote of its five city commissioners this city has enshyacted a fair housing ordinance

The ordinance the third of its kind in OhiO becomes effecshytive May 3 Considerably strongshyer than the fair housing legisia- tion enacted by the Ohio Legisshylature in 1965 it outlaws disshycrimination in the sale or rental of any housing excepting only dwellings for members of reli shygious organizations or housing established for one sex only

Springfields new ordinance came as the res~lt of an improved climate of racial harmony The citys mayor Robert C Henry is a Negro whose performance of his duties has won wide reshyspect In recent years an Urban League has been launched and has made considerable progress A Human Relations Commission is functioning

PROVIDENCE COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP In atshytendance at PC Scholarship Fund Basketball Game in New Bedford were William Doyle presidentof the PC Club of New Bedford and Michael Doherty present scholarship recipient

Billy Oakes Marty Ford and Tom Duff of st Josephs the nations fifth-ranked_ team

Sees lay Teachers

Form Asso~iataon CLEVELAND (NC)-Groundshy

work for a diocesan lay teachers asso~iation was laid at a meeting of representatives of 21 diocesan high schools here

shy Patrick Bruening teacher at St Josephs high school and temshyporary chairman of the new unit said the association is an organshyization of professional people seekint professional growth

He added Only after we have proven ourselves as professionshyals with a professional attitude

about our job can we ask for and hope to get professional consideration I

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lhe players enjoyed demonshystrating th~ir proficiency The fans enjoyed watching the demonstration ~ and the scholar shipfund of the Providence Colshylege Alumni Club of New Bedshy~ord teaped tbebenef~il ~fboth

~ Population Control WASHINGTON (NC) - U s

Sen J W Fulbright of Arkansas has asked for aCongressional appropdation of $150 million for increased population coritior asshysistanCe to developIng countries

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Social Week here Angel Cardinal Herrera y

Oria former archbishop of Mashylaga in a letter to the Social Week sessions deplored what he called a deficiency of Catholic influence in Spanish public lilfe declaring that Spain a Catholic nation was far from being a model of social justice

No Dialogue Earlier Auxiliary Bishop Rashy

fael Gonzalez Moralejo of Valenshycia ecclesiastical moderator of the SocialWeek sounded a simshyilar note declaring that where there is no dialogue between citizens and their government there is no democracy and such a society cannot call itself Christian

Cardinal Herrera said that ahead of Spain are nations who

have learned how to organize their natioJlallif~ according to the norms of justice which are the daughters of consciElnce Sweden has progressed in the social and pOlitlclll o~der to such an extent that the ~ope

could state that its public ~n~ishy tutions are in harmonywith the teachings of the Seco~dVatican Council he said

1[Jpper ~Iasses Cardinal Herrera lirged the

upper classes of -the countryto contribute toward the formation of a sound and realistic public opinion by which religious conshycepts would be applied to the economic and social life of Spain

It is necessary he said to diminish the differences in classes to work toward Unity not only in the economic order but also in i~ the education and

c~vic department

The Best

Car

Georgell Cluh Olf to Good Start mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Apr 20 1967

Taunton High Is Surprise In County Diamond loop former FltrrJDD Riweff CYOer on Scholagslvop ltltIt PIl1Jf$~ns

By PETE~ BARTEK Norton High Coach

Coach BiD Georges Taunton High diamond aggreg~

tion is the early season surprise in the Bristol County schoolboy league now in ita second week of the eampaign The pennant race appeam ~ be developing into one of the most exciting in many years Five clubs are battling of Ule better area clubs year fOIl the coveted flag And after year

Coach Harold (Chet) Haneshywhile action is fast and fm-shywichs Bishop Feehan High teamiOWl in the BCL the eight N3rshyof Attleboro has tucked awayragansett League teams are early season wins over Northgetting I e Q d y Attleboro and New Bedford Voshy

lor the chamshy cational The latter two will pionship race m probably fight it out fornext-toshytheir COmpetishy the-last place in the final standshytion Delayed ing as they seek to avoid theboth by rain and cellar Ii old weather The two top contests on nextCOaches h a v e Mondays BCL card will seebeen reminding Coyle playing Durfelte at Alumnitheir charges of Field in Fall River while Taunshythe pitfalls of ton journeys to North Dartmoutheareless loose to clash with stang Two northernplay and also Peter eounty rivals Attleboro andthe IOOmmission Bartek Feehan meet at the formers of Deedless errors which ean field next Monday when North relegatea club to an early Deeshy Attleboro travels to New Bedshyond diviaion berth from which it ford to take 0111 Vocatlonal win be bard to emerge as 1M Nury Contests oompetition progresses Meanwhile the Narragansett

Chausse and JlaJkut loop is comple~ing its first week The Herring City Orange and of play Its still a little early to

Black pulled the big surprise of make 8 judgment as to how thebe young season when it held clubs will stand at the end of thethe always strong Dullfee High

lI~mpaign team of Fall River to a 2-2 tie in Four Narry tilts are on tap for11 innings The prognosticators next Tuesdaybad been writing off the Georgeshy Coach Jack McCartys Caseeoached clan solely because they High Cardinals of Swansea willfelt Taunton would be unable to face Coach Jack Harts DimanJeplace Artmiddot Koska lost by gradshy Vocational team in Fall River uation in what looms as one of the

But Scott Chawrse impressed most interesting early seasonin his confrontation with the Fan games Coach Doug Baxendales River Hilltoppelll aDd now the Msgr Prevost High team of Fall same pundits who had relegated River will be at Dighton to meet Taunton to a lowly apot 8re the Coach Eddie Texeiras D - ~ first to admit that things will be Regionals Coach Ed Bibeau will much more pleasant for the lead his W~port High aggr~gashyTauntonians this Spring tion to Seekonk to middotvh( with

Stro~ Coyle Offense Coach Roger Hills charges The Admittedly an the doubting fourth Narry contest next Tuesshy

Thomases were not convinced day will see Coach Jack Brenshyon the basis of a single performshy nans Holy Family High teain of ance So Joe Majkut and Chausse New Bedford meeting Coach Jim Ulen eombined to throw a no-hit Sullivans Somersetmiddot High teamwin over Coach Dick Joyces at the latters field Attleboro High team Even the

Lanllers Ready most skeptical then conceded that Taunton must be reckoned On Ca~ Cod n nip-~pd~tuck

in the flag race battle is going on in that areas While Taunton High has heeD eon1erence schedule Four conshy

eGualling the early season attenshy tests are listed for the Capeway tion unexpected results have eircuit next Monday They are eccurred in several other diashy Oldmiddot Rochester (Mattapoisett) mond eontests Attleboro which at Barnstable Bourne at Wareshydid DOt seem destined lor gfeat bam Dartmouth middotat Dennis-Yarshythings this Spring provided the mouth and Fairhaven vs Lawshyfirst surprise w~en it toppled rence High at Falmouth Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Norton High in the Clover Stang High of North Dartmouth Valley Conference plays its first

Taunton then proved its mettle league game at home against when it defeated surprising Millis next Monday The Purple Attleboro Hickey has talent at - and White Lancers travel to Stang but his problem has heeD Medfield next Wednesday tv properly align his best playem Apparently they were not in the Score Governmentright spots when they went down to defeat at the hands of Coach On Lab~r Problems Jim Burns Msgr Coyle High

BUENOS AIRES (NC) -TwonJne of Taunton which has Catholic organizations have isshycwuted its way to two one~sided sued a joint manifesto criticizingviet(lries Coyles strength is in thlte Argentine government sayshyits offensive attack but it also ing it has failed to protect workshy

has a capable defense and pitch ers basic rightsJng staff to make a real run for Issued by the Catholic Youngthe BCL crown Workers (JOC) and Catholic _ Feehans Auspicious Start Action Workers Movement

Durfee while it may have been (MOAC) the statement alsotemporarily halted by Taunton called upon the bishops to be enpects to be among the leaders aware of the needs and goals of before the end of the week The young workers and the labor Hilltoppers looked good in winshy class and to be brave in ltexshy

double-header from Pil-shyning a pressing the Churchs doctrine grim High of Rhode Island last as applied to real-life situations weekend CoachJoe Lewis feelsmiddot It said that the government his boys can now maintain the which calls itself Christian but momentum they have generated is anything but Christian has in the non-league affairs It goes nothing to do with the Gospelalmost without saying that one or Christs teachings or with the off-day is not going to thwart Churchs doctrines as defined by the Hilltopperll wbo produce ODe the Second Vatican Councit

By JOE MIRANDA A Parsons College senior JRobshy

eli Bonalewicz of Fall River is -nearIng the end of a most sucshycessful college career both athshyletically and academically

Bob is attending Parsons in Fairfield Iowa on a baseball scholarship and has started bis third season as the colleges first strong catcher

neans List Student A Physical Education major

Bob has a minor in History and during the last marking period was named to the Deans List at Parsons -

A member of St PatrIcks Parshyish Bonny is a 1963 graduate of Durfee High School where he participated in football basketshyball and baseball

The son of Mr and Mrs Mathew Bonalewicz of 50 Chapshylin Street he is oile of five chil shydren ald has not yet decided upon a vocation

Bonny has two older brotherll a lieutenant and Mathew Jr II

staff sergeant both in the Air Force and stationed ubroad Bob also has two sisters Kathleen II student at Durfee High and Ma) Ann a grammar school pupil

Has f80 Average Bonalewicz recently returned

from a Southern baseball trip end gained excellent commendashytions from his coach Duane Banks for his performance as the Wildcats won 11 of 13 games

The Fall River player batted 430 belted three homers had nine runs-batted-in and seltlred 10 during Parsons first 13 games

Bonalewicz a 22-year-old 175shyJ)ound 5-8 giant enjoys playing baseball and so does his coach who scheduled 89 games last seashyson to set a ollegiate record fur the most games played in one year

Ankle IBjUlY

With the former Durfee backshystop handling the brunt of the catching duties until a knee inshyjury forced him to the sidelines Parsons won 72 lost 15 and twice finished in ti~d games called beshyca~se of darkness

The former St Patricks star in the CYO baseball program started poory this season finshyis middotng off the Southern trip with an ankle sprain but entering this week the ankle was in good shape and Bonny expected to take his regular spot behind the plate

Federal Agency Has Inter-Faith Advisors

WASHINGTON (NC)- A Catholic priest a Methodist minshyister and a Jewish rabbi have been appointed religious advishyBors to the United States Inforshymation Agency here

Msgr George G Higgins clIishyrector of the Social Action Deshypartment U S Catholic Confershyence the Rev Edward G Cu-middot roll superintendent of the Washshyington Northwest District ol the Methodist Baltimore Conference and Rabbi Richard G Hirsch dishyrector of the Relgious Action Center Union of American Heshybrew Congregations have been named to the USIA advisory panel

Officials of the agency noted that while it has had religious advisors since its inception this marks the first time an interfaith panel had been established

The purpose of the panel offi shycials said is to assure that the agencys handling of religious matters serves the best intlterest of the nation and its dlveraity of faiths

Bonalewicz also played for St Patricks T)iocesan championship team and for the Fall River Mershychants in the Newport Sunse~ League

As a senior at DUrfee Bonny was awarded the 1963 George Kaplan Memorial Trophy as the Hilltoppers best senior basketshyball player

His hustle and determination while performing for Durfee at Bostcm Garden during the anshynual Eastern Massachusetts Tecb tournament gained him the reshyspect and admiration of all that witnessed his efforts

Bonalewicz recently completed a practice teaching tour in an Iowa Junior High School and while tere coached the eighth grade team to a league chamshypionship

Earlier in the college year Bob_ was a member of the Parsons intramural flag football progmiddotam and received a trophy for his performan J

Despite the heavy bnsebaU schedule Bob has manged to keep hi grades above average and after the Fall semestershyshowed his prowess in the classshyroom by being named to the Deans List for the second time

DeMatha Winner In Hoop Tourney

WASHINGTON (NC) - DeshyMatha High of suburban Hyattsshyville Md scored an upset cliff shyhanger victory to cop the 12th national high sChool basketballl tournament sponsored by thE local Knights of Columbus J017 the fifth straight time

DeMatha avenged two regula17 season defeats by Mackin High Washington Catholic League

champ with its last minute 70-68 victory Mount Carmel of Chiengo took

third place with a 47-45 overshytime win over DePaul Acndemy of Chicago Northeast Cnthrt1ie of Philadelphia took fifth pIhce with a 77-74 win over St Petertl

B(~ BONALEWICZ of New Brunswick N J Catheshydral High of Trenton NJ Inpound

The oung catcher has been Dwight School of New York alslaquo) long known for his bullet like participated tlnrowlr arm and gained conshy Aubrey Nash DeMatha junloY siderable praise from opponents wall named the tournnmentl in 111gh school amateur and colshy most valuable player lege eompetitions for his savvy A 5-11 junior John Somogyftbehind the plate set three tournament records-shy

Three-Letter Man 40 field goals 108 points in threE Bonalewicz played football for games and 43 points in one game Don MontIe basketb~ll for Tom and tied another record ll-forshyKaram and baseball for middotJoe 11 from the foul line Lewis while at Durfee and also performed for Lewis Chathammiddot team in the Cape Cod League

The Fall Riverite cannot get FAIRHAVENenough baseball according to his mother Mrs Bonalewicz recalls LUMBER a game at Alumni Field when

COMPANYDurfee bested a Venezuelan team sponsored by the Peoplesshyto-Peoples program Bob was inshy Complete linejured and taken -to the hospital Mrs Bonalewicz remembers Building Materials then came back to finish the game hitting a home run to win I SPRING ST FAIRHAVENmiddotit for the Hilltoppers He wall voted the outstanding player in 993-2611the gameo

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I

THEANCHOR()ioltese of Fan ~tv~r-Thurs ApO 1967 ~ ~ middot-middotmiddotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ middot20

AT BISEIOPS CONFERENCE Facilities for offering Mass were provided by the Archdiocese of Chicago when 230 U S bishops met in semi-annual conference In left photo nine othel prelates concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Joseph TRyan of Anchorage Alaska In right

photo are Archbishop John F Dearde~ of Detroit at left president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and at right Archbishop Johl1l F Cody of Chicago conference host Bishops Connolly and Gerrard attended from the Fall River Diocese NC Photos

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Page 12: 04.20.67

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-11lun Apr 20 1961 12 - )

Irish Emigronts Concern B~hops inmiddot Pgstoral

DUBLIN (NC)-Thespiritual and social needs of Irish 0trtifirants and the importance of preparing them for their new life in other countries were major concerns of the

Irish hierarchy at its meeti~g here in- Maynooth In a pas~ toFal on emigration it wasmiddotmiddot pointed out that while de- parture of Irish people foigt residence in other cuiitries is on the decline those who do leave ~can be an enormous force formiddotgoodmiddotin the lands they go to if they have the right ideals and motLves and abilities properly developed

Without these the pastoral adds the alien enironment in which they find themselves may presen~ serious dangers to the spiritual and moral wenfare ~

the weaker ones Education and religious formashy

tion of young people by the bullbull schools and by the clergy coopshy

erating with teachers were cited as most effective contriilgtutiona

to the formation of those likely to emigrate

Among recommendations made in the pastoral for properly pi-eshyparing potential emigrants for livingin other lands were

Young people should be enshycouraied to remain in schooias long as they can benefit from H

Emphasis on the virtue of tem perance

The utilization of youth club activities (discussion clubs and

guiles) to help young members to acquire healthy and natural

sOcial graces and habits The aid of priests in helping

the young people to grow up to

confident maturity Counse by priests on expected

problems of housing suitable

I

REV ALBERT F SHOVELTON

Priest to Spe(l]llc At Seminar

Rev Albert E fShovelton dishy

rector of Sl Mary Home New Bedford will speak as a represhy

sentative of the Diocesan Comshy employment dangersmiddot to health Unity atNClline Committe~ longhours of work in other the75th anniversary celebration

countries advanced atrange- at Holy Trinity LutheranTo SurveyCU mentS with Catholic welfaeChurchNorth Easton Thursday agencies in countries 9f their April 27

CHIltAGO (NC) - The board choice and the provision of in Father Shoveltons talk ~iU of trusteesof the Catholic Uni-formlltion concerning facilities be part of aseroinar middotHe wili be versity of America Washing- abroad for emigrantS preceded by Rev Dr Nils Ehtenshyton D9middot his est~blished it ne~ ~he h6ldin~ Of Irisit~nhlli~middot 8~rom Boston University School survey and ogtlectlODs ~()mmlttee lft llt1rge centers lt ~ Theology whose subject will headed br ~ St ~OU~1l1(ly~a~ Aparishnewsletter s~nt be Ecun1eni~m in Protestant to study ~he funct~op and plaOl th I fmiddot h middotmiddotf g Perspective Today f th Cmiddotth li U -Of Of Dl0n y rom omemiddot 10 Or1ll1O ~ a 0 r ~vterslY~ lt the emigrants bfuricti6ns inFathel ShovElltons suoject will m~nqa ~r~o ern a hoh~ - the local parishes at Chri~tmaiJbe ~EcumeJ1ismin Roman Cllthshy

laCatton on middota national scale d thO t f th h oljc PerspectiveToday A dis-Th middottt an 0 er lmes 0 e yearw en JJ

e cozpml ee~~made up U4 they mightmiddot possibly be home~uss)n period will follow SIX laymen and four archbIshops ) The audience will be comshyall of whom ar~ pr~sent trustees _ prised of the Lutheran parisa o~ the u~lverslty Formatu~n at Southern PrOVince cmgregation the townspeople ~he conrrutteewasannounce by ~ _ the towns clergy and the stll~ FrancII Cardinal Spellman of Favors DIGcoraate ~ dents at Holy Cross Fathenl New york ch~rman of the MIAMI CNC)Bishops of the Seminary Catholic Urnverslty board province of Atlanta have giyen Pastor of Holy Trjnity is Rev

The appointment of the com- p~sts in the six-ctiocese area Kenneth E Bjorklund

nlission for Christian

SAVE DOLLARS

with the MERCHANlS

84EconomOO

Auto Loan Pian

mittee came against a backshyground of reports that the U S bishops might transfer its Ionshytrol of CatJlolic University to 11 group of laymen The univershysitys rector Bishop William J McDonald has denied the middotreshyports but the chairman of the

new commi~ee Dr Ca~roU Hochwalt SaId the commIttee has been given the widest posshysible mandate from which nothshying will be excluded Our assignment Dr Hochshy

walt saidis the most farshyreaching one possible We are to take a reaiistic look at every aspec~ of the university all it has developed under its original directive since 1889 and at its potential for the forseeable

gt futule It is obviously the trusshyteef desire to leave no qtiestfon unanswered which may aftect the unfyersityas anational-hlsti tution 1its ~aculty students ~d

permission to hear confessions in the entire province and they have also asked the National Brothers VOuDlltee~ Conference of Catholic BishoPs As firefilllhters

to consider restoring the perma- nent diaconate in dioceses that want it

The two decisions were ~~_ nounced after the Bishops held their annual meeting in Miami

Archbls~OP P~ul J Hallman of A~lanta SaId l~ IS cus~omary ~or prtests t~ receIve theIr faculties from theIr own dl~cese and they h~ve been restncted o use wlthn that diocese EffectlVelmshy

II NORTHBROOK (NC) - Four

of the 34 men in the Northbrook volunteer fire department here are religious Brothers They are assigned to the national headshyquarters of the Society ofmiddot the Divine Word at nearby Techny Ill

The Brothrs are on call any time the Northbrook first stashytion standby has two or less men on duty for all general

the Cliurcli and the nation ift ~ J llmohgihemthejt haVe fouglU serves~ ( I i) middotClosingmiddotMeasure middotisome 50fires lti

j middot5T PAUL (NC)4AbilLban

Dedicate Monment ~ing ~l)e sale pf spe~iti~mtr 0ROURKtr chandise on Sundays has heen ~

To adFe Serra middot houses bullbull FunealHomepassed b)-both of the j

medl~telY all pne~ts In good alaons and for any fire or emershystandmg may nw he~r the con- gency when additional personnel fesslOns of Iemtents 10 the A- are needed Their volunteering la~ta archdIOcese ~nd th~ 41- was approved by the superiors oces~ of Sva~nah Charleston andmiddot the seminary bought them II ~alelgh MIami and St Augus- veh~C1e to expedite transportmshy

tine tion when they answer a fire ~ ca~I

Solons pass Sun JI n y The Brothers estaimat~ that

S_CRAMENTO (NC) dDme MinrElsota legislatureGov~aJ monument of Padre runipero old LeVander of Minnesota was Serra OFMwassolemnly ded- exPected to sign it into law icated on the grounds of tille The legislation forbids the sale State Capitol here Saturday OIl Sundays and six holidays

The formal ceremonies were (New Years Day Memorial Day qonducted by officials of the Independence Day Labor Day state alld by officers of the Nll- Thapksgiving and Christmas) of tive Sf ns and Daughters of the cameras musical instruments Golden West The project haa phonographs and tape recorders been sponsored by the California radios and television sets jewel-State Legislature and the fra- ry clocks and watches furs terrial ~ orders who provided furni~ure and other home furshymatching funds to finance its nishings including appliances executi~n middotmiddotmiddotAlso wearing apparel ()all

S7J ~c~nd St~~ef

Fall River MOIss_ 679-6072

MICHAEL J McMAHON Licensed Funeral Director Regisfered Embalmer

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Father Noel F Moholy OFMkinds including footwear lug- 469 LOCUST STREIE1T vice postulator for the canorlizashy gage lawnmowers and 9ther tion of Ithe Franciscan friar who outdvor machinery and equipshy FAU RIVER MASS bas been hailed as Californias ment hardware and tools paints 672-3381 First Citizen and Greatest Pio-Illeer W3 the principal speakeII at the ded~cation

varnishes wallpaper and re-middot lated tools lumber and other buildine materials and supplies

Wilfred e~

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James IE

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Suburban Parishes Should H~lp Save City Parishes

WASHINGTON (NC)-Archbishop Patrick A YBoy1e of Washington appealed here to ~ubJrbanCatholic parisbes to come to the aid of poverty-stricken parishes in the inner city At least 10 Catholic parishes in the inner city need financial help to continue to ismiddotmiddoth d d - ize t II h told C Has ave ecrease s exlS e a ommumon though the schools have contimshy

breakfast of the St Vincent ued to operate at fun capacity de Paul Society and the Whll~ parish income has faUellil only way we can give it iI off school costs have risen ~ through our suburban parishes cause of increased salaries em-

Suburban parishes are hard ployment of lay teachers and pressed themselves he said with higher maintenance costs for most of them deepiy in debt 00- older buildings cause of new constru~tion and expansion Nevertheless they must inaiJpirit of true charity share their resources with our poor parishes

The archbishop said that one of the reasons flr the poor fi shynancial condition of the inner city parishes was the cost of operating their schools but said emphatically that none of these schools would be given up

If we didnt have to support our schools Archbishop OBoyle said nearly all Of our parishes couldmiddot take care of their basic needs But we are not going to giv~ up any of our schools as long as we can get Ii dime to support them

Not mentioning which parish was concerned he stated thatmiddot one middotitmner city parish received $54000 from archdiocesan funds las~ year

Msgr Thomas W Lyons Arch diocesanmiddot Director of Educatiot1 said th~t before the whije middotmigramiddot tionmiddot to the suburbs CathoUa constituted about 22 per cent 01 the Washington Population The Negr~ who replaced the whitea are only about JO per cent Cathshyolic The result is that the par

Parochial school tuiti6n which averages about $4 a month haa not kept pace with costs Msgr Lyons explained

The St Vincent de Paul Soclshyety-here recently announced a twinning program in whicb sOlue of the more affluent parshyishes adopt inner city parisheo and provide for their needs

Offers Folk Mass For Vocations

HOUSTON (NC)-Bishop John L Morkowsky of Galveston- Houston offered a special foUt MaSs for youth on World Day oL Pr~yer for Vocations at Sacred Heart co-cathedral here

Father William Steele diocshyesan vocation director said the folk Mass is being offered to atshytract the young people middotThemiddot homily duringmiddot the Mass dealt with vocations

Contemporarymiddot folk musiC composed by Ray Repp nation ally known folk song writer was played during the Mass Guitar aceompaniment was proshyvided by seminarians from St MaryoS Seminary here

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Cardinal Cushing Sees Decrease In Seminaries

BOSTON (NC)-The numshyber of Catholic seminaries in the United States will deshycrease because of the diffi shyculty of obtaining top-flight scholars to staH them Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston preshydicted here

Addressing the New England Conference of the Catholic Hosshypital Association the cardinal told some 680 nuns priests and

laymen that schools of theology both Catholic and Protestant will become more closely identi shyfied with the great colleges and universities of this country a system not unlike that of Oxford in England

Sharing the platform with Archbishop Cushing was Bishop Fulton J Sheen of Rochester N Y who urged Catholic hosshypitals to go outside their own walls to bring social and medical help to the poor

Go out into the slums he said Give two or three hours a day visiting poor families for healing and counseling

He also suggested that Cathoshylic hospitals in this country adopt hospitals in poor counshytries

In A Rut We can certainly afford to

have someone put up a hut in the poor world We have the spirit but we have gotten into a rut the bishop said

Bishop Sheen told the confershyence the hallmark of a Catholic hospital is that we serve each patient as we would serve Christ

Cardinal Cushing also preshydicted that rising costs of care of the sick will induce the fedshyeral government to become more closely identified in hosshypital administration

I was told he added that in some hospitals the cost of a bed per day is almost $100 There must be a ceiling somewhere

Salons to Study Divorce Laws

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey State Assembly has unanimously approved a resolushytion to establish a commission to study the states divorce laws The measure already passed by the Senate is expected to be signed quickly by Gov Richard J Hughes

Thp commission described by Governor Hughes as an effort to strengthen marriage has al shyready encountered the opposishytion of -the Monitor the Trenton laquoiocesan newspaper But the bIShOps of the states three other Oatholic dioceses have reserved comment -

Boih Governor Hughes and the commissions sponsor Sen Jereshymiah F OConnor are Catholics And while Senator OConnor would like to see the commission recommend liberalization of the states di~orce law - desertion adultery and extreme cruelty are the only grounds at present-he would also like other changes made

Among them are a- family eourt which would serve as

counseling agency as well as divorce court lengthening of the present three-day waiting period as a1 obstacle to quick marriages and anr a warning to young PershySODS of the seriousness of marshyriqe

Senate Election PROVIDENCE (NC)-Sixteen

members of the 26-member senshyate of priests for the Providence dJocese have been elected in the first part of the senates twoshyatage elections

REV PATRICK 3 ONEILL

NCIEA Appoints Fr ONeiU

Rev Patrick J ONeill Supershyintendent of Schools in the Dioshycese of Fall River has been apshypointed by the Superintendents Department of the National Catholic Educational Association to serve as a member of the nashytional committee concerning tbe shygrowth and development of diocshyesan and parish school boards

This committee under the chairman Rt Rev Msgr ONeill DAmour will serv() as an adshyvisory unit It will gather and distribute information concernshying the development growth and function of school boards

Father ONeill made an extenshysive study of functioning school boards throughout the country His work in organizing our Diocshyesan Board of Education and working with it during the past year has been commended

Newman Chaplains School at IHCJJlvOlId

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Newman Chaplains Asshysociation has added a second training school for priests and Sisters entering Newman work It will be conducted at Harvard University

As in past years a school will be held at the University of Colshyorado in Boulder Dates for both schools are June 113 to July 2

The Newman Chaplains School prepares priests and nuns asshysigned to the secular campus The faculty has been chosen on the basis of experience in the Newman apostolate and speciali shyzation in theology -philosophy script~reand counseliJ)g _

Wlhere A GOODNAME

Means A GREAT DEAL

GEO-OHARA CHEVROLET

1001 Kings Hwy

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Open Evenings

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 13

Family Care Program forO Children The Paul A Dever State by the psychologists and pre-placement visits with the

School Taunton under the sponsorship of the Departshyment of Mental Health has recently begun a Family Care Program in an attempt tomiddot proshyvide some of its children with the experience of family life

screened by the social workers have all been approved by the schools physicians for the proshygram

These children are ready and able to enter into the commushynity said Dr John L Smalldon superintendent of the Dever

child to the prospective foster parents to determine the comshypatibility of the youngster with the family Once settled within the family the child will also be periodically visited by a schooi social worker to assist in the adjustment The youngsters

The program is initially seekshying to place approximately 20 selected youngsters in homes in

school Provides Funds

This program with its emphashy

would attend special educatiOD classes in public schoolll throughout the South Shore

the South Shore area These chidren have been selected for their advanced capacities for edshyucation and training and their abilities to adjust to a home enshyvironment

These children reconmmended

sis on the advantages of the proper fa mil y environment seeks through a gradual process to assimilate the child within the community

The Social Service Department at the Dever School will conduct

The Department of Mental Health which sponsorsmiddot similar Family Care Programs in sevshyeral other schools in the state is providing funds for the supshyport of the children

What do you do when you live on a Take a good look at your everyday very small island with over three and a - surroundings You are apart of the 20 half million people-say Hong Kong of theworlds populati~nthat has access Move to the suburbs But what if the to 80 of the worlds food That means suburb is Red China The only answer that the other 80 of the world must be is this-and rbe hundreds of thousands content with the remaining ~O Of who crowd these house- boats are lucky course you can read this and say So Ovlaquo half die people of the world ani But You cannot say to someone who taorneless-and most live in Asia is hungry come tomorrow We must

When we hear that three-fourths ol act today because tomorrow may be too cbe human race lives inpoverty or below late (pope Paul VI) Feed the man the subsist~ level these are the peo- dying of hunger if you have not fed pie we are talking about Do we know him you have killed h1m (Vatican II) what it feels like to subsist to know no Dear Monsignor OMeara 1 am attachshyother feeling but that of hunger It is ing my gilt 0 $__ to help right the impossible or we could never spend over imbalance in our world Please use it so 100 billion dollars annually on arma- that a missionary can feed the starving ments while 10000 die each day from name---------- shyyenJldernouri8bment address _~____

THE HOLYFATHER~S

FUND FOR THE POOR RT REV EDWARD T OmiddotMEARA NAT~NAL DIRECTOR THE SOCIETY POR THE PROPAGATION Of THE FMTH 36e 5TH AVE NYbull NY 10001

IN PALL RIVER YOUR DIRECTOR e RT REV RAYMOND CONSIDINE 868 N MAIN ST

THE ANCHOR~Diocese ofFa River-Thursbull Apr 20 19M

middotSocial Revolutmiddotion Is Needed In latin America Lands

From Social Revohitiiolll iin the New Latin America Edited by John 3 Considine MM

The possibility of orientating regional planning toward an overall solution of the pressing problems that concern more than one Latin nation could well engage Christian initiative writes Rene Atero The most typical example of this kind he sa)s concerns Social Revolution in Latin-~ershythe region of the Andean ica Most Rev Mark GMcshyMountains where peasants Grath CSC says Barbara numbering more than five Ward widely read Catholic

million live in thee different economist begins her book enshyltcountries possessing basically titled The Rich Nations and the

Poor Nations with the flat stateshy similar pro b- ment I suppose we are all lems Our asso- aware of the fact that we live in ciation with na- the most catastrophically revolushy~ional orgariiza- tionary age that men have ever

tions concerned fced middotmiddotwith deyelop- Social Revolution ment planning Vice-President Hubert Humshyin no way im- phrey who honored this meeting plies the im- with his presence last year proper subordi- writes in a recent issue of Forshynation of enti- eign Affairs Although the obshytie sund e r servation that Latin America is Church s p 0 n- in the midst of a political ecoshysorship to less effectual accom- nomic and social revolution has plishment under the state become a commonplace it is

On the contrary it is a ques- true tion of becoming involved in a The influential Chilean magashynew front in which Christian zine Mensaje published by the action is not only indispensable Jesuit Fathers dedicated an enshybut will be most efficacious in tire issue in December of 1962 to helping to enlist sectors of Latin the theme Revolution in Latin American society of top impor- America and followed this up

middottance for national dEvelopment withmiddot another special issue in With reference to the actual bctober 1963 on Revolutionary implementation of plans through Reforms in Latin America

well elaborated projectS we Early in 1964 the Civilta Catshyshould make certain that iden- tolica published in Rome by the tification and recognition as an Jesuits carried a critique of important part of the national these two issues of Mensaje by effort are given to current Father Jarlot which questioned Church activities already oper- the prudence of using the terio ating numerous projects of social revolution in a Christian conshydevelopment throughout the text pointing out that itia ltcontinent loaded with Marxist overtones

For example with regard to Not only does it signify rapid education we should lteall atten- c structural changes Father Jarlot tion to the fact that there aremiddot in asserts but also connotes vioshy

lence and some measure of hate Latin America about 5000 pri- and class warfare He would vate ed~cational insttutions pre- prefer the term evolution pared to share in current eduea- tional programs throughout the Social Revolution oontinent Mr Humphrey in the article

The private univemities andmiddot already mentioned asks the eenters of technical training inmiddot question Is it appropriate te the fields of agriculture labor define Alliance (for Progress) and cooperatives couY-a double policy as favoring social revolll shythe potential for plofessional tion - or should this word be and technical trainin1 if they avoided in favor of evolution 01 would participate on D national some other expression basis ir serving the more press- He anwers Evolution if ing needs of society carefully examined proves to be

Broad Horizons inadequate for it implies an un-We must work also in the pres- conscious non-deliberate change

ervation of the progress which that is slow and gradual has been achieved in the areas- What is required is conscious of social welfare now b~ing em- rapid change in the socioshyphasized (housing education economic structure a process public health) Lay groups such that can correctly and precisely as Catholic Action in different be called a revolutionmiddot If used spheres _ Legion of Mary St not as a slogan but in itS precise Vincent de Paul Carita3-which sense the policy of peaceful s0shy

up to now have directed their -cial and economic revolution is efforts mainly towards religion agtcorrect~haracterizatio~ofmiddot il~

t hid limce policy d If t middot an we are ac IVlless ou eJmiddot We should not hesitaietoi pand theIr programs a11d focus d tf l th t m some of their work on ilrojects I e~ I y o~rse ~es WI I ~i planned by specialists J JatmAmencaiJust ~ Presldcnt

This would permit the cltanel ~ohnson ~ssoclated hunseU WIth it in hIS war on poverty I~ng of theIr ~eal t~elr ~rga~l~a- throughout the world whenhe gtcent

tIOn and theIr splnt of saCrIfIce tl k d Iffit b bull recen y remar e a peaceshyas power u resources 0 e put f lItmiddot th i5 at the disposal of society Among u re~bo u IOn ~n ese areas such works surely programs of ~mossl Ie a VIolent revolutIon

IS mevltable community improvement will be especially attractive to tlhese lay groups

Thus the Church might con- sider putting its knowledge and resources to more effective use in preparing programs and projshyects for adaptation to national and regional needs

They should select carefully those with the capacity to fulfill so that they may obtain financing from national or international sources to complement their own eontributions thus enlarging the scope of their activities

In a study of The Church and

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Weve always enjoyed a great reputation formiddotmeat have always sold the pIck of oholce meats as Ih$p~cted and graded by the USDepartment of Agrloulture (USDA)

But now with our YouCome First policy our meat casel have taken on ~ new look

Our finicky p~IIQy~t~~reotlng oniy the ohoicest of the

oholce c has beoome believe It middotor not evet1lmiddotmol-e-flnlokye The trlmnilng and outtlng leoloser and mQre~a~e(ld ~ e bull to etJlv~ you th0 gie~tGstm~at vaYu9middotand most flavorful meats In lF~r2~ National hIS~O[y OLill oounters are the cieanes~ and our butohers mor~ eager than ever to lend you aweloomemiddotrneal tpia8lnlng Idea~

tiuohs gre~~ InQwsplrlt demanded a great new name II

fiRST CHOlom MEAT AU-

USDA graded and Inspeoted bull ann thel very plok of the oholce eaoh and every cut the best yoo oan buy~ Arnothefr way we provemiddot

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Arguments For Celibacy Outweigh Those Against

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Arguments urging that the requirement of eeHbacy of priests be set aside as an obshystacle to increasing vooationsare not sufficient Archbi-shop Gabriel Garribe pro-prefect of the Congregation of Semishynaries and Universities told a pressconfelence here My personal answer is that the arguments for celibacy cd the clergy are stronger than those against it He said he beshylieved there should be a firm affirmation in this respect and that it would maintain celibacy in the Latin Church

By doing so he said the quality ofpriesUy candidates will grow and through the quaUy of its priests the Church will harvest an increase in the quantity of candidates

The drop in the number of vocations the Archbishop stated Is due in part at least to the new attitude of todays youth and therefore requires changes_ in the traditional seminary formation

The prelate told the press that todays youth is much more fully aware of the whole world and far more sensitive to its problems than in the past Those responsible for seminary training must realize the importance of education and be capable of understanding the new generashytion of admiring them and of discovering for them the mission of the Church

StatistiCs Given Archbishop Garrone not e d

tj~at although there has been a falilng off in vocations generally there have been some surprising exceptions He singled out 1be

Dominican Work Continued from Page One

means that the approach will be intellectual rather than devoshytional and the emphasis win rest on accuracy on the truth of a statement rather than on whether it is opportune

In performing such a task mistakes 1n the form of partisan statements ~ld ill-balanced reshymarks are sometimes inevitable Father Hislop said

He affirmed the Dominicans loyalty to the Church but noted that it is often difficult for a vanguard intellectual group to express itself in terms that win not be misunderstood by the majority of Catholics

CCD Talks Continued from Page One

Tauntol as the speaker Mrs Mary Fuller of Buzzards

Bay will speak at the meetiDll in Bishop Stang High School North Dartmouth

At Bishop CasSidy High School Taunton the speaker will be Edward McDonagh-Of North Attleboro

Thomas Flangheddy of Taunshyton will address the meeting at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

The Cape area meeting will be held at Holy Trinity West Hallshywich with Miss Patricia llIIakle as speaker

Seek More funds WASHINGTON (NC) -Two

members of Marylands congresshysional delegation have introshyduced a bill which would make the government spend $75 milshylion annually for birth eontrol aid in the U ~ by 1973 The bin introduced by Sen Joseph Ty ings and Rep Samuel Freidel would propose $20 million the fkst year rising to $75 million bIV the fifth )ear Sta1e and loeal governments would provide _ edditiODal $25 mDJiclID br )87J

extraordinary development of vocations in Mexicp and in Yugoslavia and the stable continuity of recruitment in Poland

Among the statistics provided at the conference were the fact that the latest Church figures count 234000 Diocesan priests and 168000 Religious priests There are in addition 166400 Religious who are not ordained priests

One of the most heartening things in the vocational world picture it was pointed out hasshybeen the increase of priestly vocations in Africa Asia and Oceania

The growth of the local clergy has been a phenomenon of the last 40 years Today in Africa and Asia approximately 500 orshydinations take place every year

~regregampfsect ~ITOW(QJtfreg

$e~~ Aod WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep

Clement J Zablocki of Wisconshysin has introduced a proposal to correct U a defense education gap in American schools

Zablockis bill wo~ld amend the National Defense Education Act (NDEA) to provide federal grants for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment which could be used by children and teachers In parochial and private schools

In a statement on themiddot flOor Of the House of Representatives Zablocki pointed to inequities In

the present NDEA progra~ which Congress passed In 1958 to strengthen instruction in scishyence mathematics foreign lanshyguages and related subjects

An important provision of the act Zablocki said is Title III which provides matching grants to public schools for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment Non-public schools now are eligible only for loans for that purpose

Under Zablockis bill public authorities could obtain federal funds to buy laboratory and other special equipment which eould then be provided for use in non-public schools

In order to comply with matching provisions of the NDEA the non-public schools or groups of such schools would be required to prove they had spent an equal amount thenr selves for such eqUipment from private funds

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FALL RIVER AUXllLhARY AT MEETING Bishop Gerrard Auxiliary lBishop of the Diocese of Fall River is pictured at one of the sessions of the Spring meeting of the Bishops of theU Sheld in Ohicago NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 h A priI 20T urs 1967

Say~ ~Q~~OIP No SIQ7(~ ~ lovell

KANSAS CITY (NC) - The new role of a Bishop in the era of renewal has been spelled out here by Bishop Charles H Helmshysing of Kansas City-St Joseph

In addition to the age-old role of teacher Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop today must read stud) and apply the teachings of the Second Vatican Council the Gosshypels expressed to meet the needs of the modern world In short Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop must be a slave of love to serve as Christ served mankind

Bishop Helmsil1g spoke at the consecration of Auxiliary Bishop Joseph V Sullivan 45 of Kansas City-St Joseph

Bishop Sullivan is the fir~

native of this Missouri city eleshyvated to the hierarchy He was ordained to the priesthood June 1 1946 has served as chancellor of the diocese since 1957 and was named Bishop by Pope Paul VI last month

MarltqJ MregGGreg TJ~ ~~i MILWAUKEE (NC)-ALuthshy

eran scholar will teach Lutheran theology to graduate students at Marquette University here start shying next September Dr Kenneth G Hagen assistant professor of religion at Concordia College Moorhead MinJl will be the Marquet~e theology departmentu first full-time visiting scholra unshyder a grant from the Louis Calshyder Foundation in New York

-THREE LOCATIONS bull youre lookIng for the best in banking se~lce come 011J in to The NationalBank With the opening of our Stafford Square Office were now nearer to even more of you rOll the Greater Fall River area and each of our offices has Just aboUt every service you could want for yourself andl your family We mean M when we say were your FuID lervice BankPft

THE FALLmiddot RIVER

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t6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~n River-Thurs~ Apr 201967

Friend~2 [iJescribes Stru~g~ For QM~gtLy in T~~regwo~~~

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Rennedy When Fred W Friendly resigned from the Columbia

Broadcasting System in 1966 he ended a 16-year association with that network His trials in broadcast journalism are tbe subject of his new book Due To Circumstances Beyond Our Control Control bull Managements obligation is toRandom House $695 457 protect the interests of these Madison Avenue New York stockho~ders

NY 10022) But this volume But Mr Friendly is concprned is far more than a personal about the other stockholders memoir It is the story of th~ the 195 million citizens who

grant CBS and the other broadshybattle a losing casters the franchise to use theirbattle of course air for quality in

FCC Gutlesscommercial tel shyOne might naively expect that

~vision The the Federal Communications

main point is Commission would effectivelythat the story is here told by an insider Mr Friendlys middotfame criginally gprang from his close associashytion with the late Edward R Murrow He was Murrows partner in the prepashyntion of such pioneering and still unparalleled series as Se~ lil Now and CBS Reports

After Murrow left CBS and wentmiddot into governm()nt service Mr Friendly became president

of CBS news He resigned that ~sition because of a clispute conshycerning the broadcasting of Senshyate hearings on the Vietnam war

Many ancient or recent conshyfilets over broadcasting policy are rehearsed in this hook There fta for example a detailed acshy~unt of the hassies concerning Murrows TV _program dealing with Senator McCarthy before McCarthys downfall as the reshyault of the hearings in the Spring of 1954

There are briefer accounts of other skirmishes Thflse are all interesting and instructive But the value of the book lies not so much in these reminiscences as fin Mr Friendlys knowledgeable analysis of the process whereby television has retreated more and more from public service and become a purveyor of junk and garbage littering the American Iiving room and worse the American mind with trash

Geared to Prcfit Many factors account for this

perversion The principal one is greed Television is geared to private profit not puqUc service lLast years whopping profits will not suffice this year There must be sizable increase

This is to satisfy stockholders Mr Friendly asked William Paley chairman of the board Why do we have to make more money every year The reply was We have many small shareholders across the country and within the companybullbullbullbull

Subcommittee Sets Hearings on Smut

WASHINGTON (NC) -The House Select Subcommittee on Education is holding hearings beginning today on a bill to esshytablish a National Commissionmiddot on Noxious and Obscene Matters and Materials

Subcomllittee chairman Domishynick Daniels of New Jersey is sponsor of thc bill which would provide for a 16-member panel to study the problem of obscenity and recoqunend means Clf dealing with it

On the same day that the hearshyings were announced two other congressmen Arnold Olsen of Montana and Glenn Cunningham of Nebraska introduced bills to curb the mailing of obscene matshyter Olsens bill has bpoundlen enshydorsed by the Post Office Deshy~artment

protect the interests of the other 195 milion But Mr Friendly on the basis of close observation has -no kind words and no reshyspect for the FCC For all pur- poses the agency is toothless and gutless

To make even more money for the shareholders every possible penny has to be wrung out of the advertising medium which television now essentially is This consideration governs proshygramming

It might be supposed that even if prime time at night must eco- ~

nomically go chiefly to programshyming which brings in the maxishymum advertising dollar there is ample opportunity for public service broadcasting in the dayshytime hours But no pienty of money is to be made from dayshytime advertising

Endless Re-runs Three soap companJes alone

spend $290 million a year on television advertising and a lot of this is directed at housewives during the daytime And the programming dictated by this advertising comprisesmostly old old movies and endless re-runs of stupid situation comedies

Huge profits (are) being realshyized from the use of the miracle of television as a transmission belt for retread serials soap opshyeras game shows and the like The yield from the detergent deodorant bleach or food advershytisers who possess the daytime schedule (whose annualexpendishytures (are) some $130000000 ) is the principal reason why no serious progtamming can be sustained for any length of time during these hours

l3y serious programming is meant such things as crittcal UN debates (for example on Vietnam) vital congressional hearings the Popes visit to the UN Churchills funeral etc) Some of these have in fact got on the air and even for a conshysiderable period oftime b~t alshyways there is a major bitter battle involved

Educational TV What may not be realized is

the power of the local station n is by no means meekly subshymissive to the network It largely gqes its own way and its wayis in search of the utmost in profits

It is this fact for example which accounts for the nonshyexistence of a good solid repre~ sentative late-evening news broadcast over the nekwork The local station prefers to put on its own scrappy superficial travesty of a news program beshycause it can get-in an excessively large number of profitable comshymercials

Perhaps there is some hope in the field of educational televishy

sion Mr Friendly is now enshygaged in exploring that possibil shyity For our sake may he be successful At any rate we must thank him for reminding us of our tolerance of the criminial misuse Qf the air waves

H E A 0 S UNIVlERSliJIY New president of St Bonashyventure University St Bonashyventure N Y is the Very Rev Reginald A Redlon

OFM formerly of St Franshycis College Rye Beach N H The university Is operated by the Holy_ Name province of the Order of Friars Minor NC Photo

Issues GlLIidelimiddotnes For IEcumenism

LITTLE ROCK (NC) - Ecushymenical guidelines dealing prinshycipally with the conduct of Catholics at Protestant functions have been issued by Bishop Alshybert L Fletcher of Lttle Rock

Composed of the diocesan ecumenical commission the gUidelines specify that Catholics may attend Protestant church services participate in the singshying and common prayer but may not act as a reader or officer of such services

The rules permit Catholics to serye in wedding parties at mar- riages in Protestant churches providing the service does not involve a Catholic or a divorceci person Attendance at baccalaushyreate services in a church or elsewhere is permitted

Under the rules Catholics may not act as sponsors at Protestantmiddot baptisms Oi confirmation nat Jlarticipate in intercommunion services The guidelines encour- age Protestant attendance at Catholic services

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Misunderstandingmiddot Faced In Ecumenical Meeting

Roman Catholic and Lutheran theologians agreed here after their fourth meeting that many misunderstandings had been overcome on the Sacrament of the Lords SuppeR -Holy Eucharist-but that further examination is necesshysary The doctrinal consulshy to the concrete worship life o1Ztation held at the headquartshy the Church ers of the Lutheran Church In a prepared statement reshyin America was the fourth leased ft the conclusion of the in a series sponsored by the closed meeting the group noted Bishops Committee for Ecumenshy that in contrat to topics disshyism and Interreligious Affairs cussed at the first two meetings of the NCCB and the USA Nashy -the Nicene Creed and Baptismtional Committee of the Luthershy -there have been historically an Wotld Federation serious disagreements between

Main themes discussed at the the confessions concerning the three-day meeting were the Eucharist Lords Supper as a sacrifice the All participants the stateshymanner of Christs presence in ment added agreed that many the Sacrament the import of the misunderstandings had beellll concept of transubstantiation overcome as a result of the latest and the relation of these issues meeting

HOW TDCURE LEPERS

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THE PILLS

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ARE THII

YOU

A LEPER IN~

Dear Itoklm

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patient for a year

C Strfngless glftlil of $100 $50 $25 $11S $10 $5 $2 Bet the Sisters buy what they need

IiJ $850 equals 10000 Dapsone tablets

IlJ $1 a month ($12 a yeer) gives you membershyehlp un our Damlen Club for lepers

---~~---~~-------shy CO INCLOSIm PIJlA8Ul FIND $~======_

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For our eIght edlcal Sisters In P1rappancode south India today is just a normal day Doctors bags In hand they are out In the villages eKmiddot amlnlng everyone for leprosybullbullbullbull Leprosy can be cured If diagnosed early says Sister Elizashybeth a surgeon Better yet Itcan be prevented In this case an ounce of prevention is worthten pounds of cure bullbullbull The cure is cheaper than penny nely Only $850 buys 10000 Dapsone _ mIracle tablets enough for 43 lepers for a yeerl bullbullbull The effort In Pirappancode islnternashytional German Catholics built the 25middotbed ho pital (1St Johns) French Catholics gave a workshop (for therapy) and an American friend of ours has pledged a convent and chapel Now the Sisters need medicinps a $200 microscope a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for treating children especially In farmiddotflung villages Will you help them Monsignor Nolan will acshyknowledge your gifts promptly and the Slste win pray for you aware you are helping them cure lepers as Christ did -

WHAT YOU CAN DO IJ $5000 gives the Sisters a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for fighting leprosy at Ita source (A sign on the side will featu re the name ofyour favorite saint and your name ifyou wish)

IJ $1500wlll give theSlster-surgeon an ope Instable Shes ustng akitchen table now

WOULDc $575 buys a whirlpool beth $100 a sterilizer

NEED C $300 pays In full ~or the two-year training 01 IF a native Slsternurse She will write to you

YOU WERI C $240 ($5 a Week) takes care of bull fuMmiddottlme

~IlAII IA8T WlILflARIi ASBDelATIGN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN PresIdent

MSGR JOHN G NOLAN Natlonal8ecretaIJ Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc S30 Madison Avenuemiddot New York NY 1001 T~one 212yUkOft 6-5840

rHf ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Apr 20 196717

CATHOLIC (HAR~l~~S AP~EAL SILVER JUBILEE YEAR

MAY 7-17

What does it mean to you The opportunity to raise your sights to the level of a $2500 Jubilee Gift

An act of aratitude for 25 years of Charitable Seice

Bishop Connollys love for exceptionoillhiidren cannot be

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This Message

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THE ANCHORshy~18 Top East C~ast College Hoopsters middotPlay )Sees SociaI EquityThurs April 20 1967

Still Lagging Anglicalfj)~ ~teview At I(ennedy Center For P C Alumni In Spain Antii Cali~~i~ By Patricia Francis MALAGA (NC) - Spain

was taken to task for lagging1562 C~~lireglf A full house crowd saw some o( the East Coasts top collegIate basketball players behind many other countriesLONDON (NC) _ The demonstrate last week how basketball should be played Occasion was the 8th annual hi the development of a

ehurch of England has set Scholarship Basketball Game sponsored by the Providence College Alumni Club of New just Christian social and ecoshyup a permanent commission Bedford at Kennedy Youth Center in New Bedford Initiated in 1959 to - raise nomic life at the 26th Spanish C1)n Christian Docbine with tis first task to consider recastshying or replacing that churchs historic charter of the Thirtyshy~Hne Articles of Religion which

are strongly anti-Catholic In tOne

They are regarded by many as o stumbling block to Christian ~ity The articles drawn up in 1562

for the avoiding of diversities $pound opinions and for the establishshyhtg of consent touching truereli shygion must be publicly accepted py the clergy at ordination

They have become a matter of ~increasing objection lind some

Anglican clergymen now feel talat they should not be called Upon to subscribe to doctrinal definitions which reflect views formed in the 16th oentury aarship is a $2400 one paid at the time of extreme and bitter reli- rate of $600 a year to the winner gious controversy Next award will be made in

The articles denounce the 1970 TheRevEdwardC Duffy eurohurch of Rome as erroneous in chairman of- the scholarship matters of faith and declare games and recruiter of the among other things that theplaye~s who participate emphashyBishop of Rome hath no jurisdic- sizes the scholarship is open middotto tion in this -realm of Englandany deserving boy who has been Some prominent Anglican clergymen have blal1led the sharp declfnein ordination canshy

Qlidates on a reluctance to subshy~ribe to this document

Consider Advis( The new commission was apshy

pointed by Anglican Archbishops Michael Ramsey of Canterbury and Donald Coggan of York It consists of 17 members most of them theological professors repshyzesenting different schools of thought in the Anglican Church

Anglican Bishop Iar Ramsey of Durham is chairman The commissions general terms of reference say that it is

to consider and advise upon doctrinal questions submitted to it from time to time by the archshybishops and to plan when deshyslrable the investigation of

I ~uestions by other groups Its first task will be to conshy

sider the place of the Thirty- lege University of Rhode Island Nine Articles in the Anglican St Josephs of Philadelphia Bosshy

tradition and the question of ton College and Holy Cross subscription and assentto them There were Bill Blair Jim

Benedict Bob Kavolski and Bill Lasher of PC Mike FitzgeraldReligious Influence (of Mattapoisett) Henry Carey

In US on Wan~ -7- NEW YORK (NC)-Although

a majority of all Americans exshypressed the belief that 11eligion is losing its influence in the

United States in the latest Gallup Poll Catholics declined to-give majority assent to the opinion

The national survey showed tilat 57 per cent of all Americans in 1967 believe religion is losing its influence Only 14 per cent expressed this opinion in 1957

Among Protestants 60 per cent In 1967 compared with L7 per eent in 1957 said religion was losing its influence Forty-eight

per-cent of Catholics agreed in the latest survey compared with Beven per cent in 1957

Get Federal Funds PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A

Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyect under the auspices of Philashydelppia Archbishop John J Krols Commjssion on Economic Oppi)rtunity Programs hlils reshyceived $267980 from the federal government It was one of 74 Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyects in 30 states approved by Secretary of Labor W Willard Wirtz

accepted as a freshman at Provshyidence College regardless of the high school he attended

Primary Method William F Doyle president of

the NE Bedford club says the games are the alumnis primary method of raising money for the schoJarship fund

Since it was first held the game has attracted a following of avid fans-who help swell the scholshyarship treasury

Father Duffy feels it is the top post-season game in New England arid cites as proof the fact that his long time friend Bob Cousy Hoiy Cross All- Anierican and Boston Celtic great played in it himself two years ago It was his last game

Players who participated in this years money-for-scholarshyships game-all college seniors

represented Providence Colshy

scholarship funds for deserv- ing gr~duates of area high

schools the game profits enabled presentation of the first Edward J Tucker Memorial Scholarship of $2000 to Clifford Marr of New Bedford in 1962 Marr a graduate of Holy Family High was graduated from Provishydence College in 1966 and curshyrently is an Army lieutenant on duty in Korea

The second scholarship---named for the late 1r Tucker of Fairshyhaven a Providence College

graduate and one of the charter members of the New Bedford club--was awarded last year to Michael Doherty of New Bedshyford also a Holy Family gradushyate

Currently the four-year scholshy

Steve Chubin and Bob Boehm of the U of RI Richie Murphy and Greg Hochstein of Holy Cross John Austin and Ed Hock- enbury of Boston College and

f~nll lHoMsnln1~ fLaw Olhoc City EI1il(Jlcts

SPRIfiGFIELD (NC) - By unanimous vote of its five city commissioners this city has enshyacted a fair housing ordinance

The ordinance the third of its kind in OhiO becomes effecshytive May 3 Considerably strongshyer than the fair housing legisia- tion enacted by the Ohio Legisshylature in 1965 it outlaws disshycrimination in the sale or rental of any housing excepting only dwellings for members of reli shygious organizations or housing established for one sex only

Springfields new ordinance came as the res~lt of an improved climate of racial harmony The citys mayor Robert C Henry is a Negro whose performance of his duties has won wide reshyspect In recent years an Urban League has been launched and has made considerable progress A Human Relations Commission is functioning

PROVIDENCE COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP In atshytendance at PC Scholarship Fund Basketball Game in New Bedford were William Doyle presidentof the PC Club of New Bedford and Michael Doherty present scholarship recipient

Billy Oakes Marty Ford and Tom Duff of st Josephs the nations fifth-ranked_ team

Sees lay Teachers

Form Asso~iataon CLEVELAND (NC)-Groundshy

work for a diocesan lay teachers asso~iation was laid at a meeting of representatives of 21 diocesan high schools here

shy Patrick Bruening teacher at St Josephs high school and temshyporary chairman of the new unit said the association is an organshyization of professional people seekint professional growth

He added Only after we have proven ourselves as professionshyals with a professional attitude

about our job can we ask for and hope to get professional consideration I

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lhe players enjoyed demonshystrating th~ir proficiency The fans enjoyed watching the demonstration ~ and the scholar shipfund of the Providence Colshylege Alumni Club of New Bedshy~ord teaped tbebenef~il ~fboth

~ Population Control WASHINGTON (NC) - U s

Sen J W Fulbright of Arkansas has asked for aCongressional appropdation of $150 million for increased population coritior asshysistanCe to developIng countries

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Social Week here Angel Cardinal Herrera y

Oria former archbishop of Mashylaga in a letter to the Social Week sessions deplored what he called a deficiency of Catholic influence in Spanish public lilfe declaring that Spain a Catholic nation was far from being a model of social justice

No Dialogue Earlier Auxiliary Bishop Rashy

fael Gonzalez Moralejo of Valenshycia ecclesiastical moderator of the SocialWeek sounded a simshyilar note declaring that where there is no dialogue between citizens and their government there is no democracy and such a society cannot call itself Christian

Cardinal Herrera said that ahead of Spain are nations who

have learned how to organize their natioJlallif~ according to the norms of justice which are the daughters of consciElnce Sweden has progressed in the social and pOlitlclll o~der to such an extent that the ~ope

could state that its public ~n~ishy tutions are in harmonywith the teachings of the Seco~dVatican Council he said

1[Jpper ~Iasses Cardinal Herrera lirged the

upper classes of -the countryto contribute toward the formation of a sound and realistic public opinion by which religious conshycepts would be applied to the economic and social life of Spain

It is necessary he said to diminish the differences in classes to work toward Unity not only in the economic order but also in i~ the education and

c~vic department

The Best

Car

Georgell Cluh Olf to Good Start mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Apr 20 1967

Taunton High Is Surprise In County Diamond loop former FltrrJDD Riweff CYOer on Scholagslvop ltltIt PIl1Jf$~ns

By PETE~ BARTEK Norton High Coach

Coach BiD Georges Taunton High diamond aggreg~

tion is the early season surprise in the Bristol County schoolboy league now in ita second week of the eampaign The pennant race appeam ~ be developing into one of the most exciting in many years Five clubs are battling of Ule better area clubs year fOIl the coveted flag And after year

Coach Harold (Chet) Haneshywhile action is fast and fm-shywichs Bishop Feehan High teamiOWl in the BCL the eight N3rshyof Attleboro has tucked awayragansett League teams are early season wins over Northgetting I e Q d y Attleboro and New Bedford Voshy

lor the chamshy cational The latter two will pionship race m probably fight it out fornext-toshytheir COmpetishy the-last place in the final standshytion Delayed ing as they seek to avoid theboth by rain and cellar Ii old weather The two top contests on nextCOaches h a v e Mondays BCL card will seebeen reminding Coyle playing Durfelte at Alumnitheir charges of Field in Fall River while Taunshythe pitfalls of ton journeys to North Dartmoutheareless loose to clash with stang Two northernplay and also Peter eounty rivals Attleboro andthe IOOmmission Bartek Feehan meet at the formers of Deedless errors which ean field next Monday when North relegatea club to an early Deeshy Attleboro travels to New Bedshyond diviaion berth from which it ford to take 0111 Vocatlonal win be bard to emerge as 1M Nury Contests oompetition progresses Meanwhile the Narragansett

Chausse and JlaJkut loop is comple~ing its first week The Herring City Orange and of play Its still a little early to

Black pulled the big surprise of make 8 judgment as to how thebe young season when it held clubs will stand at the end of thethe always strong Dullfee High

lI~mpaign team of Fall River to a 2-2 tie in Four Narry tilts are on tap for11 innings The prognosticators next Tuesdaybad been writing off the Georgeshy Coach Jack McCartys Caseeoached clan solely because they High Cardinals of Swansea willfelt Taunton would be unable to face Coach Jack Harts DimanJeplace Artmiddot Koska lost by gradshy Vocational team in Fall River uation in what looms as one of the

But Scott Chawrse impressed most interesting early seasonin his confrontation with the Fan games Coach Doug Baxendales River Hilltoppelll aDd now the Msgr Prevost High team of Fall same pundits who had relegated River will be at Dighton to meet Taunton to a lowly apot 8re the Coach Eddie Texeiras D - ~ first to admit that things will be Regionals Coach Ed Bibeau will much more pleasant for the lead his W~port High aggr~gashyTauntonians this Spring tion to Seekonk to middotvh( with

Stro~ Coyle Offense Coach Roger Hills charges The Admittedly an the doubting fourth Narry contest next Tuesshy

Thomases were not convinced day will see Coach Jack Brenshyon the basis of a single performshy nans Holy Family High teain of ance So Joe Majkut and Chausse New Bedford meeting Coach Jim Ulen eombined to throw a no-hit Sullivans Somersetmiddot High teamwin over Coach Dick Joyces at the latters field Attleboro High team Even the

Lanllers Ready most skeptical then conceded that Taunton must be reckoned On Ca~ Cod n nip-~pd~tuck

in the flag race battle is going on in that areas While Taunton High has heeD eon1erence schedule Four conshy

eGualling the early season attenshy tests are listed for the Capeway tion unexpected results have eircuit next Monday They are eccurred in several other diashy Oldmiddot Rochester (Mattapoisett) mond eontests Attleboro which at Barnstable Bourne at Wareshydid DOt seem destined lor gfeat bam Dartmouth middotat Dennis-Yarshythings this Spring provided the mouth and Fairhaven vs Lawshyfirst surprise w~en it toppled rence High at Falmouth Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Norton High in the Clover Stang High of North Dartmouth Valley Conference plays its first

Taunton then proved its mettle league game at home against when it defeated surprising Millis next Monday The Purple Attleboro Hickey has talent at - and White Lancers travel to Stang but his problem has heeD Medfield next Wednesday tv properly align his best playem Apparently they were not in the Score Governmentright spots when they went down to defeat at the hands of Coach On Lab~r Problems Jim Burns Msgr Coyle High

BUENOS AIRES (NC) -TwonJne of Taunton which has Catholic organizations have isshycwuted its way to two one~sided sued a joint manifesto criticizingviet(lries Coyles strength is in thlte Argentine government sayshyits offensive attack but it also ing it has failed to protect workshy

has a capable defense and pitch ers basic rightsJng staff to make a real run for Issued by the Catholic Youngthe BCL crown Workers (JOC) and Catholic _ Feehans Auspicious Start Action Workers Movement

Durfee while it may have been (MOAC) the statement alsotemporarily halted by Taunton called upon the bishops to be enpects to be among the leaders aware of the needs and goals of before the end of the week The young workers and the labor Hilltoppers looked good in winshy class and to be brave in ltexshy

double-header from Pil-shyning a pressing the Churchs doctrine grim High of Rhode Island last as applied to real-life situations weekend CoachJoe Lewis feelsmiddot It said that the government his boys can now maintain the which calls itself Christian but momentum they have generated is anything but Christian has in the non-league affairs It goes nothing to do with the Gospelalmost without saying that one or Christs teachings or with the off-day is not going to thwart Churchs doctrines as defined by the Hilltopperll wbo produce ODe the Second Vatican Councit

By JOE MIRANDA A Parsons College senior JRobshy

eli Bonalewicz of Fall River is -nearIng the end of a most sucshycessful college career both athshyletically and academically

Bob is attending Parsons in Fairfield Iowa on a baseball scholarship and has started bis third season as the colleges first strong catcher

neans List Student A Physical Education major

Bob has a minor in History and during the last marking period was named to the Deans List at Parsons -

A member of St PatrIcks Parshyish Bonny is a 1963 graduate of Durfee High School where he participated in football basketshyball and baseball

The son of Mr and Mrs Mathew Bonalewicz of 50 Chapshylin Street he is oile of five chil shydren ald has not yet decided upon a vocation

Bonny has two older brotherll a lieutenant and Mathew Jr II

staff sergeant both in the Air Force and stationed ubroad Bob also has two sisters Kathleen II student at Durfee High and Ma) Ann a grammar school pupil

Has f80 Average Bonalewicz recently returned

from a Southern baseball trip end gained excellent commendashytions from his coach Duane Banks for his performance as the Wildcats won 11 of 13 games

The Fall River player batted 430 belted three homers had nine runs-batted-in and seltlred 10 during Parsons first 13 games

Bonalewicz a 22-year-old 175shyJ)ound 5-8 giant enjoys playing baseball and so does his coach who scheduled 89 games last seashyson to set a ollegiate record fur the most games played in one year

Ankle IBjUlY

With the former Durfee backshystop handling the brunt of the catching duties until a knee inshyjury forced him to the sidelines Parsons won 72 lost 15 and twice finished in ti~d games called beshyca~se of darkness

The former St Patricks star in the CYO baseball program started poory this season finshyis middotng off the Southern trip with an ankle sprain but entering this week the ankle was in good shape and Bonny expected to take his regular spot behind the plate

Federal Agency Has Inter-Faith Advisors

WASHINGTON (NC)- A Catholic priest a Methodist minshyister and a Jewish rabbi have been appointed religious advishyBors to the United States Inforshymation Agency here

Msgr George G Higgins clIishyrector of the Social Action Deshypartment U S Catholic Confershyence the Rev Edward G Cu-middot roll superintendent of the Washshyington Northwest District ol the Methodist Baltimore Conference and Rabbi Richard G Hirsch dishyrector of the Relgious Action Center Union of American Heshybrew Congregations have been named to the USIA advisory panel

Officials of the agency noted that while it has had religious advisors since its inception this marks the first time an interfaith panel had been established

The purpose of the panel offi shycials said is to assure that the agencys handling of religious matters serves the best intlterest of the nation and its dlveraity of faiths

Bonalewicz also played for St Patricks T)iocesan championship team and for the Fall River Mershychants in the Newport Sunse~ League

As a senior at DUrfee Bonny was awarded the 1963 George Kaplan Memorial Trophy as the Hilltoppers best senior basketshyball player

His hustle and determination while performing for Durfee at Bostcm Garden during the anshynual Eastern Massachusetts Tecb tournament gained him the reshyspect and admiration of all that witnessed his efforts

Bonalewicz recently completed a practice teaching tour in an Iowa Junior High School and while tere coached the eighth grade team to a league chamshypionship

Earlier in the college year Bob_ was a member of the Parsons intramural flag football progmiddotam and received a trophy for his performan J

Despite the heavy bnsebaU schedule Bob has manged to keep hi grades above average and after the Fall semestershyshowed his prowess in the classshyroom by being named to the Deans List for the second time

DeMatha Winner In Hoop Tourney

WASHINGTON (NC) - DeshyMatha High of suburban Hyattsshyville Md scored an upset cliff shyhanger victory to cop the 12th national high sChool basketballl tournament sponsored by thE local Knights of Columbus J017 the fifth straight time

DeMatha avenged two regula17 season defeats by Mackin High Washington Catholic League

champ with its last minute 70-68 victory Mount Carmel of Chiengo took

third place with a 47-45 overshytime win over DePaul Acndemy of Chicago Northeast Cnthrt1ie of Philadelphia took fifth pIhce with a 77-74 win over St Petertl

B(~ BONALEWICZ of New Brunswick N J Catheshydral High of Trenton NJ Inpound

The oung catcher has been Dwight School of New York alslaquo) long known for his bullet like participated tlnrowlr arm and gained conshy Aubrey Nash DeMatha junloY siderable praise from opponents wall named the tournnmentl in 111gh school amateur and colshy most valuable player lege eompetitions for his savvy A 5-11 junior John Somogyftbehind the plate set three tournament records-shy

Three-Letter Man 40 field goals 108 points in threE Bonalewicz played football for games and 43 points in one game Don MontIe basketb~ll for Tom and tied another record ll-forshyKaram and baseball for middotJoe 11 from the foul line Lewis while at Durfee and also performed for Lewis Chathammiddot team in the Cape Cod League

The Fall Riverite cannot get FAIRHAVENenough baseball according to his mother Mrs Bonalewicz recalls LUMBER a game at Alumni Field when

COMPANYDurfee bested a Venezuelan team sponsored by the Peoplesshyto-Peoples program Bob was inshy Complete linejured and taken -to the hospital Mrs Bonalewicz remembers Building Materials then came back to finish the game hitting a home run to win I SPRING ST FAIRHAVENmiddotit for the Hilltoppers He wall voted the outstanding player in 993-2611the gameo

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THEANCHOR()ioltese of Fan ~tv~r-Thurs ApO 1967 ~ ~ middot-middotmiddotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ middot20

AT BISEIOPS CONFERENCE Facilities for offering Mass were provided by the Archdiocese of Chicago when 230 U S bishops met in semi-annual conference In left photo nine othel prelates concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Joseph TRyan of Anchorage Alaska In right

photo are Archbishop John F Dearde~ of Detroit at left president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and at right Archbishop Johl1l F Cody of Chicago conference host Bishops Connolly and Gerrard attended from the Fall River Diocese NC Photos

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Page 13: 04.20.67

Cardinal Cushing Sees Decrease In Seminaries

BOSTON (NC)-The numshyber of Catholic seminaries in the United States will deshycrease because of the diffi shyculty of obtaining top-flight scholars to staH them Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston preshydicted here

Addressing the New England Conference of the Catholic Hosshypital Association the cardinal told some 680 nuns priests and

laymen that schools of theology both Catholic and Protestant will become more closely identi shyfied with the great colleges and universities of this country a system not unlike that of Oxford in England

Sharing the platform with Archbishop Cushing was Bishop Fulton J Sheen of Rochester N Y who urged Catholic hosshypitals to go outside their own walls to bring social and medical help to the poor

Go out into the slums he said Give two or three hours a day visiting poor families for healing and counseling

He also suggested that Cathoshylic hospitals in this country adopt hospitals in poor counshytries

In A Rut We can certainly afford to

have someone put up a hut in the poor world We have the spirit but we have gotten into a rut the bishop said

Bishop Sheen told the confershyence the hallmark of a Catholic hospital is that we serve each patient as we would serve Christ

Cardinal Cushing also preshydicted that rising costs of care of the sick will induce the fedshyeral government to become more closely identified in hosshypital administration

I was told he added that in some hospitals the cost of a bed per day is almost $100 There must be a ceiling somewhere

Salons to Study Divorce Laws

TRENTON (NC) - The New Jersey State Assembly has unanimously approved a resolushytion to establish a commission to study the states divorce laws The measure already passed by the Senate is expected to be signed quickly by Gov Richard J Hughes

Thp commission described by Governor Hughes as an effort to strengthen marriage has al shyready encountered the opposishytion of -the Monitor the Trenton laquoiocesan newspaper But the bIShOps of the states three other Oatholic dioceses have reserved comment -

Boih Governor Hughes and the commissions sponsor Sen Jereshymiah F OConnor are Catholics And while Senator OConnor would like to see the commission recommend liberalization of the states di~orce law - desertion adultery and extreme cruelty are the only grounds at present-he would also like other changes made

Among them are a- family eourt which would serve as

counseling agency as well as divorce court lengthening of the present three-day waiting period as a1 obstacle to quick marriages and anr a warning to young PershySODS of the seriousness of marshyriqe

Senate Election PROVIDENCE (NC)-Sixteen

members of the 26-member senshyate of priests for the Providence dJocese have been elected in the first part of the senates twoshyatage elections

REV PATRICK 3 ONEILL

NCIEA Appoints Fr ONeiU

Rev Patrick J ONeill Supershyintendent of Schools in the Dioshycese of Fall River has been apshypointed by the Superintendents Department of the National Catholic Educational Association to serve as a member of the nashytional committee concerning tbe shygrowth and development of diocshyesan and parish school boards

This committee under the chairman Rt Rev Msgr ONeill DAmour will serv() as an adshyvisory unit It will gather and distribute information concernshying the development growth and function of school boards

Father ONeill made an extenshysive study of functioning school boards throughout the country His work in organizing our Diocshyesan Board of Education and working with it during the past year has been commended

Newman Chaplains School at IHCJJlvOlId

WASHINGTON (NC) - The National Newman Chaplains Asshysociation has added a second training school for priests and Sisters entering Newman work It will be conducted at Harvard University

As in past years a school will be held at the University of Colshyorado in Boulder Dates for both schools are June 113 to July 2

The Newman Chaplains School prepares priests and nuns asshysigned to the secular campus The faculty has been chosen on the basis of experience in the Newman apostolate and speciali shyzation in theology -philosophy script~reand counseliJ)g _

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs Apr 20 1967 13

Family Care Program forO Children The Paul A Dever State by the psychologists and pre-placement visits with the

School Taunton under the sponsorship of the Departshyment of Mental Health has recently begun a Family Care Program in an attempt tomiddot proshyvide some of its children with the experience of family life

screened by the social workers have all been approved by the schools physicians for the proshygram

These children are ready and able to enter into the commushynity said Dr John L Smalldon superintendent of the Dever

child to the prospective foster parents to determine the comshypatibility of the youngster with the family Once settled within the family the child will also be periodically visited by a schooi social worker to assist in the adjustment The youngsters

The program is initially seekshying to place approximately 20 selected youngsters in homes in

school Provides Funds

This program with its emphashy

would attend special educatiOD classes in public schoolll throughout the South Shore

the South Shore area These chidren have been selected for their advanced capacities for edshyucation and training and their abilities to adjust to a home enshyvironment

These children reconmmended

sis on the advantages of the proper fa mil y environment seeks through a gradual process to assimilate the child within the community

The Social Service Department at the Dever School will conduct

The Department of Mental Health which sponsorsmiddot similar Family Care Programs in sevshyeral other schools in the state is providing funds for the supshyport of the children

What do you do when you live on a Take a good look at your everyday very small island with over three and a - surroundings You are apart of the 20 half million people-say Hong Kong of theworlds populati~nthat has access Move to the suburbs But what if the to 80 of the worlds food That means suburb is Red China The only answer that the other 80 of the world must be is this-and rbe hundreds of thousands content with the remaining ~O Of who crowd these house- boats are lucky course you can read this and say So Ovlaquo half die people of the world ani But You cannot say to someone who taorneless-and most live in Asia is hungry come tomorrow We must

When we hear that three-fourths ol act today because tomorrow may be too cbe human race lives inpoverty or below late (pope Paul VI) Feed the man the subsist~ level these are the peo- dying of hunger if you have not fed pie we are talking about Do we know him you have killed h1m (Vatican II) what it feels like to subsist to know no Dear Monsignor OMeara 1 am attachshyother feeling but that of hunger It is ing my gilt 0 $__ to help right the impossible or we could never spend over imbalance in our world Please use it so 100 billion dollars annually on arma- that a missionary can feed the starving ments while 10000 die each day from name---------- shyyenJldernouri8bment address _~____

THE HOLYFATHER~S

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THE ANCHOR~Diocese ofFa River-Thursbull Apr 20 19M

middotSocial Revolutmiddotion Is Needed In latin America Lands

From Social Revohitiiolll iin the New Latin America Edited by John 3 Considine MM

The possibility of orientating regional planning toward an overall solution of the pressing problems that concern more than one Latin nation could well engage Christian initiative writes Rene Atero The most typical example of this kind he sa)s concerns Social Revolution in Latin-~ershythe region of the Andean ica Most Rev Mark GMcshyMountains where peasants Grath CSC says Barbara numbering more than five Ward widely read Catholic

million live in thee different economist begins her book enshyltcountries possessing basically titled The Rich Nations and the

Poor Nations with the flat stateshy similar pro b- ment I suppose we are all lems Our asso- aware of the fact that we live in ciation with na- the most catastrophically revolushy~ional orgariiza- tionary age that men have ever

tions concerned fced middotmiddotwith deyelop- Social Revolution ment planning Vice-President Hubert Humshyin no way im- phrey who honored this meeting plies the im- with his presence last year proper subordi- writes in a recent issue of Forshynation of enti- eign Affairs Although the obshytie sund e r servation that Latin America is Church s p 0 n- in the midst of a political ecoshysorship to less effectual accom- nomic and social revolution has plishment under the state become a commonplace it is

On the contrary it is a ques- true tion of becoming involved in a The influential Chilean magashynew front in which Christian zine Mensaje published by the action is not only indispensable Jesuit Fathers dedicated an enshybut will be most efficacious in tire issue in December of 1962 to helping to enlist sectors of Latin the theme Revolution in Latin American society of top impor- America and followed this up

middottance for national dEvelopment withmiddot another special issue in With reference to the actual bctober 1963 on Revolutionary implementation of plans through Reforms in Latin America

well elaborated projectS we Early in 1964 the Civilta Catshyshould make certain that iden- tolica published in Rome by the tification and recognition as an Jesuits carried a critique of important part of the national these two issues of Mensaje by effort are given to current Father Jarlot which questioned Church activities already oper- the prudence of using the terio ating numerous projects of social revolution in a Christian conshydevelopment throughout the text pointing out that itia ltcontinent loaded with Marxist overtones

For example with regard to Not only does it signify rapid education we should lteall atten- c structural changes Father Jarlot tion to the fact that there aremiddot in asserts but also connotes vioshy

lence and some measure of hate Latin America about 5000 pri- and class warfare He would vate ed~cational insttutions pre- prefer the term evolution pared to share in current eduea- tional programs throughout the Social Revolution oontinent Mr Humphrey in the article

The private univemities andmiddot already mentioned asks the eenters of technical training inmiddot question Is it appropriate te the fields of agriculture labor define Alliance (for Progress) and cooperatives couY-a double policy as favoring social revolll shythe potential for plofessional tion - or should this word be and technical trainin1 if they avoided in favor of evolution 01 would participate on D national some other expression basis ir serving the more press- He anwers Evolution if ing needs of society carefully examined proves to be

Broad Horizons inadequate for it implies an un-We must work also in the pres- conscious non-deliberate change

ervation of the progress which that is slow and gradual has been achieved in the areas- What is required is conscious of social welfare now b~ing em- rapid change in the socioshyphasized (housing education economic structure a process public health) Lay groups such that can correctly and precisely as Catholic Action in different be called a revolutionmiddot If used spheres _ Legion of Mary St not as a slogan but in itS precise Vincent de Paul Carita3-which sense the policy of peaceful s0shy

up to now have directed their -cial and economic revolution is efforts mainly towards religion agtcorrect~haracterizatio~ofmiddot il~

t hid limce policy d If t middot an we are ac IVlless ou eJmiddot We should not hesitaietoi pand theIr programs a11d focus d tf l th t m some of their work on ilrojects I e~ I y o~rse ~es WI I ~i planned by specialists J JatmAmencaiJust ~ Presldcnt

This would permit the cltanel ~ohnson ~ssoclated hunseU WIth it in hIS war on poverty I~ng of theIr ~eal t~elr ~rga~l~a- throughout the world whenhe gtcent

tIOn and theIr splnt of saCrIfIce tl k d Iffit b bull recen y remar e a peaceshyas power u resources 0 e put f lItmiddot th i5 at the disposal of society Among u re~bo u IOn ~n ese areas such works surely programs of ~mossl Ie a VIolent revolutIon

IS mevltable community improvement will be especially attractive to tlhese lay groups

Thus the Church might con- sider putting its knowledge and resources to more effective use in preparing programs and projshyects for adaptation to national and regional needs

They should select carefully those with the capacity to fulfill so that they may obtain financing from national or international sources to complement their own eontributions thus enlarging the scope of their activities

In a study of The Church and

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Theres muchthat$ new at Firat National these days~ bullbull and this sign atthe meat oaeels one of the most exoltlng~

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Weve always enjoyed a great reputation formiddotmeat have always sold the pIck of oholce meats as Ih$p~cted and graded by the USDepartment of Agrloulture (USDA)

But now with our YouCome First policy our meat casel have taken on ~ new look

Our finicky p~IIQy~t~~reotlng oniy the ohoicest of the

oholce c has beoome believe It middotor not evet1lmiddotmol-e-flnlokye The trlmnilng and outtlng leoloser and mQre~a~e(ld ~ e bull to etJlv~ you th0 gie~tGstm~at vaYu9middotand most flavorful meats In lF~r2~ National hIS~O[y OLill oounters are the cieanes~ and our butohers mor~ eager than ever to lend you aweloomemiddotrneal tpia8lnlng Idea~

tiuohs gre~~ InQwsplrlt demanded a great new name II

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Arguments For Celibacy Outweigh Those Against

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Arguments urging that the requirement of eeHbacy of priests be set aside as an obshystacle to increasing vooationsare not sufficient Archbi-shop Gabriel Garribe pro-prefect of the Congregation of Semishynaries and Universities told a pressconfelence here My personal answer is that the arguments for celibacy cd the clergy are stronger than those against it He said he beshylieved there should be a firm affirmation in this respect and that it would maintain celibacy in the Latin Church

By doing so he said the quality ofpriesUy candidates will grow and through the quaUy of its priests the Church will harvest an increase in the quantity of candidates

The drop in the number of vocations the Archbishop stated Is due in part at least to the new attitude of todays youth and therefore requires changes_ in the traditional seminary formation

The prelate told the press that todays youth is much more fully aware of the whole world and far more sensitive to its problems than in the past Those responsible for seminary training must realize the importance of education and be capable of understanding the new generashytion of admiring them and of discovering for them the mission of the Church

StatistiCs Given Archbishop Garrone not e d

tj~at although there has been a falilng off in vocations generally there have been some surprising exceptions He singled out 1be

Dominican Work Continued from Page One

means that the approach will be intellectual rather than devoshytional and the emphasis win rest on accuracy on the truth of a statement rather than on whether it is opportune

In performing such a task mistakes 1n the form of partisan statements ~ld ill-balanced reshymarks are sometimes inevitable Father Hislop said

He affirmed the Dominicans loyalty to the Church but noted that it is often difficult for a vanguard intellectual group to express itself in terms that win not be misunderstood by the majority of Catholics

CCD Talks Continued from Page One

Tauntol as the speaker Mrs Mary Fuller of Buzzards

Bay will speak at the meetiDll in Bishop Stang High School North Dartmouth

At Bishop CasSidy High School Taunton the speaker will be Edward McDonagh-Of North Attleboro

Thomas Flangheddy of Taunshyton will address the meeting at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

The Cape area meeting will be held at Holy Trinity West Hallshywich with Miss Patricia llIIakle as speaker

Seek More funds WASHINGTON (NC) -Two

members of Marylands congresshysional delegation have introshyduced a bill which would make the government spend $75 milshylion annually for birth eontrol aid in the U ~ by 1973 The bin introduced by Sen Joseph Ty ings and Rep Samuel Freidel would propose $20 million the fkst year rising to $75 million bIV the fifth )ear Sta1e and loeal governments would provide _ edditiODal $25 mDJiclID br )87J

extraordinary development of vocations in Mexicp and in Yugoslavia and the stable continuity of recruitment in Poland

Among the statistics provided at the conference were the fact that the latest Church figures count 234000 Diocesan priests and 168000 Religious priests There are in addition 166400 Religious who are not ordained priests

One of the most heartening things in the vocational world picture it was pointed out hasshybeen the increase of priestly vocations in Africa Asia and Oceania

The growth of the local clergy has been a phenomenon of the last 40 years Today in Africa and Asia approximately 500 orshydinations take place every year

~regregampfsect ~ITOW(QJtfreg

$e~~ Aod WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep

Clement J Zablocki of Wisconshysin has introduced a proposal to correct U a defense education gap in American schools

Zablockis bill wo~ld amend the National Defense Education Act (NDEA) to provide federal grants for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment which could be used by children and teachers In parochial and private schools

In a statement on themiddot flOor Of the House of Representatives Zablocki pointed to inequities In

the present NDEA progra~ which Congress passed In 1958 to strengthen instruction in scishyence mathematics foreign lanshyguages and related subjects

An important provision of the act Zablocki said is Title III which provides matching grants to public schools for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment Non-public schools now are eligible only for loans for that purpose

Under Zablockis bill public authorities could obtain federal funds to buy laboratory and other special equipment which eould then be provided for use in non-public schools

In order to comply with matching provisions of the NDEA the non-public schools or groups of such schools would be required to prove they had spent an equal amount thenr selves for such eqUipment from private funds

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FALL RIVER AUXllLhARY AT MEETING Bishop Gerrard Auxiliary lBishop of the Diocese of Fall River is pictured at one of the sessions of the Spring meeting of the Bishops of theU Sheld in Ohicago NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 h A priI 20T urs 1967

Say~ ~Q~~OIP No SIQ7(~ ~ lovell

KANSAS CITY (NC) - The new role of a Bishop in the era of renewal has been spelled out here by Bishop Charles H Helmshysing of Kansas City-St Joseph

In addition to the age-old role of teacher Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop today must read stud) and apply the teachings of the Second Vatican Council the Gosshypels expressed to meet the needs of the modern world In short Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop must be a slave of love to serve as Christ served mankind

Bishop Helmsil1g spoke at the consecration of Auxiliary Bishop Joseph V Sullivan 45 of Kansas City-St Joseph

Bishop Sullivan is the fir~

native of this Missouri city eleshyvated to the hierarchy He was ordained to the priesthood June 1 1946 has served as chancellor of the diocese since 1957 and was named Bishop by Pope Paul VI last month

MarltqJ MregGGreg TJ~ ~~i MILWAUKEE (NC)-ALuthshy

eran scholar will teach Lutheran theology to graduate students at Marquette University here start shying next September Dr Kenneth G Hagen assistant professor of religion at Concordia College Moorhead MinJl will be the Marquet~e theology departmentu first full-time visiting scholra unshyder a grant from the Louis Calshyder Foundation in New York

-THREE LOCATIONS bull youre lookIng for the best in banking se~lce come 011J in to The NationalBank With the opening of our Stafford Square Office were now nearer to even more of you rOll the Greater Fall River area and each of our offices has Just aboUt every service you could want for yourself andl your family We mean M when we say were your FuID lervice BankPft

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t6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~n River-Thurs~ Apr 201967

Friend~2 [iJescribes Stru~g~ For QM~gtLy in T~~regwo~~~

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Rennedy When Fred W Friendly resigned from the Columbia

Broadcasting System in 1966 he ended a 16-year association with that network His trials in broadcast journalism are tbe subject of his new book Due To Circumstances Beyond Our Control Control bull Managements obligation is toRandom House $695 457 protect the interests of these Madison Avenue New York stockho~ders

NY 10022) But this volume But Mr Friendly is concprned is far more than a personal about the other stockholders memoir It is the story of th~ the 195 million citizens who

grant CBS and the other broadshybattle a losing casters the franchise to use theirbattle of course air for quality in

FCC Gutlesscommercial tel shyOne might naively expect that

~vision The the Federal Communications

main point is Commission would effectivelythat the story is here told by an insider Mr Friendlys middotfame criginally gprang from his close associashytion with the late Edward R Murrow He was Murrows partner in the prepashyntion of such pioneering and still unparalleled series as Se~ lil Now and CBS Reports

After Murrow left CBS and wentmiddot into governm()nt service Mr Friendly became president

of CBS news He resigned that ~sition because of a clispute conshycerning the broadcasting of Senshyate hearings on the Vietnam war

Many ancient or recent conshyfilets over broadcasting policy are rehearsed in this hook There fta for example a detailed acshy~unt of the hassies concerning Murrows TV _program dealing with Senator McCarthy before McCarthys downfall as the reshyault of the hearings in the Spring of 1954

There are briefer accounts of other skirmishes Thflse are all interesting and instructive But the value of the book lies not so much in these reminiscences as fin Mr Friendlys knowledgeable analysis of the process whereby television has retreated more and more from public service and become a purveyor of junk and garbage littering the American Iiving room and worse the American mind with trash

Geared to Prcfit Many factors account for this

perversion The principal one is greed Television is geared to private profit not puqUc service lLast years whopping profits will not suffice this year There must be sizable increase

This is to satisfy stockholders Mr Friendly asked William Paley chairman of the board Why do we have to make more money every year The reply was We have many small shareholders across the country and within the companybullbullbullbull

Subcommittee Sets Hearings on Smut

WASHINGTON (NC) -The House Select Subcommittee on Education is holding hearings beginning today on a bill to esshytablish a National Commissionmiddot on Noxious and Obscene Matters and Materials

Subcomllittee chairman Domishynick Daniels of New Jersey is sponsor of thc bill which would provide for a 16-member panel to study the problem of obscenity and recoqunend means Clf dealing with it

On the same day that the hearshyings were announced two other congressmen Arnold Olsen of Montana and Glenn Cunningham of Nebraska introduced bills to curb the mailing of obscene matshyter Olsens bill has bpoundlen enshydorsed by the Post Office Deshy~artment

protect the interests of the other 195 milion But Mr Friendly on the basis of close observation has -no kind words and no reshyspect for the FCC For all pur- poses the agency is toothless and gutless

To make even more money for the shareholders every possible penny has to be wrung out of the advertising medium which television now essentially is This consideration governs proshygramming

It might be supposed that even if prime time at night must eco- ~

nomically go chiefly to programshyming which brings in the maxishymum advertising dollar there is ample opportunity for public service broadcasting in the dayshytime hours But no pienty of money is to be made from dayshytime advertising

Endless Re-runs Three soap companJes alone

spend $290 million a year on television advertising and a lot of this is directed at housewives during the daytime And the programming dictated by this advertising comprisesmostly old old movies and endless re-runs of stupid situation comedies

Huge profits (are) being realshyized from the use of the miracle of television as a transmission belt for retread serials soap opshyeras game shows and the like The yield from the detergent deodorant bleach or food advershytisers who possess the daytime schedule (whose annualexpendishytures (are) some $130000000 ) is the principal reason why no serious progtamming can be sustained for any length of time during these hours

l3y serious programming is meant such things as crittcal UN debates (for example on Vietnam) vital congressional hearings the Popes visit to the UN Churchills funeral etc) Some of these have in fact got on the air and even for a conshysiderable period oftime b~t alshyways there is a major bitter battle involved

Educational TV What may not be realized is

the power of the local station n is by no means meekly subshymissive to the network It largely gqes its own way and its wayis in search of the utmost in profits

It is this fact for example which accounts for the nonshyexistence of a good solid repre~ sentative late-evening news broadcast over the nekwork The local station prefers to put on its own scrappy superficial travesty of a news program beshycause it can get-in an excessively large number of profitable comshymercials

Perhaps there is some hope in the field of educational televishy

sion Mr Friendly is now enshygaged in exploring that possibil shyity For our sake may he be successful At any rate we must thank him for reminding us of our tolerance of the criminial misuse Qf the air waves

H E A 0 S UNIVlERSliJIY New president of St Bonashyventure University St Bonashyventure N Y is the Very Rev Reginald A Redlon

OFM formerly of St Franshycis College Rye Beach N H The university Is operated by the Holy_ Name province of the Order of Friars Minor NC Photo

Issues GlLIidelimiddotnes For IEcumenism

LITTLE ROCK (NC) - Ecushymenical guidelines dealing prinshycipally with the conduct of Catholics at Protestant functions have been issued by Bishop Alshybert L Fletcher of Lttle Rock

Composed of the diocesan ecumenical commission the gUidelines specify that Catholics may attend Protestant church services participate in the singshying and common prayer but may not act as a reader or officer of such services

The rules permit Catholics to serye in wedding parties at mar- riages in Protestant churches providing the service does not involve a Catholic or a divorceci person Attendance at baccalaushyreate services in a church or elsewhere is permitted

Under the rules Catholics may not act as sponsors at Protestantmiddot baptisms Oi confirmation nat Jlarticipate in intercommunion services The guidelines encour- age Protestant attendance at Catholic services

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Misunderstandingmiddot Faced In Ecumenical Meeting

Roman Catholic and Lutheran theologians agreed here after their fourth meeting that many misunderstandings had been overcome on the Sacrament of the Lords SuppeR -Holy Eucharist-but that further examination is necesshysary The doctrinal consulshy to the concrete worship life o1Ztation held at the headquartshy the Church ers of the Lutheran Church In a prepared statement reshyin America was the fourth leased ft the conclusion of the in a series sponsored by the closed meeting the group noted Bishops Committee for Ecumenshy that in contrat to topics disshyism and Interreligious Affairs cussed at the first two meetings of the NCCB and the USA Nashy -the Nicene Creed and Baptismtional Committee of the Luthershy -there have been historically an Wotld Federation serious disagreements between

Main themes discussed at the the confessions concerning the three-day meeting were the Eucharist Lords Supper as a sacrifice the All participants the stateshymanner of Christs presence in ment added agreed that many the Sacrament the import of the misunderstandings had beellll concept of transubstantiation overcome as a result of the latest and the relation of these issues meeting

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For our eIght edlcal Sisters In P1rappancode south India today is just a normal day Doctors bags In hand they are out In the villages eKmiddot amlnlng everyone for leprosybullbullbullbull Leprosy can be cured If diagnosed early says Sister Elizashybeth a surgeon Better yet Itcan be prevented In this case an ounce of prevention is worthten pounds of cure bullbullbull The cure is cheaper than penny nely Only $850 buys 10000 Dapsone _ mIracle tablets enough for 43 lepers for a yeerl bullbullbull The effort In Pirappancode islnternashytional German Catholics built the 25middotbed ho pital (1St Johns) French Catholics gave a workshop (for therapy) and an American friend of ours has pledged a convent and chapel Now the Sisters need medicinps a $200 microscope a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for treating children especially In farmiddotflung villages Will you help them Monsignor Nolan will acshyknowledge your gifts promptly and the Slste win pray for you aware you are helping them cure lepers as Christ did -

WHAT YOU CAN DO IJ $5000 gives the Sisters a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for fighting leprosy at Ita source (A sign on the side will featu re the name ofyour favorite saint and your name ifyou wish)

IJ $1500wlll give theSlster-surgeon an ope Instable Shes ustng akitchen table now

WOULDc $575 buys a whirlpool beth $100 a sterilizer

NEED C $300 pays In full ~or the two-year training 01 IF a native Slsternurse She will write to you

YOU WERI C $240 ($5 a Week) takes care of bull fuMmiddottlme

~IlAII IA8T WlILflARIi ASBDelATIGN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN PresIdent

MSGR JOHN G NOLAN Natlonal8ecretaIJ Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc S30 Madison Avenuemiddot New York NY 1001 T~one 212yUkOft 6-5840

rHf ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Apr 20 196717

CATHOLIC (HAR~l~~S AP~EAL SILVER JUBILEE YEAR

MAY 7-17

What does it mean to you The opportunity to raise your sights to the level of a $2500 Jubilee Gift

An act of aratitude for 25 years of Charitable Seice

Bishop Connollys love for exceptionoillhiidren cannot be

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THE ANCHORshy~18 Top East C~ast College Hoopsters middotPlay )Sees SociaI EquityThurs April 20 1967

Still Lagging Anglicalfj)~ ~teview At I(ennedy Center For P C Alumni In Spain Antii Cali~~i~ By Patricia Francis MALAGA (NC) - Spain

was taken to task for lagging1562 C~~lireglf A full house crowd saw some o( the East Coasts top collegIate basketball players behind many other countriesLONDON (NC) _ The demonstrate last week how basketball should be played Occasion was the 8th annual hi the development of a

ehurch of England has set Scholarship Basketball Game sponsored by the Providence College Alumni Club of New just Christian social and ecoshyup a permanent commission Bedford at Kennedy Youth Center in New Bedford Initiated in 1959 to - raise nomic life at the 26th Spanish C1)n Christian Docbine with tis first task to consider recastshying or replacing that churchs historic charter of the Thirtyshy~Hne Articles of Religion which

are strongly anti-Catholic In tOne

They are regarded by many as o stumbling block to Christian ~ity The articles drawn up in 1562

for the avoiding of diversities $pound opinions and for the establishshyhtg of consent touching truereli shygion must be publicly accepted py the clergy at ordination

They have become a matter of ~increasing objection lind some

Anglican clergymen now feel talat they should not be called Upon to subscribe to doctrinal definitions which reflect views formed in the 16th oentury aarship is a $2400 one paid at the time of extreme and bitter reli- rate of $600 a year to the winner gious controversy Next award will be made in

The articles denounce the 1970 TheRevEdwardC Duffy eurohurch of Rome as erroneous in chairman of- the scholarship matters of faith and declare games and recruiter of the among other things that theplaye~s who participate emphashyBishop of Rome hath no jurisdic- sizes the scholarship is open middotto tion in this -realm of Englandany deserving boy who has been Some prominent Anglican clergymen have blal1led the sharp declfnein ordination canshy

Qlidates on a reluctance to subshy~ribe to this document

Consider Advis( The new commission was apshy

pointed by Anglican Archbishops Michael Ramsey of Canterbury and Donald Coggan of York It consists of 17 members most of them theological professors repshyzesenting different schools of thought in the Anglican Church

Anglican Bishop Iar Ramsey of Durham is chairman The commissions general terms of reference say that it is

to consider and advise upon doctrinal questions submitted to it from time to time by the archshybishops and to plan when deshyslrable the investigation of

I ~uestions by other groups Its first task will be to conshy

sider the place of the Thirty- lege University of Rhode Island Nine Articles in the Anglican St Josephs of Philadelphia Bosshy

tradition and the question of ton College and Holy Cross subscription and assentto them There were Bill Blair Jim

Benedict Bob Kavolski and Bill Lasher of PC Mike FitzgeraldReligious Influence (of Mattapoisett) Henry Carey

In US on Wan~ -7- NEW YORK (NC)-Although

a majority of all Americans exshypressed the belief that 11eligion is losing its influence in the

United States in the latest Gallup Poll Catholics declined to-give majority assent to the opinion

The national survey showed tilat 57 per cent of all Americans in 1967 believe religion is losing its influence Only 14 per cent expressed this opinion in 1957

Among Protestants 60 per cent In 1967 compared with L7 per eent in 1957 said religion was losing its influence Forty-eight

per-cent of Catholics agreed in the latest survey compared with Beven per cent in 1957

Get Federal Funds PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A

Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyect under the auspices of Philashydelppia Archbishop John J Krols Commjssion on Economic Oppi)rtunity Programs hlils reshyceived $267980 from the federal government It was one of 74 Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyects in 30 states approved by Secretary of Labor W Willard Wirtz

accepted as a freshman at Provshyidence College regardless of the high school he attended

Primary Method William F Doyle president of

the NE Bedford club says the games are the alumnis primary method of raising money for the schoJarship fund

Since it was first held the game has attracted a following of avid fans-who help swell the scholshyarship treasury

Father Duffy feels it is the top post-season game in New England arid cites as proof the fact that his long time friend Bob Cousy Hoiy Cross All- Anierican and Boston Celtic great played in it himself two years ago It was his last game

Players who participated in this years money-for-scholarshyships game-all college seniors

represented Providence Colshy

scholarship funds for deserv- ing gr~duates of area high

schools the game profits enabled presentation of the first Edward J Tucker Memorial Scholarship of $2000 to Clifford Marr of New Bedford in 1962 Marr a graduate of Holy Family High was graduated from Provishydence College in 1966 and curshyrently is an Army lieutenant on duty in Korea

The second scholarship---named for the late 1r Tucker of Fairshyhaven a Providence College

graduate and one of the charter members of the New Bedford club--was awarded last year to Michael Doherty of New Bedshyford also a Holy Family gradushyate

Currently the four-year scholshy

Steve Chubin and Bob Boehm of the U of RI Richie Murphy and Greg Hochstein of Holy Cross John Austin and Ed Hock- enbury of Boston College and

f~nll lHoMsnln1~ fLaw Olhoc City EI1il(Jlcts

SPRIfiGFIELD (NC) - By unanimous vote of its five city commissioners this city has enshyacted a fair housing ordinance

The ordinance the third of its kind in OhiO becomes effecshytive May 3 Considerably strongshyer than the fair housing legisia- tion enacted by the Ohio Legisshylature in 1965 it outlaws disshycrimination in the sale or rental of any housing excepting only dwellings for members of reli shygious organizations or housing established for one sex only

Springfields new ordinance came as the res~lt of an improved climate of racial harmony The citys mayor Robert C Henry is a Negro whose performance of his duties has won wide reshyspect In recent years an Urban League has been launched and has made considerable progress A Human Relations Commission is functioning

PROVIDENCE COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP In atshytendance at PC Scholarship Fund Basketball Game in New Bedford were William Doyle presidentof the PC Club of New Bedford and Michael Doherty present scholarship recipient

Billy Oakes Marty Ford and Tom Duff of st Josephs the nations fifth-ranked_ team

Sees lay Teachers

Form Asso~iataon CLEVELAND (NC)-Groundshy

work for a diocesan lay teachers asso~iation was laid at a meeting of representatives of 21 diocesan high schools here

shy Patrick Bruening teacher at St Josephs high school and temshyporary chairman of the new unit said the association is an organshyization of professional people seekint professional growth

He added Only after we have proven ourselves as professionshyals with a professional attitude

about our job can we ask for and hope to get professional consideration I

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lhe players enjoyed demonshystrating th~ir proficiency The fans enjoyed watching the demonstration ~ and the scholar shipfund of the Providence Colshylege Alumni Club of New Bedshy~ord teaped tbebenef~il ~fboth

~ Population Control WASHINGTON (NC) - U s

Sen J W Fulbright of Arkansas has asked for aCongressional appropdation of $150 million for increased population coritior asshysistanCe to developIng countries

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Social Week here Angel Cardinal Herrera y

Oria former archbishop of Mashylaga in a letter to the Social Week sessions deplored what he called a deficiency of Catholic influence in Spanish public lilfe declaring that Spain a Catholic nation was far from being a model of social justice

No Dialogue Earlier Auxiliary Bishop Rashy

fael Gonzalez Moralejo of Valenshycia ecclesiastical moderator of the SocialWeek sounded a simshyilar note declaring that where there is no dialogue between citizens and their government there is no democracy and such a society cannot call itself Christian

Cardinal Herrera said that ahead of Spain are nations who

have learned how to organize their natioJlallif~ according to the norms of justice which are the daughters of consciElnce Sweden has progressed in the social and pOlitlclll o~der to such an extent that the ~ope

could state that its public ~n~ishy tutions are in harmonywith the teachings of the Seco~dVatican Council he said

1[Jpper ~Iasses Cardinal Herrera lirged the

upper classes of -the countryto contribute toward the formation of a sound and realistic public opinion by which religious conshycepts would be applied to the economic and social life of Spain

It is necessary he said to diminish the differences in classes to work toward Unity not only in the economic order but also in i~ the education and

c~vic department

The Best

Car

Georgell Cluh Olf to Good Start mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Apr 20 1967

Taunton High Is Surprise In County Diamond loop former FltrrJDD Riweff CYOer on Scholagslvop ltltIt PIl1Jf$~ns

By PETE~ BARTEK Norton High Coach

Coach BiD Georges Taunton High diamond aggreg~

tion is the early season surprise in the Bristol County schoolboy league now in ita second week of the eampaign The pennant race appeam ~ be developing into one of the most exciting in many years Five clubs are battling of Ule better area clubs year fOIl the coveted flag And after year

Coach Harold (Chet) Haneshywhile action is fast and fm-shywichs Bishop Feehan High teamiOWl in the BCL the eight N3rshyof Attleboro has tucked awayragansett League teams are early season wins over Northgetting I e Q d y Attleboro and New Bedford Voshy

lor the chamshy cational The latter two will pionship race m probably fight it out fornext-toshytheir COmpetishy the-last place in the final standshytion Delayed ing as they seek to avoid theboth by rain and cellar Ii old weather The two top contests on nextCOaches h a v e Mondays BCL card will seebeen reminding Coyle playing Durfelte at Alumnitheir charges of Field in Fall River while Taunshythe pitfalls of ton journeys to North Dartmoutheareless loose to clash with stang Two northernplay and also Peter eounty rivals Attleboro andthe IOOmmission Bartek Feehan meet at the formers of Deedless errors which ean field next Monday when North relegatea club to an early Deeshy Attleboro travels to New Bedshyond diviaion berth from which it ford to take 0111 Vocatlonal win be bard to emerge as 1M Nury Contests oompetition progresses Meanwhile the Narragansett

Chausse and JlaJkut loop is comple~ing its first week The Herring City Orange and of play Its still a little early to

Black pulled the big surprise of make 8 judgment as to how thebe young season when it held clubs will stand at the end of thethe always strong Dullfee High

lI~mpaign team of Fall River to a 2-2 tie in Four Narry tilts are on tap for11 innings The prognosticators next Tuesdaybad been writing off the Georgeshy Coach Jack McCartys Caseeoached clan solely because they High Cardinals of Swansea willfelt Taunton would be unable to face Coach Jack Harts DimanJeplace Artmiddot Koska lost by gradshy Vocational team in Fall River uation in what looms as one of the

But Scott Chawrse impressed most interesting early seasonin his confrontation with the Fan games Coach Doug Baxendales River Hilltoppelll aDd now the Msgr Prevost High team of Fall same pundits who had relegated River will be at Dighton to meet Taunton to a lowly apot 8re the Coach Eddie Texeiras D - ~ first to admit that things will be Regionals Coach Ed Bibeau will much more pleasant for the lead his W~port High aggr~gashyTauntonians this Spring tion to Seekonk to middotvh( with

Stro~ Coyle Offense Coach Roger Hills charges The Admittedly an the doubting fourth Narry contest next Tuesshy

Thomases were not convinced day will see Coach Jack Brenshyon the basis of a single performshy nans Holy Family High teain of ance So Joe Majkut and Chausse New Bedford meeting Coach Jim Ulen eombined to throw a no-hit Sullivans Somersetmiddot High teamwin over Coach Dick Joyces at the latters field Attleboro High team Even the

Lanllers Ready most skeptical then conceded that Taunton must be reckoned On Ca~ Cod n nip-~pd~tuck

in the flag race battle is going on in that areas While Taunton High has heeD eon1erence schedule Four conshy

eGualling the early season attenshy tests are listed for the Capeway tion unexpected results have eircuit next Monday They are eccurred in several other diashy Oldmiddot Rochester (Mattapoisett) mond eontests Attleboro which at Barnstable Bourne at Wareshydid DOt seem destined lor gfeat bam Dartmouth middotat Dennis-Yarshythings this Spring provided the mouth and Fairhaven vs Lawshyfirst surprise w~en it toppled rence High at Falmouth Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Norton High in the Clover Stang High of North Dartmouth Valley Conference plays its first

Taunton then proved its mettle league game at home against when it defeated surprising Millis next Monday The Purple Attleboro Hickey has talent at - and White Lancers travel to Stang but his problem has heeD Medfield next Wednesday tv properly align his best playem Apparently they were not in the Score Governmentright spots when they went down to defeat at the hands of Coach On Lab~r Problems Jim Burns Msgr Coyle High

BUENOS AIRES (NC) -TwonJne of Taunton which has Catholic organizations have isshycwuted its way to two one~sided sued a joint manifesto criticizingviet(lries Coyles strength is in thlte Argentine government sayshyits offensive attack but it also ing it has failed to protect workshy

has a capable defense and pitch ers basic rightsJng staff to make a real run for Issued by the Catholic Youngthe BCL crown Workers (JOC) and Catholic _ Feehans Auspicious Start Action Workers Movement

Durfee while it may have been (MOAC) the statement alsotemporarily halted by Taunton called upon the bishops to be enpects to be among the leaders aware of the needs and goals of before the end of the week The young workers and the labor Hilltoppers looked good in winshy class and to be brave in ltexshy

double-header from Pil-shyning a pressing the Churchs doctrine grim High of Rhode Island last as applied to real-life situations weekend CoachJoe Lewis feelsmiddot It said that the government his boys can now maintain the which calls itself Christian but momentum they have generated is anything but Christian has in the non-league affairs It goes nothing to do with the Gospelalmost without saying that one or Christs teachings or with the off-day is not going to thwart Churchs doctrines as defined by the Hilltopperll wbo produce ODe the Second Vatican Councit

By JOE MIRANDA A Parsons College senior JRobshy

eli Bonalewicz of Fall River is -nearIng the end of a most sucshycessful college career both athshyletically and academically

Bob is attending Parsons in Fairfield Iowa on a baseball scholarship and has started bis third season as the colleges first strong catcher

neans List Student A Physical Education major

Bob has a minor in History and during the last marking period was named to the Deans List at Parsons -

A member of St PatrIcks Parshyish Bonny is a 1963 graduate of Durfee High School where he participated in football basketshyball and baseball

The son of Mr and Mrs Mathew Bonalewicz of 50 Chapshylin Street he is oile of five chil shydren ald has not yet decided upon a vocation

Bonny has two older brotherll a lieutenant and Mathew Jr II

staff sergeant both in the Air Force and stationed ubroad Bob also has two sisters Kathleen II student at Durfee High and Ma) Ann a grammar school pupil

Has f80 Average Bonalewicz recently returned

from a Southern baseball trip end gained excellent commendashytions from his coach Duane Banks for his performance as the Wildcats won 11 of 13 games

The Fall River player batted 430 belted three homers had nine runs-batted-in and seltlred 10 during Parsons first 13 games

Bonalewicz a 22-year-old 175shyJ)ound 5-8 giant enjoys playing baseball and so does his coach who scheduled 89 games last seashyson to set a ollegiate record fur the most games played in one year

Ankle IBjUlY

With the former Durfee backshystop handling the brunt of the catching duties until a knee inshyjury forced him to the sidelines Parsons won 72 lost 15 and twice finished in ti~d games called beshyca~se of darkness

The former St Patricks star in the CYO baseball program started poory this season finshyis middotng off the Southern trip with an ankle sprain but entering this week the ankle was in good shape and Bonny expected to take his regular spot behind the plate

Federal Agency Has Inter-Faith Advisors

WASHINGTON (NC)- A Catholic priest a Methodist minshyister and a Jewish rabbi have been appointed religious advishyBors to the United States Inforshymation Agency here

Msgr George G Higgins clIishyrector of the Social Action Deshypartment U S Catholic Confershyence the Rev Edward G Cu-middot roll superintendent of the Washshyington Northwest District ol the Methodist Baltimore Conference and Rabbi Richard G Hirsch dishyrector of the Relgious Action Center Union of American Heshybrew Congregations have been named to the USIA advisory panel

Officials of the agency noted that while it has had religious advisors since its inception this marks the first time an interfaith panel had been established

The purpose of the panel offi shycials said is to assure that the agencys handling of religious matters serves the best intlterest of the nation and its dlveraity of faiths

Bonalewicz also played for St Patricks T)iocesan championship team and for the Fall River Mershychants in the Newport Sunse~ League

As a senior at DUrfee Bonny was awarded the 1963 George Kaplan Memorial Trophy as the Hilltoppers best senior basketshyball player

His hustle and determination while performing for Durfee at Bostcm Garden during the anshynual Eastern Massachusetts Tecb tournament gained him the reshyspect and admiration of all that witnessed his efforts

Bonalewicz recently completed a practice teaching tour in an Iowa Junior High School and while tere coached the eighth grade team to a league chamshypionship

Earlier in the college year Bob_ was a member of the Parsons intramural flag football progmiddotam and received a trophy for his performan J

Despite the heavy bnsebaU schedule Bob has manged to keep hi grades above average and after the Fall semestershyshowed his prowess in the classshyroom by being named to the Deans List for the second time

DeMatha Winner In Hoop Tourney

WASHINGTON (NC) - DeshyMatha High of suburban Hyattsshyville Md scored an upset cliff shyhanger victory to cop the 12th national high sChool basketballl tournament sponsored by thE local Knights of Columbus J017 the fifth straight time

DeMatha avenged two regula17 season defeats by Mackin High Washington Catholic League

champ with its last minute 70-68 victory Mount Carmel of Chiengo took

third place with a 47-45 overshytime win over DePaul Acndemy of Chicago Northeast Cnthrt1ie of Philadelphia took fifth pIhce with a 77-74 win over St Petertl

B(~ BONALEWICZ of New Brunswick N J Catheshydral High of Trenton NJ Inpound

The oung catcher has been Dwight School of New York alslaquo) long known for his bullet like participated tlnrowlr arm and gained conshy Aubrey Nash DeMatha junloY siderable praise from opponents wall named the tournnmentl in 111gh school amateur and colshy most valuable player lege eompetitions for his savvy A 5-11 junior John Somogyftbehind the plate set three tournament records-shy

Three-Letter Man 40 field goals 108 points in threE Bonalewicz played football for games and 43 points in one game Don MontIe basketb~ll for Tom and tied another record ll-forshyKaram and baseball for middotJoe 11 from the foul line Lewis while at Durfee and also performed for Lewis Chathammiddot team in the Cape Cod League

The Fall Riverite cannot get FAIRHAVENenough baseball according to his mother Mrs Bonalewicz recalls LUMBER a game at Alumni Field when

COMPANYDurfee bested a Venezuelan team sponsored by the Peoplesshyto-Peoples program Bob was inshy Complete linejured and taken -to the hospital Mrs Bonalewicz remembers Building Materials then came back to finish the game hitting a home run to win I SPRING ST FAIRHAVENmiddotit for the Hilltoppers He wall voted the outstanding player in 993-2611the gameo

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THEANCHOR()ioltese of Fan ~tv~r-Thurs ApO 1967 ~ ~ middot-middotmiddotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ middot20

AT BISEIOPS CONFERENCE Facilities for offering Mass were provided by the Archdiocese of Chicago when 230 U S bishops met in semi-annual conference In left photo nine othel prelates concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Joseph TRyan of Anchorage Alaska In right

photo are Archbishop John F Dearde~ of Detroit at left president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and at right Archbishop Johl1l F Cody of Chicago conference host Bishops Connolly and Gerrard attended from the Fall River Diocese NC Photos

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Page 14: 04.20.67

THE ANCHOR~Diocese ofFa River-Thursbull Apr 20 19M

middotSocial Revolutmiddotion Is Needed In latin America Lands

From Social Revohitiiolll iin the New Latin America Edited by John 3 Considine MM

The possibility of orientating regional planning toward an overall solution of the pressing problems that concern more than one Latin nation could well engage Christian initiative writes Rene Atero The most typical example of this kind he sa)s concerns Social Revolution in Latin-~ershythe region of the Andean ica Most Rev Mark GMcshyMountains where peasants Grath CSC says Barbara numbering more than five Ward widely read Catholic

million live in thee different economist begins her book enshyltcountries possessing basically titled The Rich Nations and the

Poor Nations with the flat stateshy similar pro b- ment I suppose we are all lems Our asso- aware of the fact that we live in ciation with na- the most catastrophically revolushy~ional orgariiza- tionary age that men have ever

tions concerned fced middotmiddotwith deyelop- Social Revolution ment planning Vice-President Hubert Humshyin no way im- phrey who honored this meeting plies the im- with his presence last year proper subordi- writes in a recent issue of Forshynation of enti- eign Affairs Although the obshytie sund e r servation that Latin America is Church s p 0 n- in the midst of a political ecoshysorship to less effectual accom- nomic and social revolution has plishment under the state become a commonplace it is

On the contrary it is a ques- true tion of becoming involved in a The influential Chilean magashynew front in which Christian zine Mensaje published by the action is not only indispensable Jesuit Fathers dedicated an enshybut will be most efficacious in tire issue in December of 1962 to helping to enlist sectors of Latin the theme Revolution in Latin American society of top impor- America and followed this up

middottance for national dEvelopment withmiddot another special issue in With reference to the actual bctober 1963 on Revolutionary implementation of plans through Reforms in Latin America

well elaborated projectS we Early in 1964 the Civilta Catshyshould make certain that iden- tolica published in Rome by the tification and recognition as an Jesuits carried a critique of important part of the national these two issues of Mensaje by effort are given to current Father Jarlot which questioned Church activities already oper- the prudence of using the terio ating numerous projects of social revolution in a Christian conshydevelopment throughout the text pointing out that itia ltcontinent loaded with Marxist overtones

For example with regard to Not only does it signify rapid education we should lteall atten- c structural changes Father Jarlot tion to the fact that there aremiddot in asserts but also connotes vioshy

lence and some measure of hate Latin America about 5000 pri- and class warfare He would vate ed~cational insttutions pre- prefer the term evolution pared to share in current eduea- tional programs throughout the Social Revolution oontinent Mr Humphrey in the article

The private univemities andmiddot already mentioned asks the eenters of technical training inmiddot question Is it appropriate te the fields of agriculture labor define Alliance (for Progress) and cooperatives couY-a double policy as favoring social revolll shythe potential for plofessional tion - or should this word be and technical trainin1 if they avoided in favor of evolution 01 would participate on D national some other expression basis ir serving the more press- He anwers Evolution if ing needs of society carefully examined proves to be

Broad Horizons inadequate for it implies an un-We must work also in the pres- conscious non-deliberate change

ervation of the progress which that is slow and gradual has been achieved in the areas- What is required is conscious of social welfare now b~ing em- rapid change in the socioshyphasized (housing education economic structure a process public health) Lay groups such that can correctly and precisely as Catholic Action in different be called a revolutionmiddot If used spheres _ Legion of Mary St not as a slogan but in itS precise Vincent de Paul Carita3-which sense the policy of peaceful s0shy

up to now have directed their -cial and economic revolution is efforts mainly towards religion agtcorrect~haracterizatio~ofmiddot il~

t hid limce policy d If t middot an we are ac IVlless ou eJmiddot We should not hesitaietoi pand theIr programs a11d focus d tf l th t m some of their work on ilrojects I e~ I y o~rse ~es WI I ~i planned by specialists J JatmAmencaiJust ~ Presldcnt

This would permit the cltanel ~ohnson ~ssoclated hunseU WIth it in hIS war on poverty I~ng of theIr ~eal t~elr ~rga~l~a- throughout the world whenhe gtcent

tIOn and theIr splnt of saCrIfIce tl k d Iffit b bull recen y remar e a peaceshyas power u resources 0 e put f lItmiddot th i5 at the disposal of society Among u re~bo u IOn ~n ese areas such works surely programs of ~mossl Ie a VIolent revolutIon

IS mevltable community improvement will be especially attractive to tlhese lay groups

Thus the Church might con- sider putting its knowledge and resources to more effective use in preparing programs and projshyects for adaptation to national and regional needs

They should select carefully those with the capacity to fulfill so that they may obtain financing from national or international sources to complement their own eontributions thus enlarging the scope of their activities

In a study of The Church and

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Arguments For Celibacy Outweigh Those Against

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Arguments urging that the requirement of eeHbacy of priests be set aside as an obshystacle to increasing vooationsare not sufficient Archbi-shop Gabriel Garribe pro-prefect of the Congregation of Semishynaries and Universities told a pressconfelence here My personal answer is that the arguments for celibacy cd the clergy are stronger than those against it He said he beshylieved there should be a firm affirmation in this respect and that it would maintain celibacy in the Latin Church

By doing so he said the quality ofpriesUy candidates will grow and through the quaUy of its priests the Church will harvest an increase in the quantity of candidates

The drop in the number of vocations the Archbishop stated Is due in part at least to the new attitude of todays youth and therefore requires changes_ in the traditional seminary formation

The prelate told the press that todays youth is much more fully aware of the whole world and far more sensitive to its problems than in the past Those responsible for seminary training must realize the importance of education and be capable of understanding the new generashytion of admiring them and of discovering for them the mission of the Church

StatistiCs Given Archbishop Garrone not e d

tj~at although there has been a falilng off in vocations generally there have been some surprising exceptions He singled out 1be

Dominican Work Continued from Page One

means that the approach will be intellectual rather than devoshytional and the emphasis win rest on accuracy on the truth of a statement rather than on whether it is opportune

In performing such a task mistakes 1n the form of partisan statements ~ld ill-balanced reshymarks are sometimes inevitable Father Hislop said

He affirmed the Dominicans loyalty to the Church but noted that it is often difficult for a vanguard intellectual group to express itself in terms that win not be misunderstood by the majority of Catholics

CCD Talks Continued from Page One

Tauntol as the speaker Mrs Mary Fuller of Buzzards

Bay will speak at the meetiDll in Bishop Stang High School North Dartmouth

At Bishop CasSidy High School Taunton the speaker will be Edward McDonagh-Of North Attleboro

Thomas Flangheddy of Taunshyton will address the meeting at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

The Cape area meeting will be held at Holy Trinity West Hallshywich with Miss Patricia llIIakle as speaker

Seek More funds WASHINGTON (NC) -Two

members of Marylands congresshysional delegation have introshyduced a bill which would make the government spend $75 milshylion annually for birth eontrol aid in the U ~ by 1973 The bin introduced by Sen Joseph Ty ings and Rep Samuel Freidel would propose $20 million the fkst year rising to $75 million bIV the fifth )ear Sta1e and loeal governments would provide _ edditiODal $25 mDJiclID br )87J

extraordinary development of vocations in Mexicp and in Yugoslavia and the stable continuity of recruitment in Poland

Among the statistics provided at the conference were the fact that the latest Church figures count 234000 Diocesan priests and 168000 Religious priests There are in addition 166400 Religious who are not ordained priests

One of the most heartening things in the vocational world picture it was pointed out hasshybeen the increase of priestly vocations in Africa Asia and Oceania

The growth of the local clergy has been a phenomenon of the last 40 years Today in Africa and Asia approximately 500 orshydinations take place every year

~regregampfsect ~ITOW(QJtfreg

$e~~ Aod WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep

Clement J Zablocki of Wisconshysin has introduced a proposal to correct U a defense education gap in American schools

Zablockis bill wo~ld amend the National Defense Education Act (NDEA) to provide federal grants for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment which could be used by children and teachers In parochial and private schools

In a statement on themiddot flOor Of the House of Representatives Zablocki pointed to inequities In

the present NDEA progra~ which Congress passed In 1958 to strengthen instruction in scishyence mathematics foreign lanshyguages and related subjects

An important provision of the act Zablocki said is Title III which provides matching grants to public schools for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment Non-public schools now are eligible only for loans for that purpose

Under Zablockis bill public authorities could obtain federal funds to buy laboratory and other special equipment which eould then be provided for use in non-public schools

In order to comply with matching provisions of the NDEA the non-public schools or groups of such schools would be required to prove they had spent an equal amount thenr selves for such eqUipment from private funds

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FALL RIVER AUXllLhARY AT MEETING Bishop Gerrard Auxiliary lBishop of the Diocese of Fall River is pictured at one of the sessions of the Spring meeting of the Bishops of theU Sheld in Ohicago NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 h A priI 20T urs 1967

Say~ ~Q~~OIP No SIQ7(~ ~ lovell

KANSAS CITY (NC) - The new role of a Bishop in the era of renewal has been spelled out here by Bishop Charles H Helmshysing of Kansas City-St Joseph

In addition to the age-old role of teacher Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop today must read stud) and apply the teachings of the Second Vatican Council the Gosshypels expressed to meet the needs of the modern world In short Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop must be a slave of love to serve as Christ served mankind

Bishop Helmsil1g spoke at the consecration of Auxiliary Bishop Joseph V Sullivan 45 of Kansas City-St Joseph

Bishop Sullivan is the fir~

native of this Missouri city eleshyvated to the hierarchy He was ordained to the priesthood June 1 1946 has served as chancellor of the diocese since 1957 and was named Bishop by Pope Paul VI last month

MarltqJ MregGGreg TJ~ ~~i MILWAUKEE (NC)-ALuthshy

eran scholar will teach Lutheran theology to graduate students at Marquette University here start shying next September Dr Kenneth G Hagen assistant professor of religion at Concordia College Moorhead MinJl will be the Marquet~e theology departmentu first full-time visiting scholra unshyder a grant from the Louis Calshyder Foundation in New York

-THREE LOCATIONS bull youre lookIng for the best in banking se~lce come 011J in to The NationalBank With the opening of our Stafford Square Office were now nearer to even more of you rOll the Greater Fall River area and each of our offices has Just aboUt every service you could want for yourself andl your family We mean M when we say were your FuID lervice BankPft

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t6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~n River-Thurs~ Apr 201967

Friend~2 [iJescribes Stru~g~ For QM~gtLy in T~~regwo~~~

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Rennedy When Fred W Friendly resigned from the Columbia

Broadcasting System in 1966 he ended a 16-year association with that network His trials in broadcast journalism are tbe subject of his new book Due To Circumstances Beyond Our Control Control bull Managements obligation is toRandom House $695 457 protect the interests of these Madison Avenue New York stockho~ders

NY 10022) But this volume But Mr Friendly is concprned is far more than a personal about the other stockholders memoir It is the story of th~ the 195 million citizens who

grant CBS and the other broadshybattle a losing casters the franchise to use theirbattle of course air for quality in

FCC Gutlesscommercial tel shyOne might naively expect that

~vision The the Federal Communications

main point is Commission would effectivelythat the story is here told by an insider Mr Friendlys middotfame criginally gprang from his close associashytion with the late Edward R Murrow He was Murrows partner in the prepashyntion of such pioneering and still unparalleled series as Se~ lil Now and CBS Reports

After Murrow left CBS and wentmiddot into governm()nt service Mr Friendly became president

of CBS news He resigned that ~sition because of a clispute conshycerning the broadcasting of Senshyate hearings on the Vietnam war

Many ancient or recent conshyfilets over broadcasting policy are rehearsed in this hook There fta for example a detailed acshy~unt of the hassies concerning Murrows TV _program dealing with Senator McCarthy before McCarthys downfall as the reshyault of the hearings in the Spring of 1954

There are briefer accounts of other skirmishes Thflse are all interesting and instructive But the value of the book lies not so much in these reminiscences as fin Mr Friendlys knowledgeable analysis of the process whereby television has retreated more and more from public service and become a purveyor of junk and garbage littering the American Iiving room and worse the American mind with trash

Geared to Prcfit Many factors account for this

perversion The principal one is greed Television is geared to private profit not puqUc service lLast years whopping profits will not suffice this year There must be sizable increase

This is to satisfy stockholders Mr Friendly asked William Paley chairman of the board Why do we have to make more money every year The reply was We have many small shareholders across the country and within the companybullbullbullbull

Subcommittee Sets Hearings on Smut

WASHINGTON (NC) -The House Select Subcommittee on Education is holding hearings beginning today on a bill to esshytablish a National Commissionmiddot on Noxious and Obscene Matters and Materials

Subcomllittee chairman Domishynick Daniels of New Jersey is sponsor of thc bill which would provide for a 16-member panel to study the problem of obscenity and recoqunend means Clf dealing with it

On the same day that the hearshyings were announced two other congressmen Arnold Olsen of Montana and Glenn Cunningham of Nebraska introduced bills to curb the mailing of obscene matshyter Olsens bill has bpoundlen enshydorsed by the Post Office Deshy~artment

protect the interests of the other 195 milion But Mr Friendly on the basis of close observation has -no kind words and no reshyspect for the FCC For all pur- poses the agency is toothless and gutless

To make even more money for the shareholders every possible penny has to be wrung out of the advertising medium which television now essentially is This consideration governs proshygramming

It might be supposed that even if prime time at night must eco- ~

nomically go chiefly to programshyming which brings in the maxishymum advertising dollar there is ample opportunity for public service broadcasting in the dayshytime hours But no pienty of money is to be made from dayshytime advertising

Endless Re-runs Three soap companJes alone

spend $290 million a year on television advertising and a lot of this is directed at housewives during the daytime And the programming dictated by this advertising comprisesmostly old old movies and endless re-runs of stupid situation comedies

Huge profits (are) being realshyized from the use of the miracle of television as a transmission belt for retread serials soap opshyeras game shows and the like The yield from the detergent deodorant bleach or food advershytisers who possess the daytime schedule (whose annualexpendishytures (are) some $130000000 ) is the principal reason why no serious progtamming can be sustained for any length of time during these hours

l3y serious programming is meant such things as crittcal UN debates (for example on Vietnam) vital congressional hearings the Popes visit to the UN Churchills funeral etc) Some of these have in fact got on the air and even for a conshysiderable period oftime b~t alshyways there is a major bitter battle involved

Educational TV What may not be realized is

the power of the local station n is by no means meekly subshymissive to the network It largely gqes its own way and its wayis in search of the utmost in profits

It is this fact for example which accounts for the nonshyexistence of a good solid repre~ sentative late-evening news broadcast over the nekwork The local station prefers to put on its own scrappy superficial travesty of a news program beshycause it can get-in an excessively large number of profitable comshymercials

Perhaps there is some hope in the field of educational televishy

sion Mr Friendly is now enshygaged in exploring that possibil shyity For our sake may he be successful At any rate we must thank him for reminding us of our tolerance of the criminial misuse Qf the air waves

H E A 0 S UNIVlERSliJIY New president of St Bonashyventure University St Bonashyventure N Y is the Very Rev Reginald A Redlon

OFM formerly of St Franshycis College Rye Beach N H The university Is operated by the Holy_ Name province of the Order of Friars Minor NC Photo

Issues GlLIidelimiddotnes For IEcumenism

LITTLE ROCK (NC) - Ecushymenical guidelines dealing prinshycipally with the conduct of Catholics at Protestant functions have been issued by Bishop Alshybert L Fletcher of Lttle Rock

Composed of the diocesan ecumenical commission the gUidelines specify that Catholics may attend Protestant church services participate in the singshying and common prayer but may not act as a reader or officer of such services

The rules permit Catholics to serye in wedding parties at mar- riages in Protestant churches providing the service does not involve a Catholic or a divorceci person Attendance at baccalaushyreate services in a church or elsewhere is permitted

Under the rules Catholics may not act as sponsors at Protestantmiddot baptisms Oi confirmation nat Jlarticipate in intercommunion services The guidelines encour- age Protestant attendance at Catholic services

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Misunderstandingmiddot Faced In Ecumenical Meeting

Roman Catholic and Lutheran theologians agreed here after their fourth meeting that many misunderstandings had been overcome on the Sacrament of the Lords SuppeR -Holy Eucharist-but that further examination is necesshysary The doctrinal consulshy to the concrete worship life o1Ztation held at the headquartshy the Church ers of the Lutheran Church In a prepared statement reshyin America was the fourth leased ft the conclusion of the in a series sponsored by the closed meeting the group noted Bishops Committee for Ecumenshy that in contrat to topics disshyism and Interreligious Affairs cussed at the first two meetings of the NCCB and the USA Nashy -the Nicene Creed and Baptismtional Committee of the Luthershy -there have been historically an Wotld Federation serious disagreements between

Main themes discussed at the the confessions concerning the three-day meeting were the Eucharist Lords Supper as a sacrifice the All participants the stateshymanner of Christs presence in ment added agreed that many the Sacrament the import of the misunderstandings had beellll concept of transubstantiation overcome as a result of the latest and the relation of these issues meeting

HOW TDCURE LEPERS

THIi HilLY FATHERS MIBSIDNAID TD THI ORIIlNTAL CHURCH

THE PILLS

ARE CHEAPER

THAN PENNY CANDY

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ARE THII

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A LEPER IN~

Dear Itoklm

IPlesll0 li9tum coupon

with your t9fferlng

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patient for a year

C Strfngless glftlil of $100 $50 $25 $11S $10 $5 $2 Bet the Sisters buy what they need

IiJ $850 equals 10000 Dapsone tablets

IlJ $1 a month ($12 a yeer) gives you membershyehlp un our Damlen Club for lepers

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For our eIght edlcal Sisters In P1rappancode south India today is just a normal day Doctors bags In hand they are out In the villages eKmiddot amlnlng everyone for leprosybullbullbullbull Leprosy can be cured If diagnosed early says Sister Elizashybeth a surgeon Better yet Itcan be prevented In this case an ounce of prevention is worthten pounds of cure bullbullbull The cure is cheaper than penny nely Only $850 buys 10000 Dapsone _ mIracle tablets enough for 43 lepers for a yeerl bullbullbull The effort In Pirappancode islnternashytional German Catholics built the 25middotbed ho pital (1St Johns) French Catholics gave a workshop (for therapy) and an American friend of ours has pledged a convent and chapel Now the Sisters need medicinps a $200 microscope a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for treating children especially In farmiddotflung villages Will you help them Monsignor Nolan will acshyknowledge your gifts promptly and the Slste win pray for you aware you are helping them cure lepers as Christ did -

WHAT YOU CAN DO IJ $5000 gives the Sisters a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for fighting leprosy at Ita source (A sign on the side will featu re the name ofyour favorite saint and your name ifyou wish)

IJ $1500wlll give theSlster-surgeon an ope Instable Shes ustng akitchen table now

WOULDc $575 buys a whirlpool beth $100 a sterilizer

NEED C $300 pays In full ~or the two-year training 01 IF a native Slsternurse She will write to you

YOU WERI C $240 ($5 a Week) takes care of bull fuMmiddottlme

~IlAII IA8T WlILflARIi ASBDelATIGN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN PresIdent

MSGR JOHN G NOLAN Natlonal8ecretaIJ Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc S30 Madison Avenuemiddot New York NY 1001 T~one 212yUkOft 6-5840

rHf ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Apr 20 196717

CATHOLIC (HAR~l~~S AP~EAL SILVER JUBILEE YEAR

MAY 7-17

What does it mean to you The opportunity to raise your sights to the level of a $2500 Jubilee Gift

An act of aratitude for 25 years of Charitable Seice

Bishop Connollys love for exceptionoillhiidren cannot be

described in words-but this picture D5 beyond description

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THE ANCHORshy~18 Top East C~ast College Hoopsters middotPlay )Sees SociaI EquityThurs April 20 1967

Still Lagging Anglicalfj)~ ~teview At I(ennedy Center For P C Alumni In Spain Antii Cali~~i~ By Patricia Francis MALAGA (NC) - Spain

was taken to task for lagging1562 C~~lireglf A full house crowd saw some o( the East Coasts top collegIate basketball players behind many other countriesLONDON (NC) _ The demonstrate last week how basketball should be played Occasion was the 8th annual hi the development of a

ehurch of England has set Scholarship Basketball Game sponsored by the Providence College Alumni Club of New just Christian social and ecoshyup a permanent commission Bedford at Kennedy Youth Center in New Bedford Initiated in 1959 to - raise nomic life at the 26th Spanish C1)n Christian Docbine with tis first task to consider recastshying or replacing that churchs historic charter of the Thirtyshy~Hne Articles of Religion which

are strongly anti-Catholic In tOne

They are regarded by many as o stumbling block to Christian ~ity The articles drawn up in 1562

for the avoiding of diversities $pound opinions and for the establishshyhtg of consent touching truereli shygion must be publicly accepted py the clergy at ordination

They have become a matter of ~increasing objection lind some

Anglican clergymen now feel talat they should not be called Upon to subscribe to doctrinal definitions which reflect views formed in the 16th oentury aarship is a $2400 one paid at the time of extreme and bitter reli- rate of $600 a year to the winner gious controversy Next award will be made in

The articles denounce the 1970 TheRevEdwardC Duffy eurohurch of Rome as erroneous in chairman of- the scholarship matters of faith and declare games and recruiter of the among other things that theplaye~s who participate emphashyBishop of Rome hath no jurisdic- sizes the scholarship is open middotto tion in this -realm of Englandany deserving boy who has been Some prominent Anglican clergymen have blal1led the sharp declfnein ordination canshy

Qlidates on a reluctance to subshy~ribe to this document

Consider Advis( The new commission was apshy

pointed by Anglican Archbishops Michael Ramsey of Canterbury and Donald Coggan of York It consists of 17 members most of them theological professors repshyzesenting different schools of thought in the Anglican Church

Anglican Bishop Iar Ramsey of Durham is chairman The commissions general terms of reference say that it is

to consider and advise upon doctrinal questions submitted to it from time to time by the archshybishops and to plan when deshyslrable the investigation of

I ~uestions by other groups Its first task will be to conshy

sider the place of the Thirty- lege University of Rhode Island Nine Articles in the Anglican St Josephs of Philadelphia Bosshy

tradition and the question of ton College and Holy Cross subscription and assentto them There were Bill Blair Jim

Benedict Bob Kavolski and Bill Lasher of PC Mike FitzgeraldReligious Influence (of Mattapoisett) Henry Carey

In US on Wan~ -7- NEW YORK (NC)-Although

a majority of all Americans exshypressed the belief that 11eligion is losing its influence in the

United States in the latest Gallup Poll Catholics declined to-give majority assent to the opinion

The national survey showed tilat 57 per cent of all Americans in 1967 believe religion is losing its influence Only 14 per cent expressed this opinion in 1957

Among Protestants 60 per cent In 1967 compared with L7 per eent in 1957 said religion was losing its influence Forty-eight

per-cent of Catholics agreed in the latest survey compared with Beven per cent in 1957

Get Federal Funds PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A

Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyect under the auspices of Philashydelppia Archbishop John J Krols Commjssion on Economic Oppi)rtunity Programs hlils reshyceived $267980 from the federal government It was one of 74 Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyects in 30 states approved by Secretary of Labor W Willard Wirtz

accepted as a freshman at Provshyidence College regardless of the high school he attended

Primary Method William F Doyle president of

the NE Bedford club says the games are the alumnis primary method of raising money for the schoJarship fund

Since it was first held the game has attracted a following of avid fans-who help swell the scholshyarship treasury

Father Duffy feels it is the top post-season game in New England arid cites as proof the fact that his long time friend Bob Cousy Hoiy Cross All- Anierican and Boston Celtic great played in it himself two years ago It was his last game

Players who participated in this years money-for-scholarshyships game-all college seniors

represented Providence Colshy

scholarship funds for deserv- ing gr~duates of area high

schools the game profits enabled presentation of the first Edward J Tucker Memorial Scholarship of $2000 to Clifford Marr of New Bedford in 1962 Marr a graduate of Holy Family High was graduated from Provishydence College in 1966 and curshyrently is an Army lieutenant on duty in Korea

The second scholarship---named for the late 1r Tucker of Fairshyhaven a Providence College

graduate and one of the charter members of the New Bedford club--was awarded last year to Michael Doherty of New Bedshyford also a Holy Family gradushyate

Currently the four-year scholshy

Steve Chubin and Bob Boehm of the U of RI Richie Murphy and Greg Hochstein of Holy Cross John Austin and Ed Hock- enbury of Boston College and

f~nll lHoMsnln1~ fLaw Olhoc City EI1il(Jlcts

SPRIfiGFIELD (NC) - By unanimous vote of its five city commissioners this city has enshyacted a fair housing ordinance

The ordinance the third of its kind in OhiO becomes effecshytive May 3 Considerably strongshyer than the fair housing legisia- tion enacted by the Ohio Legisshylature in 1965 it outlaws disshycrimination in the sale or rental of any housing excepting only dwellings for members of reli shygious organizations or housing established for one sex only

Springfields new ordinance came as the res~lt of an improved climate of racial harmony The citys mayor Robert C Henry is a Negro whose performance of his duties has won wide reshyspect In recent years an Urban League has been launched and has made considerable progress A Human Relations Commission is functioning

PROVIDENCE COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP In atshytendance at PC Scholarship Fund Basketball Game in New Bedford were William Doyle presidentof the PC Club of New Bedford and Michael Doherty present scholarship recipient

Billy Oakes Marty Ford and Tom Duff of st Josephs the nations fifth-ranked_ team

Sees lay Teachers

Form Asso~iataon CLEVELAND (NC)-Groundshy

work for a diocesan lay teachers asso~iation was laid at a meeting of representatives of 21 diocesan high schools here

shy Patrick Bruening teacher at St Josephs high school and temshyporary chairman of the new unit said the association is an organshyization of professional people seekint professional growth

He added Only after we have proven ourselves as professionshyals with a professional attitude

about our job can we ask for and hope to get professional consideration I

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lhe players enjoyed demonshystrating th~ir proficiency The fans enjoyed watching the demonstration ~ and the scholar shipfund of the Providence Colshylege Alumni Club of New Bedshy~ord teaped tbebenef~il ~fboth

~ Population Control WASHINGTON (NC) - U s

Sen J W Fulbright of Arkansas has asked for aCongressional appropdation of $150 million for increased population coritior asshysistanCe to developIng countries

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Social Week here Angel Cardinal Herrera y

Oria former archbishop of Mashylaga in a letter to the Social Week sessions deplored what he called a deficiency of Catholic influence in Spanish public lilfe declaring that Spain a Catholic nation was far from being a model of social justice

No Dialogue Earlier Auxiliary Bishop Rashy

fael Gonzalez Moralejo of Valenshycia ecclesiastical moderator of the SocialWeek sounded a simshyilar note declaring that where there is no dialogue between citizens and their government there is no democracy and such a society cannot call itself Christian

Cardinal Herrera said that ahead of Spain are nations who

have learned how to organize their natioJlallif~ according to the norms of justice which are the daughters of consciElnce Sweden has progressed in the social and pOlitlclll o~der to such an extent that the ~ope

could state that its public ~n~ishy tutions are in harmonywith the teachings of the Seco~dVatican Council he said

1[Jpper ~Iasses Cardinal Herrera lirged the

upper classes of -the countryto contribute toward the formation of a sound and realistic public opinion by which religious conshycepts would be applied to the economic and social life of Spain

It is necessary he said to diminish the differences in classes to work toward Unity not only in the economic order but also in i~ the education and

c~vic department

The Best

Car

Georgell Cluh Olf to Good Start mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Apr 20 1967

Taunton High Is Surprise In County Diamond loop former FltrrJDD Riweff CYOer on Scholagslvop ltltIt PIl1Jf$~ns

By PETE~ BARTEK Norton High Coach

Coach BiD Georges Taunton High diamond aggreg~

tion is the early season surprise in the Bristol County schoolboy league now in ita second week of the eampaign The pennant race appeam ~ be developing into one of the most exciting in many years Five clubs are battling of Ule better area clubs year fOIl the coveted flag And after year

Coach Harold (Chet) Haneshywhile action is fast and fm-shywichs Bishop Feehan High teamiOWl in the BCL the eight N3rshyof Attleboro has tucked awayragansett League teams are early season wins over Northgetting I e Q d y Attleboro and New Bedford Voshy

lor the chamshy cational The latter two will pionship race m probably fight it out fornext-toshytheir COmpetishy the-last place in the final standshytion Delayed ing as they seek to avoid theboth by rain and cellar Ii old weather The two top contests on nextCOaches h a v e Mondays BCL card will seebeen reminding Coyle playing Durfelte at Alumnitheir charges of Field in Fall River while Taunshythe pitfalls of ton journeys to North Dartmoutheareless loose to clash with stang Two northernplay and also Peter eounty rivals Attleboro andthe IOOmmission Bartek Feehan meet at the formers of Deedless errors which ean field next Monday when North relegatea club to an early Deeshy Attleboro travels to New Bedshyond diviaion berth from which it ford to take 0111 Vocatlonal win be bard to emerge as 1M Nury Contests oompetition progresses Meanwhile the Narragansett

Chausse and JlaJkut loop is comple~ing its first week The Herring City Orange and of play Its still a little early to

Black pulled the big surprise of make 8 judgment as to how thebe young season when it held clubs will stand at the end of thethe always strong Dullfee High

lI~mpaign team of Fall River to a 2-2 tie in Four Narry tilts are on tap for11 innings The prognosticators next Tuesdaybad been writing off the Georgeshy Coach Jack McCartys Caseeoached clan solely because they High Cardinals of Swansea willfelt Taunton would be unable to face Coach Jack Harts DimanJeplace Artmiddot Koska lost by gradshy Vocational team in Fall River uation in what looms as one of the

But Scott Chawrse impressed most interesting early seasonin his confrontation with the Fan games Coach Doug Baxendales River Hilltoppelll aDd now the Msgr Prevost High team of Fall same pundits who had relegated River will be at Dighton to meet Taunton to a lowly apot 8re the Coach Eddie Texeiras D - ~ first to admit that things will be Regionals Coach Ed Bibeau will much more pleasant for the lead his W~port High aggr~gashyTauntonians this Spring tion to Seekonk to middotvh( with

Stro~ Coyle Offense Coach Roger Hills charges The Admittedly an the doubting fourth Narry contest next Tuesshy

Thomases were not convinced day will see Coach Jack Brenshyon the basis of a single performshy nans Holy Family High teain of ance So Joe Majkut and Chausse New Bedford meeting Coach Jim Ulen eombined to throw a no-hit Sullivans Somersetmiddot High teamwin over Coach Dick Joyces at the latters field Attleboro High team Even the

Lanllers Ready most skeptical then conceded that Taunton must be reckoned On Ca~ Cod n nip-~pd~tuck

in the flag race battle is going on in that areas While Taunton High has heeD eon1erence schedule Four conshy

eGualling the early season attenshy tests are listed for the Capeway tion unexpected results have eircuit next Monday They are eccurred in several other diashy Oldmiddot Rochester (Mattapoisett) mond eontests Attleboro which at Barnstable Bourne at Wareshydid DOt seem destined lor gfeat bam Dartmouth middotat Dennis-Yarshythings this Spring provided the mouth and Fairhaven vs Lawshyfirst surprise w~en it toppled rence High at Falmouth Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Norton High in the Clover Stang High of North Dartmouth Valley Conference plays its first

Taunton then proved its mettle league game at home against when it defeated surprising Millis next Monday The Purple Attleboro Hickey has talent at - and White Lancers travel to Stang but his problem has heeD Medfield next Wednesday tv properly align his best playem Apparently they were not in the Score Governmentright spots when they went down to defeat at the hands of Coach On Lab~r Problems Jim Burns Msgr Coyle High

BUENOS AIRES (NC) -TwonJne of Taunton which has Catholic organizations have isshycwuted its way to two one~sided sued a joint manifesto criticizingviet(lries Coyles strength is in thlte Argentine government sayshyits offensive attack but it also ing it has failed to protect workshy

has a capable defense and pitch ers basic rightsJng staff to make a real run for Issued by the Catholic Youngthe BCL crown Workers (JOC) and Catholic _ Feehans Auspicious Start Action Workers Movement

Durfee while it may have been (MOAC) the statement alsotemporarily halted by Taunton called upon the bishops to be enpects to be among the leaders aware of the needs and goals of before the end of the week The young workers and the labor Hilltoppers looked good in winshy class and to be brave in ltexshy

double-header from Pil-shyning a pressing the Churchs doctrine grim High of Rhode Island last as applied to real-life situations weekend CoachJoe Lewis feelsmiddot It said that the government his boys can now maintain the which calls itself Christian but momentum they have generated is anything but Christian has in the non-league affairs It goes nothing to do with the Gospelalmost without saying that one or Christs teachings or with the off-day is not going to thwart Churchs doctrines as defined by the Hilltopperll wbo produce ODe the Second Vatican Councit

By JOE MIRANDA A Parsons College senior JRobshy

eli Bonalewicz of Fall River is -nearIng the end of a most sucshycessful college career both athshyletically and academically

Bob is attending Parsons in Fairfield Iowa on a baseball scholarship and has started bis third season as the colleges first strong catcher

neans List Student A Physical Education major

Bob has a minor in History and during the last marking period was named to the Deans List at Parsons -

A member of St PatrIcks Parshyish Bonny is a 1963 graduate of Durfee High School where he participated in football basketshyball and baseball

The son of Mr and Mrs Mathew Bonalewicz of 50 Chapshylin Street he is oile of five chil shydren ald has not yet decided upon a vocation

Bonny has two older brotherll a lieutenant and Mathew Jr II

staff sergeant both in the Air Force and stationed ubroad Bob also has two sisters Kathleen II student at Durfee High and Ma) Ann a grammar school pupil

Has f80 Average Bonalewicz recently returned

from a Southern baseball trip end gained excellent commendashytions from his coach Duane Banks for his performance as the Wildcats won 11 of 13 games

The Fall River player batted 430 belted three homers had nine runs-batted-in and seltlred 10 during Parsons first 13 games

Bonalewicz a 22-year-old 175shyJ)ound 5-8 giant enjoys playing baseball and so does his coach who scheduled 89 games last seashyson to set a ollegiate record fur the most games played in one year

Ankle IBjUlY

With the former Durfee backshystop handling the brunt of the catching duties until a knee inshyjury forced him to the sidelines Parsons won 72 lost 15 and twice finished in ti~d games called beshyca~se of darkness

The former St Patricks star in the CYO baseball program started poory this season finshyis middotng off the Southern trip with an ankle sprain but entering this week the ankle was in good shape and Bonny expected to take his regular spot behind the plate

Federal Agency Has Inter-Faith Advisors

WASHINGTON (NC)- A Catholic priest a Methodist minshyister and a Jewish rabbi have been appointed religious advishyBors to the United States Inforshymation Agency here

Msgr George G Higgins clIishyrector of the Social Action Deshypartment U S Catholic Confershyence the Rev Edward G Cu-middot roll superintendent of the Washshyington Northwest District ol the Methodist Baltimore Conference and Rabbi Richard G Hirsch dishyrector of the Relgious Action Center Union of American Heshybrew Congregations have been named to the USIA advisory panel

Officials of the agency noted that while it has had religious advisors since its inception this marks the first time an interfaith panel had been established

The purpose of the panel offi shycials said is to assure that the agencys handling of religious matters serves the best intlterest of the nation and its dlveraity of faiths

Bonalewicz also played for St Patricks T)iocesan championship team and for the Fall River Mershychants in the Newport Sunse~ League

As a senior at DUrfee Bonny was awarded the 1963 George Kaplan Memorial Trophy as the Hilltoppers best senior basketshyball player

His hustle and determination while performing for Durfee at Bostcm Garden during the anshynual Eastern Massachusetts Tecb tournament gained him the reshyspect and admiration of all that witnessed his efforts

Bonalewicz recently completed a practice teaching tour in an Iowa Junior High School and while tere coached the eighth grade team to a league chamshypionship

Earlier in the college year Bob_ was a member of the Parsons intramural flag football progmiddotam and received a trophy for his performan J

Despite the heavy bnsebaU schedule Bob has manged to keep hi grades above average and after the Fall semestershyshowed his prowess in the classshyroom by being named to the Deans List for the second time

DeMatha Winner In Hoop Tourney

WASHINGTON (NC) - DeshyMatha High of suburban Hyattsshyville Md scored an upset cliff shyhanger victory to cop the 12th national high sChool basketballl tournament sponsored by thE local Knights of Columbus J017 the fifth straight time

DeMatha avenged two regula17 season defeats by Mackin High Washington Catholic League

champ with its last minute 70-68 victory Mount Carmel of Chiengo took

third place with a 47-45 overshytime win over DePaul Acndemy of Chicago Northeast Cnthrt1ie of Philadelphia took fifth pIhce with a 77-74 win over St Petertl

B(~ BONALEWICZ of New Brunswick N J Catheshydral High of Trenton NJ Inpound

The oung catcher has been Dwight School of New York alslaquo) long known for his bullet like participated tlnrowlr arm and gained conshy Aubrey Nash DeMatha junloY siderable praise from opponents wall named the tournnmentl in 111gh school amateur and colshy most valuable player lege eompetitions for his savvy A 5-11 junior John Somogyftbehind the plate set three tournament records-shy

Three-Letter Man 40 field goals 108 points in threE Bonalewicz played football for games and 43 points in one game Don MontIe basketb~ll for Tom and tied another record ll-forshyKaram and baseball for middotJoe 11 from the foul line Lewis while at Durfee and also performed for Lewis Chathammiddot team in the Cape Cod League

The Fall Riverite cannot get FAIRHAVENenough baseball according to his mother Mrs Bonalewicz recalls LUMBER a game at Alumni Field when

COMPANYDurfee bested a Venezuelan team sponsored by the Peoplesshyto-Peoples program Bob was inshy Complete linejured and taken -to the hospital Mrs Bonalewicz remembers Building Materials then came back to finish the game hitting a home run to win I SPRING ST FAIRHAVENmiddotit for the Hilltoppers He wall voted the outstanding player in 993-2611the gameo

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sect Increase the Use sect ~ of Fish ~ I ~~e ~ Fomily Diet ~

middot1 UN~~~ ~ _ 1 ~IUllIIllIllllllIllUlllutJUJHIJJJJlllllllllill IIIJlIlIIampIUIltIllHWlUlnmJWnIUlWIIJJllllllllliIllIIlIUIIIIII~

I

THEANCHOR()ioltese of Fan ~tv~r-Thurs ApO 1967 ~ ~ middot-middotmiddotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ middot20

AT BISEIOPS CONFERENCE Facilities for offering Mass were provided by the Archdiocese of Chicago when 230 U S bishops met in semi-annual conference In left photo nine othel prelates concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Joseph TRyan of Anchorage Alaska In right

photo are Archbishop John F Dearde~ of Detroit at left president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and at right Archbishop Johl1l F Cody of Chicago conference host Bishops Connolly and Gerrard attended from the Fall River Diocese NC Photos

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Page 15: 04.20.67

Arguments For Celibacy Outweigh Those Against

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Arguments urging that the requirement of eeHbacy of priests be set aside as an obshystacle to increasing vooationsare not sufficient Archbi-shop Gabriel Garribe pro-prefect of the Congregation of Semishynaries and Universities told a pressconfelence here My personal answer is that the arguments for celibacy cd the clergy are stronger than those against it He said he beshylieved there should be a firm affirmation in this respect and that it would maintain celibacy in the Latin Church

By doing so he said the quality ofpriesUy candidates will grow and through the quaUy of its priests the Church will harvest an increase in the quantity of candidates

The drop in the number of vocations the Archbishop stated Is due in part at least to the new attitude of todays youth and therefore requires changes_ in the traditional seminary formation

The prelate told the press that todays youth is much more fully aware of the whole world and far more sensitive to its problems than in the past Those responsible for seminary training must realize the importance of education and be capable of understanding the new generashytion of admiring them and of discovering for them the mission of the Church

StatistiCs Given Archbishop Garrone not e d

tj~at although there has been a falilng off in vocations generally there have been some surprising exceptions He singled out 1be

Dominican Work Continued from Page One

means that the approach will be intellectual rather than devoshytional and the emphasis win rest on accuracy on the truth of a statement rather than on whether it is opportune

In performing such a task mistakes 1n the form of partisan statements ~ld ill-balanced reshymarks are sometimes inevitable Father Hislop said

He affirmed the Dominicans loyalty to the Church but noted that it is often difficult for a vanguard intellectual group to express itself in terms that win not be misunderstood by the majority of Catholics

CCD Talks Continued from Page One

Tauntol as the speaker Mrs Mary Fuller of Buzzards

Bay will speak at the meetiDll in Bishop Stang High School North Dartmouth

At Bishop CasSidy High School Taunton the speaker will be Edward McDonagh-Of North Attleboro

Thomas Flangheddy of Taunshyton will address the meeting at Bishop Feehan High School Attleboro

The Cape area meeting will be held at Holy Trinity West Hallshywich with Miss Patricia llIIakle as speaker

Seek More funds WASHINGTON (NC) -Two

members of Marylands congresshysional delegation have introshyduced a bill which would make the government spend $75 milshylion annually for birth eontrol aid in the U ~ by 1973 The bin introduced by Sen Joseph Ty ings and Rep Samuel Freidel would propose $20 million the fkst year rising to $75 million bIV the fifth )ear Sta1e and loeal governments would provide _ edditiODal $25 mDJiclID br )87J

extraordinary development of vocations in Mexicp and in Yugoslavia and the stable continuity of recruitment in Poland

Among the statistics provided at the conference were the fact that the latest Church figures count 234000 Diocesan priests and 168000 Religious priests There are in addition 166400 Religious who are not ordained priests

One of the most heartening things in the vocational world picture it was pointed out hasshybeen the increase of priestly vocations in Africa Asia and Oceania

The growth of the local clergy has been a phenomenon of the last 40 years Today in Africa and Asia approximately 500 orshydinations take place every year

~regregampfsect ~ITOW(QJtfreg

$e~~ Aod WASHINGTON (NC) - Rep

Clement J Zablocki of Wisconshysin has introduced a proposal to correct U a defense education gap in American schools

Zablockis bill wo~ld amend the National Defense Education Act (NDEA) to provide federal grants for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment which could be used by children and teachers In parochial and private schools

In a statement on themiddot flOor Of the House of Representatives Zablocki pointed to inequities In

the present NDEA progra~ which Congress passed In 1958 to strengthen instruction in scishyence mathematics foreign lanshyguages and related subjects

An important provision of the act Zablocki said is Title III which provides matching grants to public schools for purchase of laboratory and other special equipment Non-public schools now are eligible only for loans for that purpose

Under Zablockis bill public authorities could obtain federal funds to buy laboratory and other special equipment which eould then be provided for use in non-public schools

In order to comply with matching provisions of the NDEA the non-public schools or groups of such schools would be required to prove they had spent an equal amount thenr selves for such eqUipment from private funds

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FALL RIVER AUXllLhARY AT MEETING Bishop Gerrard Auxiliary lBishop of the Diocese of Fall River is pictured at one of the sessions of the Spring meeting of the Bishops of theU Sheld in Ohicago NC Photo

THE ANCHOR- 15 h A priI 20T urs 1967

Say~ ~Q~~OIP No SIQ7(~ ~ lovell

KANSAS CITY (NC) - The new role of a Bishop in the era of renewal has been spelled out here by Bishop Charles H Helmshysing of Kansas City-St Joseph

In addition to the age-old role of teacher Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop today must read stud) and apply the teachings of the Second Vatican Council the Gosshypels expressed to meet the needs of the modern world In short Bishop Helmsing said a Bishop must be a slave of love to serve as Christ served mankind

Bishop Helmsil1g spoke at the consecration of Auxiliary Bishop Joseph V Sullivan 45 of Kansas City-St Joseph

Bishop Sullivan is the fir~

native of this Missouri city eleshyvated to the hierarchy He was ordained to the priesthood June 1 1946 has served as chancellor of the diocese since 1957 and was named Bishop by Pope Paul VI last month

MarltqJ MregGGreg TJ~ ~~i MILWAUKEE (NC)-ALuthshy

eran scholar will teach Lutheran theology to graduate students at Marquette University here start shying next September Dr Kenneth G Hagen assistant professor of religion at Concordia College Moorhead MinJl will be the Marquet~e theology departmentu first full-time visiting scholra unshyder a grant from the Louis Calshyder Foundation in New York

-THREE LOCATIONS bull youre lookIng for the best in banking se~lce come 011J in to The NationalBank With the opening of our Stafford Square Office were now nearer to even more of you rOll the Greater Fall River area and each of our offices has Just aboUt every service you could want for yourself andl your family We mean M when we say were your FuID lervice BankPft

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t6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~n River-Thurs~ Apr 201967

Friend~2 [iJescribes Stru~g~ For QM~gtLy in T~~regwo~~~

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Rennedy When Fred W Friendly resigned from the Columbia

Broadcasting System in 1966 he ended a 16-year association with that network His trials in broadcast journalism are tbe subject of his new book Due To Circumstances Beyond Our Control Control bull Managements obligation is toRandom House $695 457 protect the interests of these Madison Avenue New York stockho~ders

NY 10022) But this volume But Mr Friendly is concprned is far more than a personal about the other stockholders memoir It is the story of th~ the 195 million citizens who

grant CBS and the other broadshybattle a losing casters the franchise to use theirbattle of course air for quality in

FCC Gutlesscommercial tel shyOne might naively expect that

~vision The the Federal Communications

main point is Commission would effectivelythat the story is here told by an insider Mr Friendlys middotfame criginally gprang from his close associashytion with the late Edward R Murrow He was Murrows partner in the prepashyntion of such pioneering and still unparalleled series as Se~ lil Now and CBS Reports

After Murrow left CBS and wentmiddot into governm()nt service Mr Friendly became president

of CBS news He resigned that ~sition because of a clispute conshycerning the broadcasting of Senshyate hearings on the Vietnam war

Many ancient or recent conshyfilets over broadcasting policy are rehearsed in this hook There fta for example a detailed acshy~unt of the hassies concerning Murrows TV _program dealing with Senator McCarthy before McCarthys downfall as the reshyault of the hearings in the Spring of 1954

There are briefer accounts of other skirmishes Thflse are all interesting and instructive But the value of the book lies not so much in these reminiscences as fin Mr Friendlys knowledgeable analysis of the process whereby television has retreated more and more from public service and become a purveyor of junk and garbage littering the American Iiving room and worse the American mind with trash

Geared to Prcfit Many factors account for this

perversion The principal one is greed Television is geared to private profit not puqUc service lLast years whopping profits will not suffice this year There must be sizable increase

This is to satisfy stockholders Mr Friendly asked William Paley chairman of the board Why do we have to make more money every year The reply was We have many small shareholders across the country and within the companybullbullbullbull

Subcommittee Sets Hearings on Smut

WASHINGTON (NC) -The House Select Subcommittee on Education is holding hearings beginning today on a bill to esshytablish a National Commissionmiddot on Noxious and Obscene Matters and Materials

Subcomllittee chairman Domishynick Daniels of New Jersey is sponsor of thc bill which would provide for a 16-member panel to study the problem of obscenity and recoqunend means Clf dealing with it

On the same day that the hearshyings were announced two other congressmen Arnold Olsen of Montana and Glenn Cunningham of Nebraska introduced bills to curb the mailing of obscene matshyter Olsens bill has bpoundlen enshydorsed by the Post Office Deshy~artment

protect the interests of the other 195 milion But Mr Friendly on the basis of close observation has -no kind words and no reshyspect for the FCC For all pur- poses the agency is toothless and gutless

To make even more money for the shareholders every possible penny has to be wrung out of the advertising medium which television now essentially is This consideration governs proshygramming

It might be supposed that even if prime time at night must eco- ~

nomically go chiefly to programshyming which brings in the maxishymum advertising dollar there is ample opportunity for public service broadcasting in the dayshytime hours But no pienty of money is to be made from dayshytime advertising

Endless Re-runs Three soap companJes alone

spend $290 million a year on television advertising and a lot of this is directed at housewives during the daytime And the programming dictated by this advertising comprisesmostly old old movies and endless re-runs of stupid situation comedies

Huge profits (are) being realshyized from the use of the miracle of television as a transmission belt for retread serials soap opshyeras game shows and the like The yield from the detergent deodorant bleach or food advershytisers who possess the daytime schedule (whose annualexpendishytures (are) some $130000000 ) is the principal reason why no serious progtamming can be sustained for any length of time during these hours

l3y serious programming is meant such things as crittcal UN debates (for example on Vietnam) vital congressional hearings the Popes visit to the UN Churchills funeral etc) Some of these have in fact got on the air and even for a conshysiderable period oftime b~t alshyways there is a major bitter battle involved

Educational TV What may not be realized is

the power of the local station n is by no means meekly subshymissive to the network It largely gqes its own way and its wayis in search of the utmost in profits

It is this fact for example which accounts for the nonshyexistence of a good solid repre~ sentative late-evening news broadcast over the nekwork The local station prefers to put on its own scrappy superficial travesty of a news program beshycause it can get-in an excessively large number of profitable comshymercials

Perhaps there is some hope in the field of educational televishy

sion Mr Friendly is now enshygaged in exploring that possibil shyity For our sake may he be successful At any rate we must thank him for reminding us of our tolerance of the criminial misuse Qf the air waves

H E A 0 S UNIVlERSliJIY New president of St Bonashyventure University St Bonashyventure N Y is the Very Rev Reginald A Redlon

OFM formerly of St Franshycis College Rye Beach N H The university Is operated by the Holy_ Name province of the Order of Friars Minor NC Photo

Issues GlLIidelimiddotnes For IEcumenism

LITTLE ROCK (NC) - Ecushymenical guidelines dealing prinshycipally with the conduct of Catholics at Protestant functions have been issued by Bishop Alshybert L Fletcher of Lttle Rock

Composed of the diocesan ecumenical commission the gUidelines specify that Catholics may attend Protestant church services participate in the singshying and common prayer but may not act as a reader or officer of such services

The rules permit Catholics to serye in wedding parties at mar- riages in Protestant churches providing the service does not involve a Catholic or a divorceci person Attendance at baccalaushyreate services in a church or elsewhere is permitted

Under the rules Catholics may not act as sponsors at Protestantmiddot baptisms Oi confirmation nat Jlarticipate in intercommunion services The guidelines encour- age Protestant attendance at Catholic services

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Misunderstandingmiddot Faced In Ecumenical Meeting

Roman Catholic and Lutheran theologians agreed here after their fourth meeting that many misunderstandings had been overcome on the Sacrament of the Lords SuppeR -Holy Eucharist-but that further examination is necesshysary The doctrinal consulshy to the concrete worship life o1Ztation held at the headquartshy the Church ers of the Lutheran Church In a prepared statement reshyin America was the fourth leased ft the conclusion of the in a series sponsored by the closed meeting the group noted Bishops Committee for Ecumenshy that in contrat to topics disshyism and Interreligious Affairs cussed at the first two meetings of the NCCB and the USA Nashy -the Nicene Creed and Baptismtional Committee of the Luthershy -there have been historically an Wotld Federation serious disagreements between

Main themes discussed at the the confessions concerning the three-day meeting were the Eucharist Lords Supper as a sacrifice the All participants the stateshymanner of Christs presence in ment added agreed that many the Sacrament the import of the misunderstandings had beellll concept of transubstantiation overcome as a result of the latest and the relation of these issues meeting

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For our eIght edlcal Sisters In P1rappancode south India today is just a normal day Doctors bags In hand they are out In the villages eKmiddot amlnlng everyone for leprosybullbullbullbull Leprosy can be cured If diagnosed early says Sister Elizashybeth a surgeon Better yet Itcan be prevented In this case an ounce of prevention is worthten pounds of cure bullbullbull The cure is cheaper than penny nely Only $850 buys 10000 Dapsone _ mIracle tablets enough for 43 lepers for a yeerl bullbullbull The effort In Pirappancode islnternashytional German Catholics built the 25middotbed ho pital (1St Johns) French Catholics gave a workshop (for therapy) and an American friend of ours has pledged a convent and chapel Now the Sisters need medicinps a $200 microscope a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for treating children especially In farmiddotflung villages Will you help them Monsignor Nolan will acshyknowledge your gifts promptly and the Slste win pray for you aware you are helping them cure lepers as Christ did -

WHAT YOU CAN DO IJ $5000 gives the Sisters a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for fighting leprosy at Ita source (A sign on the side will featu re the name ofyour favorite saint and your name ifyou wish)

IJ $1500wlll give theSlster-surgeon an ope Instable Shes ustng akitchen table now

WOULDc $575 buys a whirlpool beth $100 a sterilizer

NEED C $300 pays In full ~or the two-year training 01 IF a native Slsternurse She will write to you

YOU WERI C $240 ($5 a Week) takes care of bull fuMmiddottlme

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NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN PresIdent

MSGR JOHN G NOLAN Natlonal8ecretaIJ Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc S30 Madison Avenuemiddot New York NY 1001 T~one 212yUkOft 6-5840

rHf ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Apr 20 196717

CATHOLIC (HAR~l~~S AP~EAL SILVER JUBILEE YEAR

MAY 7-17

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An act of aratitude for 25 years of Charitable Seice

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THE ANCHORshy~18 Top East C~ast College Hoopsters middotPlay )Sees SociaI EquityThurs April 20 1967

Still Lagging Anglicalfj)~ ~teview At I(ennedy Center For P C Alumni In Spain Antii Cali~~i~ By Patricia Francis MALAGA (NC) - Spain

was taken to task for lagging1562 C~~lireglf A full house crowd saw some o( the East Coasts top collegIate basketball players behind many other countriesLONDON (NC) _ The demonstrate last week how basketball should be played Occasion was the 8th annual hi the development of a

ehurch of England has set Scholarship Basketball Game sponsored by the Providence College Alumni Club of New just Christian social and ecoshyup a permanent commission Bedford at Kennedy Youth Center in New Bedford Initiated in 1959 to - raise nomic life at the 26th Spanish C1)n Christian Docbine with tis first task to consider recastshying or replacing that churchs historic charter of the Thirtyshy~Hne Articles of Religion which

are strongly anti-Catholic In tOne

They are regarded by many as o stumbling block to Christian ~ity The articles drawn up in 1562

for the avoiding of diversities $pound opinions and for the establishshyhtg of consent touching truereli shygion must be publicly accepted py the clergy at ordination

They have become a matter of ~increasing objection lind some

Anglican clergymen now feel talat they should not be called Upon to subscribe to doctrinal definitions which reflect views formed in the 16th oentury aarship is a $2400 one paid at the time of extreme and bitter reli- rate of $600 a year to the winner gious controversy Next award will be made in

The articles denounce the 1970 TheRevEdwardC Duffy eurohurch of Rome as erroneous in chairman of- the scholarship matters of faith and declare games and recruiter of the among other things that theplaye~s who participate emphashyBishop of Rome hath no jurisdic- sizes the scholarship is open middotto tion in this -realm of Englandany deserving boy who has been Some prominent Anglican clergymen have blal1led the sharp declfnein ordination canshy

Qlidates on a reluctance to subshy~ribe to this document

Consider Advis( The new commission was apshy

pointed by Anglican Archbishops Michael Ramsey of Canterbury and Donald Coggan of York It consists of 17 members most of them theological professors repshyzesenting different schools of thought in the Anglican Church

Anglican Bishop Iar Ramsey of Durham is chairman The commissions general terms of reference say that it is

to consider and advise upon doctrinal questions submitted to it from time to time by the archshybishops and to plan when deshyslrable the investigation of

I ~uestions by other groups Its first task will be to conshy

sider the place of the Thirty- lege University of Rhode Island Nine Articles in the Anglican St Josephs of Philadelphia Bosshy

tradition and the question of ton College and Holy Cross subscription and assentto them There were Bill Blair Jim

Benedict Bob Kavolski and Bill Lasher of PC Mike FitzgeraldReligious Influence (of Mattapoisett) Henry Carey

In US on Wan~ -7- NEW YORK (NC)-Although

a majority of all Americans exshypressed the belief that 11eligion is losing its influence in the

United States in the latest Gallup Poll Catholics declined to-give majority assent to the opinion

The national survey showed tilat 57 per cent of all Americans in 1967 believe religion is losing its influence Only 14 per cent expressed this opinion in 1957

Among Protestants 60 per cent In 1967 compared with L7 per eent in 1957 said religion was losing its influence Forty-eight

per-cent of Catholics agreed in the latest survey compared with Beven per cent in 1957

Get Federal Funds PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A

Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyect under the auspices of Philashydelppia Archbishop John J Krols Commjssion on Economic Oppi)rtunity Programs hlils reshyceived $267980 from the federal government It was one of 74 Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyects in 30 states approved by Secretary of Labor W Willard Wirtz

accepted as a freshman at Provshyidence College regardless of the high school he attended

Primary Method William F Doyle president of

the NE Bedford club says the games are the alumnis primary method of raising money for the schoJarship fund

Since it was first held the game has attracted a following of avid fans-who help swell the scholshyarship treasury

Father Duffy feels it is the top post-season game in New England arid cites as proof the fact that his long time friend Bob Cousy Hoiy Cross All- Anierican and Boston Celtic great played in it himself two years ago It was his last game

Players who participated in this years money-for-scholarshyships game-all college seniors

represented Providence Colshy

scholarship funds for deserv- ing gr~duates of area high

schools the game profits enabled presentation of the first Edward J Tucker Memorial Scholarship of $2000 to Clifford Marr of New Bedford in 1962 Marr a graduate of Holy Family High was graduated from Provishydence College in 1966 and curshyrently is an Army lieutenant on duty in Korea

The second scholarship---named for the late 1r Tucker of Fairshyhaven a Providence College

graduate and one of the charter members of the New Bedford club--was awarded last year to Michael Doherty of New Bedshyford also a Holy Family gradushyate

Currently the four-year scholshy

Steve Chubin and Bob Boehm of the U of RI Richie Murphy and Greg Hochstein of Holy Cross John Austin and Ed Hock- enbury of Boston College and

f~nll lHoMsnln1~ fLaw Olhoc City EI1il(Jlcts

SPRIfiGFIELD (NC) - By unanimous vote of its five city commissioners this city has enshyacted a fair housing ordinance

The ordinance the third of its kind in OhiO becomes effecshytive May 3 Considerably strongshyer than the fair housing legisia- tion enacted by the Ohio Legisshylature in 1965 it outlaws disshycrimination in the sale or rental of any housing excepting only dwellings for members of reli shygious organizations or housing established for one sex only

Springfields new ordinance came as the res~lt of an improved climate of racial harmony The citys mayor Robert C Henry is a Negro whose performance of his duties has won wide reshyspect In recent years an Urban League has been launched and has made considerable progress A Human Relations Commission is functioning

PROVIDENCE COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP In atshytendance at PC Scholarship Fund Basketball Game in New Bedford were William Doyle presidentof the PC Club of New Bedford and Michael Doherty present scholarship recipient

Billy Oakes Marty Ford and Tom Duff of st Josephs the nations fifth-ranked_ team

Sees lay Teachers

Form Asso~iataon CLEVELAND (NC)-Groundshy

work for a diocesan lay teachers asso~iation was laid at a meeting of representatives of 21 diocesan high schools here

shy Patrick Bruening teacher at St Josephs high school and temshyporary chairman of the new unit said the association is an organshyization of professional people seekint professional growth

He added Only after we have proven ourselves as professionshyals with a professional attitude

about our job can we ask for and hope to get professional consideration I

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lhe players enjoyed demonshystrating th~ir proficiency The fans enjoyed watching the demonstration ~ and the scholar shipfund of the Providence Colshylege Alumni Club of New Bedshy~ord teaped tbebenef~il ~fboth

~ Population Control WASHINGTON (NC) - U s

Sen J W Fulbright of Arkansas has asked for aCongressional appropdation of $150 million for increased population coritior asshysistanCe to developIng countries

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Social Week here Angel Cardinal Herrera y

Oria former archbishop of Mashylaga in a letter to the Social Week sessions deplored what he called a deficiency of Catholic influence in Spanish public lilfe declaring that Spain a Catholic nation was far from being a model of social justice

No Dialogue Earlier Auxiliary Bishop Rashy

fael Gonzalez Moralejo of Valenshycia ecclesiastical moderator of the SocialWeek sounded a simshyilar note declaring that where there is no dialogue between citizens and their government there is no democracy and such a society cannot call itself Christian

Cardinal Herrera said that ahead of Spain are nations who

have learned how to organize their natioJlallif~ according to the norms of justice which are the daughters of consciElnce Sweden has progressed in the social and pOlitlclll o~der to such an extent that the ~ope

could state that its public ~n~ishy tutions are in harmonywith the teachings of the Seco~dVatican Council he said

1[Jpper ~Iasses Cardinal Herrera lirged the

upper classes of -the countryto contribute toward the formation of a sound and realistic public opinion by which religious conshycepts would be applied to the economic and social life of Spain

It is necessary he said to diminish the differences in classes to work toward Unity not only in the economic order but also in i~ the education and

c~vic department

The Best

Car

Georgell Cluh Olf to Good Start mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Apr 20 1967

Taunton High Is Surprise In County Diamond loop former FltrrJDD Riweff CYOer on Scholagslvop ltltIt PIl1Jf$~ns

By PETE~ BARTEK Norton High Coach

Coach BiD Georges Taunton High diamond aggreg~

tion is the early season surprise in the Bristol County schoolboy league now in ita second week of the eampaign The pennant race appeam ~ be developing into one of the most exciting in many years Five clubs are battling of Ule better area clubs year fOIl the coveted flag And after year

Coach Harold (Chet) Haneshywhile action is fast and fm-shywichs Bishop Feehan High teamiOWl in the BCL the eight N3rshyof Attleboro has tucked awayragansett League teams are early season wins over Northgetting I e Q d y Attleboro and New Bedford Voshy

lor the chamshy cational The latter two will pionship race m probably fight it out fornext-toshytheir COmpetishy the-last place in the final standshytion Delayed ing as they seek to avoid theboth by rain and cellar Ii old weather The two top contests on nextCOaches h a v e Mondays BCL card will seebeen reminding Coyle playing Durfelte at Alumnitheir charges of Field in Fall River while Taunshythe pitfalls of ton journeys to North Dartmoutheareless loose to clash with stang Two northernplay and also Peter eounty rivals Attleboro andthe IOOmmission Bartek Feehan meet at the formers of Deedless errors which ean field next Monday when North relegatea club to an early Deeshy Attleboro travels to New Bedshyond diviaion berth from which it ford to take 0111 Vocatlonal win be bard to emerge as 1M Nury Contests oompetition progresses Meanwhile the Narragansett

Chausse and JlaJkut loop is comple~ing its first week The Herring City Orange and of play Its still a little early to

Black pulled the big surprise of make 8 judgment as to how thebe young season when it held clubs will stand at the end of thethe always strong Dullfee High

lI~mpaign team of Fall River to a 2-2 tie in Four Narry tilts are on tap for11 innings The prognosticators next Tuesdaybad been writing off the Georgeshy Coach Jack McCartys Caseeoached clan solely because they High Cardinals of Swansea willfelt Taunton would be unable to face Coach Jack Harts DimanJeplace Artmiddot Koska lost by gradshy Vocational team in Fall River uation in what looms as one of the

But Scott Chawrse impressed most interesting early seasonin his confrontation with the Fan games Coach Doug Baxendales River Hilltoppelll aDd now the Msgr Prevost High team of Fall same pundits who had relegated River will be at Dighton to meet Taunton to a lowly apot 8re the Coach Eddie Texeiras D - ~ first to admit that things will be Regionals Coach Ed Bibeau will much more pleasant for the lead his W~port High aggr~gashyTauntonians this Spring tion to Seekonk to middotvh( with

Stro~ Coyle Offense Coach Roger Hills charges The Admittedly an the doubting fourth Narry contest next Tuesshy

Thomases were not convinced day will see Coach Jack Brenshyon the basis of a single performshy nans Holy Family High teain of ance So Joe Majkut and Chausse New Bedford meeting Coach Jim Ulen eombined to throw a no-hit Sullivans Somersetmiddot High teamwin over Coach Dick Joyces at the latters field Attleboro High team Even the

Lanllers Ready most skeptical then conceded that Taunton must be reckoned On Ca~ Cod n nip-~pd~tuck

in the flag race battle is going on in that areas While Taunton High has heeD eon1erence schedule Four conshy

eGualling the early season attenshy tests are listed for the Capeway tion unexpected results have eircuit next Monday They are eccurred in several other diashy Oldmiddot Rochester (Mattapoisett) mond eontests Attleboro which at Barnstable Bourne at Wareshydid DOt seem destined lor gfeat bam Dartmouth middotat Dennis-Yarshythings this Spring provided the mouth and Fairhaven vs Lawshyfirst surprise w~en it toppled rence High at Falmouth Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Norton High in the Clover Stang High of North Dartmouth Valley Conference plays its first

Taunton then proved its mettle league game at home against when it defeated surprising Millis next Monday The Purple Attleboro Hickey has talent at - and White Lancers travel to Stang but his problem has heeD Medfield next Wednesday tv properly align his best playem Apparently they were not in the Score Governmentright spots when they went down to defeat at the hands of Coach On Lab~r Problems Jim Burns Msgr Coyle High

BUENOS AIRES (NC) -TwonJne of Taunton which has Catholic organizations have isshycwuted its way to two one~sided sued a joint manifesto criticizingviet(lries Coyles strength is in thlte Argentine government sayshyits offensive attack but it also ing it has failed to protect workshy

has a capable defense and pitch ers basic rightsJng staff to make a real run for Issued by the Catholic Youngthe BCL crown Workers (JOC) and Catholic _ Feehans Auspicious Start Action Workers Movement

Durfee while it may have been (MOAC) the statement alsotemporarily halted by Taunton called upon the bishops to be enpects to be among the leaders aware of the needs and goals of before the end of the week The young workers and the labor Hilltoppers looked good in winshy class and to be brave in ltexshy

double-header from Pil-shyning a pressing the Churchs doctrine grim High of Rhode Island last as applied to real-life situations weekend CoachJoe Lewis feelsmiddot It said that the government his boys can now maintain the which calls itself Christian but momentum they have generated is anything but Christian has in the non-league affairs It goes nothing to do with the Gospelalmost without saying that one or Christs teachings or with the off-day is not going to thwart Churchs doctrines as defined by the Hilltopperll wbo produce ODe the Second Vatican Councit

By JOE MIRANDA A Parsons College senior JRobshy

eli Bonalewicz of Fall River is -nearIng the end of a most sucshycessful college career both athshyletically and academically

Bob is attending Parsons in Fairfield Iowa on a baseball scholarship and has started bis third season as the colleges first strong catcher

neans List Student A Physical Education major

Bob has a minor in History and during the last marking period was named to the Deans List at Parsons -

A member of St PatrIcks Parshyish Bonny is a 1963 graduate of Durfee High School where he participated in football basketshyball and baseball

The son of Mr and Mrs Mathew Bonalewicz of 50 Chapshylin Street he is oile of five chil shydren ald has not yet decided upon a vocation

Bonny has two older brotherll a lieutenant and Mathew Jr II

staff sergeant both in the Air Force and stationed ubroad Bob also has two sisters Kathleen II student at Durfee High and Ma) Ann a grammar school pupil

Has f80 Average Bonalewicz recently returned

from a Southern baseball trip end gained excellent commendashytions from his coach Duane Banks for his performance as the Wildcats won 11 of 13 games

The Fall River player batted 430 belted three homers had nine runs-batted-in and seltlred 10 during Parsons first 13 games

Bonalewicz a 22-year-old 175shyJ)ound 5-8 giant enjoys playing baseball and so does his coach who scheduled 89 games last seashyson to set a ollegiate record fur the most games played in one year

Ankle IBjUlY

With the former Durfee backshystop handling the brunt of the catching duties until a knee inshyjury forced him to the sidelines Parsons won 72 lost 15 and twice finished in ti~d games called beshyca~se of darkness

The former St Patricks star in the CYO baseball program started poory this season finshyis middotng off the Southern trip with an ankle sprain but entering this week the ankle was in good shape and Bonny expected to take his regular spot behind the plate

Federal Agency Has Inter-Faith Advisors

WASHINGTON (NC)- A Catholic priest a Methodist minshyister and a Jewish rabbi have been appointed religious advishyBors to the United States Inforshymation Agency here

Msgr George G Higgins clIishyrector of the Social Action Deshypartment U S Catholic Confershyence the Rev Edward G Cu-middot roll superintendent of the Washshyington Northwest District ol the Methodist Baltimore Conference and Rabbi Richard G Hirsch dishyrector of the Relgious Action Center Union of American Heshybrew Congregations have been named to the USIA advisory panel

Officials of the agency noted that while it has had religious advisors since its inception this marks the first time an interfaith panel had been established

The purpose of the panel offi shycials said is to assure that the agencys handling of religious matters serves the best intlterest of the nation and its dlveraity of faiths

Bonalewicz also played for St Patricks T)iocesan championship team and for the Fall River Mershychants in the Newport Sunse~ League

As a senior at DUrfee Bonny was awarded the 1963 George Kaplan Memorial Trophy as the Hilltoppers best senior basketshyball player

His hustle and determination while performing for Durfee at Bostcm Garden during the anshynual Eastern Massachusetts Tecb tournament gained him the reshyspect and admiration of all that witnessed his efforts

Bonalewicz recently completed a practice teaching tour in an Iowa Junior High School and while tere coached the eighth grade team to a league chamshypionship

Earlier in the college year Bob_ was a member of the Parsons intramural flag football progmiddotam and received a trophy for his performan J

Despite the heavy bnsebaU schedule Bob has manged to keep hi grades above average and after the Fall semestershyshowed his prowess in the classshyroom by being named to the Deans List for the second time

DeMatha Winner In Hoop Tourney

WASHINGTON (NC) - DeshyMatha High of suburban Hyattsshyville Md scored an upset cliff shyhanger victory to cop the 12th national high sChool basketballl tournament sponsored by thE local Knights of Columbus J017 the fifth straight time

DeMatha avenged two regula17 season defeats by Mackin High Washington Catholic League

champ with its last minute 70-68 victory Mount Carmel of Chiengo took

third place with a 47-45 overshytime win over DePaul Acndemy of Chicago Northeast Cnthrt1ie of Philadelphia took fifth pIhce with a 77-74 win over St Petertl

B(~ BONALEWICZ of New Brunswick N J Catheshydral High of Trenton NJ Inpound

The oung catcher has been Dwight School of New York alslaquo) long known for his bullet like participated tlnrowlr arm and gained conshy Aubrey Nash DeMatha junloY siderable praise from opponents wall named the tournnmentl in 111gh school amateur and colshy most valuable player lege eompetitions for his savvy A 5-11 junior John Somogyftbehind the plate set three tournament records-shy

Three-Letter Man 40 field goals 108 points in threE Bonalewicz played football for games and 43 points in one game Don MontIe basketb~ll for Tom and tied another record ll-forshyKaram and baseball for middotJoe 11 from the foul line Lewis while at Durfee and also performed for Lewis Chathammiddot team in the Cape Cod League

The Fall Riverite cannot get FAIRHAVENenough baseball according to his mother Mrs Bonalewicz recalls LUMBER a game at Alumni Field when

COMPANYDurfee bested a Venezuelan team sponsored by the Peoplesshyto-Peoples program Bob was inshy Complete linejured and taken -to the hospital Mrs Bonalewicz remembers Building Materials then came back to finish the game hitting a home run to win I SPRING ST FAIRHAVENmiddotit for the Hilltoppers He wall voted the outstanding player in 993-2611the gameo

~1I1111111111111111111111111111111111IIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIlIllIUIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1111111111I1II111II1I1II111111111111111~

sect Increase the Use sect ~ of Fish ~ I ~~e ~ Fomily Diet ~

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I

THEANCHOR()ioltese of Fan ~tv~r-Thurs ApO 1967 ~ ~ middot-middotmiddotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ middot20

AT BISEIOPS CONFERENCE Facilities for offering Mass were provided by the Archdiocese of Chicago when 230 U S bishops met in semi-annual conference In left photo nine othel prelates concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Joseph TRyan of Anchorage Alaska In right

photo are Archbishop John F Dearde~ of Detroit at left president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and at right Archbishop Johl1l F Cody of Chicago conference host Bishops Connolly and Gerrard attended from the Fall River Diocese NC Photos

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Page 16: 04.20.67

t6 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~n River-Thurs~ Apr 201967

Friend~2 [iJescribes Stru~g~ For QM~gtLy in T~~regwo~~~

By Rt Rev Msgr John S Rennedy When Fred W Friendly resigned from the Columbia

Broadcasting System in 1966 he ended a 16-year association with that network His trials in broadcast journalism are tbe subject of his new book Due To Circumstances Beyond Our Control Control bull Managements obligation is toRandom House $695 457 protect the interests of these Madison Avenue New York stockho~ders

NY 10022) But this volume But Mr Friendly is concprned is far more than a personal about the other stockholders memoir It is the story of th~ the 195 million citizens who

grant CBS and the other broadshybattle a losing casters the franchise to use theirbattle of course air for quality in

FCC Gutlesscommercial tel shyOne might naively expect that

~vision The the Federal Communications

main point is Commission would effectivelythat the story is here told by an insider Mr Friendlys middotfame criginally gprang from his close associashytion with the late Edward R Murrow He was Murrows partner in the prepashyntion of such pioneering and still unparalleled series as Se~ lil Now and CBS Reports

After Murrow left CBS and wentmiddot into governm()nt service Mr Friendly became president

of CBS news He resigned that ~sition because of a clispute conshycerning the broadcasting of Senshyate hearings on the Vietnam war

Many ancient or recent conshyfilets over broadcasting policy are rehearsed in this hook There fta for example a detailed acshy~unt of the hassies concerning Murrows TV _program dealing with Senator McCarthy before McCarthys downfall as the reshyault of the hearings in the Spring of 1954

There are briefer accounts of other skirmishes Thflse are all interesting and instructive But the value of the book lies not so much in these reminiscences as fin Mr Friendlys knowledgeable analysis of the process whereby television has retreated more and more from public service and become a purveyor of junk and garbage littering the American Iiving room and worse the American mind with trash

Geared to Prcfit Many factors account for this

perversion The principal one is greed Television is geared to private profit not puqUc service lLast years whopping profits will not suffice this year There must be sizable increase

This is to satisfy stockholders Mr Friendly asked William Paley chairman of the board Why do we have to make more money every year The reply was We have many small shareholders across the country and within the companybullbullbullbull

Subcommittee Sets Hearings on Smut

WASHINGTON (NC) -The House Select Subcommittee on Education is holding hearings beginning today on a bill to esshytablish a National Commissionmiddot on Noxious and Obscene Matters and Materials

Subcomllittee chairman Domishynick Daniels of New Jersey is sponsor of thc bill which would provide for a 16-member panel to study the problem of obscenity and recoqunend means Clf dealing with it

On the same day that the hearshyings were announced two other congressmen Arnold Olsen of Montana and Glenn Cunningham of Nebraska introduced bills to curb the mailing of obscene matshyter Olsens bill has bpoundlen enshydorsed by the Post Office Deshy~artment

protect the interests of the other 195 milion But Mr Friendly on the basis of close observation has -no kind words and no reshyspect for the FCC For all pur- poses the agency is toothless and gutless

To make even more money for the shareholders every possible penny has to be wrung out of the advertising medium which television now essentially is This consideration governs proshygramming

It might be supposed that even if prime time at night must eco- ~

nomically go chiefly to programshyming which brings in the maxishymum advertising dollar there is ample opportunity for public service broadcasting in the dayshytime hours But no pienty of money is to be made from dayshytime advertising

Endless Re-runs Three soap companJes alone

spend $290 million a year on television advertising and a lot of this is directed at housewives during the daytime And the programming dictated by this advertising comprisesmostly old old movies and endless re-runs of stupid situation comedies

Huge profits (are) being realshyized from the use of the miracle of television as a transmission belt for retread serials soap opshyeras game shows and the like The yield from the detergent deodorant bleach or food advershytisers who possess the daytime schedule (whose annualexpendishytures (are) some $130000000 ) is the principal reason why no serious progtamming can be sustained for any length of time during these hours

l3y serious programming is meant such things as crittcal UN debates (for example on Vietnam) vital congressional hearings the Popes visit to the UN Churchills funeral etc) Some of these have in fact got on the air and even for a conshysiderable period oftime b~t alshyways there is a major bitter battle involved

Educational TV What may not be realized is

the power of the local station n is by no means meekly subshymissive to the network It largely gqes its own way and its wayis in search of the utmost in profits

It is this fact for example which accounts for the nonshyexistence of a good solid repre~ sentative late-evening news broadcast over the nekwork The local station prefers to put on its own scrappy superficial travesty of a news program beshycause it can get-in an excessively large number of profitable comshymercials

Perhaps there is some hope in the field of educational televishy

sion Mr Friendly is now enshygaged in exploring that possibil shyity For our sake may he be successful At any rate we must thank him for reminding us of our tolerance of the criminial misuse Qf the air waves

H E A 0 S UNIVlERSliJIY New president of St Bonashyventure University St Bonashyventure N Y is the Very Rev Reginald A Redlon

OFM formerly of St Franshycis College Rye Beach N H The university Is operated by the Holy_ Name province of the Order of Friars Minor NC Photo

Issues GlLIidelimiddotnes For IEcumenism

LITTLE ROCK (NC) - Ecushymenical guidelines dealing prinshycipally with the conduct of Catholics at Protestant functions have been issued by Bishop Alshybert L Fletcher of Lttle Rock

Composed of the diocesan ecumenical commission the gUidelines specify that Catholics may attend Protestant church services participate in the singshying and common prayer but may not act as a reader or officer of such services

The rules permit Catholics to serye in wedding parties at mar- riages in Protestant churches providing the service does not involve a Catholic or a divorceci person Attendance at baccalaushyreate services in a church or elsewhere is permitted

Under the rules Catholics may not act as sponsors at Protestantmiddot baptisms Oi confirmation nat Jlarticipate in intercommunion services The guidelines encour- age Protestant attendance at Catholic services

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Misunderstandingmiddot Faced In Ecumenical Meeting

Roman Catholic and Lutheran theologians agreed here after their fourth meeting that many misunderstandings had been overcome on the Sacrament of the Lords SuppeR -Holy Eucharist-but that further examination is necesshysary The doctrinal consulshy to the concrete worship life o1Ztation held at the headquartshy the Church ers of the Lutheran Church In a prepared statement reshyin America was the fourth leased ft the conclusion of the in a series sponsored by the closed meeting the group noted Bishops Committee for Ecumenshy that in contrat to topics disshyism and Interreligious Affairs cussed at the first two meetings of the NCCB and the USA Nashy -the Nicene Creed and Baptismtional Committee of the Luthershy -there have been historically an Wotld Federation serious disagreements between

Main themes discussed at the the confessions concerning the three-day meeting were the Eucharist Lords Supper as a sacrifice the All participants the stateshymanner of Christs presence in ment added agreed that many the Sacrament the import of the misunderstandings had beellll concept of transubstantiation overcome as a result of the latest and the relation of these issues meeting

HOW TDCURE LEPERS

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IlJ $1 a month ($12 a yeer) gives you membershyehlp un our Damlen Club for lepers

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For our eIght edlcal Sisters In P1rappancode south India today is just a normal day Doctors bags In hand they are out In the villages eKmiddot amlnlng everyone for leprosybullbullbullbull Leprosy can be cured If diagnosed early says Sister Elizashybeth a surgeon Better yet Itcan be prevented In this case an ounce of prevention is worthten pounds of cure bullbullbull The cure is cheaper than penny nely Only $850 buys 10000 Dapsone _ mIracle tablets enough for 43 lepers for a yeerl bullbullbull The effort In Pirappancode islnternashytional German Catholics built the 25middotbed ho pital (1St Johns) French Catholics gave a workshop (for therapy) and an American friend of ours has pledged a convent and chapel Now the Sisters need medicinps a $200 microscope a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for treating children especially In farmiddotflung villages Will you help them Monsignor Nolan will acshyknowledge your gifts promptly and the Slste win pray for you aware you are helping them cure lepers as Christ did -

WHAT YOU CAN DO IJ $5000 gives the Sisters a mobile dispensary (hospital on wheels) for fighting leprosy at Ita source (A sign on the side will featu re the name ofyour favorite saint and your name ifyou wish)

IJ $1500wlll give theSlster-surgeon an ope Instable Shes ustng akitchen table now

WOULDc $575 buys a whirlpool beth $100 a sterilizer

NEED C $300 pays In full ~or the two-year training 01 IF a native Slsternurse She will write to you

YOU WERI C $240 ($5 a Week) takes care of bull fuMmiddottlme

~IlAII IA8T WlILflARIi ASBDelATIGN

NEAR EAST MISSIONS FRANCIS CARDINAL SPELLMAN PresIdent

MSGR JOHN G NOLAN Natlonal8ecretaIJ Write CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc S30 Madison Avenuemiddot New York NY 1001 T~one 212yUkOft 6-5840

rHf ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Apr 20 196717

CATHOLIC (HAR~l~~S AP~EAL SILVER JUBILEE YEAR

MAY 7-17

What does it mean to you The opportunity to raise your sights to the level of a $2500 Jubilee Gift

An act of aratitude for 25 years of Charitable Seice

Bishop Connollys love for exceptionoillhiidren cannot be

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THE ANCHORshy~18 Top East C~ast College Hoopsters middotPlay )Sees SociaI EquityThurs April 20 1967

Still Lagging Anglicalfj)~ ~teview At I(ennedy Center For P C Alumni In Spain Antii Cali~~i~ By Patricia Francis MALAGA (NC) - Spain

was taken to task for lagging1562 C~~lireglf A full house crowd saw some o( the East Coasts top collegIate basketball players behind many other countriesLONDON (NC) _ The demonstrate last week how basketball should be played Occasion was the 8th annual hi the development of a

ehurch of England has set Scholarship Basketball Game sponsored by the Providence College Alumni Club of New just Christian social and ecoshyup a permanent commission Bedford at Kennedy Youth Center in New Bedford Initiated in 1959 to - raise nomic life at the 26th Spanish C1)n Christian Docbine with tis first task to consider recastshying or replacing that churchs historic charter of the Thirtyshy~Hne Articles of Religion which

are strongly anti-Catholic In tOne

They are regarded by many as o stumbling block to Christian ~ity The articles drawn up in 1562

for the avoiding of diversities $pound opinions and for the establishshyhtg of consent touching truereli shygion must be publicly accepted py the clergy at ordination

They have become a matter of ~increasing objection lind some

Anglican clergymen now feel talat they should not be called Upon to subscribe to doctrinal definitions which reflect views formed in the 16th oentury aarship is a $2400 one paid at the time of extreme and bitter reli- rate of $600 a year to the winner gious controversy Next award will be made in

The articles denounce the 1970 TheRevEdwardC Duffy eurohurch of Rome as erroneous in chairman of- the scholarship matters of faith and declare games and recruiter of the among other things that theplaye~s who participate emphashyBishop of Rome hath no jurisdic- sizes the scholarship is open middotto tion in this -realm of Englandany deserving boy who has been Some prominent Anglican clergymen have blal1led the sharp declfnein ordination canshy

Qlidates on a reluctance to subshy~ribe to this document

Consider Advis( The new commission was apshy

pointed by Anglican Archbishops Michael Ramsey of Canterbury and Donald Coggan of York It consists of 17 members most of them theological professors repshyzesenting different schools of thought in the Anglican Church

Anglican Bishop Iar Ramsey of Durham is chairman The commissions general terms of reference say that it is

to consider and advise upon doctrinal questions submitted to it from time to time by the archshybishops and to plan when deshyslrable the investigation of

I ~uestions by other groups Its first task will be to conshy

sider the place of the Thirty- lege University of Rhode Island Nine Articles in the Anglican St Josephs of Philadelphia Bosshy

tradition and the question of ton College and Holy Cross subscription and assentto them There were Bill Blair Jim

Benedict Bob Kavolski and Bill Lasher of PC Mike FitzgeraldReligious Influence (of Mattapoisett) Henry Carey

In US on Wan~ -7- NEW YORK (NC)-Although

a majority of all Americans exshypressed the belief that 11eligion is losing its influence in the

United States in the latest Gallup Poll Catholics declined to-give majority assent to the opinion

The national survey showed tilat 57 per cent of all Americans in 1967 believe religion is losing its influence Only 14 per cent expressed this opinion in 1957

Among Protestants 60 per cent In 1967 compared with L7 per eent in 1957 said religion was losing its influence Forty-eight

per-cent of Catholics agreed in the latest survey compared with Beven per cent in 1957

Get Federal Funds PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A

Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyect under the auspices of Philashydelppia Archbishop John J Krols Commjssion on Economic Oppi)rtunity Programs hlils reshyceived $267980 from the federal government It was one of 74 Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyects in 30 states approved by Secretary of Labor W Willard Wirtz

accepted as a freshman at Provshyidence College regardless of the high school he attended

Primary Method William F Doyle president of

the NE Bedford club says the games are the alumnis primary method of raising money for the schoJarship fund

Since it was first held the game has attracted a following of avid fans-who help swell the scholshyarship treasury

Father Duffy feels it is the top post-season game in New England arid cites as proof the fact that his long time friend Bob Cousy Hoiy Cross All- Anierican and Boston Celtic great played in it himself two years ago It was his last game

Players who participated in this years money-for-scholarshyships game-all college seniors

represented Providence Colshy

scholarship funds for deserv- ing gr~duates of area high

schools the game profits enabled presentation of the first Edward J Tucker Memorial Scholarship of $2000 to Clifford Marr of New Bedford in 1962 Marr a graduate of Holy Family High was graduated from Provishydence College in 1966 and curshyrently is an Army lieutenant on duty in Korea

The second scholarship---named for the late 1r Tucker of Fairshyhaven a Providence College

graduate and one of the charter members of the New Bedford club--was awarded last year to Michael Doherty of New Bedshyford also a Holy Family gradushyate

Currently the four-year scholshy

Steve Chubin and Bob Boehm of the U of RI Richie Murphy and Greg Hochstein of Holy Cross John Austin and Ed Hock- enbury of Boston College and

f~nll lHoMsnln1~ fLaw Olhoc City EI1il(Jlcts

SPRIfiGFIELD (NC) - By unanimous vote of its five city commissioners this city has enshyacted a fair housing ordinance

The ordinance the third of its kind in OhiO becomes effecshytive May 3 Considerably strongshyer than the fair housing legisia- tion enacted by the Ohio Legisshylature in 1965 it outlaws disshycrimination in the sale or rental of any housing excepting only dwellings for members of reli shygious organizations or housing established for one sex only

Springfields new ordinance came as the res~lt of an improved climate of racial harmony The citys mayor Robert C Henry is a Negro whose performance of his duties has won wide reshyspect In recent years an Urban League has been launched and has made considerable progress A Human Relations Commission is functioning

PROVIDENCE COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP In atshytendance at PC Scholarship Fund Basketball Game in New Bedford were William Doyle presidentof the PC Club of New Bedford and Michael Doherty present scholarship recipient

Billy Oakes Marty Ford and Tom Duff of st Josephs the nations fifth-ranked_ team

Sees lay Teachers

Form Asso~iataon CLEVELAND (NC)-Groundshy

work for a diocesan lay teachers asso~iation was laid at a meeting of representatives of 21 diocesan high schools here

shy Patrick Bruening teacher at St Josephs high school and temshyporary chairman of the new unit said the association is an organshyization of professional people seekint professional growth

He added Only after we have proven ourselves as professionshyals with a professional attitude

about our job can we ask for and hope to get professional consideration I

lEM~~UX PLUMBING amp HIEATIN~ INC

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lhe players enjoyed demonshystrating th~ir proficiency The fans enjoyed watching the demonstration ~ and the scholar shipfund of the Providence Colshylege Alumni Club of New Bedshy~ord teaped tbebenef~il ~fboth

~ Population Control WASHINGTON (NC) - U s

Sen J W Fulbright of Arkansas has asked for aCongressional appropdation of $150 million for increased population coritior asshysistanCe to developIng countries

LINCOLNPARK PLAN YOUR pnCN~C

OUTING NOW Special Rates to School and Parish Groups

For Best Dafes For Your Picnic OUfing or Cla~liak0

CONTACT MANAGER a~ Ili~coln Park Phone -199-6984 or 636-2744

SlIlIllIIllIlIlIlIlIllIIllIlIlIllIlIllIllIlIllIllIllIlIllIl1II111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111I1111111~

I 0 amp D SALES AND SERViCE Ii FRIG~AIRE i ~ sectsect REFRIGERATION gsect

sectAPPLIANCES sect AIR CONDITIONING I I 363 SEc1IND ST FALL RIVER MASS I iilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllIllIlIllIllIlIlIlJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiIIIIII1II11111111uF

Social Week here Angel Cardinal Herrera y

Oria former archbishop of Mashylaga in a letter to the Social Week sessions deplored what he called a deficiency of Catholic influence in Spanish public lilfe declaring that Spain a Catholic nation was far from being a model of social justice

No Dialogue Earlier Auxiliary Bishop Rashy

fael Gonzalez Moralejo of Valenshycia ecclesiastical moderator of the SocialWeek sounded a simshyilar note declaring that where there is no dialogue between citizens and their government there is no democracy and such a society cannot call itself Christian

Cardinal Herrera said that ahead of Spain are nations who

have learned how to organize their natioJlallif~ according to the norms of justice which are the daughters of consciElnce Sweden has progressed in the social and pOlitlclll o~der to such an extent that the ~ope

could state that its public ~n~ishy tutions are in harmonywith the teachings of the Seco~dVatican Council he said

1[Jpper ~Iasses Cardinal Herrera lirged the

upper classes of -the countryto contribute toward the formation of a sound and realistic public opinion by which religious conshycepts would be applied to the economic and social life of Spain

It is necessary he said to diminish the differences in classes to work toward Unity not only in the economic order but also in i~ the education and

c~vic department

The Best

Car

Georgell Cluh Olf to Good Start mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Apr 20 1967

Taunton High Is Surprise In County Diamond loop former FltrrJDD Riweff CYOer on Scholagslvop ltltIt PIl1Jf$~ns

By PETE~ BARTEK Norton High Coach

Coach BiD Georges Taunton High diamond aggreg~

tion is the early season surprise in the Bristol County schoolboy league now in ita second week of the eampaign The pennant race appeam ~ be developing into one of the most exciting in many years Five clubs are battling of Ule better area clubs year fOIl the coveted flag And after year

Coach Harold (Chet) Haneshywhile action is fast and fm-shywichs Bishop Feehan High teamiOWl in the BCL the eight N3rshyof Attleboro has tucked awayragansett League teams are early season wins over Northgetting I e Q d y Attleboro and New Bedford Voshy

lor the chamshy cational The latter two will pionship race m probably fight it out fornext-toshytheir COmpetishy the-last place in the final standshytion Delayed ing as they seek to avoid theboth by rain and cellar Ii old weather The two top contests on nextCOaches h a v e Mondays BCL card will seebeen reminding Coyle playing Durfelte at Alumnitheir charges of Field in Fall River while Taunshythe pitfalls of ton journeys to North Dartmoutheareless loose to clash with stang Two northernplay and also Peter eounty rivals Attleboro andthe IOOmmission Bartek Feehan meet at the formers of Deedless errors which ean field next Monday when North relegatea club to an early Deeshy Attleboro travels to New Bedshyond diviaion berth from which it ford to take 0111 Vocatlonal win be bard to emerge as 1M Nury Contests oompetition progresses Meanwhile the Narragansett

Chausse and JlaJkut loop is comple~ing its first week The Herring City Orange and of play Its still a little early to

Black pulled the big surprise of make 8 judgment as to how thebe young season when it held clubs will stand at the end of thethe always strong Dullfee High

lI~mpaign team of Fall River to a 2-2 tie in Four Narry tilts are on tap for11 innings The prognosticators next Tuesdaybad been writing off the Georgeshy Coach Jack McCartys Caseeoached clan solely because they High Cardinals of Swansea willfelt Taunton would be unable to face Coach Jack Harts DimanJeplace Artmiddot Koska lost by gradshy Vocational team in Fall River uation in what looms as one of the

But Scott Chawrse impressed most interesting early seasonin his confrontation with the Fan games Coach Doug Baxendales River Hilltoppelll aDd now the Msgr Prevost High team of Fall same pundits who had relegated River will be at Dighton to meet Taunton to a lowly apot 8re the Coach Eddie Texeiras D - ~ first to admit that things will be Regionals Coach Ed Bibeau will much more pleasant for the lead his W~port High aggr~gashyTauntonians this Spring tion to Seekonk to middotvh( with

Stro~ Coyle Offense Coach Roger Hills charges The Admittedly an the doubting fourth Narry contest next Tuesshy

Thomases were not convinced day will see Coach Jack Brenshyon the basis of a single performshy nans Holy Family High teain of ance So Joe Majkut and Chausse New Bedford meeting Coach Jim Ulen eombined to throw a no-hit Sullivans Somersetmiddot High teamwin over Coach Dick Joyces at the latters field Attleboro High team Even the

Lanllers Ready most skeptical then conceded that Taunton must be reckoned On Ca~ Cod n nip-~pd~tuck

in the flag race battle is going on in that areas While Taunton High has heeD eon1erence schedule Four conshy

eGualling the early season attenshy tests are listed for the Capeway tion unexpected results have eircuit next Monday They are eccurred in several other diashy Oldmiddot Rochester (Mattapoisett) mond eontests Attleboro which at Barnstable Bourne at Wareshydid DOt seem destined lor gfeat bam Dartmouth middotat Dennis-Yarshythings this Spring provided the mouth and Fairhaven vs Lawshyfirst surprise w~en it toppled rence High at Falmouth Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Norton High in the Clover Stang High of North Dartmouth Valley Conference plays its first

Taunton then proved its mettle league game at home against when it defeated surprising Millis next Monday The Purple Attleboro Hickey has talent at - and White Lancers travel to Stang but his problem has heeD Medfield next Wednesday tv properly align his best playem Apparently they were not in the Score Governmentright spots when they went down to defeat at the hands of Coach On Lab~r Problems Jim Burns Msgr Coyle High

BUENOS AIRES (NC) -TwonJne of Taunton which has Catholic organizations have isshycwuted its way to two one~sided sued a joint manifesto criticizingviet(lries Coyles strength is in thlte Argentine government sayshyits offensive attack but it also ing it has failed to protect workshy

has a capable defense and pitch ers basic rightsJng staff to make a real run for Issued by the Catholic Youngthe BCL crown Workers (JOC) and Catholic _ Feehans Auspicious Start Action Workers Movement

Durfee while it may have been (MOAC) the statement alsotemporarily halted by Taunton called upon the bishops to be enpects to be among the leaders aware of the needs and goals of before the end of the week The young workers and the labor Hilltoppers looked good in winshy class and to be brave in ltexshy

double-header from Pil-shyning a pressing the Churchs doctrine grim High of Rhode Island last as applied to real-life situations weekend CoachJoe Lewis feelsmiddot It said that the government his boys can now maintain the which calls itself Christian but momentum they have generated is anything but Christian has in the non-league affairs It goes nothing to do with the Gospelalmost without saying that one or Christs teachings or with the off-day is not going to thwart Churchs doctrines as defined by the Hilltopperll wbo produce ODe the Second Vatican Councit

By JOE MIRANDA A Parsons College senior JRobshy

eli Bonalewicz of Fall River is -nearIng the end of a most sucshycessful college career both athshyletically and academically

Bob is attending Parsons in Fairfield Iowa on a baseball scholarship and has started bis third season as the colleges first strong catcher

neans List Student A Physical Education major

Bob has a minor in History and during the last marking period was named to the Deans List at Parsons -

A member of St PatrIcks Parshyish Bonny is a 1963 graduate of Durfee High School where he participated in football basketshyball and baseball

The son of Mr and Mrs Mathew Bonalewicz of 50 Chapshylin Street he is oile of five chil shydren ald has not yet decided upon a vocation

Bonny has two older brotherll a lieutenant and Mathew Jr II

staff sergeant both in the Air Force and stationed ubroad Bob also has two sisters Kathleen II student at Durfee High and Ma) Ann a grammar school pupil

Has f80 Average Bonalewicz recently returned

from a Southern baseball trip end gained excellent commendashytions from his coach Duane Banks for his performance as the Wildcats won 11 of 13 games

The Fall River player batted 430 belted three homers had nine runs-batted-in and seltlred 10 during Parsons first 13 games

Bonalewicz a 22-year-old 175shyJ)ound 5-8 giant enjoys playing baseball and so does his coach who scheduled 89 games last seashyson to set a ollegiate record fur the most games played in one year

Ankle IBjUlY

With the former Durfee backshystop handling the brunt of the catching duties until a knee inshyjury forced him to the sidelines Parsons won 72 lost 15 and twice finished in ti~d games called beshyca~se of darkness

The former St Patricks star in the CYO baseball program started poory this season finshyis middotng off the Southern trip with an ankle sprain but entering this week the ankle was in good shape and Bonny expected to take his regular spot behind the plate

Federal Agency Has Inter-Faith Advisors

WASHINGTON (NC)- A Catholic priest a Methodist minshyister and a Jewish rabbi have been appointed religious advishyBors to the United States Inforshymation Agency here

Msgr George G Higgins clIishyrector of the Social Action Deshypartment U S Catholic Confershyence the Rev Edward G Cu-middot roll superintendent of the Washshyington Northwest District ol the Methodist Baltimore Conference and Rabbi Richard G Hirsch dishyrector of the Relgious Action Center Union of American Heshybrew Congregations have been named to the USIA advisory panel

Officials of the agency noted that while it has had religious advisors since its inception this marks the first time an interfaith panel had been established

The purpose of the panel offi shycials said is to assure that the agencys handling of religious matters serves the best intlterest of the nation and its dlveraity of faiths

Bonalewicz also played for St Patricks T)iocesan championship team and for the Fall River Mershychants in the Newport Sunse~ League

As a senior at DUrfee Bonny was awarded the 1963 George Kaplan Memorial Trophy as the Hilltoppers best senior basketshyball player

His hustle and determination while performing for Durfee at Bostcm Garden during the anshynual Eastern Massachusetts Tecb tournament gained him the reshyspect and admiration of all that witnessed his efforts

Bonalewicz recently completed a practice teaching tour in an Iowa Junior High School and while tere coached the eighth grade team to a league chamshypionship

Earlier in the college year Bob_ was a member of the Parsons intramural flag football progmiddotam and received a trophy for his performan J

Despite the heavy bnsebaU schedule Bob has manged to keep hi grades above average and after the Fall semestershyshowed his prowess in the classshyroom by being named to the Deans List for the second time

DeMatha Winner In Hoop Tourney

WASHINGTON (NC) - DeshyMatha High of suburban Hyattsshyville Md scored an upset cliff shyhanger victory to cop the 12th national high sChool basketballl tournament sponsored by thE local Knights of Columbus J017 the fifth straight time

DeMatha avenged two regula17 season defeats by Mackin High Washington Catholic League

champ with its last minute 70-68 victory Mount Carmel of Chiengo took

third place with a 47-45 overshytime win over DePaul Acndemy of Chicago Northeast Cnthrt1ie of Philadelphia took fifth pIhce with a 77-74 win over St Petertl

B(~ BONALEWICZ of New Brunswick N J Catheshydral High of Trenton NJ Inpound

The oung catcher has been Dwight School of New York alslaquo) long known for his bullet like participated tlnrowlr arm and gained conshy Aubrey Nash DeMatha junloY siderable praise from opponents wall named the tournnmentl in 111gh school amateur and colshy most valuable player lege eompetitions for his savvy A 5-11 junior John Somogyftbehind the plate set three tournament records-shy

Three-Letter Man 40 field goals 108 points in threE Bonalewicz played football for games and 43 points in one game Don MontIe basketb~ll for Tom and tied another record ll-forshyKaram and baseball for middotJoe 11 from the foul line Lewis while at Durfee and also performed for Lewis Chathammiddot team in the Cape Cod League

The Fall Riverite cannot get FAIRHAVENenough baseball according to his mother Mrs Bonalewicz recalls LUMBER a game at Alumni Field when

COMPANYDurfee bested a Venezuelan team sponsored by the Peoplesshyto-Peoples program Bob was inshy Complete linejured and taken -to the hospital Mrs Bonalewicz remembers Building Materials then came back to finish the game hitting a home run to win I SPRING ST FAIRHAVENmiddotit for the Hilltoppers He wall voted the outstanding player in 993-2611the gameo

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sect Increase the Use sect ~ of Fish ~ I ~~e ~ Fomily Diet ~

middot1 UN~~~ ~ _ 1 ~IUllIIllIllllllIllUlllutJUJHIJJJJlllllllllill IIIJlIlIIampIUIltIllHWlUlnmJWnIUlWIIJJllllllllliIllIIlIUIIIIII~

I

THEANCHOR()ioltese of Fan ~tv~r-Thurs ApO 1967 ~ ~ middot-middotmiddotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ middot20

AT BISEIOPS CONFERENCE Facilities for offering Mass were provided by the Archdiocese of Chicago when 230 U S bishops met in semi-annual conference In left photo nine othel prelates concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Joseph TRyan of Anchorage Alaska In right

photo are Archbishop John F Dearde~ of Detroit at left president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and at right Archbishop Johl1l F Cody of Chicago conference host Bishops Connolly and Gerrard attended from the Fall River Diocese NC Photos

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Page 17: 04.20.67

rHf ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs Apr 20 196717

CATHOLIC (HAR~l~~S AP~EAL SILVER JUBILEE YEAR

MAY 7-17

What does it mean to you The opportunity to raise your sights to the level of a $2500 Jubilee Gift

An act of aratitude for 25 years of Charitable Seice

Bishop Connollys love for exceptionoillhiidren cannot be

described in words-but this picture D5 beyond description

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THE ANCHORshy~18 Top East C~ast College Hoopsters middotPlay )Sees SociaI EquityThurs April 20 1967

Still Lagging Anglicalfj)~ ~teview At I(ennedy Center For P C Alumni In Spain Antii Cali~~i~ By Patricia Francis MALAGA (NC) - Spain

was taken to task for lagging1562 C~~lireglf A full house crowd saw some o( the East Coasts top collegIate basketball players behind many other countriesLONDON (NC) _ The demonstrate last week how basketball should be played Occasion was the 8th annual hi the development of a

ehurch of England has set Scholarship Basketball Game sponsored by the Providence College Alumni Club of New just Christian social and ecoshyup a permanent commission Bedford at Kennedy Youth Center in New Bedford Initiated in 1959 to - raise nomic life at the 26th Spanish C1)n Christian Docbine with tis first task to consider recastshying or replacing that churchs historic charter of the Thirtyshy~Hne Articles of Religion which

are strongly anti-Catholic In tOne

They are regarded by many as o stumbling block to Christian ~ity The articles drawn up in 1562

for the avoiding of diversities $pound opinions and for the establishshyhtg of consent touching truereli shygion must be publicly accepted py the clergy at ordination

They have become a matter of ~increasing objection lind some

Anglican clergymen now feel talat they should not be called Upon to subscribe to doctrinal definitions which reflect views formed in the 16th oentury aarship is a $2400 one paid at the time of extreme and bitter reli- rate of $600 a year to the winner gious controversy Next award will be made in

The articles denounce the 1970 TheRevEdwardC Duffy eurohurch of Rome as erroneous in chairman of- the scholarship matters of faith and declare games and recruiter of the among other things that theplaye~s who participate emphashyBishop of Rome hath no jurisdic- sizes the scholarship is open middotto tion in this -realm of Englandany deserving boy who has been Some prominent Anglican clergymen have blal1led the sharp declfnein ordination canshy

Qlidates on a reluctance to subshy~ribe to this document

Consider Advis( The new commission was apshy

pointed by Anglican Archbishops Michael Ramsey of Canterbury and Donald Coggan of York It consists of 17 members most of them theological professors repshyzesenting different schools of thought in the Anglican Church

Anglican Bishop Iar Ramsey of Durham is chairman The commissions general terms of reference say that it is

to consider and advise upon doctrinal questions submitted to it from time to time by the archshybishops and to plan when deshyslrable the investigation of

I ~uestions by other groups Its first task will be to conshy

sider the place of the Thirty- lege University of Rhode Island Nine Articles in the Anglican St Josephs of Philadelphia Bosshy

tradition and the question of ton College and Holy Cross subscription and assentto them There were Bill Blair Jim

Benedict Bob Kavolski and Bill Lasher of PC Mike FitzgeraldReligious Influence (of Mattapoisett) Henry Carey

In US on Wan~ -7- NEW YORK (NC)-Although

a majority of all Americans exshypressed the belief that 11eligion is losing its influence in the

United States in the latest Gallup Poll Catholics declined to-give majority assent to the opinion

The national survey showed tilat 57 per cent of all Americans in 1967 believe religion is losing its influence Only 14 per cent expressed this opinion in 1957

Among Protestants 60 per cent In 1967 compared with L7 per eent in 1957 said religion was losing its influence Forty-eight

per-cent of Catholics agreed in the latest survey compared with Beven per cent in 1957

Get Federal Funds PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A

Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyect under the auspices of Philashydelppia Archbishop John J Krols Commjssion on Economic Oppi)rtunity Programs hlils reshyceived $267980 from the federal government It was one of 74 Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyects in 30 states approved by Secretary of Labor W Willard Wirtz

accepted as a freshman at Provshyidence College regardless of the high school he attended

Primary Method William F Doyle president of

the NE Bedford club says the games are the alumnis primary method of raising money for the schoJarship fund

Since it was first held the game has attracted a following of avid fans-who help swell the scholshyarship treasury

Father Duffy feels it is the top post-season game in New England arid cites as proof the fact that his long time friend Bob Cousy Hoiy Cross All- Anierican and Boston Celtic great played in it himself two years ago It was his last game

Players who participated in this years money-for-scholarshyships game-all college seniors

represented Providence Colshy

scholarship funds for deserv- ing gr~duates of area high

schools the game profits enabled presentation of the first Edward J Tucker Memorial Scholarship of $2000 to Clifford Marr of New Bedford in 1962 Marr a graduate of Holy Family High was graduated from Provishydence College in 1966 and curshyrently is an Army lieutenant on duty in Korea

The second scholarship---named for the late 1r Tucker of Fairshyhaven a Providence College

graduate and one of the charter members of the New Bedford club--was awarded last year to Michael Doherty of New Bedshyford also a Holy Family gradushyate

Currently the four-year scholshy

Steve Chubin and Bob Boehm of the U of RI Richie Murphy and Greg Hochstein of Holy Cross John Austin and Ed Hock- enbury of Boston College and

f~nll lHoMsnln1~ fLaw Olhoc City EI1il(Jlcts

SPRIfiGFIELD (NC) - By unanimous vote of its five city commissioners this city has enshyacted a fair housing ordinance

The ordinance the third of its kind in OhiO becomes effecshytive May 3 Considerably strongshyer than the fair housing legisia- tion enacted by the Ohio Legisshylature in 1965 it outlaws disshycrimination in the sale or rental of any housing excepting only dwellings for members of reli shygious organizations or housing established for one sex only

Springfields new ordinance came as the res~lt of an improved climate of racial harmony The citys mayor Robert C Henry is a Negro whose performance of his duties has won wide reshyspect In recent years an Urban League has been launched and has made considerable progress A Human Relations Commission is functioning

PROVIDENCE COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP In atshytendance at PC Scholarship Fund Basketball Game in New Bedford were William Doyle presidentof the PC Club of New Bedford and Michael Doherty present scholarship recipient

Billy Oakes Marty Ford and Tom Duff of st Josephs the nations fifth-ranked_ team

Sees lay Teachers

Form Asso~iataon CLEVELAND (NC)-Groundshy

work for a diocesan lay teachers asso~iation was laid at a meeting of representatives of 21 diocesan high schools here

shy Patrick Bruening teacher at St Josephs high school and temshyporary chairman of the new unit said the association is an organshyization of professional people seekint professional growth

He added Only after we have proven ourselves as professionshyals with a professional attitude

about our job can we ask for and hope to get professional consideration I

lEM~~UX PLUMBING amp HIEATIN~ INC

Sales ana Service for tlomestic

ana Industrial Oil Burners

995-1631

2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE NEW BEDFORD

Casey-Sexton bullCleansers bullbullbull

Unc 94 TREMONT STREET

iAUNTON MASS Tel 822middot0621

lhe players enjoyed demonshystrating th~ir proficiency The fans enjoyed watching the demonstration ~ and the scholar shipfund of the Providence Colshylege Alumni Club of New Bedshy~ord teaped tbebenef~il ~fboth

~ Population Control WASHINGTON (NC) - U s

Sen J W Fulbright of Arkansas has asked for aCongressional appropdation of $150 million for increased population coritior asshysistanCe to developIng countries

LINCOLNPARK PLAN YOUR pnCN~C

OUTING NOW Special Rates to School and Parish Groups

For Best Dafes For Your Picnic OUfing or Cla~liak0

CONTACT MANAGER a~ Ili~coln Park Phone -199-6984 or 636-2744

SlIlIllIIllIlIlIlIlIllIIllIlIlIllIlIllIllIlIllIllIllIlIllIl1II111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111I1111111~

I 0 amp D SALES AND SERViCE Ii FRIG~AIRE i ~ sectsect REFRIGERATION gsect

sectAPPLIANCES sect AIR CONDITIONING I I 363 SEc1IND ST FALL RIVER MASS I iilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllIllIlIllIllIlIlIlJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiIIIIII1II11111111uF

Social Week here Angel Cardinal Herrera y

Oria former archbishop of Mashylaga in a letter to the Social Week sessions deplored what he called a deficiency of Catholic influence in Spanish public lilfe declaring that Spain a Catholic nation was far from being a model of social justice

No Dialogue Earlier Auxiliary Bishop Rashy

fael Gonzalez Moralejo of Valenshycia ecclesiastical moderator of the SocialWeek sounded a simshyilar note declaring that where there is no dialogue between citizens and their government there is no democracy and such a society cannot call itself Christian

Cardinal Herrera said that ahead of Spain are nations who

have learned how to organize their natioJlallif~ according to the norms of justice which are the daughters of consciElnce Sweden has progressed in the social and pOlitlclll o~der to such an extent that the ~ope

could state that its public ~n~ishy tutions are in harmonywith the teachings of the Seco~dVatican Council he said

1[Jpper ~Iasses Cardinal Herrera lirged the

upper classes of -the countryto contribute toward the formation of a sound and realistic public opinion by which religious conshycepts would be applied to the economic and social life of Spain

It is necessary he said to diminish the differences in classes to work toward Unity not only in the economic order but also in i~ the education and

c~vic department

The Best

Car

Georgell Cluh Olf to Good Start mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Apr 20 1967

Taunton High Is Surprise In County Diamond loop former FltrrJDD Riweff CYOer on Scholagslvop ltltIt PIl1Jf$~ns

By PETE~ BARTEK Norton High Coach

Coach BiD Georges Taunton High diamond aggreg~

tion is the early season surprise in the Bristol County schoolboy league now in ita second week of the eampaign The pennant race appeam ~ be developing into one of the most exciting in many years Five clubs are battling of Ule better area clubs year fOIl the coveted flag And after year

Coach Harold (Chet) Haneshywhile action is fast and fm-shywichs Bishop Feehan High teamiOWl in the BCL the eight N3rshyof Attleboro has tucked awayragansett League teams are early season wins over Northgetting I e Q d y Attleboro and New Bedford Voshy

lor the chamshy cational The latter two will pionship race m probably fight it out fornext-toshytheir COmpetishy the-last place in the final standshytion Delayed ing as they seek to avoid theboth by rain and cellar Ii old weather The two top contests on nextCOaches h a v e Mondays BCL card will seebeen reminding Coyle playing Durfelte at Alumnitheir charges of Field in Fall River while Taunshythe pitfalls of ton journeys to North Dartmoutheareless loose to clash with stang Two northernplay and also Peter eounty rivals Attleboro andthe IOOmmission Bartek Feehan meet at the formers of Deedless errors which ean field next Monday when North relegatea club to an early Deeshy Attleboro travels to New Bedshyond diviaion berth from which it ford to take 0111 Vocatlonal win be bard to emerge as 1M Nury Contests oompetition progresses Meanwhile the Narragansett

Chausse and JlaJkut loop is comple~ing its first week The Herring City Orange and of play Its still a little early to

Black pulled the big surprise of make 8 judgment as to how thebe young season when it held clubs will stand at the end of thethe always strong Dullfee High

lI~mpaign team of Fall River to a 2-2 tie in Four Narry tilts are on tap for11 innings The prognosticators next Tuesdaybad been writing off the Georgeshy Coach Jack McCartys Caseeoached clan solely because they High Cardinals of Swansea willfelt Taunton would be unable to face Coach Jack Harts DimanJeplace Artmiddot Koska lost by gradshy Vocational team in Fall River uation in what looms as one of the

But Scott Chawrse impressed most interesting early seasonin his confrontation with the Fan games Coach Doug Baxendales River Hilltoppelll aDd now the Msgr Prevost High team of Fall same pundits who had relegated River will be at Dighton to meet Taunton to a lowly apot 8re the Coach Eddie Texeiras D - ~ first to admit that things will be Regionals Coach Ed Bibeau will much more pleasant for the lead his W~port High aggr~gashyTauntonians this Spring tion to Seekonk to middotvh( with

Stro~ Coyle Offense Coach Roger Hills charges The Admittedly an the doubting fourth Narry contest next Tuesshy

Thomases were not convinced day will see Coach Jack Brenshyon the basis of a single performshy nans Holy Family High teain of ance So Joe Majkut and Chausse New Bedford meeting Coach Jim Ulen eombined to throw a no-hit Sullivans Somersetmiddot High teamwin over Coach Dick Joyces at the latters field Attleboro High team Even the

Lanllers Ready most skeptical then conceded that Taunton must be reckoned On Ca~ Cod n nip-~pd~tuck

in the flag race battle is going on in that areas While Taunton High has heeD eon1erence schedule Four conshy

eGualling the early season attenshy tests are listed for the Capeway tion unexpected results have eircuit next Monday They are eccurred in several other diashy Oldmiddot Rochester (Mattapoisett) mond eontests Attleboro which at Barnstable Bourne at Wareshydid DOt seem destined lor gfeat bam Dartmouth middotat Dennis-Yarshythings this Spring provided the mouth and Fairhaven vs Lawshyfirst surprise w~en it toppled rence High at Falmouth Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Norton High in the Clover Stang High of North Dartmouth Valley Conference plays its first

Taunton then proved its mettle league game at home against when it defeated surprising Millis next Monday The Purple Attleboro Hickey has talent at - and White Lancers travel to Stang but his problem has heeD Medfield next Wednesday tv properly align his best playem Apparently they were not in the Score Governmentright spots when they went down to defeat at the hands of Coach On Lab~r Problems Jim Burns Msgr Coyle High

BUENOS AIRES (NC) -TwonJne of Taunton which has Catholic organizations have isshycwuted its way to two one~sided sued a joint manifesto criticizingviet(lries Coyles strength is in thlte Argentine government sayshyits offensive attack but it also ing it has failed to protect workshy

has a capable defense and pitch ers basic rightsJng staff to make a real run for Issued by the Catholic Youngthe BCL crown Workers (JOC) and Catholic _ Feehans Auspicious Start Action Workers Movement

Durfee while it may have been (MOAC) the statement alsotemporarily halted by Taunton called upon the bishops to be enpects to be among the leaders aware of the needs and goals of before the end of the week The young workers and the labor Hilltoppers looked good in winshy class and to be brave in ltexshy

double-header from Pil-shyning a pressing the Churchs doctrine grim High of Rhode Island last as applied to real-life situations weekend CoachJoe Lewis feelsmiddot It said that the government his boys can now maintain the which calls itself Christian but momentum they have generated is anything but Christian has in the non-league affairs It goes nothing to do with the Gospelalmost without saying that one or Christs teachings or with the off-day is not going to thwart Churchs doctrines as defined by the Hilltopperll wbo produce ODe the Second Vatican Councit

By JOE MIRANDA A Parsons College senior JRobshy

eli Bonalewicz of Fall River is -nearIng the end of a most sucshycessful college career both athshyletically and academically

Bob is attending Parsons in Fairfield Iowa on a baseball scholarship and has started bis third season as the colleges first strong catcher

neans List Student A Physical Education major

Bob has a minor in History and during the last marking period was named to the Deans List at Parsons -

A member of St PatrIcks Parshyish Bonny is a 1963 graduate of Durfee High School where he participated in football basketshyball and baseball

The son of Mr and Mrs Mathew Bonalewicz of 50 Chapshylin Street he is oile of five chil shydren ald has not yet decided upon a vocation

Bonny has two older brotherll a lieutenant and Mathew Jr II

staff sergeant both in the Air Force and stationed ubroad Bob also has two sisters Kathleen II student at Durfee High and Ma) Ann a grammar school pupil

Has f80 Average Bonalewicz recently returned

from a Southern baseball trip end gained excellent commendashytions from his coach Duane Banks for his performance as the Wildcats won 11 of 13 games

The Fall River player batted 430 belted three homers had nine runs-batted-in and seltlred 10 during Parsons first 13 games

Bonalewicz a 22-year-old 175shyJ)ound 5-8 giant enjoys playing baseball and so does his coach who scheduled 89 games last seashyson to set a ollegiate record fur the most games played in one year

Ankle IBjUlY

With the former Durfee backshystop handling the brunt of the catching duties until a knee inshyjury forced him to the sidelines Parsons won 72 lost 15 and twice finished in ti~d games called beshyca~se of darkness

The former St Patricks star in the CYO baseball program started poory this season finshyis middotng off the Southern trip with an ankle sprain but entering this week the ankle was in good shape and Bonny expected to take his regular spot behind the plate

Federal Agency Has Inter-Faith Advisors

WASHINGTON (NC)- A Catholic priest a Methodist minshyister and a Jewish rabbi have been appointed religious advishyBors to the United States Inforshymation Agency here

Msgr George G Higgins clIishyrector of the Social Action Deshypartment U S Catholic Confershyence the Rev Edward G Cu-middot roll superintendent of the Washshyington Northwest District ol the Methodist Baltimore Conference and Rabbi Richard G Hirsch dishyrector of the Relgious Action Center Union of American Heshybrew Congregations have been named to the USIA advisory panel

Officials of the agency noted that while it has had religious advisors since its inception this marks the first time an interfaith panel had been established

The purpose of the panel offi shycials said is to assure that the agencys handling of religious matters serves the best intlterest of the nation and its dlveraity of faiths

Bonalewicz also played for St Patricks T)iocesan championship team and for the Fall River Mershychants in the Newport Sunse~ League

As a senior at DUrfee Bonny was awarded the 1963 George Kaplan Memorial Trophy as the Hilltoppers best senior basketshyball player

His hustle and determination while performing for Durfee at Bostcm Garden during the anshynual Eastern Massachusetts Tecb tournament gained him the reshyspect and admiration of all that witnessed his efforts

Bonalewicz recently completed a practice teaching tour in an Iowa Junior High School and while tere coached the eighth grade team to a league chamshypionship

Earlier in the college year Bob_ was a member of the Parsons intramural flag football progmiddotam and received a trophy for his performan J

Despite the heavy bnsebaU schedule Bob has manged to keep hi grades above average and after the Fall semestershyshowed his prowess in the classshyroom by being named to the Deans List for the second time

DeMatha Winner In Hoop Tourney

WASHINGTON (NC) - DeshyMatha High of suburban Hyattsshyville Md scored an upset cliff shyhanger victory to cop the 12th national high sChool basketballl tournament sponsored by thE local Knights of Columbus J017 the fifth straight time

DeMatha avenged two regula17 season defeats by Mackin High Washington Catholic League

champ with its last minute 70-68 victory Mount Carmel of Chiengo took

third place with a 47-45 overshytime win over DePaul Acndemy of Chicago Northeast Cnthrt1ie of Philadelphia took fifth pIhce with a 77-74 win over St Petertl

B(~ BONALEWICZ of New Brunswick N J Catheshydral High of Trenton NJ Inpound

The oung catcher has been Dwight School of New York alslaquo) long known for his bullet like participated tlnrowlr arm and gained conshy Aubrey Nash DeMatha junloY siderable praise from opponents wall named the tournnmentl in 111gh school amateur and colshy most valuable player lege eompetitions for his savvy A 5-11 junior John Somogyftbehind the plate set three tournament records-shy

Three-Letter Man 40 field goals 108 points in threE Bonalewicz played football for games and 43 points in one game Don MontIe basketb~ll for Tom and tied another record ll-forshyKaram and baseball for middotJoe 11 from the foul line Lewis while at Durfee and also performed for Lewis Chathammiddot team in the Cape Cod League

The Fall Riverite cannot get FAIRHAVENenough baseball according to his mother Mrs Bonalewicz recalls LUMBER a game at Alumni Field when

COMPANYDurfee bested a Venezuelan team sponsored by the Peoplesshyto-Peoples program Bob was inshy Complete linejured and taken -to the hospital Mrs Bonalewicz remembers Building Materials then came back to finish the game hitting a home run to win I SPRING ST FAIRHAVENmiddotit for the Hilltoppers He wall voted the outstanding player in 993-2611the gameo

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I

THEANCHOR()ioltese of Fan ~tv~r-Thurs ApO 1967 ~ ~ middot-middotmiddotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ middot20

AT BISEIOPS CONFERENCE Facilities for offering Mass were provided by the Archdiocese of Chicago when 230 U S bishops met in semi-annual conference In left photo nine othel prelates concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Joseph TRyan of Anchorage Alaska In right

photo are Archbishop John F Dearde~ of Detroit at left president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and at right Archbishop Johl1l F Cody of Chicago conference host Bishops Connolly and Gerrard attended from the Fall River Diocese NC Photos

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Page 18: 04.20.67

THE ANCHORshy~18 Top East C~ast College Hoopsters middotPlay )Sees SociaI EquityThurs April 20 1967

Still Lagging Anglicalfj)~ ~teview At I(ennedy Center For P C Alumni In Spain Antii Cali~~i~ By Patricia Francis MALAGA (NC) - Spain

was taken to task for lagging1562 C~~lireglf A full house crowd saw some o( the East Coasts top collegIate basketball players behind many other countriesLONDON (NC) _ The demonstrate last week how basketball should be played Occasion was the 8th annual hi the development of a

ehurch of England has set Scholarship Basketball Game sponsored by the Providence College Alumni Club of New just Christian social and ecoshyup a permanent commission Bedford at Kennedy Youth Center in New Bedford Initiated in 1959 to - raise nomic life at the 26th Spanish C1)n Christian Docbine with tis first task to consider recastshying or replacing that churchs historic charter of the Thirtyshy~Hne Articles of Religion which

are strongly anti-Catholic In tOne

They are regarded by many as o stumbling block to Christian ~ity The articles drawn up in 1562

for the avoiding of diversities $pound opinions and for the establishshyhtg of consent touching truereli shygion must be publicly accepted py the clergy at ordination

They have become a matter of ~increasing objection lind some

Anglican clergymen now feel talat they should not be called Upon to subscribe to doctrinal definitions which reflect views formed in the 16th oentury aarship is a $2400 one paid at the time of extreme and bitter reli- rate of $600 a year to the winner gious controversy Next award will be made in

The articles denounce the 1970 TheRevEdwardC Duffy eurohurch of Rome as erroneous in chairman of- the scholarship matters of faith and declare games and recruiter of the among other things that theplaye~s who participate emphashyBishop of Rome hath no jurisdic- sizes the scholarship is open middotto tion in this -realm of Englandany deserving boy who has been Some prominent Anglican clergymen have blal1led the sharp declfnein ordination canshy

Qlidates on a reluctance to subshy~ribe to this document

Consider Advis( The new commission was apshy

pointed by Anglican Archbishops Michael Ramsey of Canterbury and Donald Coggan of York It consists of 17 members most of them theological professors repshyzesenting different schools of thought in the Anglican Church

Anglican Bishop Iar Ramsey of Durham is chairman The commissions general terms of reference say that it is

to consider and advise upon doctrinal questions submitted to it from time to time by the archshybishops and to plan when deshyslrable the investigation of

I ~uestions by other groups Its first task will be to conshy

sider the place of the Thirty- lege University of Rhode Island Nine Articles in the Anglican St Josephs of Philadelphia Bosshy

tradition and the question of ton College and Holy Cross subscription and assentto them There were Bill Blair Jim

Benedict Bob Kavolski and Bill Lasher of PC Mike FitzgeraldReligious Influence (of Mattapoisett) Henry Carey

In US on Wan~ -7- NEW YORK (NC)-Although

a majority of all Americans exshypressed the belief that 11eligion is losing its influence in the

United States in the latest Gallup Poll Catholics declined to-give majority assent to the opinion

The national survey showed tilat 57 per cent of all Americans in 1967 believe religion is losing its influence Only 14 per cent expressed this opinion in 1957

Among Protestants 60 per cent In 1967 compared with L7 per eent in 1957 said religion was losing its influence Forty-eight

per-cent of Catholics agreed in the latest survey compared with Beven per cent in 1957

Get Federal Funds PHILADELPHIA (NC) - A

Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyect under the auspices of Philashydelppia Archbishop John J Krols Commjssion on Economic Oppi)rtunity Programs hlils reshyceived $267980 from the federal government It was one of 74 Neighborhood Youth Corps projshyects in 30 states approved by Secretary of Labor W Willard Wirtz

accepted as a freshman at Provshyidence College regardless of the high school he attended

Primary Method William F Doyle president of

the NE Bedford club says the games are the alumnis primary method of raising money for the schoJarship fund

Since it was first held the game has attracted a following of avid fans-who help swell the scholshyarship treasury

Father Duffy feels it is the top post-season game in New England arid cites as proof the fact that his long time friend Bob Cousy Hoiy Cross All- Anierican and Boston Celtic great played in it himself two years ago It was his last game

Players who participated in this years money-for-scholarshyships game-all college seniors

represented Providence Colshy

scholarship funds for deserv- ing gr~duates of area high

schools the game profits enabled presentation of the first Edward J Tucker Memorial Scholarship of $2000 to Clifford Marr of New Bedford in 1962 Marr a graduate of Holy Family High was graduated from Provishydence College in 1966 and curshyrently is an Army lieutenant on duty in Korea

The second scholarship---named for the late 1r Tucker of Fairshyhaven a Providence College

graduate and one of the charter members of the New Bedford club--was awarded last year to Michael Doherty of New Bedshyford also a Holy Family gradushyate

Currently the four-year scholshy

Steve Chubin and Bob Boehm of the U of RI Richie Murphy and Greg Hochstein of Holy Cross John Austin and Ed Hock- enbury of Boston College and

f~nll lHoMsnln1~ fLaw Olhoc City EI1il(Jlcts

SPRIfiGFIELD (NC) - By unanimous vote of its five city commissioners this city has enshyacted a fair housing ordinance

The ordinance the third of its kind in OhiO becomes effecshytive May 3 Considerably strongshyer than the fair housing legisia- tion enacted by the Ohio Legisshylature in 1965 it outlaws disshycrimination in the sale or rental of any housing excepting only dwellings for members of reli shygious organizations or housing established for one sex only

Springfields new ordinance came as the res~lt of an improved climate of racial harmony The citys mayor Robert C Henry is a Negro whose performance of his duties has won wide reshyspect In recent years an Urban League has been launched and has made considerable progress A Human Relations Commission is functioning

PROVIDENCE COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP In atshytendance at PC Scholarship Fund Basketball Game in New Bedford were William Doyle presidentof the PC Club of New Bedford and Michael Doherty present scholarship recipient

Billy Oakes Marty Ford and Tom Duff of st Josephs the nations fifth-ranked_ team

Sees lay Teachers

Form Asso~iataon CLEVELAND (NC)-Groundshy

work for a diocesan lay teachers asso~iation was laid at a meeting of representatives of 21 diocesan high schools here

shy Patrick Bruening teacher at St Josephs high school and temshyporary chairman of the new unit said the association is an organshyization of professional people seekint professional growth

He added Only after we have proven ourselves as professionshyals with a professional attitude

about our job can we ask for and hope to get professional consideration I

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lhe players enjoyed demonshystrating th~ir proficiency The fans enjoyed watching the demonstration ~ and the scholar shipfund of the Providence Colshylege Alumni Club of New Bedshy~ord teaped tbebenef~il ~fboth

~ Population Control WASHINGTON (NC) - U s

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Social Week here Angel Cardinal Herrera y

Oria former archbishop of Mashylaga in a letter to the Social Week sessions deplored what he called a deficiency of Catholic influence in Spanish public lilfe declaring that Spain a Catholic nation was far from being a model of social justice

No Dialogue Earlier Auxiliary Bishop Rashy

fael Gonzalez Moralejo of Valenshycia ecclesiastical moderator of the SocialWeek sounded a simshyilar note declaring that where there is no dialogue between citizens and their government there is no democracy and such a society cannot call itself Christian

Cardinal Herrera said that ahead of Spain are nations who

have learned how to organize their natioJlallif~ according to the norms of justice which are the daughters of consciElnce Sweden has progressed in the social and pOlitlclll o~der to such an extent that the ~ope

could state that its public ~n~ishy tutions are in harmonywith the teachings of the Seco~dVatican Council he said

1[Jpper ~Iasses Cardinal Herrera lirged the

upper classes of -the countryto contribute toward the formation of a sound and realistic public opinion by which religious conshycepts would be applied to the economic and social life of Spain

It is necessary he said to diminish the differences in classes to work toward Unity not only in the economic order but also in i~ the education and

c~vic department

The Best

Car

Georgell Cluh Olf to Good Start mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Apr 20 1967

Taunton High Is Surprise In County Diamond loop former FltrrJDD Riweff CYOer on Scholagslvop ltltIt PIl1Jf$~ns

By PETE~ BARTEK Norton High Coach

Coach BiD Georges Taunton High diamond aggreg~

tion is the early season surprise in the Bristol County schoolboy league now in ita second week of the eampaign The pennant race appeam ~ be developing into one of the most exciting in many years Five clubs are battling of Ule better area clubs year fOIl the coveted flag And after year

Coach Harold (Chet) Haneshywhile action is fast and fm-shywichs Bishop Feehan High teamiOWl in the BCL the eight N3rshyof Attleboro has tucked awayragansett League teams are early season wins over Northgetting I e Q d y Attleboro and New Bedford Voshy

lor the chamshy cational The latter two will pionship race m probably fight it out fornext-toshytheir COmpetishy the-last place in the final standshytion Delayed ing as they seek to avoid theboth by rain and cellar Ii old weather The two top contests on nextCOaches h a v e Mondays BCL card will seebeen reminding Coyle playing Durfelte at Alumnitheir charges of Field in Fall River while Taunshythe pitfalls of ton journeys to North Dartmoutheareless loose to clash with stang Two northernplay and also Peter eounty rivals Attleboro andthe IOOmmission Bartek Feehan meet at the formers of Deedless errors which ean field next Monday when North relegatea club to an early Deeshy Attleboro travels to New Bedshyond diviaion berth from which it ford to take 0111 Vocatlonal win be bard to emerge as 1M Nury Contests oompetition progresses Meanwhile the Narragansett

Chausse and JlaJkut loop is comple~ing its first week The Herring City Orange and of play Its still a little early to

Black pulled the big surprise of make 8 judgment as to how thebe young season when it held clubs will stand at the end of thethe always strong Dullfee High

lI~mpaign team of Fall River to a 2-2 tie in Four Narry tilts are on tap for11 innings The prognosticators next Tuesdaybad been writing off the Georgeshy Coach Jack McCartys Caseeoached clan solely because they High Cardinals of Swansea willfelt Taunton would be unable to face Coach Jack Harts DimanJeplace Artmiddot Koska lost by gradshy Vocational team in Fall River uation in what looms as one of the

But Scott Chawrse impressed most interesting early seasonin his confrontation with the Fan games Coach Doug Baxendales River Hilltoppelll aDd now the Msgr Prevost High team of Fall same pundits who had relegated River will be at Dighton to meet Taunton to a lowly apot 8re the Coach Eddie Texeiras D - ~ first to admit that things will be Regionals Coach Ed Bibeau will much more pleasant for the lead his W~port High aggr~gashyTauntonians this Spring tion to Seekonk to middotvh( with

Stro~ Coyle Offense Coach Roger Hills charges The Admittedly an the doubting fourth Narry contest next Tuesshy

Thomases were not convinced day will see Coach Jack Brenshyon the basis of a single performshy nans Holy Family High teain of ance So Joe Majkut and Chausse New Bedford meeting Coach Jim Ulen eombined to throw a no-hit Sullivans Somersetmiddot High teamwin over Coach Dick Joyces at the latters field Attleboro High team Even the

Lanllers Ready most skeptical then conceded that Taunton must be reckoned On Ca~ Cod n nip-~pd~tuck

in the flag race battle is going on in that areas While Taunton High has heeD eon1erence schedule Four conshy

eGualling the early season attenshy tests are listed for the Capeway tion unexpected results have eircuit next Monday They are eccurred in several other diashy Oldmiddot Rochester (Mattapoisett) mond eontests Attleboro which at Barnstable Bourne at Wareshydid DOt seem destined lor gfeat bam Dartmouth middotat Dennis-Yarshythings this Spring provided the mouth and Fairhaven vs Lawshyfirst surprise w~en it toppled rence High at Falmouth Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Norton High in the Clover Stang High of North Dartmouth Valley Conference plays its first

Taunton then proved its mettle league game at home against when it defeated surprising Millis next Monday The Purple Attleboro Hickey has talent at - and White Lancers travel to Stang but his problem has heeD Medfield next Wednesday tv properly align his best playem Apparently they were not in the Score Governmentright spots when they went down to defeat at the hands of Coach On Lab~r Problems Jim Burns Msgr Coyle High

BUENOS AIRES (NC) -TwonJne of Taunton which has Catholic organizations have isshycwuted its way to two one~sided sued a joint manifesto criticizingviet(lries Coyles strength is in thlte Argentine government sayshyits offensive attack but it also ing it has failed to protect workshy

has a capable defense and pitch ers basic rightsJng staff to make a real run for Issued by the Catholic Youngthe BCL crown Workers (JOC) and Catholic _ Feehans Auspicious Start Action Workers Movement

Durfee while it may have been (MOAC) the statement alsotemporarily halted by Taunton called upon the bishops to be enpects to be among the leaders aware of the needs and goals of before the end of the week The young workers and the labor Hilltoppers looked good in winshy class and to be brave in ltexshy

double-header from Pil-shyning a pressing the Churchs doctrine grim High of Rhode Island last as applied to real-life situations weekend CoachJoe Lewis feelsmiddot It said that the government his boys can now maintain the which calls itself Christian but momentum they have generated is anything but Christian has in the non-league affairs It goes nothing to do with the Gospelalmost without saying that one or Christs teachings or with the off-day is not going to thwart Churchs doctrines as defined by the Hilltopperll wbo produce ODe the Second Vatican Councit

By JOE MIRANDA A Parsons College senior JRobshy

eli Bonalewicz of Fall River is -nearIng the end of a most sucshycessful college career both athshyletically and academically

Bob is attending Parsons in Fairfield Iowa on a baseball scholarship and has started bis third season as the colleges first strong catcher

neans List Student A Physical Education major

Bob has a minor in History and during the last marking period was named to the Deans List at Parsons -

A member of St PatrIcks Parshyish Bonny is a 1963 graduate of Durfee High School where he participated in football basketshyball and baseball

The son of Mr and Mrs Mathew Bonalewicz of 50 Chapshylin Street he is oile of five chil shydren ald has not yet decided upon a vocation

Bonny has two older brotherll a lieutenant and Mathew Jr II

staff sergeant both in the Air Force and stationed ubroad Bob also has two sisters Kathleen II student at Durfee High and Ma) Ann a grammar school pupil

Has f80 Average Bonalewicz recently returned

from a Southern baseball trip end gained excellent commendashytions from his coach Duane Banks for his performance as the Wildcats won 11 of 13 games

The Fall River player batted 430 belted three homers had nine runs-batted-in and seltlred 10 during Parsons first 13 games

Bonalewicz a 22-year-old 175shyJ)ound 5-8 giant enjoys playing baseball and so does his coach who scheduled 89 games last seashyson to set a ollegiate record fur the most games played in one year

Ankle IBjUlY

With the former Durfee backshystop handling the brunt of the catching duties until a knee inshyjury forced him to the sidelines Parsons won 72 lost 15 and twice finished in ti~d games called beshyca~se of darkness

The former St Patricks star in the CYO baseball program started poory this season finshyis middotng off the Southern trip with an ankle sprain but entering this week the ankle was in good shape and Bonny expected to take his regular spot behind the plate

Federal Agency Has Inter-Faith Advisors

WASHINGTON (NC)- A Catholic priest a Methodist minshyister and a Jewish rabbi have been appointed religious advishyBors to the United States Inforshymation Agency here

Msgr George G Higgins clIishyrector of the Social Action Deshypartment U S Catholic Confershyence the Rev Edward G Cu-middot roll superintendent of the Washshyington Northwest District ol the Methodist Baltimore Conference and Rabbi Richard G Hirsch dishyrector of the Relgious Action Center Union of American Heshybrew Congregations have been named to the USIA advisory panel

Officials of the agency noted that while it has had religious advisors since its inception this marks the first time an interfaith panel had been established

The purpose of the panel offi shycials said is to assure that the agencys handling of religious matters serves the best intlterest of the nation and its dlveraity of faiths

Bonalewicz also played for St Patricks T)iocesan championship team and for the Fall River Mershychants in the Newport Sunse~ League

As a senior at DUrfee Bonny was awarded the 1963 George Kaplan Memorial Trophy as the Hilltoppers best senior basketshyball player

His hustle and determination while performing for Durfee at Bostcm Garden during the anshynual Eastern Massachusetts Tecb tournament gained him the reshyspect and admiration of all that witnessed his efforts

Bonalewicz recently completed a practice teaching tour in an Iowa Junior High School and while tere coached the eighth grade team to a league chamshypionship

Earlier in the college year Bob_ was a member of the Parsons intramural flag football progmiddotam and received a trophy for his performan J

Despite the heavy bnsebaU schedule Bob has manged to keep hi grades above average and after the Fall semestershyshowed his prowess in the classshyroom by being named to the Deans List for the second time

DeMatha Winner In Hoop Tourney

WASHINGTON (NC) - DeshyMatha High of suburban Hyattsshyville Md scored an upset cliff shyhanger victory to cop the 12th national high sChool basketballl tournament sponsored by thE local Knights of Columbus J017 the fifth straight time

DeMatha avenged two regula17 season defeats by Mackin High Washington Catholic League

champ with its last minute 70-68 victory Mount Carmel of Chiengo took

third place with a 47-45 overshytime win over DePaul Acndemy of Chicago Northeast Cnthrt1ie of Philadelphia took fifth pIhce with a 77-74 win over St Petertl

B(~ BONALEWICZ of New Brunswick N J Catheshydral High of Trenton NJ Inpound

The oung catcher has been Dwight School of New York alslaquo) long known for his bullet like participated tlnrowlr arm and gained conshy Aubrey Nash DeMatha junloY siderable praise from opponents wall named the tournnmentl in 111gh school amateur and colshy most valuable player lege eompetitions for his savvy A 5-11 junior John Somogyftbehind the plate set three tournament records-shy

Three-Letter Man 40 field goals 108 points in threE Bonalewicz played football for games and 43 points in one game Don MontIe basketb~ll for Tom and tied another record ll-forshyKaram and baseball for middotJoe 11 from the foul line Lewis while at Durfee and also performed for Lewis Chathammiddot team in the Cape Cod League

The Fall Riverite cannot get FAIRHAVENenough baseball according to his mother Mrs Bonalewicz recalls LUMBER a game at Alumni Field when

COMPANYDurfee bested a Venezuelan team sponsored by the Peoplesshyto-Peoples program Bob was inshy Complete linejured and taken -to the hospital Mrs Bonalewicz remembers Building Materials then came back to finish the game hitting a home run to win I SPRING ST FAIRHAVENmiddotit for the Hilltoppers He wall voted the outstanding player in 993-2611the gameo

~1I1111111111111111111111111111111111IIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIlIllIUIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1111111111I1II111II1I1II111111111111111~

sect Increase the Use sect ~ of Fish ~ I ~~e ~ Fomily Diet ~

middot1 UN~~~ ~ _ 1 ~IUllIIllIllllllIllUlllutJUJHIJJJJlllllllllill IIIJlIlIIampIUIltIllHWlUlnmJWnIUlWIIJJllllllllliIllIIlIUIIIIII~

I

THEANCHOR()ioltese of Fan ~tv~r-Thurs ApO 1967 ~ ~ middot-middotmiddotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ middot20

AT BISEIOPS CONFERENCE Facilities for offering Mass were provided by the Archdiocese of Chicago when 230 U S bishops met in semi-annual conference In left photo nine othel prelates concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Joseph TRyan of Anchorage Alaska In right

photo are Archbishop John F Dearde~ of Detroit at left president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and at right Archbishop Johl1l F Cody of Chicago conference host Bishops Connolly and Gerrard attended from the Fall River Diocese NC Photos

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~

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99mu~iseLounge Love SeatClub Chair Cocktail Table $ illl original factory cartom~

murdy Tugged 24 inch cle(ArCalif~rnia RedwoOd handso~eenough 6 Pieces As Shown00 grace the most lavish porctt patio or lawn--economical enough

00 fit the most modest bUdget Reversible duck cushions provide oontrasting effeCts with Floral qesign on one side-solid green on 99 the other Galvanized hardware Chaise Lounge ClUb Chair Bar- - $ becue Table with 2 Side Benches and Cocktail Table in original factoly cartons

Other Gr~upng$

Open Daily 9 AM

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Page 19: 04.20.67

Georgell Cluh Olf to Good Start mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs Apr 20 1967

Taunton High Is Surprise In County Diamond loop former FltrrJDD Riweff CYOer on Scholagslvop ltltIt PIl1Jf$~ns

By PETE~ BARTEK Norton High Coach

Coach BiD Georges Taunton High diamond aggreg~

tion is the early season surprise in the Bristol County schoolboy league now in ita second week of the eampaign The pennant race appeam ~ be developing into one of the most exciting in many years Five clubs are battling of Ule better area clubs year fOIl the coveted flag And after year

Coach Harold (Chet) Haneshywhile action is fast and fm-shywichs Bishop Feehan High teamiOWl in the BCL the eight N3rshyof Attleboro has tucked awayragansett League teams are early season wins over Northgetting I e Q d y Attleboro and New Bedford Voshy

lor the chamshy cational The latter two will pionship race m probably fight it out fornext-toshytheir COmpetishy the-last place in the final standshytion Delayed ing as they seek to avoid theboth by rain and cellar Ii old weather The two top contests on nextCOaches h a v e Mondays BCL card will seebeen reminding Coyle playing Durfelte at Alumnitheir charges of Field in Fall River while Taunshythe pitfalls of ton journeys to North Dartmoutheareless loose to clash with stang Two northernplay and also Peter eounty rivals Attleboro andthe IOOmmission Bartek Feehan meet at the formers of Deedless errors which ean field next Monday when North relegatea club to an early Deeshy Attleboro travels to New Bedshyond diviaion berth from which it ford to take 0111 Vocatlonal win be bard to emerge as 1M Nury Contests oompetition progresses Meanwhile the Narragansett

Chausse and JlaJkut loop is comple~ing its first week The Herring City Orange and of play Its still a little early to

Black pulled the big surprise of make 8 judgment as to how thebe young season when it held clubs will stand at the end of thethe always strong Dullfee High

lI~mpaign team of Fall River to a 2-2 tie in Four Narry tilts are on tap for11 innings The prognosticators next Tuesdaybad been writing off the Georgeshy Coach Jack McCartys Caseeoached clan solely because they High Cardinals of Swansea willfelt Taunton would be unable to face Coach Jack Harts DimanJeplace Artmiddot Koska lost by gradshy Vocational team in Fall River uation in what looms as one of the

But Scott Chawrse impressed most interesting early seasonin his confrontation with the Fan games Coach Doug Baxendales River Hilltoppelll aDd now the Msgr Prevost High team of Fall same pundits who had relegated River will be at Dighton to meet Taunton to a lowly apot 8re the Coach Eddie Texeiras D - ~ first to admit that things will be Regionals Coach Ed Bibeau will much more pleasant for the lead his W~port High aggr~gashyTauntonians this Spring tion to Seekonk to middotvh( with

Stro~ Coyle Offense Coach Roger Hills charges The Admittedly an the doubting fourth Narry contest next Tuesshy

Thomases were not convinced day will see Coach Jack Brenshyon the basis of a single performshy nans Holy Family High teain of ance So Joe Majkut and Chausse New Bedford meeting Coach Jim Ulen eombined to throw a no-hit Sullivans Somersetmiddot High teamwin over Coach Dick Joyces at the latters field Attleboro High team Even the

Lanllers Ready most skeptical then conceded that Taunton must be reckoned On Ca~ Cod n nip-~pd~tuck

in the flag race battle is going on in that areas While Taunton High has heeD eon1erence schedule Four conshy

eGualling the early season attenshy tests are listed for the Capeway tion unexpected results have eircuit next Monday They are eccurred in several other diashy Oldmiddot Rochester (Mattapoisett) mond eontests Attleboro which at Barnstable Bourne at Wareshydid DOt seem destined lor gfeat bam Dartmouth middotat Dennis-Yarshythings this Spring provided the mouth and Fairhaven vs Lawshyfirst surprise w~en it toppled rence High at Falmouth Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Norton High in the Clover Stang High of North Dartmouth Valley Conference plays its first

Taunton then proved its mettle league game at home against when it defeated surprising Millis next Monday The Purple Attleboro Hickey has talent at - and White Lancers travel to Stang but his problem has heeD Medfield next Wednesday tv properly align his best playem Apparently they were not in the Score Governmentright spots when they went down to defeat at the hands of Coach On Lab~r Problems Jim Burns Msgr Coyle High

BUENOS AIRES (NC) -TwonJne of Taunton which has Catholic organizations have isshycwuted its way to two one~sided sued a joint manifesto criticizingviet(lries Coyles strength is in thlte Argentine government sayshyits offensive attack but it also ing it has failed to protect workshy

has a capable defense and pitch ers basic rightsJng staff to make a real run for Issued by the Catholic Youngthe BCL crown Workers (JOC) and Catholic _ Feehans Auspicious Start Action Workers Movement

Durfee while it may have been (MOAC) the statement alsotemporarily halted by Taunton called upon the bishops to be enpects to be among the leaders aware of the needs and goals of before the end of the week The young workers and the labor Hilltoppers looked good in winshy class and to be brave in ltexshy

double-header from Pil-shyning a pressing the Churchs doctrine grim High of Rhode Island last as applied to real-life situations weekend CoachJoe Lewis feelsmiddot It said that the government his boys can now maintain the which calls itself Christian but momentum they have generated is anything but Christian has in the non-league affairs It goes nothing to do with the Gospelalmost without saying that one or Christs teachings or with the off-day is not going to thwart Churchs doctrines as defined by the Hilltopperll wbo produce ODe the Second Vatican Councit

By JOE MIRANDA A Parsons College senior JRobshy

eli Bonalewicz of Fall River is -nearIng the end of a most sucshycessful college career both athshyletically and academically

Bob is attending Parsons in Fairfield Iowa on a baseball scholarship and has started bis third season as the colleges first strong catcher

neans List Student A Physical Education major

Bob has a minor in History and during the last marking period was named to the Deans List at Parsons -

A member of St PatrIcks Parshyish Bonny is a 1963 graduate of Durfee High School where he participated in football basketshyball and baseball

The son of Mr and Mrs Mathew Bonalewicz of 50 Chapshylin Street he is oile of five chil shydren ald has not yet decided upon a vocation

Bonny has two older brotherll a lieutenant and Mathew Jr II

staff sergeant both in the Air Force and stationed ubroad Bob also has two sisters Kathleen II student at Durfee High and Ma) Ann a grammar school pupil

Has f80 Average Bonalewicz recently returned

from a Southern baseball trip end gained excellent commendashytions from his coach Duane Banks for his performance as the Wildcats won 11 of 13 games

The Fall River player batted 430 belted three homers had nine runs-batted-in and seltlred 10 during Parsons first 13 games

Bonalewicz a 22-year-old 175shyJ)ound 5-8 giant enjoys playing baseball and so does his coach who scheduled 89 games last seashyson to set a ollegiate record fur the most games played in one year

Ankle IBjUlY

With the former Durfee backshystop handling the brunt of the catching duties until a knee inshyjury forced him to the sidelines Parsons won 72 lost 15 and twice finished in ti~d games called beshyca~se of darkness

The former St Patricks star in the CYO baseball program started poory this season finshyis middotng off the Southern trip with an ankle sprain but entering this week the ankle was in good shape and Bonny expected to take his regular spot behind the plate

Federal Agency Has Inter-Faith Advisors

WASHINGTON (NC)- A Catholic priest a Methodist minshyister and a Jewish rabbi have been appointed religious advishyBors to the United States Inforshymation Agency here

Msgr George G Higgins clIishyrector of the Social Action Deshypartment U S Catholic Confershyence the Rev Edward G Cu-middot roll superintendent of the Washshyington Northwest District ol the Methodist Baltimore Conference and Rabbi Richard G Hirsch dishyrector of the Relgious Action Center Union of American Heshybrew Congregations have been named to the USIA advisory panel

Officials of the agency noted that while it has had religious advisors since its inception this marks the first time an interfaith panel had been established

The purpose of the panel offi shycials said is to assure that the agencys handling of religious matters serves the best intlterest of the nation and its dlveraity of faiths

Bonalewicz also played for St Patricks T)iocesan championship team and for the Fall River Mershychants in the Newport Sunse~ League

As a senior at DUrfee Bonny was awarded the 1963 George Kaplan Memorial Trophy as the Hilltoppers best senior basketshyball player

His hustle and determination while performing for Durfee at Bostcm Garden during the anshynual Eastern Massachusetts Tecb tournament gained him the reshyspect and admiration of all that witnessed his efforts

Bonalewicz recently completed a practice teaching tour in an Iowa Junior High School and while tere coached the eighth grade team to a league chamshypionship

Earlier in the college year Bob_ was a member of the Parsons intramural flag football progmiddotam and received a trophy for his performan J

Despite the heavy bnsebaU schedule Bob has manged to keep hi grades above average and after the Fall semestershyshowed his prowess in the classshyroom by being named to the Deans List for the second time

DeMatha Winner In Hoop Tourney

WASHINGTON (NC) - DeshyMatha High of suburban Hyattsshyville Md scored an upset cliff shyhanger victory to cop the 12th national high sChool basketballl tournament sponsored by thE local Knights of Columbus J017 the fifth straight time

DeMatha avenged two regula17 season defeats by Mackin High Washington Catholic League

champ with its last minute 70-68 victory Mount Carmel of Chiengo took

third place with a 47-45 overshytime win over DePaul Acndemy of Chicago Northeast Cnthrt1ie of Philadelphia took fifth pIhce with a 77-74 win over St Petertl

B(~ BONALEWICZ of New Brunswick N J Catheshydral High of Trenton NJ Inpound

The oung catcher has been Dwight School of New York alslaquo) long known for his bullet like participated tlnrowlr arm and gained conshy Aubrey Nash DeMatha junloY siderable praise from opponents wall named the tournnmentl in 111gh school amateur and colshy most valuable player lege eompetitions for his savvy A 5-11 junior John Somogyftbehind the plate set three tournament records-shy

Three-Letter Man 40 field goals 108 points in threE Bonalewicz played football for games and 43 points in one game Don MontIe basketb~ll for Tom and tied another record ll-forshyKaram and baseball for middotJoe 11 from the foul line Lewis while at Durfee and also performed for Lewis Chathammiddot team in the Cape Cod League

The Fall Riverite cannot get FAIRHAVENenough baseball according to his mother Mrs Bonalewicz recalls LUMBER a game at Alumni Field when

COMPANYDurfee bested a Venezuelan team sponsored by the Peoplesshyto-Peoples program Bob was inshy Complete linejured and taken -to the hospital Mrs Bonalewicz remembers Building Materials then came back to finish the game hitting a home run to win I SPRING ST FAIRHAVENmiddotit for the Hilltoppers He wall voted the outstanding player in 993-2611the gameo

~1I1111111111111111111111111111111111IIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIlIllIUIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1111111111I1II111II1I1II111111111111111~

sect Increase the Use sect ~ of Fish ~ I ~~e ~ Fomily Diet ~

middot1 UN~~~ ~ _ 1 ~IUllIIllIllllllIllUlllutJUJHIJJJJlllllllllill IIIJlIlIIampIUIltIllHWlUlnmJWnIUlWIIJJllllllllliIllIIlIUIIIIII~

I

THEANCHOR()ioltese of Fan ~tv~r-Thurs ApO 1967 ~ ~ middot-middotmiddotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ middot20

AT BISEIOPS CONFERENCE Facilities for offering Mass were provided by the Archdiocese of Chicago when 230 U S bishops met in semi-annual conference In left photo nine othel prelates concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Joseph TRyan of Anchorage Alaska In right

photo are Archbishop John F Dearde~ of Detroit at left president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and at right Archbishop Johl1l F Cody of Chicago conference host Bishops Connolly and Gerrard attended from the Fall River Diocese NC Photos

IT1I1l8 lFurniture

Wonderland

Of the East _l bullbullbullbull ~

5Oth Anniversary Values Summer Furniture

Take advantage of the fabulous pre-season Anniversary Values on Masons huge stock of Summer Furniture All the fam~us

brands are here-come early while s~lections are at a peak

~

FREE DELIVIERY

ACRES OIF

FREE PARKiNG

High strengUlframes Qf polished-- aluminum Fold easily for con~ venient storage Ligh~ as a feather-sturdy and comfortable Fine quality plastic webbig in smart Sumrrer Colors

onIY $12 95 ~[bull 3 Pieces

~~ ~6amp ~ ~ l omiddot ~~ [k It ~O~~~~it~~~ r

- amp~ ~ 0 ~ If

j -- f

Tete-a-Tete 2- Club Chairs 9 9 and Cocktail Table in origi- $ nal factory caitons

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CALIFORN~A REDWOOD GROUP BY BRANDT

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murdy Tugged 24 inch cle(ArCalif~rnia RedwoOd handso~eenough 6 Pieces As Shown00 grace the most lavish porctt patio or lawn--economical enough

00 fit the most modest bUdget Reversible duck cushions provide oontrasting effeCts with Floral qesign on one side-solid green on 99 the other Galvanized hardware Chaise Lounge ClUb Chair Bar- - $ becue Table with 2 Side Benches and Cocktail Table in original factoly cartons

Other Gr~upng$

Open Daily 9 AM

to 10 PM~

ncluding SCtur~ays

~G--ar-de-n~~U~m-middot-b~re-I-ia-smiddotmiddot~

See Q Vast Selection - Your Choicemiddot 52995 Styles amp Colors From

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Page 20: 04.20.67

THEANCHOR()ioltese of Fan ~tv~r-Thurs ApO 1967 ~ ~ middot-middotmiddotmiddotrmiddot ~ ~ middot20

AT BISEIOPS CONFERENCE Facilities for offering Mass were provided by the Archdiocese of Chicago when 230 U S bishops met in semi-annual conference In left photo nine othel prelates concelebrate Mass with Archbishop Joseph TRyan of Anchorage Alaska In right

photo are Archbishop John F Dearde~ of Detroit at left president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops and at right Archbishop Johl1l F Cody of Chicago conference host Bishops Connolly and Gerrard attended from the Fall River Diocese NC Photos

IT1I1l8 lFurniture

Wonderland

Of the East _l bullbullbullbull ~

5Oth Anniversary Values Summer Furniture

Take advantage of the fabulous pre-season Anniversary Values on Masons huge stock of Summer Furniture All the fam~us

brands are here-come early while s~lections are at a peak

~

FREE DELIVIERY

ACRES OIF

FREE PARKiNG

High strengUlframes Qf polished-- aluminum Fold easily for con~ venient storage Ligh~ as a feather-sturdy and comfortable Fine quality plastic webbig in smart Sumrrer Colors

onIY $12 95 ~[bull 3 Pieces

~~ ~6amp ~ ~ l omiddot ~~ [k It ~O~~~~it~~~ r

- amp~ ~ 0 ~ If

j -- f

Tete-a-Tete 2- Club Chairs 9 9 and Cocktail Table in origi- $ nal factory caitons

~---~I~~t~middot lt lt-~~~

CALIFORN~A REDWOOD GROUP BY BRANDT

Coml~lInies To IPGI~

CCNVENilSNT BUIDGIE1I 1T1ElMS

No Banks or Finlllllmce

99mu~iseLounge Love SeatClub Chair Cocktail Table $ illl original factory cartom~

murdy Tugged 24 inch cle(ArCalif~rnia RedwoOd handso~eenough 6 Pieces As Shown00 grace the most lavish porctt patio or lawn--economical enough

00 fit the most modest bUdget Reversible duck cushions provide oontrasting effeCts with Floral qesign on one side-solid green on 99 the other Galvanized hardware Chaise Lounge ClUb Chair Bar- - $ becue Table with 2 Side Benches and Cocktail Table in original factoly cartons

Other Gr~upng$

Open Daily 9 AM

to 10 PM~

ncluding SCtur~ays

~G--ar-de-n~~U~m-middot-b~re-I-ia-smiddotmiddot~

See Q Vast Selection - Your Choicemiddot 52995 Styles amp Colors From

3 Pc ~ro~pigmiddotbymiddot Telescope i~middot Lightweigh Aluminurn