12.05.68

20
Four Parishes in "Through her we may see Him, made sweeter, not made dim, and her hands Immaculate leave His light sifted to suit our sight." Thus Gerard Manley Hop- kins sang of Mary, and thus generations of Ca'tholics have delighted to think of her. Echoing this ancient tradition, the United States was in 1846 dedicated to her under her title of the Immaculate Conception, preceding by eight years the definition of this dogma by Pius IX. December 8, the feast of the Immacu- late Conception, is a holy day in the United States and further proof of the devotion of American Catholics to Mary' is found in the nation's capital, where stands the National Shrine of the Im- maculate Conception. The Fall River Diocese has not lagged in paying special tribute to Mary under her title of Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception. In Fall -River, New Bedford, Taunton and North Easton there are churches of this name; and' two Cape Cod mission chapels are also thus dedi- cated. ImmaCUlate Conception Church in Fall River has served Catholics in the Flint area of the city since 1882, when it was erected under direction of its first pastor, Rev. Owen Kiernan, and dedicated by the late Bishop Hendricken of Providence. By 1929 the parish had outgrown its original building and the present brick structure was completed and dedicated by Bishop Cassidy, then Vicar-General of the Diocese. The present pastor is Msgr. Arthur W. Tansey, assisted by Rev. Francis M. Coady and Rev. Ralph D. Tetrault. They serve some 1200 families. Immaculate Conception New Bedford was first a mission of St. John the Baptist par- ish and in 1909 be- came a parish in its own right, with Rev. Augusto J. Taveira as first pastor. The pres- ent church was con- structed in 1913 and dedicated in 1916. A high point ih parish history came in 1958 when the 12 - room $450,000 Immaculate Church in Diocese Honor parish was established in 1883 and is proud of the fact that Conception its parochial school, opened in Conception School was dedicated, ac- commodating 550 pupils. , A yearly event uniting the 2,000 mem- ber parish is the August Feast of the Blessed Sacrament, which for the past 54 years has attracted as many as 120,000 visitors. The celebration fulfills a vow made by four Portuguese emigrants to New Bedford that they would hold an annual observance if they arrived safely in the new world. Rev. A. Castelo Branco has been pasto: of Immaculate Con- ception since 1956. Curates are Rev. Manuel Andrade and Rev. Evaristo Tavares and also assisting in the parish is Rev. Am.erico Da S. tins, C.M. Rev. William H. O'Reilly is pas'tor at Immaculate Concep- tion Church in Taun- ton, aided by Rev. Barry W. Wall. The 1891, was the first in the city. The first pastor was Rev.. James F. Roach, who sex:ved Immaculate Concep- tion for 23 years. In 1904 the growing parish was divided, St. Jacques being established to care for French Catholics of the area. In 1954 the present church was erected under direction of Rev. Thomas H. TaYlor. The parfsh serves some 400 families. Seven hundred and fifty families are served by Immaculate Conception parish in North Easton, whose present pastor is Rev. John J. Casey, assisted by Rev. John J. Steakem. The parish was founded in 1871, although it is believed that area Catholics were served by New Bedford priests as early as 1832. Bishop Fitzpatrick of Boston dedicated the first Immaculate Conception Church in 1851 and Mass was celebrated there twice a month until 1856, when priests from Easton were able to come to the area more frequently. The present church, located on Main Street in North Easton, was erected in Turn to Page Seventeen 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111:111111II 1111111 111111111 111111111 111111 11111111 111111111 111111111111111 1 11111111 111111111 1111111111 1II111111111!11 111111111 mllllnllllll 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Recommend Some Changes In Dutch Catechism VATICAN CITY (NC)-The Holy See has published a declalfation on the controversial Dutch catechism, insisting that despite some of the catechism's laudable aspects, there are certain theological points which mus.t be clarified. At the same time the Holy See was emphatic that the decla- ration was not the catechism or terming it heretical. The declaration was drawn up by a commission of six cardinals set up by Pope Paul VI for the purpose of studying various as- pects of the catechism. At the time of its release, the document was published in Acta Apostol- icae Sedis, the Holy See's oniy official publication. The document listed 10 major points in the Dutch catechism which should be subject to change. They are: 1. God the creator (not only of the world but also of angels and of souls). The catechism should teach that God has cre- ated angels and creates immedi- ately individual human souls. 2. Original sin or the fall of all men in Adam. The catechism is .to teach the doctrine that man in the beginning rebelled against God and so lost for himseif and his offspring that sanctity and 'justice in which he had been constituted, and that he handed on a true state of sin to all through propagation of human nature. Turn to Page Seventeen Diocesan Schools Promote Professional Development Rev. Patrick .J. O'Neill, superintendent of Diocesan Schools Ito day announced that the Diocesan School Board will allow the teachers in the dioces-an schools to have the second Wednesday afternoon of each month for meetings Guide for Teachers- Tell It Like It Is TORONTO (NC) - Don't brainwash the kids. En- courage them to think, discuss, question, probe and evalu- ate. Tell it the way it is w,hen discussing war, cigarettes, colonialIsm, revolving credit, advertisements, commercials, and loan interest. This is theadVlice two speakers gave teachers 'attending the Chris- Han Curriculum Develop- ment Conference sponsored here by the Ontario English Cath- olic Teachers' Association. John Fisher, author and lec- turer, and Romeo Maione, direc- tor of the Canadian Catholic Organization for Development and Peace, urged the teachers to encourage a thirst for truth in their pupils-even if it means questioning fundamental aspects of Western society. Both speakers warned that if teaehers "tell it the way it is," they will eventually be faced :with an enormous, powerful op- position - the communications industry and the business world which, they said, have too much at stake to allow such question- ing to go unimpeded. Immaculate Conception "We are too ready to tacitly Feast accept that education must be Next Sunday subordinate to the industrial. that would promote profes- sional development. The meeting time will provide for in-service courses, special workshops, and opportunities to visit other schools, as well as providing for better staff meet- ings and parent-.teacher ,inter- views. The concept of a Professional Day is not new. Many of the progressives schools throughout the country have been involved in this practice for some time. Since most teachers have school commitments, there is little time to and evalu- ate the numerous changes in education. Each principal has ,been ad- vised that the early dismissal is optional and that parents must be advised in advance on' the specific days of the O1eetings. The Anchor Goes Offset Today The Anchor today ,begins publication of its weekly newspaper <m the offset press F II R' f h C L & S I f o t e . J. eary ons, nco 0 a 'lVer. This 20-page newspaper has been printed on the conventional letterpress, first in Web- ster 'and then in North Attleboro, for almost 12 years, since its inception on April 11, 1957. brings this paper to your home-is now carried out at Leary's. The Anchor is most grateful to the North Attleboro Chronicle which has printed this newspaper during the greater part of its exis- tence. The Anchor regrets exceedingly the ter- mination of the close relationship this newspaper has enjoyed with the North Attleboro corpor- Attempting to keep abreast, or "OGRAPH/ ation-and its ,business manager, Mr. even lead, many larger publications ROb.ert R. - which is not with considerably more income, The '" eqUIpped WIth an offset press. Pub- Anchor seeks to offer its readers the, 'ttt RIVER licly, we wish to acknowledge our best and more modern type of publication. We thanks to the North Attleboro newspaper which believe the change from the cylindrical letter cooperated in every way possible to see that press to the up-to-the-minute offset press the people of Southeastern Massachusetts were must be immediately apparent to every reader provided with this official diocesan newspaper. Who merely scans the first page of this edition. We sincerely hope that you will continue to The entire production of The Anchor - from enjoy, even more than ever, your weekly edition type through which; The " . system," Fisher said. "For too long the teaching profession has accepted a mythical inferiority to the business world; for too long the teaching profession has been content with having its future charted and controlled by those same businessmen." Fisher urged teachers to en- courage their pupils to discuss contemporary society. "Have them watch television commercials and provide class discussion on what the commer- cial said. Have them cut out advertisements for class dissec- tion and discussion. "Truth shall make you free ... but what if the truth leads to sharp questioning of the con- vention'al economic wisdom?" Turn to Page Eighteen Changes Affect Curate, Court In Diocese Bishop Connolly announced today 'the transfer of one assistant and the reorgani- zation of the Diocesan Matri- monial Tribunal. Rev. Donald E. Messier, as- sistant at S1. Jean the Baptist Church, Fall River has been ap- pointed assistant at Our Lady of Fatima Church, New Bedford. Father Messier was ordained by Bishop Connolly in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, on May 18 of this year. Since ordination, he has served as an assistant at S1. Jean the Baptist Church, Fall River. His new assignment was effective yesterday, Dec. 4. The Bishop also announced the reorganization of the Di- ocesan Matrimonial Tribunal which handles cases ,t,o::01a,rriage.

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UNI~~ ~~BEL ROb.ert R. ~herman - which is not with considerably more income, The '" eqUIpped WIth an offset press. Pub- Anchor seeks to offer its readers the, I f "Through her we may see Him, made sweeter, not made dim, and her hands o t e . J. eary ons, nco 0 a 'lVer. This 20-page newspaper has been printed on the conventional letterpress, first in Web­ ster 'and then in North Attleboro, for almost 12 years, since its inception on April 11, 1957. by Bishop Cassidy, then Vicar-General

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 12.05.68

Four Parishes in "Through her we may see

Him, made sweeter, not made dim, and her hands Immaculate leave His light sifted to suit our sight." Thus Gerard Manley Hop­kins sang of Mary, and thus generations of Ca'tholics have delighted to think of her. Echoing this ancient tradition, the United States was in 1846 dedicated to her under her title of the Immaculate Conception, preceding by eight years the definition of this dogma by Pius IX.

December 8, the feast of the Immacu­late Conception, is a holy day in the United States and further proof of the devotion of American Catholics to Mary' is found in the nation's capital, where stands the National Shrine of the Im­maculate Conception.

The Fall River Diocese has not lagged in paying special tribute to Mary under her title of Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception. In Fall -River, New Bedford, Taunton and North Easton there are churches of this name; and' two Cape Cod mission chapels are also thus dedi­cated.

ImmaCUlate Conception Church in Fall River has served Catholics in the Flint area of the city since 1882, when it was erected under direction of its

first pastor, Rev. Owen Kiernan, and dedicated by the late Bishop Hendricken of Providence.

By 1929 the parish had outgrown its original building and the present brick structure was completed and dedicated by Bishop Cassidy, then Vicar-General of the Diocese. The present pastor is Msgr. Arthur W. Tansey, assisted by Rev. Francis M. Coady and Rev. Ralph D. Tetrault. They serve some 1200 families.

Immaculate Conception New Bedford was first a mission of St. John the Baptist par­ish and in 1909 be­came a parish in its own right, with Rev. Augusto J. Taveira as first pastor. The pres­ent church was con­structed in 1913 and dedicated in 1916. A high point ih parish history came in 1958 when the 12 - room $450,000 Immaculate

Church in

Diocese Honor parish was established in 1883 and is proud of the fact thatConception its parochial school, opened in

Conception School was dedicated, ac­commodating 550 pupils.

, A yearly event uniting the 2,000 mem­ber parish is the August Feast of the Blessed Sacrament, which for the past 54 years has attracted as many as 120,000 visitors. The celebration fulfills a vow made by four Portuguese emigrants to New Bedford that they would hold an annual observance if they arrived safely in the new world.

Rev. A. Castelo Branco has been pasto: of Immaculate Con­ception since 1956. Curates are Rev. Manuel Andrade and Rev. Evaristo Tavares and also assisting in the parish is Rev. Am.erico Da S. Mar~ tins, C.M.

Rev. William H. O'Reilly is pas'tor at Immaculate Concep­tion Church in Taun­ton, aided by Rev. Barry W. Wall. The

1891, was the first in the city. The first pastor was Rev.. James F.

Roach, who sex:ved Immaculate Concep­tion for 23 years. In 1904 the growing parish was divided, St. Jacques being established to care for French Catholics of the area.

In 1954 the present church was erected under direction of Rev. Thomas H. TaYlor. The parfsh serves some 400 families.

Seven hundred and fifty families are served by Immaculate Conception parish in North Easton, whose present pastor is Rev. John J. Casey, assisted by Rev. John J. Steakem. The parish was founded in 1871, although it is believed that area Catholics were served by New Bedford priests as early as 1832.

Bishop Fitzpatrick of Boston dedicated the first Immaculate Conception Church in 1851 and Mass was celebrated there twice a month until 1856, when priests from Easton were able to come to the area more frequently.

The present church, located on Main Street in North Easton, was erected in

Turn to Page Seventeen

11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111:111111II 1111111 111111111 111111111 111111 11111111 111111111 111111111111111111111111 111111111 1111111111 1II111111111!11 111111111 mllllnllllll111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111

Recommend Some Changes In Dutch Catechism

VATICAN CITY (NC)-The Holy See has published a declalfation on the controversial Dutch catechism, insisting that despite some of the catechism's laudable aspects, there are certain theological points which mus.t be clarified. At the same time the Holy See was emphatic that the decla­ration was not cond~mn'ing

the catechism or terming it heretical.

The declaration was drawn up by a commission of six cardinals set up by Pope Paul VI for the purpose of studying various as­pects of the catechism. At the time of its release, the document was published in Acta Apostol­icae Sedis, the Holy See's oniy official publication.

The document listed 10 major points in the Dutch catechism which should be subject to change. They are:

1. God the creator (not only of the world but also of angels and of souls). The catechism should teach that God has cre­ated angels and creates immedi­ately individual human souls.

2. Original sin or the fall of all men in Adam. The catechism is .to teach the doctrine that man in the beginning rebelled against God and so lost for himseif and his offspring that sanctity and 'justice in which he had been constituted, and that he handed on a true state of sin to all through propagation of human nature.

Turn to Page Seventeen

Diocesan Schools Promote Professional Development

Rev. Patrick .J. O'Neill, superintendent of Diocesan Schools Itoday announced that the Diocesan School Board will allow the teachers in the dioces-an schools to have the second Wednesday afternoon of each month for meetings

Guide for Teachers­Tell It Like It Is

TORONTO (NC) - Don't brainwash the kids. En­courage them to think, discuss, question, probe and evalu­ate. Tell it the way it is w,hen discussing war, cigarettes, colonialIsm, revolving credit, advertisements, commercials, and loan interest. This is theadVlice two speakers gave teachers 'attending the Chris­Han Curriculum Develop­ment Conference sponsored here by the Ontario English Cath­olic Teachers' Association.

John Fisher, author and lec­turer, and Romeo Maione, direc­tor of the Canadian Catholic Organization for Development and Peace, urged the teachers to encourage a thirst for truth in their pupils-even if it means questioning fundamental aspects of Western society.

Both speakers warned that if teaehers "tell it the way it is," they will eventually be faced :with an enormous, powerful op­position - the communications industry and the business world which, they said, have too much at stake to allow such question­ing to go unimpeded.

Immaculate Conception "We are too ready to tacitly Feast accept that education must be

Next Sunday subordinate to the industrial.

that would promote profes­sional development. The meeting time will provide for in-service courses, special workshops, and opportunities to visit other schools, as well as providing for better staff meet­ings and parent-.teacher ,inter­views.

The concept of a Professional Day is not new. Many of the progressives schools throughout the country have been involved in this practice for some time. Since most teachers have after~ school commitments, there is little time to discu~s and evalu­ate the numerous changes in education.

Each principal has ,been ad­vised that the early dismissal is optional and that parents must be advised in advance on' the specific days of the O1eetings.

The Anchor Goes Offset Today The Anchor today ,begins publication of

its weekly newspaper <m the offset pressF II R'f h C L & S I fo t e . J. eary ons, nco 0 a 'lVer.

This 20-page newspaper has been printed on the conventional letterpress, first in Web­ster 'and then in North Attleboro, for almost 12 years, since its inception on April 11, 1957.

brings this paper to your home-is now carried out at Leary's.

The Anchor is most grateful to the North Attleboro Chronicle which has printed this newspaper during the greater part of its exis­tence. The Anchor regrets exceedingly the ter­mination of the close relationship this newspaper has enjoyed with the North Attleboro corpor-

Attempting to keep abreast, or "OGRAPH/ ation-and its ,business manager, Mr. even lead, many larger publications UNI~~ ~~BEL ROb.ert R. ~herman - which is not with considerably more income, The '" eqUIpped WIth an offset press. Pub-Anchor seeks to offer its readers the, 'ttt RIVER ~~ licly, we wish to acknowledge our best and more modern type of publication. We thanks to the North Attleboro newspaper which believe the change from the cylindrical letter cooperated in every way possible to see that press to the up-to-the-minute offset press the people of Southeastern Massachusetts were must be immediately apparent to every reader provided with this official diocesan newspaper. Who merely scans the first page of this edition. We sincerely hope that you will continue to

The entire production of The Anchor - from enjoy, even more than ever, your weekly edition type s~tting through th~,.~~iling,process which; ,~9f The A~chor. " .

system," Fisher said. "For too long the teaching profession has accepted a mythical inferiority to the business world; for too long the teaching profession has been content with having its future charted and controlled by those same businessmen."

Fisher urged teachers to en­courage their pupils to discuss contemporary society.

"Have them watch television commercials and provide class discussion on what the commer­cial said. Have them cut out advertisements for class dissec­tion and discussion.

"Truth shall make you free ... but what if the truth leads to sharp questioning of the con­vention'al economic wisdom?"

Turn to Page Eighteen

Changes Affect Curate, Court In Diocese

Bishop Connolly announced today 'the transfer of one assistant and the reorgani­zation of the Diocesan Matri­monial Tribunal.

Rev. Donald E. Messier, as­sistant at S1. Jean the Baptist Church, Fall River has been ap­pointed assistant at Our Lady of Fatima Church, New Bedford.

Father Messier was ordained by Bishop Connolly in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, on May 18 of this year. Since ordination, he has served as an assistant at S1. Jean the Baptist Church, Fall River. His new assignment was effective yesterday, Dec. 4.

The Bishop also announced the reorganization of the Di­ocesan Matrimonial Tribunal which handles cases ~rtaining

,t,o::01a,rriage.

Page 2: 12.05.68

"; ....... '. t' "~.,/,J.: :t ~

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Dec. 5~ 1968 Protestant Journal Publishes2 Religious Census. of Congress

WASHINGTON (NC)-Chris- olics)n the Senate and House. tianity Today, an independent The census also says that, Protestant· journal,has put>;.. among the new governors ofOFFICIAL lished an "authoritative Reli- states elected this year, 9 are gious Census of Congress," Methodists, 8 Roman Catholics, which gives the following "com-. 7 Baptists, 6 Episcopalians, 6 plete list of categories'; for the Presby,terians, 4 United Church upcQming 91st Congress. . of Christ, 3 Christian Church

Roman Catholi(}-l11 (13 Sen- (Disciples of Christ), 2 Luther­APPOINTMENTS

Diocese o.fFa·1l River.

ators, 98 Representatives); Meth- ans, 2 Latter-Day Saints,· and odist-90 (23 Senators, 67 Rep- 1 Jewish, 1 Unitarian and 1

Officials:' Very Rev. William A. CalvIn, J.C..D:, pastor of resentatlves; Presbyterian - 82 "Protestant." Our' Lady of Fatima. Swansea. (13 Senators, 69 Representa- The "religious balimce"that

tives); Episcopalian-67 (14 Sen- . prevailed among members ofVice-Officialis: Rt. Rev. Reginald M: Barrette, chancellor ators, 53 Representatives). the 90th Congress' "will 'be gen­

and episcopal secretary. Baptist-53 (10. Senators, 43 erally maintained" hi the 91&t , Representatives; United Church Congress,the journal aSserts.

Judges: Rev. James ·F. Kenney, past{)r of Our Lady of the of Christ and Congregational- '. Assumption, Osterville.' 29 (6 Senators, 23 Representa-' . Rev. Edmond R. Levesque, assistant at. S1. George, West­ ..tives); Jewish-19 (2' Senators, Court to Hear Suit port. ' ·17 Representatives); Lutheran Barring Stam.p Sal,e

-14 (3 Senators, i1 Representa-Rev. J-amesA: McC~11thy,'administrator of ·St. Dominic, tives); Christian Church (Disci-' WASHINGTON (NC) - The

- Swansea. . ple's)-13 (1 ·Senator, 12 Repre- United States Court of AppealsRev. Edward A. Mitchell, J.C.D~, assistant at St. Mll1'Y's _ . RETIRES: Bishop Francis, D. sentatives).· has ordered a new hearing on a

Gleeson, S.J' i ,of Fairbanks,Ca~hedra~, Fall Riyer. . Latter,.Day Saints-10 (4 Sen- 1967 suit which sought to bar 'Rev: Cornelius J. O'Neill, assistant at St. Paul's,' Taun­ Alaska, has resigned his See, ators, 6'Representatives); Unita- the sale of Christmas stamps

and will be succeeded bv Bish~ rian-UniversaHst-7 (4 Senators, with a religious theme.ton..' .op Robert ,L. Whelan, s.L who. 3 Representatives);' Churches of The organization pressing theRev. Joseph Oliveira, assistant af St. Michael's, ·Fall was consecrafed in February Christ.....:...{j (1 Senator, 5 Repre- suit, Protestants and Other

River. 1968 and has been coadjutor of sentatives); 'Christian Science- Americans for Separation of Rev.. Maurice Souza,. p~stor of 8t: AIt,thony's, Taunton. , Fairbanks. NC Photo; , 5. (1 Senator, 4 'Representatives). Church and State,' objected to - . .. ., .'

The 'publication said' three the' sille' of the stamp on thePr~motei of .Justlce: Rt. ,'jtev. Daniel F. Shall-Qo, pastor of Senators and .nine Represents:' grounds that it benefited Chris-'

. Holy, Name, Fall River. tives describe themselves as tian. 'religions in general 'and thePriests'. Senate "Protestant," and three Repre'; Roman Catholic Churc~ in par-Defender of the Bond: Rev. nonald A. Tosti, assistant at. The regular monthly meet­ sentatives 'prefer not to be listed. ticular. .

Sacred Heart, Fall River. ing of the Senate of Priests New Governors The 1967 stamp, like the 'one of the Fall River Diocese will ,It says "other groups" are chosen for 1968, is a reprodlic­

Advocates: Rev. Manuel ,Po ,Ferreira, assistant a·t St. Jotln take, place Friday afternoon, Greek Orthodox, 3; Society of tion of a portion of a paintingthe Baptist, New Bedford.' December 13, at 1:30. in the Friends, 3; Evangelical Free, from' the National' Gallery of Rev. :Roger D. Leduc, assis'tant at Sacred Hear,t, No. Catholic MeDWriaR Home· in Church, 2, and Reformed Art. Attleboro. Yall River. Church in America, 1; Schwenk- The suit had originally been

felder Church,. 1; ,Apostolic dismissed because the U. S. Dis-Rev. Leonard M. Mullaney, assistant· af St. Patrick's; Mass Ordo. Christian Church, 1; .Christian trict Court ruled that the grol,lpWareham. . , . . and Missionary Alliance l' had no standing to 'sue .the gov-

Rev. John J. Smith, assistant at St. James', New Bedford. FRIDAY-:-St. NIcholas, BIShop, Evangelical Covenant Ch'rcli' ernment over the way in which Rev. Roland Bousquet, assistant at 5t .Joesph's, New . Confe~~o,r. I1ICla~. Wh~te. ..' I, and' Seventh-Day AdveiJ.~ists~ tax money is spent. The Court Bedford. . . ' .... ',: '. '" . .,.".,:OR ';' ..•".... '.~: ..;'1..,.,/., . ..,: ''', .. " .., .... '. " "·'·of-·Appeals decision (Nov. 14)

~ass 'of. ,preceding ~unday. The journal says'ihe~'e ftg\'.ires ·... ;·ov~rrulea ...them\iihdJ:sai'4'~ re~entRev. Edward 'A. Rausch, ,assistant at St. ,John the Evan­ '. Violet . ' '5 r' C,.s"t'j'·l·'· ,"gelist, At·tleboro. .. .' ,: ", ';"" .... .... ',,' )'. ;', ," ': .. , _. .r}"ep.~~!!~~:t ,:an.,,.c;>;ver-."f~U :increase:'. up ~me,o~r_, ':ll~g n!>w.. per-

SATURDAY-'-St. Ambrose', Bish... ,of two, m t1)e number "of Cath-' . mits taxpayers· to sue the gov-Rev. Ralph' D. Tetrault. assistant at Immacula.te Concep­ op, Confessor and Doctor of' ernment' 'on' a - 'coilstitutio'!1al tion, Fall River. . .

the Churc~~ g~ Class: White.' Students Protest' issue. Secretary and Notary: Rev. Henry T. Mun~oe, assistant at

Mass 6f preceding Sunday. Firing of Teac.her .---------~'~~"l,.;-.:..;...--.....,Holy Name, New Bedford. Violet... ~r~. YOU :~ein.g c,~lie.it~~o:~ 'kA

MONZA (NC)-The dismissal': .' '. 'serve GOD ' ' '.' • Notaries: Rev. Edmund J. Fitzgerald, assistant at Holy Name, SUNDAY-Feast of the Immac- of a pr-iest. who allowed' discus- .1'.. _, ., .... ".;'J~ .-1 J I ,

Fall, River. ulate Concepti{)n of Mary. sion of sex matters in his high" . as a co'nt~l!1plativ.e,NUN,~' Patroness Of The United school religion class has touched in the Dominican Cloister?Rev. Thomas' 'J. Harrington, student ,in th~ Gradua,te States. I Class. White. Mass off protests and a bri~f citywide.School of Canon Law, Catholic !Universi·tY,iWashington. Proper; Glory; Creed; Preface school. boy'co'tt 'Ib'- .stud'e'nts", I'n W:· ....'·"0· ,.',.-Y rite to ominrcan MonasteryRev. Maurice R. Jeffrey, assistant· at St. Jean ·the Baptiste, of Blessed Virgin. . this Italian city;nine~miles'from:' .' .' ,., ...., ,

Fall River. ". . ", ...J 'l .. .. , , ...80~, CQurt St., SYrac.,u.Sp-. ,.N.Y"

MONDAY-Mass of. Second M1 an. . ,'" ':', " " .;, 0'"

Rev. John J. Oliveira, assIstant at 5t. John of Qod. Sunday of Advent. III Class. The' .~~st' recent~'r~pe'r~us~ion.;; .. :,,:-.: :~ <11,) '1.3208 Somerset. ' Violet.' in the firIng of' Faiher Gino'·, '--__...,.,_....,.._..._:_._:._:_.,.....__-J

Brambilla, F.S.C,L, 40" from ' Effeotive date of appointments is Tuesday, Dec. 10, 1968. TUESDAY-Mass .of Second Paolo F~isi High 'School was a

Sunday of Advent: III Class. one-d'ay strike in all of Monza's Assignment Violet. high. schools.

.' ORRev. Donald E. Messier, ~istant at S1. Jean the Bap­ The woman principal who.dis­

si. Melchiades, Pope, Martyr. missed the priest 'had accused ..tiste, Fall River, to Our Lady of ;Fa-ti rna, Ne~ Bedford, as Red. him of discussing "sul;>jects. dan­assistant. WEDNESDAY ....,.. St. Damasus, gerous to young peo.pl~." . .

Pope, Confessor. III Class.Effective date of the assIgnment is .. Wednesday" Dec. White. Mass Proper; Glory;4, 1968.

OR Michael C.' AustinMass of Second Sunday of . Advent. oInc. .:, r .~, '. ,'.: ,:l .... :...:t-J • r

THURSDAY - Our Lady of,r;t:Z;;:r .Funeral,' Se~ic~ .'Guadalupe, Patroness of the Americas. III Class. White. Edward F. Carney' .Bishop of Fall River. .

. rJt __ .

• HYANNIS • HARWICHPORT • SQUT.~,YA8.MOUTH

,,:~,,~,.. ,

,JJ£:J •.. _~'l'.

DOAN'~BE:~L~AMC:S '. lNCOR.!)()R.A'rEd .

-" .fun'erallService

,;.,

FORTY HOURS DEVOTION

Dec. ·8-St. Margaret, Buz­zards Bay.

St. Bernard, Assonet. Our Lady of the Cape,

East Brewster. Dec. 15-51. Anthony' Padua,

Fall River. S1: Mary, Fairhaven. St. Helena's Convent,

Fall -River.

THE ANCHOR

Mass Propex:; Glory; Preface 549 County :Street of Blessed Virgin.. New Bedford 999-6222

OR Mass of .Second Sunday of 'Serving ,the area'si";c~ 1921

Second Class Postage Paid at Fall River. will continue as a research asso­Mass. Published every Thursday at 410, , ci.ate ,of the. Cambridge Center Rev. Mortimer Downi~g, 1942,.H,ghland Avenue. Fall River,' Mass. 02722. by the Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall' and as a member of its board of Pastor, St., Francis· Xavier, Hy-River. Subscription price by mail, postpaid annis. . .... , '. $4.00·per year. directors.

Name New Director Advent.

At Research Center CAMBRIDGE (NC) - Father Second Anniversary James J. McGinley, S.J., former

'The second anniversary of thepresident of Canisius College in death of Rt. Rev. Msgr. John H.,Buffalo, has been named direc­Hackett, former chancellor, willtor of the Cambridge Center for be commemorated with a con­Social Studies. Father McGin­celebrated Mass at 11 o'clockley is a labor economist and a Friday morning, Dec, 6. atmember of the Administrative Sacred Heart Church, Fall River.Consultant Se'rvice of the Asso­

.ciation of American Colleges. The center's former director, Necrology

,Father TheodoreV. Purcell, S.J., ' DEC. 15 " .

-SUMNER JAMES WARING JR.

.FUNERAL· DIRECTOR Owner & Director"; The Waring Home

I SERVIN~. A~~ FAITtiS• I ~ • •

", . " . I . (•

Page 3: 12.05.68

3 'l'HE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Dec. 5, 1968

Discuss Variety, of.Topi.cs. At Ch'arities Conference : I, 'PITTSBURGH' <NC)-Works'hops at the National Con­ference of Catholk Charities meeting here included discus­

" sions of social justice, welfare policies, unwed parenthood " 'and PrOblems of the aged. In 'a workshop on Social Action

.~" :~q;~rltl~enc.~ Public" P,oH~y,. . . ", A~YI'nE.' Nlchol-s, e,xecubve been done to help ti:le ~oma'n· ,', .director.' >of, the North: City ,,~hC? wants to .keep. her. chiI'd. :,'"Congi.ess in (.IPhiladelphia" I told. Although' one speaker 'noted'

how the black community views .that two-thirds of all unwed the social action 'work' of the mothers in the U. ·S.· are not of· .

. , ROfI\!ln~Giltholic: ,CJ'lUrch. ' ;' :.' sch06l,age, all. participants in':'.. '~Afr'it,,~e sai,d,·tl).ere is 110,~lack the. wotkshop referred to unwed" ..:

"comqt;ullity;w~d~:' kno~l~d.g~ of mothers as "girls." Cath91i,qfsoq.l!I:~ctionin.;a!l;\~rge.. "0':"" c" k . j h IYt' t· . !l' gIWtqHliIIS .th~t 9f Phila,~~IPhia.. I'" :c:ase~o:~::'f~~m ba~holi~r ~r;;ar~ : Second, he saId, black Impres- 1 'T"" 'i 'ih Db' hd' si0t\1l of theCatholic ChurcQ. and .. ~,1, !~~ ,['~:'\ ce .)1,P9ue~c ,~o-

. itli'taii<U8~e f()ilme~lHn~~'by "'1 ,<;e~~,;. s~gges!.ecl . th.at ~gen.cles th~CtiO S Pi white la Catho-:'.: ~~y.~ipl~.yed tc;>~ .:pareJ:ltal a role·

;'j...'''' !fl1t\tl' !l't ~;)p"';·bJ,~;~l"Jl· m ..deahng WIth t.h~. unwed Jl ana 0 H g~. U IUS :;sues .. ,o,.... '. h'~" .' . . '~uch I a'!Vthe:·€ath61fd:~.Church's mNhl:~..,.1: .I~, ,M;~rtJ!1 ~ald, IS

t.....· p't t . s .... ~t' t id . f very gratify.mg to the person ora •.,m· o' e"ure" a e ' a 'or·· .... ;, .' '. . parociMal' school; stUderi'ts.~""· agency playmg .th..e .p~rental . oj jell'o ,'" ,.. '.' .... :. i rple~ btut mllY not, .~n. J~e long." :,' Hr,~f.'~,· ot ~,hu~C}h ',d; .rulJ; ~.~ the: :be~t th!ngf,or the

"d th . bl .- ommu . client.· . ':.. . ..EcOS'lsal',h I e, acn.:'c .' -.,-l;~l.:~, .. .-;i-}' - .. ". I '" .: ni~y. }~·il,J;lt~,Jp_.-:~~o~. ,,?h~t the·., ' ":.' Questions Adoption ChurqQr.~is ,GQiljlg,i.to I eradicate .:',.' Sister 'Ann McCarthy, super­white..!o""ci~m. He quoted ,a let- .viso·r·, of Iiifant and Materni,ty t~r tqttR,e ,g«;!;itpr pf. th~hCathplic . Services in "the .Philadelphia

..StandaxHr jand.:jl'ilpes,,:.Philadel-. archdiocese said that clients too phia a:rchdioc,esan', newspaper, ·often· have' io fit the mold of 'the stating that;the author,. a "Hfe- " agency; :1':,), .,"

10ng··.ftffilil,Cln . CatQolilj":·",lhad ..,. . . tF! ':" . rarely heard the subject Qf:hu-, man a,n,cJ, c.~yil;)rigQts. discussed in sJ?ecific terms, in,;sermons in the Phila,<;lelphia archdiocese.

Echols said: "The Catholic 'Church not only has a role to play.in !loothing. the ,~outh Phil­adelphhi..·sit4~tiqnl' but it also had .a, r~l~ in the ~orming of that situ~tion."

In the same workshop, Mathew Ahmann, executive di­rector of ~he National .C~tholic .Cc;>nferer,ce,.!.9fl ~flte~l\i\C~al., J.us­

: She..~oted that on~y one ~n fIVe unwe.<!.. mothers. IS ever .m contact' WIth .any type of SOCIal service agency ~~d that ~any of these do not receIve servIces un­

. less they agree. to give up their child for adoption.

She'said that fees for Catholic Charities maternity homes have gone up recently, and tha't these homes only accommodate one in every JO whit~"unw~d ..wotl).ers and serve one' in 50 Negro. un­wed mothers..

tice, d.issu~.~~fi w.b.a.t ~he~-G/1u.rch~G""-:Sh~ ,,'S'd:'l'th P' Ii "'i'6' ;'~h couldj d.o ~nternally·· .to . 'bring ...,. . ~~. . a,.a .op I J\ . ,,?Sabout re-distrjbution of wealth too ofte~ been "stressed as In

and true social justice in our the best mterest of both mother society. ~nd ~hild. She s~ggested that

He suggested that the Church . vesbge~ of an atbtud: of pun­use some· of its wealth ,to under- Ish~ent. hav~ crept Into pro­write loans' to ,businessmen in fesslonal .attItudes in many thebiack cornhlUrifty who often' cases. have'" difficUlty' 'getiIng capi.tal to start small businesses. Challenge Federal

," "1

pAN AMERICAN MASS: The annual Pan American Mass, held at St. Patrick's Church, Wash· ington, D.C., was attended thh year 'by President Lyndo'n a. Johnson. At left is Patrick Cardinal

.O'~oyl~;- who presided, and Archbishop Luigi Raimondi, Apostolic Delegate, who offered the

.Viass. NC Photo.

Cardi'nal Calls President Chief Ecumenis.t Lauds Johnson for Domestic

WASHINGTON (NC) - Pat­rick Cardi.nal O'Boyle of Wash­ington called President Lyndon B. Johnson "the chief ecumenist in·this ecumenical age" and sug-, gested the President "get a part' time' job at· the Ecumenical Council in Rome" WhE!n he

.. leaves' the..presidency· in Janu­

a~~~eaking at the close ~f the 60th annual Pan-American Mass at St. Patrick's Church here, Cardinal O'Boyle referred to the fact that the President, who at­tended the Mass with his oldest

. daughter Mrs. Lynda Robb, often attends services in more

Unwed Parentbood Ad' . C In..... than one church on Sundays. ~ '. , . i to 0 ueges

At a'-\vorkshop on "tJinved . :HARTFOR;p (NC) _ Federal Parenthood:" New 'Dimensions aid to church-related colleges is Need.ed," officials from Catholic, the target of' a 'test case now be­social service agencies agreed fore the U.S. District Court that· too much emphasis' has here in a suit sponsored 'by the been placed on offering adop- American Jewish Congress and tive services to the unwed the American Civil Liberties mother a!1d not enough has Union and ,brought bq 15 Con­

.' f, necticut taxpayers against state Catholi,': University and federal officials.

To Hon.,.or Thomas Jot seeks an injunction to pre­vent grants ·totaling nearly $1

W,ASHINGTON :(NC)- The mUliQn from reaching four Cath-

President Johnson is a mem­ber of the Christian Church, his wife is an Episcopalian and his daugher: Mrs. Luci Nugent, a • recent convert to Catholicism.

After his first remarks, Car­dinal O'Boyle praised the Presi­dent for "your tremendous amount of domestic legislation for -the poor." He said: "I think that when history is written there w.ll be very few men who will exceed you in prestige and honor."

Christian Response Catholic University of America' . olic colleges in the st,ate. Fair-~iigh government officials and ,,?ill award its hlgh~s~ honor, the Cardiria.~ " Gib~ons Medal, to comedian Danny Thomas, at an· awaNHbanquet'duririg' the. unh

it ' I H' .vers y s . annua omecommg Weekend' tomorrow and Satur-' day. ;:I~;~... .

"We 'at;p~otid' of what Danny: Thoma/. 'represents, both as an: entertainer and as 'a worker for the children and the deprived of all faiths and races," said Ed

. fhild University in Fairfield, members of the diplomatic corps

. Sacred Heart University in attended the Mass, at which the Bridgeport, Albertus Magnus principal concelebrant was College in New Haven and Ann- Archbishop Luigi -Raimondi, . hurst'. COlle'ge in' South Wood­ apostolic delegate in the United stock., States. Auxiliary Bishop John

The'complaint charges that the S. Spence of Washington deliv­grants pr'Omote religion through ered the homily. the contrIbution of, tax funds Bishop Spence discussed the '~to institutions which teach the problem of violence and social tenents ofa church." It also change in Western Hemisphere complains of diversion of funds nations. He said the Christian

McMahon,. national chai,rman of' from non-sectarian institutions .response' must be' twofold:. "on the university's alumni. "We think mankind is the better for h~ving,.him.bring into .;the spot- . light 'not 'only his' concerns as

a funny::"'ma~ .but also his. con'­cerris as a human being."

:TheG{~llons Awa~d -is :riimed in memory of 'James 'C~Minal Gibbons, one of the American

open to all ,to religiously con- the one hand, to repudiate vio­trc;>lled institutions "attended by lence as a solution to social ills, a limited 'elai;ls of students." while at the same time maintain­

ing and strengthening our com­

~.·'u·s ILO'W .'Upheld mitment to social justice andcontinuing our efforts to eradi­

. COLUMBUS (NC)-Franklin cate the evils in this society; County Common Pleas Judge on the other hand, to develop Robert E. Leach has upheld the effectiv~ alternatives to ~iolence

Paul VI has made this appeal. He noted "the appeal to violence arises from social conditions whirh are basically the same. It represerits' a cry of desperation from the poor and oppressed who see ilO other way of right­ing -their grievances."

He said that. inhabitants of United States urban ghettos and "victimized Indians in the high Andes" find themselves "in a truly intolerable situation."

Bishop Spense saId violence is both "radically un-Christian and pragmatically "counter­productive." He said: "The re­sort to violence sets loose in society dangerous currents which are. not subject to rational

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Legislation control and whose outcome can­not be predicated. Legitimatiz­ing violence in theory means giving license to the mob and the assassin."

He concluded that if Chris­tians fail to "do their utmost" to bring about peaceful progress and development, "they win not be able to escape their share of the blame for the triumph of violence in society,"

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Church's 'foremosf leaders at constitutionality of. an Ohio law and t? Implement these In or~er U . . f d' f h' h . ts 'th t' t to brmg about necessary SOCIal ,.,. .

t/1~ time of the.,. 9\1n lng, 0., .,:'<'i.I,c perml 1,~.'lJ ri~spor a- " :" . .').....1 _ 1;" .: .., ." '.~ . . 1.1'" ,',',,; ,'.J.j,. I, i:'" , ; ,;' "';, Catholic UniversH'1;' #-Pr~~btlS 'Uoh on ~>ublic sc~oOI.I:~uses.of ~".~ha?~:~t()letable'.Sltuatibn' 'r:,~ ..,,, . <',.",.oetter banking, ;lO"r.yourfam~Ly' "'~' ,:recipients include p.resldent students m pa.ro.c.hlal JIJd other'·~·;.' .~'" 1"1.. ; •.'1...... ,' .""" iu h'f':,_),' ':. ';f;, ". ,,,.,r'),t, ,$ ',>, ~.t" .,;!,~ "". :') ~~. \'.'; ..q '."'.".:': 'I~ .r: ~~!~l.1'~i!'~W-=-SJ1.Jt~~{~~~~.~~Jlf.=d&9Pl'}s.=~&· - •.• glsho~ Spehce "SaId' th:~;t,~gpe ., , .;.' GS'.':!'l;';) h:~~",q ,.,,'.1 ,I, 0_" , • \';.',',': ,~j\'

Page 4: 12.05.68

4 THE ANCHOR-;-Piocese of .Fall. River-Thurs."De~. 5, 1968.

See Change in. Policy. on Biafra With Opening of TaskForce

WASHINGTON (NC)-Under­Secretary of State Nicholas deB. tests mount-every day -brings Katzenbach; with a strong push more petitions .and letters de­from the. White House,has manding U. S. ·aid to the relief opened an emergency task force agenCies sending supplies to on Biafra within the walls of the Biafra-they have begun .ex- . U. S. Sta·te Department. ploring other way·s to stave off

The Task Force may also sig': starvation. . nal the opeping of a breach They have also. been spurred within the State Department ,by reports from Catholic. Relief over U. S. policy on the war- Services, the International Red and 'pethaps policy toward all of Cross ·and their. own Agency for Africa. International Development that

The Task Force began oper'a- the current rate of death' is ris­tions more than a week ago un- ing-and will leap toward the der the direction of C.. Robert 25,000-per-day mark by the end Moore, Deputy Assistant Secre- of the yea.r. tary for African Affairs. But AID recently estimated that just what it is' doing so furi- half of the people of Biafra.....:. ously-it works rOund ~he clock who total Ibetween seven and -remains something of a mys- !line million-:"'are "in jeopardy"­tery. of death from starvation.

Its formation reflects the fact "It's far worse than anyone that growing pressure has rea1izes," said one offidal. forced the nation's top foreign The private agencies, such' as policy makers to take a hard eRS and European religious look at the effects of the na- agencies ·are running short of tion'spolicy toward Biafra in funds. The Red Cross has re­the light of the soaring risk. of peatedly 'appealed for money to massive starvation. c:hipfood which it already has PLAN OPEN HOUSE: Spanish students at Sacre'd Hearts'

And ,the fact· that it Was<. 'in 'storage. . Academy, Fall' River, entertained Spanish Clubm~mbers'atstarted' under Under-Secretary Possible Consequences other Diocesan high schools at an. open. house y~,st~rd~y<aft~r­Katzenbach and not Assistant. They estim~te the daily food no.on. A film on flamenco dancing, followed ,by,discvs$ion,Secretary' for African Affairs' neect at 40,000 ;'tons. At present.' highlighted the program. Among organizers were, .seated 'fromJoseph Palmer, has led some a good night will see one-tenth

· Africanists to the conclusion . that arrive at Biafra's long air- left, . Barbara Nasser, Linda Lopes; standing; Cheryl' Mosa, that the policy may be changed. strip. . Bethany Strike, Claudia Lindo. .' '" ..• , fl """ ','

Hope of Victory The consequences of direct Palmer, a former U. S. Am- U. S. aid to Biafra - the only

bassador to Nigeria, and now thing, the relief experts say, "Rejected Proposals• >~.head of the State Department's' which. would helP - could well

Department of African Affairs, be alienation of the federal Three Liturgical Changes' Turned Down h!is ,long agreed with the U. S.. Nigerian government at a time Embassy in Lagos, the Nigerian when it is drawing closer to At Bishops' Meeting

:goyernment and the British that the Soviet UiUon. BURLINGTON (NCf-Bishop the most effective way to solve The two' recently signed a . Robert ·F....JOyce disclosed here the problem of starvation is $140' million long temi: loan that three"liturgical changes he

· through 3: qU~ck victory by .the agreement, and tlie USSR has ·,favored;. one~recommendec;l. 'byf.ederal NIgerIan forces. supplied more than· a score of ' his own· diocese, 'were turned~hat conclusion has not alto- jet fighters and ·bombers as well

gether .been one of cool ration- as technicians .and arms to fed- down at the U. S. bishops meet­l 't M t f th h hi' ing in. Washingt9n.a 1 y. os 0 ose w 0 ' 0 d eral ·forces.

the view ·have strong emotional Within .the State Department .The Vermont bishop said. his commi·tment to the concept of a the consequences are hard to diocese had proposed seeking

· uni~ed 'Nigeria--"a commitment .predict during the closhlg d'ays permission from the Holy See WhICh was threatened when of the Johnson administration. for' the reception of Holy' Com­Biafra declared its independenCe Should a new policy evolve be- munion twice a ,day. He said 18 months ago. . fore Richa.rd Nixon' moves into there was no real opposition to

And as the .war drags on the. the WhiteHouse .Jan.. 20, it" the proposal but a number of ~heory's rationality i~ becoming would 'be up to. him ·to 'either-bishops 'expresSed opinions 'the mcreasinglysuspect among affirm it or reverse it. His few pract.ice would be superfluous. higher ~olicy-makers. The fed- statements on African policy . Anoth~r proposal, rejected, he eral NIgerians are receiving give no' indication what that said; was "to allow ·Masses for massive military and economic action mi~htbe. small groups." The bishop said. aid, the dissent says, so why the reason for the rejection doesn't i-t win? .

They are losing <hope that the Protest Increased federal government either can R I" A·' or will win a quick victory. e IglOUS ctlvlty

Death Rate Rising BONN (NC)-Leading Soviet Therefore, as the public pro::' papers have noted that reli~ious

I , activity among the Soviet Cites Responsibility people is constantly increasingF W k ' S f and one publication has accused or or ers· a ety religious communit'ies' of sowing OVIEDO (NC) - Employers "the poisonous seed of indivi­

have a moral responsibility for dualism" in the population, the the, safety of their workem, German C'atholic news. agency Bishop Vicente Enrique y Taran-' KNA reported here. con of Oviedo has emphasized The Soviet periodical for here in Spain.' . atheist propaganda, Nauka i

The Bishop's comment has ReligiYa. (Science and Religion), been prompted by a strike at a relateCi the growth of religious large coal mine near here fol- activilY to insufficient efforts to lowing the accidental death of a bring' a'bout "scientific 'enlight­miner whil~_on the job. Miners enmeitt." The m~gazine also ex­who attended their co-worker's plained the increased religious funeral services were penalized activity as the effect. of anti ­by the company. The miners Soviet and anti-socialist propa­then went on strike against the ganda by "Western imperial­largest supplier of coal in Spain. ists." .

Bishop Terancon stressed that Replying to Nauka i Religiya, "the Church condemns as moral- SOV1~t a·theist propagandists ly wrong the conduct of employ- havq blamed failures to curtail ers who disregard the safety of religious activity ()n the failure their workers." of the state to provide them

"Before profit, even legitimate with an edition of the Bible con­profit," the Bishop said, "com- taining "scientific commenta­panies must heed the law of God ries."· These propagandists lfao\te which gives priority tQ' the safe- said it is impossible to refute ty of their workers." the arguments of believers

He war2ed tha t ,the~to in turn" ';with9l;lt· being famili~~ wi~1J., t~e, ~,serYed. by .~he:\pfiest,· a monthly

"seemed to be that some felt it would be subject to too many abuses." .The third proposal which

failed to gain approval 'would have allowed special' children's Masses. Bishop Joyce said: "This would have included such things as the childre.n dancing around the altar." He reported a number

Establish Priests'R • PI

etlrement an NEWARK (NC) - A retire­

ment plan has been established for priests of the Newark arch­diocese, providing individual benefits of from $300 to $600 a month, regardless of any bene­fits a retired priest may be en­titled·to through any participa­

.tion in the federal Social Secur­ity program.

Under the plan, priests may apply for retirement between the ages of 65 and 75, according . to individual circumstances. The benefits they receive will de­pend on the-accommodations se­lected for re.tirement, $300 go­ing to those priests choosing to 'continue to live in a rectory.

Costs. of the program will be met by the parish or institution

··_······_··1· .. ····

:1 .M:~~~:'~~S .. .. . .. i

of the :bishops "felt that the idea of entertainment rather than

. worsh'fp .would· ,'likely .carry. into 'ttieir':iatel' 'ii:ves:'; " - , ';" J

. ,. In 'dilicus.sions regarding ~he

.. safeguardS for" rights 'and .free­doms of priests, Bishop Joyce said it was contended that "due process" is not a specific precise thing.

"It's handled differently in different institutions, such as the state, the Church, the armed forces or 1~ .labor unions," he said.. t

Bishop Joyce stressed that the Church seek to avoid litigation and puubllc humiliation jor its members. 'He said: "The 'Church wants to protect its members and that is why hearings may be held in private."

Rhythm Clinics BOISE (NC)-Bishop Sylves­

ter W. Treinen of Boise has asked all Catholic hospitals in Idaho to consider sponsoring clinics . to teach couples the 993·3786rhythm method of birth control.

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Priests' Role .~ TORONTO (NC)-ThJ' leaven

of challenge is beginning' to stir priests' throughout the provinces of Ontario, as well as all across Canada. The challenge came from the Canadian priests at Winnipeg.

The bishops told priests from coast to coast that they them­selves should resolve problems of unrest among the .clergy, 'pro- ' pose changes and discover their particular role and identity in modern society. No "ground rules" were set down by the bishops for such discussions.

They have merely asked to hear from all priests; including those who have left the ·active

. ministry. The' object of ;the .pro­gram of discussions, among

, priests is to report their firidings and recommendations ,'lto- .the' bishops' next general' assembly in Ottawa next April. : From coast to coast" regional

meetings of priests"'lllive been scheduled for··early'next year. In Toronto, 35 delegates' repre­senting diocesan- pri~ts' senates throughout OntariO' met' at St. Augustine seminarY'recently to tackle· attitudes, problem'areas and p,ossible, solutions rregar'ding their role in modern" "Canadian society, their identity and rela­

: '. tionship to other Ca'riadians. '1~ ~ ,'>.1'''':''' :1 xu "'oJ. :.'

. Suggests Anb~ing Contra.ceptive;~$ijIe ~ADISON (NC) - A special

legislative advisory: committee .. nas .reCOmrilended'. thati-\lhmar­

ried ,persons in.' Wisconsin be permitted to buy'contraceptives.

. But the committee also' rec­ommended that cOntraceptives should not be sold in vending machines, not be advertised and pot. be,put on public display..

Msgr. : JosephP:;'Spi'ingob, a committe.e member and. official of Milwaukee Catholic Social Services, opposed the restric­tions and· said that if the law is enacted, it should' go all ·the way. Msgr. Springob was one of three Catholics on the com­mi-ttee Who opposed the entire recom~endation. The proposal was passed 9 to 3.

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Page 5: 12.05.68

5 Detroit Superh,dendent Asserts Crisis Endangers Public Schools

DETROIT (NC)-The Detroit schools, Catholic as well as pub­archdiocesan superintendent of lIc, that has them trying to' get schools denied charges by some some assistance to meet the critics that Catholic schools are staggering educational costs of out "to raid the treasury," and today," Father Zwers stated. asserted that public school chil- The priest said many parents dren have much to lose' If ate not "aware of the cost levels church - supported schools go' education has now reached. under. "The Detroit public school sys-

Father John B. Zwers issued tern is noted'for tight budgets," a statement saying tha,t among he said, "but even it pays $425 the reasons why public schools to educate each' pupil in grade must press for more money school, $580 for each junior high from taxpayers is because they school student and' over $600 must educate more than 12,000 f,or each high school student. students lost from Catholic Many suburbs spend consider­schools here during the past ably more.'.' . y.ear. No Place, to Go

"Tha,t makes over 30,000 since Father Zwers said these fig­the 1964-'65 school year who ures indicate why a1bsorption of have left our tax-free schools," private school pupils by public he said. "Like all schools, public schools is impractical. Even if and private, ours are caught in the money were available for a financial bind. Many Catholic teaching, he noted, there would parents just cannot meet neces- be no place for 173,009 pupils to sary tuition increases and also go, since existing public schools, pay increased ,taxes for support often antiquated, tend to be of public schools. crowded after having absor.bed

Higher Taxes only 30,000 pupils who formerly "Unless we find some way ·to attended Catholic schools.

tide our schools over the emer- "Another seeming solution gency,. Michigan taxpayers are which will not work is 'shared going to be charged still stiffer time' - having Catholic school school taxes, or else see their youngsters get some of their children disadvantaged as the academic training from nearby q.uallty .ofpubllc education Is public schools," he said. dikrted by the addition of for- "This is fine in limited areas, ~er Oatholic school students,'" where conditions are just right. he .stated. But there aren't enough extra'

A recent Oatholic pupil cen- facilities to share if that is sus here revealed 11,085 fewer thought of as '8 general solution. elementary grade pupils and The need is too· great, and pub­1,250 fewer high school stu,dents lic schools are generally already than a year ago. taxed to capacity. .

In the 1964-'65 year Catholic 'In Good Time' schools had 203,389 studenis. "The eventual answer seems The following year there was a fairly obvious," Father Zwers drop followed by 8,000 decreases asserted. "The diminishing pri ­In each of the next two years, vate schools will have to go on . leading up to the 12,335 falling- doing' the best they can un:til off that now leaves total enroll- ,Micql~.a~ ~f~.nally 'becomes aware

. ment here at only 173,009.;"" that It has a. good thing going Last Resort for it in systems that in the past

"It might appear to some that did not get a dollar of taxpayers' we are deliberately phasing out money for educating hundreds our Catholic schools," Father of thousands of youngsters and Zwers stated, "This is untrue-- which are .in trouble now only absolutely untrue. We never because· inflation has put all close a school except as a last, school systems in financial desperate resort. We believe our straits.... educational system holds pre- "In good time the state will clous v,alues not only for Cath- see its way free to help private ollcs but. for all Qf Michigan too. schools a ·bit-hopefully before

"For" ,the state, Catholic the quality of all education schools se{ve as a yardstick for is permapently undermined," comparing' costs and quality of Father Zwers said. instruction in pU'blic schools," he continued.

"They keep educational stand­ Establish Religious ards high in ·that way. It is also obvious that Michigan's high Education Council educational standards could not NEWARK (NC) - A religious have prevailed in any event if education advisory council has school tax money had to be been established by the Newark spread over an enrollment archdiocese, to work in con­swelled by the addition of. chil ­ junction with the archdiocesan dren now being educated in school board and the Confater-, Lutheran, Catholic and other nity of Christian Doctrine. schools sponsored by religious At an organizational meeting bodies. here, Archbishop Thomas A.

Pay Gladly, If Able Boland of Newark specifically "Catholic parents know the charged the council to concern

comforts brought by moral itself with teacher training. training, and gladly pay to get Pastors, seminary officials, it for their children, as long as high school and college teachers, they are able to. chancery officials and the CCD

"It Is only the present stress­ office are represented on the 10­ful financial strain on all member council.

At the same time, guidanceUrge Eastern Rites personnel from more than 45

high schools in the archdioceseBishops Conference organized their own independ­DETROIT (NC)-The Associ­ ent Archdiocesan Guidance

ation of Catholic Men of Eastern Council. Rites (ACMER) here recom­mended that Ea!;tern-rite bish­ops in the United States organ­ Christmas Cards Ize along the lines of the United Rev. Eugenio Petrin, Cath­States Catholic Conference. olic Mission, ·Dem Dima, P.O.

The association suggested an Birpara, District Jalpaiguri, advisory council, which would West Bengal, India, requests serve as an adjunct to the pro­ used Christmas cards for chil ­posed Conference of Catholic dren in his mission. To avoid Bishops of Eastern Rites, forma­ customs duty, he notes, packages tion of which was urged by should be marked "No commer­ACMER last July, but not yet cial value; used Christmas cards; establishedl printed matter."

THE ANCHOR·-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Dec. 5, 1968

Higher Education New Jersey Legislature Enacts Measure

To Aid Private-Institution Students $1,000 for the year-for students from families with incomes up to $5,000. .

While the tuition act allo\"s funds to be used at all accred­ited institutions in the State, one provision just about limits its use to private colleges. The bill provides that the amount of tne grant in any semester may not exceed the normal tuition less $225. Tuition rates at state insti ­tutions do not exceed $450 and are considerably less at teacher­training schools.

The bill is looked upon as an attempt to assist students wish­ing to attend private institutions but lacking full resources to do so.

for a MERRY CHRISTMAS'

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VISITS: Bishop Antonio Fra­goso avoids clerical dress in visiting his poverty-stricken di­ocese of Crateus, Brazil, in his attempt to cause social change. NC Photo.

TRENTON (NC) - A bill de­signed to help students attending private colleges and universities in New Jersey has been ap­proved by the State Assembly, 65-6, and sent to Gov. Richard J. Hughes for his signature.

The measure provides tui­tion grants for children from families in the moderate and middle-income range" An initial appropriation of $400,000 has been .provided to cover first ­year costs.

The bill provides a sliding scale of benefits according to in­come. Grants range from $100 per semester for students from families with incomes up to $9,000, to $500 per semester-or

Page 6: 12.05.68

6 THE ANCHOR~Dioce'se of Fall River-Thurs., Dec; 5, 1968 ·'Advent ,~ ,The Moo~~.,g~'s

Christianity and Tea Cups A distinguished translator of Chaucer, Professor Nevill

Coghill, commenting on Chaucer's interest in manners, has, said, "One of the things I notice in the 20th 'Century is the decline of manners, the decay of honor and' what is noble and truthful. Good manners is Christianity applied, to teacups and coffee ,spoons."

Many ,present-day problems could 'be solved Iby 'a copy of Emily Post or Amy Vanderbilt.

Consider the generation gap. It is true that there is a tension and hostility between younger and older people. Much of this is due to the sweeping 'away of 'a paternalism that gave the floor, un other days, to older people' and ex­pected younger folks to sit quietly and listen without- ex­ternally, at least-talking back. Now such a paternalism is gone. And, as a result, there is a sometimes bitter ex­change of v.iews with an accompanying alienation of the one8'roup from the. other.

'Manners /would help in this adjustment., Older people should be able to present their views and the wisdom of their years but ,in an acceptable way,· with reverence for .their listeners. Younger people 'should :be 'able to grant Clourtesy to their elder-sand present ,their own reactions ' with a similar reverence and kindness. In 'an atmosphere of mutual politeness and dignity and patience there could be a reconciliation of varying viewpoints with the empha­sis on arriving 'at truth 'and the wise path to follow, instead ofa policy of dictation by the one group and arro­gant rejection by the other.

This would be Christianity in action.

Mood of the People Nationally-known pollster Dr. George Gallup told a New

York symposium recently that "never in my' time have the media of communic'ations been ,held in suc'h low esteem" by thegeileral public. He 'attributes 'this to. the "present: ~ excessive concern with sex, with conflict, and with contro­versy.". So many Americans, have already' had so' much "argument" in their own daily lives that they are weary of the steady diet of sex and conflict being fed to them by newspapers and television and advertising.

There is .a feeling that the communications media 'have lost a certain objectivity, ,and rather than rePorting the facts they are editorializing and trying to shape and influ­

the mooRlnqRev. John F. ,Moore, St. Joseph's, Taunton

B,A" M.A., MId.

A . 'I . ' .. ,

Conf~se~~(:~ ._~"',I ... ,';' ,,',/ 1

Commori~ea'ith The recent welfare investigation in this Commonwealth

again points oufthe sad state of Massachusetts government. Rampant crime and corruption in politics, a chaotic tax

ence' public opinion. In the process they have lost touch ·structure, superfluous dupHcation of government positions with the ,public and its desire ·for stability and continuity . and political patronage have as well as for change and progress. The 'public wish' is for brought this state to t'he evoluti'on-quick and decisive, yes--ibut not for revolution brink of disaster. A State with its tearing down of structures and the creation. of House that seems to have merely a vacuum into which chaos usually rushes. little concern for anything or

anyone beyond the cIty limits of Evoluti'on is not' a substitute for lethargy. Rather, it Boston has 'become devoid of

is 'a movement toward needed ch,anges taking into account any desire to clean-up the mess sound principles of human nature which is more in tune we now face in this state. In

fact, only recently an increasewith .gradual change than 'violent upheaval. Evolution im­in pay for legislators fromplies a change of basics and not merely a change of ap­ $10,000 to $12,000 was suggested

pearances. It means a change :in contents 'and not justa by members of this very f,allible change in packaging. But it also takes 'into account the· body. way people's minds work and g,rowand assimHate and Where is this all going to end?

When will Massachusetts reallydevelop. take government as a serious

The mood of the peopl.e is for evolution. public responsibility? The hard-working taxpayer,

the sincere and honest citizen can not take 1'00 much more of this political tragedy. What is truly needed is a complete re­form and overhaul of this state's . government!

In the past election this ques­~ion of a complete constitutional reform was brought to the at­tention of the voter. The legal­istic wording of this question on the ballot would confuse many ordinary voters as is the case with most ballot questions. Despite this handicap the first steps in constitutional reform received a sufficient number of votes to be of concern to the elected servants of the people.

Better Bay State' Government Need The question is what will

happen next?· ' Will this most important re­

forming device be buried' in' Boston? Many peopl.e in the@rheANCHOR present situation have a good thing going for themselves; they

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER could care less for any change. In fact, they will use every

· known trick in the book to stopPublished ~weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River any· type of constitutional re­

410 Highland Avenue form.

The citizens of this Common­wealth must act and act swiftly. They, literally, can no longer afford to ignore this serious situation and 'allow the present system. to continue. In addition to any question of morality or ethics, many home owners will lose their properties. The sales tax, and state income tax ,Will become so" unbearable that many people' will be driven to

Answer: I really felt that it was impos­

sible to let such a reply to my article. concerning NCR pass unnoticed.

I wish to congratulate our mysterious correspondent for his clever and ingenious,style in his ,well-written rebuttal; also his analysis and detail. .

With all this talent, why must the world be deprived of his identity? .

To go to such len'gths to con­ceal himself - even to having The Anchor make a 'check' into his' personage - certainly makes one doubt the objective­ness of such a correspondence.

In addition, a concern to dis­sect words and apply a subjec­tive interpretation -to these words seemingly led to miss the forest because of the trees. It is quite noticeable that the rebut-' tal paid little a,ttention to the NCR case as' such. The entire dimension of his letter was in­deed.. a limited one because of his heavy emphasis on seman­tics.

I feel that his verbal selec­tivity certainly limited the ef­fectiveness of his reply.

A concern for words even led him to make a pun, .. 'The Moor­ing' is slipping." "

This reminds me of a state­, ment by Oliver Wendell Holmes

which summarizes my case. Holmes characterized punning as "verbicide, Le., violent treat­ment of a word with fatal re­sults to its legitimate' ~eaning," , ,

THE' MOORING

Biafra Missioner -~ Accus'es,Sritain ::>~l. :-.. -,.. r!I', ~~ ..... \... ,j'l\ Iii •. ~. ..

LONDON (NC) ,;- A Cathollc missionary priest now back in London from Biafra has accused Britain of disastrous involve­ment - politically, .morally and economically - in the Nigerian ci~il war.

Father Dermot,' Doran, Irish Holy Ghost Father wo'rking full time for Caritas Internationalis, Vatican-based relief agency, said the British government had everything to lose ,and very lit ­tle to gain by contin,uing to sup­port the Nigerian government in its fight against breakaway Biafra.

Father Doran was one of the original Caritas team who helped break the Biafra block­ade by flying in medicine paid for by the United States.

He said the civil~ ~a,~ is full of irony. "You have the amaz­ing sight of British amored ve­hicles guarding the Lagos docks while Russian-made arms are unloaded. And on the other side you have ,the Biafrans buying Czechoslovakian small' arms and mortars to defen~ themselves againstshells."

Soviet bombs .,.

and

,. .. ~

Orthodox Theologian I ,':,f'

To Receive :Award WASHINGTON (NC)-Father

John Meyendorff,theology pro­fessor at' St. VladimIr's Ortho­dox Theological Seminary, ,Yon­

the borders of· mere subsistence. kers, N. Y., has ;been"named re-Fall River, Mass. 02722 675·7151 The struggle for a complete cipient of the 1968 Chrysostom

Legal Holiday' reform of constitutional govern- Award for his contributions to PUBLISHER BONN (NC)' - The Catholic men,t in this state will not be .the cause of the reunion of the

bishops of Yugoslavia have an easy one but it is a battie Orthodox and Roman CatholicMos't Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., ,PhD. asked the government to declare that Il}ust take place if we are Churches.

the two different days on which to have government ,by and for Father Meyendorff will re-GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL 'MANAGER 'the Roman Catholics and Ser- the people. ceive the award at a convocation

Rt. ,Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A.., . ,_ .Rev. John P. Driscoll. ' bian Orthodox celebrate Christ". , , ','Letls cleanse (thiS' horrid stain " arranged by, the, St., Paul Center · ~as.1egal"h!?lidays.: The Sel'bian,' from:, the' proud"heritage of thi~" Byzal)tine 'Ini-ormati011; . Bureau

.'. I· .'.•• - •

'. . ',' ; MANA'GING 'EDITOR ".~,'.' , ,. · Orthodox, celebrate Christmas.' state"and'. bring,better','govern:- ,.,here, to ,be held at the Catholic

.. Hugh J.9o.ldel.'l, ·,LL.B. ' .:. \'.',.: ' , • , .;on the feast:9f.~he:~piphany. <.ment to:.Massachusetts. :,'-, . UniversltY·,of ..Ame.rica.,

Page 7: 12.05.68

7 THE ANCHOR­Thurs., Dec. 5, 1968

Foresees Czech, Vatican Talks

BONN (NC) - Prospects for negotiations between the Holy See and Czechoslovakia on church affail's in that country appear good at the present time, Bis.hop Fraritisek Toma­sek, apostolic administrator of Prague, said in that city.

Bishop Tomasek, who had re­turned from a visit to Rome, told Lidova' Demokracie that, although the climate for. talks appears favorable, he had not predicted, as reported, that talks between the Vatican and the Czechoslovak government will take place soon. He added that nothing can be said at this time as to a date or place for such negotiations.

Meanwhile, the deputy pre­mier of Czechoslovakia, Gustav Husak, speaking at a Communist party in· Slovakia, the eastern region of Czechoslovakia, said the current religious revival in the eountry, particularly in the Eastern region, will be tolerated but that tolerance must be mutual.

"There must be no terror groups of one side .01' the other

members of ·the eommunity or COMMOTTEE FOR ATTLEBORO AREA: Northern Deanery representatives finalizing plans for to bully people in the villages," obstructs the normal functions the ~ishop's Charity Ball on Jan. 10, are: seat.~d, Miss Emily Medeiros, hospitality; Mrs. John said Husak, who is chief of the of the university. is cause for J. Mullaney, decorations, Miss Angela Medeiros, hospitality. Standing, Mrs. Edward F. Gallag­ Slovak Communist party. "The separating from the community han, ticket committee chairman; Rev. Roger D. Leduc, area coordinator; Mrs. Harry B. loew, pres- people must be able to choose those who indulge in such ac­ of Attleboro DCCW.! . freely." He added that "afterident tion." 20 years of socialism we are too

"There has Ibeen considerable . far from the 17th century to static from outside the univer­ fight religious wars." sity and a good deal from inside, Jewish MP Receives Papal Grand Cross Stating that the revival of the

demonstra­as ~ result of the Catholic religion in Slovakia is tion," Father Hesburgh ac­ Recognize Service to Catholic Education one of the specific matters dis­knowledged. \ cussed in government circles,

'Your University' LONDON' (NC) - The prob­ some of the cost involved. Gregory at ,present is Douglas Husak said that "a democratic"I could have acted unilater­ lems of Catholic education in England's only other Knight Woodruff, former editor of the principle must be applied to this

ally, and many have accused me Britain highlighted 'bY'were a Grand Cross of the Order of St. Tablet, national Catholic weekly. problem."of weakness or lack of leader­ papal honor for a Jewish Mem­ship in not doing so. However, ber of Parliament and a confer­I much prefer to appeal to you, ence of Catholic teachers. for this is your community and Leslie Lever is only the sec­your university and it cannot be this toond. layman in countrywhat it ·should be without your hold the papal Knighthood Grandsupport," he said. ACross of the Order of St.. Greg­

Father Hesburgh called on the ory.whole university community to Lever, Labor party Member"take a stand" through the Stu­ SUBSCRIPTIONof Parliament for Ardwick, partdent Life Council, the Faculty of the big industrial city ofSenate and the Academic Coun': Manchester, received his newcil. Declaring that "freedom TOhonor for his services to Cath­cuts both ways," he said that if olice education.the univeflsity community will

Under Attackdeclare itself, "I shall take whatever action is appropriate if As a non-Catholic politician the situation is repeated." held in the greatest respect, his The ANCHOR

Father Hesburgh indicated championship of the separate that in his view the students· Catholic schools inside the na­involved in the episode ·should tional free educational system be put on disciplinary probation, has h~d great influence. For Only $4.00 (Mailed anywhere in the United States)and added, "I would be inclined Many. members of his own to use the occasion for greater party and many. other people in- . profit in ,the future by not sus­ eluding some l}ducators. would ',,~~""""""""""-------------------------------------------pending them, but by declaring like to see both the. voluntary : ~lye J\ndror 410 HIGHLAND AVE., FALL RIVER, ~ASS. 02722 :" our intentions clearly for any Catholic schools inside the state , . future recurrence." system and also the big private , Enclosed find, $ for Gift Subscription for: •, ,' fee-charging, public schools

: PLEASE PRINT PLAINLY:Diocese to Sponsor abolished 'Snd one single form of , .education provided for all. , . , .Non-Pr·ofit Housing Separate Catholic schools in­ , ~ame :........................................................................................ •, .NASHVILLE (NC) - Bishop side the national system come , .

Joseph A. Durick has announced regularly under attack. Even : Address ~...................................................................................................................................................... :the formation of a non-profit some Catholics oppose them be­ , .

corpor~tion - Diocesan Proper- eause' of the great and fncreas­ , . ties Incorporated - to sponsor ing financial dl"ain they ~mpose , City State Zip : ,

•,housipg.developments for per- . on the developing Catholic sons of low and middle incomes. Church in England and Wales. GIFT CARD SHOULD READ: ,The first such' project will be a $2 riHllion development in East Of Supreme Value ••Nashville consisting' of 160 units The most usual general objec- From

•,•of two-story garden apartments. tion is tha,t ordinary non-Cath­Initial. "s~.ed money" was made olic British taxpayers have to ............................................................................ Street : City-State ,,available'by the diocese and the provide money to build and financing will be insured by the maintain separate schools for

, Parish to receive credit , .. ,,

,Federal Housing Authority~ Oatholics. Such objections over­

. ,,, '

Construction will begin with- look the fact that the state -----~----------,-------------,------------------,-"-,.,_." .....in a month and eompletion is would have ,to find school places scheduled '·for the late Fall of for the children concerned in FOR ADDITIONAL GIFTS USE SEPARATE SHEET AND CUP TO ABOVE 1969. The air'-condHioned apart- any case., . I .' • ~ t I. I. '1. • ., .'

. ments -ar~·· eXtpededj 'to rent for ;., CathOliosl by accepting the ad ...·" • I ; (~. ~ ):) I " ;., For,'4!cid\ t-year Subscription' to. , ... '. . .1' $82, $9~'~and $102 pet'month for' " d'itionaf···bl1rden· 'of; 'helping too', '.j;':' Canada::Mexico; So. America, Central AmericQ ,oJ"}d ,Sppi.r.l t Qdd ..$1.00 for postage

one, ,two''' 8?d{ t~~ee: .~edroom'" 'JjU~ld tl'teir own 's.c?ools <act~ally' .., :'/~I/;;};g;i&~/L-:r:tg;)~/~Jk!:A//j<£l#(.I1<.!.6t>;j~~:Io/.~·,~~;*~~:;.Y.;J:~i.J.~(LI.ly' rz.1/_~!..'X II?-: IY- I/.:,'~""', units.'respe-ctlvely...·.'· • ','. reheve·lthe-'rest of the natfon of "'7'- '- , ­.~~~~~~~~~~~~~,~'Ii:~"--.~"C., '<.-

Father Hesburgh Labels Student. Protest Tyranny

NOTRE DAME (NC) ­The president of the Univer­sity of Notre Dame labeled as "clearly tyranny" a stu­dent demonstration which pre­vented a Central Intelligence Agency representative from con­ducting job interviews in the administration building here.

Father Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., said the 30 students who blocked the CIA interviews in the university's placement office "used their freedom of action to obstruct the freedom of oth­ers and to impose their own per­sonal convictions on others."

Conceding the sincerity of the students' moves, Father Hes­burgh termed their action "com­pletely out of order" in a free university society. The incident, which took place while Father HesbiJrgh was off campus, fol­lowed a 44-hour peaceful vigil against CIA and Dow Chemical CO. recruiters.

Ina letter to the entire Notre Dame student body and iaculty, Father Hesburgh said: "Most universities have already stated clearly that while peaceful pro­test. i·s legitimate, protest that infringes on the rights of other

Page 8: 12.05.68

.-.;.

8 --' THE ANCHOR~Diocese of Fall Rive,r-T.hurs.~ Dec. 5, 1968 . .

Subscriptions, Beauty Items

Answer,Shoppi'ng Probler:ns / By Marilyn Roderick

Are you rushiIrg around frantically at this moinent trying. to find the perfect present ror those speciilJ people on your gift list? Have you searched and searcheq ·through

,crowded department stores" 'and waited in endless ..li!1es ".' . to have your package 'gift '. '. wrapped? Is your Christmas high', while the subscription rate Club check running out when is really quite reasonable:

OU still have a billion or.Ymore gifts to buy. If your answer to' these questions is a. r e so u n din g"yes," then. in

all . probability : , what you r,eally . need is ,Ii Ca­'bb . fl ean cruise: instead of a' bout of Christ ­mas shopping;..

.' ,but since De­

'c e m b e r 25th rolls a r o. un d. before you· k now it and . d f .. d since your family an flen Sth t will expect more on a morn­ing than a picture postcard say-,ing "Wish you were here," the

d t gift list must be returne o.However, perhaps y-ou can re­turn to it with a fresh outlook.

Try Thoughtfulness "It's not the gift, but the'

thought," may be a hackneyed phrase but it still has a ring of truth. Thoughtfulness often t·akes a little more concentra- . ''lion but not necessarily more money. That thoughtful aunt' with taste might really enjoy a subscription to a m-on.thly maga­zine such as Gourmet or Yankee.

.The former is difficult -to ob­

tain at many news stands and is a joy for. any cooking enthusi­ast to receiv.e on a regular basis. Yankee is published in Dublin, N. H., by t,he people who publish the Farmer's Almanac and it J

has the same New Englandy charm that is, found ·:iiJ. th~t yearly oracle..

Such mar.velo\ls Catholic fam­il~; magazines as Marriage, pub-· lished by Abbey Press, Sign, Critic and., Ave .Maria would make idelil, 'i~for~ative pres-'; ents that" ~oUl((';o~',., e·njoyeB.'. 'by" e~ery' mefuber of thehO',useti01d:; the whole year through. . .

'If your r.elatives or friends jn- . clude ,.a '/ery fasnio.n conscibus Miss. or Mrs., ~think of gifting her with: .vogue', or' lllirper's Bazaar. The news' stand "prices.. of these fashion bibles are. quite

. . ." -',' - .;. '..":: ,-.' .... ./ .. ,

Warns Against Moves

While on -the subjecfof what ..· to give the fashion minded, let's" not forget the beauty gifts.The". ov.e).:,,;th~l,couptIjYi'J1~lpjn.~~~'lr~-. curlers. that heat and curl l'n " t I th I. .'. ce!y,e"Jat\d' re,.se .t~. ~J~)o1l..f ....~Jl~S:,.~ minutes are still'number one on F' t d' t f V' t the 1.I·sts 'of gl'fts to I'mprove (or " Irs. :jl§" l,r~~. °rIJL'?f,l •. 1E:,saIVi.";

(l and la-ter as Far East .;o.iJ~~lU' ( maintain) the looks of one of ,': forI. $;~Il ih~i: 'Y.a~ ,g·rep~),y"j t;e~ your. favorl'te :.fem·ales. f d t', spe9t.~d,.or)li~' ~:VO. IOl]rIJC!)·,tpe"

I myself haven't. ,tried t,hese, .. . . car~ ...qf,Ahe re~uge~&"bd~ 'I~1l1!." curlers bU,t I c!;1'd -'p','ot~·,~, e that an. .. '. . " d': :w J.~IS ,d~~re~~. "~\,\IjlJ~~'rw 9~eJl

:artl'cle I read' the o'ther day , ~ N . de~oFi~tio.n" 0 ....· the~ , ~t~<!I)alJi Orr~ .. ' about what Mrs. Johnson found. . I'ndl'spensable, . I'n" ',her travel . TO:' MARK "'ANNiVERSARY: Manuel,A. Gomes, Holy F.amil,Y i: der, ..§e~~>nd~9~!is,..t.Q: ~sgJj.':liar:'i

." net; Pii:~sideq~ '!'\1~~u'&9lle9i;(..him w<lrdrobe had put -the heated parish, Taunton, president of Massachusetts Catholic" Labor. "a .venerated missionary,)wlth. a.. curlers as, a must. on her. 'liS~.·.'· Guild, holds picture of Kennedy brothers presented to guild, Mrs.' Johnson's' hair always .by Kenneth _O'Donnell, aide' of late President,. at ceremonies lo'oks as I'f she J'ust ~tepped out' k' . -. t' '1'5th' AI t "f b'mar mg organlza Ion s anniversary. so par. 0 0 ­

,of a· beau'tl'cI'a'n's ch'al'r, so l·t . M H ICC h d I B f II d. servance was ass at 0 y ross at e ra, oston" 0 owe . would seem as l"f her use of them . . , , by banquet ' '--, .; would be a high recommenda-:'··'; r. tional'd.

f~r this particular lbeauty

Low C~t'-G'-ifts'

I.f your gift~giving budget· doesn't allow spending the $15 that even the smallest of .these curler sets costs, do not despair, there are' many other beauty items that you can afford. Have you thought of gifting a brunette rel~tive with a dynei braid to aid her hairdresser in creating some fun hairdo, or even a 'few" pin-on curls to add' zing 'to a'n'" otherwise 'ordinary coiffure:': ..

False fingernails' 'imd false eyelashes are not the sorf of beauty aids a housewife will buy' for herself, but seeing there's Ii lijtle Delilah .in us all,' they would bea' delightful, luxurious gift to receive.

F p'.. armer . ower· ..

Fran'ciscan Sister Sugge,sts Federation

Of All Organizations ' .. '

ST. PAUL (NC)-A nun who then refusing ,to attend meet­maintains a special interest in ings." farm probl~ms has called for a Sister Thomas More stressed federation of all existing farm that a federation .of all ·farm or­organizations' to help' .'create, , .ganizations woul!(provide agri-, what she· described as "fariner'-s culture' :Wfth ;;;;a!)"uhitea'j~front' power;" '. ·f. '".- .' , L' r"';: J'~o/. which,. sne" siiid, woulCl:give',the

S· 't 'M T'''h':' ,","., MO, ,',; 'f ft'13 ,industry'··th~' P'oWer~'W('needs)':iri r IS er . omas ore 0 ue th k·t' d' th'" l't' 1

Franciscan Sisters of' Christian e mar e . an e po I Ica Ch·t h' t f' t arena.afl y, 'IS ory pro essor aCt II' S IHoly Famiiy College, Manito-" on ro mg upp y woc, Wis., addressed the annual In addition' to creating a fed­meeting ,here of the Farmers . er~tion, S~~ter~h?m,~s More ; Union Grain Terminal Associa- saId t~e farm ?rga!llzab?~,s al~o._;)

Rural Bottled: Gd~ Service ,.U ,0...;.:',;._. 't­ jl1~)Vt·~\

';<1 ,At .CO,~~,~N~r ~J ;:'-:,. :'m;'~...· lAUNTON t'l·)'ff).'

, Attleboro":'" ·Nb:~Jfttl~¥.'b'':~ ,hnrf::J!o (".

. . ,.. ' } T~,u.~t,o.n ,'189'<: .: ..

;"n InR'-~'

" Aluminum or Steel·,. .944 County "Streek. '

NEW BEDFORD, ':-M:ASS. ~i .. 992-6618,,·.:1, It .,'

CCOIN ~A[Q)" SfEGaJ~N' ~ODY c©M.pA~'t·

T~y ~aklng ~~l1S ChrIstmas the ers, and said they 'are '.'notorious· in agriculture," She' safd.· ... year that yOU put., as . m.uch for joining' organizations, and tho1Jgh~. as you do ,m-o~ey mto ~~ur gifts, a~d you ll ..fmd that Supreme Court Refuses It s really. much more. fun, to, . . bl' give than receiv,e. ',:.'" . . To Hear.~i 'e 'Case", . ' .. '

WASHINGTON ..(NC) -'-'-,The'

To.. 'lnd,i,a. ni.~e' t·.ltur,g·y. .' Prelate Cites' Human u. s. Supreme Court refused tohear...a challenge brought by two .

~ANGA~OR~ (NC)'::- I~d~a's" Needs of Migrants 'Presbyterian, minister~ ,against

hnaastlownaalr'neld,l~ubrl'~SlhcO~pls~·.ca,on,md',!llp.lr~l.se}s.'?t·ns· .... " ·'''S.AN JUAN" (NC)·.:....!.Afcbbrshop·~ a .course at .. ,the University" of. L A t f S Washington dealing. wUh t!:te

against in,qjvJq~al... moves ~Q., UIS .po~1! e... o .an Juan" ~peak- ': Biibleas literature.: _ , ...:" "IndianizeJ thetliJlitgy. "~' . '.:' -; ,~~9,~ .:he~e;~n 't~e hurpan n~lfds of, T.,h,e ..·R.,e.. vs ... ·. Tho.m·as. 'W. ,M.. i.ller. . '} .' ,; .""- " ...> .' .;~:m~gran~~, t s.ald ~he rmgrant ,c.

The CqpPplss,~~nLfo~ ;:t.olturg~,;i; :;"~ho'uli:l 'b~"for Us.c·li can ;\0 get ~,' of Seattle and Harold Webb of of; the ~ndlan Bishops Confer­ rid of certain prejudices toward ,:. Tacoma charged thaf' the ,course en~e sa.ld ',h,ere that, although :<"our~:breth'ren in religion, and ,,( ,,,. . ' ...... '.' , '-,,, "

d­ t t h t b d d :­ blends' secular' and 'sectarian in': a -,"P a. IOn as o.,e 0~7,~?... ~to devel,op,.. l\Q), .appreciation oa str..'u.'ctiori' ~£~i~'·suc,h,::a-'.ma,-nri~~,:: ~s . th,~re IS no n~ed;,~o, 1>,ro.~~Ai1':~~t.:-f~the'~ricbries$:' ,tli'eY~'br1ng us It ~" ..., , sh.,?uld be p~ecetlea -.by..,~~seri~us·' ~"ls"'~ ciil{"i6 )'o't.~ijo'W}t rene~al."j to;idE.!m~~~, .jh~' :t;~diii~na{ ~~n~ : study and Wide survey." A hb' h A . .!. t f G d d th 'b'l".~, ':~>1:-~'~":7.';"'~l~"J;,f IS op ponte,lnastate-';' cep·o 0 ;'an'-, eBI e.,,"';~·

::''':Ne . cannot 'affo~:f·~!?~~~elt~~~Si i~,\Ifp'Jon behalf of 'the~.ir..." whimSical and cannot· reduce .. Puerto Rican Episcopal Confer-: '.: \.' tile sacred liturgy"...Jo: ~a,JH:if1;1i\l!i:erice, of which' he is chairman,;; innovations," "the,. ,coIl)m.ci.~.(liop., poipt,ec;l ,to., sl,Ich social problems .': de.s:lared in a sta!ement by. its ' as 'iopeliness, .. sEiparatron of mi-~' chairman;' 'ArchoishojF' Dohii-1 "(gr~nts fi-dm tlt'elr'fliinii'fes, diffi-;; samy Lourdusamy of~angalore, '; cuities, in.scbool-.and the like. ,',.

;I. .,,::~ ,"' .''''l,. ..,. 1" .~ • • ....... ~ -l. .• -¥ ~",,_ ...... f "; '(0,

Those who want to,exp.eti- .."Th.e Catholic Church, wor- e:' 'l'nt, said, -t~e archbi~b"p, 'hf6's't',\)T'iedl,"'~; J~MiY,s,. b,e.,caus.e of -the ,2,_ h ve bhe.Ndvice\J\!'»9'~~ldlJnoe=.pf pr!l'W.~\llf\ ~f"ben;~·n~ren.1/.""hel> e. el'ts\": fil'Aj~ tI.ii'g~;·j 1il"dilflf "'~u'l­ ar~tiDf~flOll;~tii'tl, "\i~' ffi1f~~~;et

:t ~~O'-l!''':~~~Q~~~\l­'"especially in Hinduism." lems which migration creates."

~erh~ps the femaie who has· 'tion (GTA). must become more dem.ocrabc you il} a.,quanc;lry giftwise is a .' . wi,thin themselves.. close member of your family for Sister ..Thomas· M~re, who She said that part of the'an­whom ~ou· .want. to :.sp.1urge a made ,a s~udy of Amencan farm, swer to farm pr&blems'is' con';' little. Tailored sweaters. and ?rg~~~zatlOns.;~~ ~~r ~octorate. trolling suppiy: At the same' skil'tsa,re .~e,ria~nlY' the' practical, ~n, .IS orY,.sal a. arm organ~ time, she added, farine'ts 'inust' thipg.)o ..b1-lY,. b.1;l.t who wan,ts "to ' lZt~hOtnds,. ~s J~ey, Cife no~. ;dC.9~- work' to 'increas'e-' d~idnd fo'i­be pracHc~l.. at ,Christm.as. In- s l~lJe d' are n~t mtereste :n their ·products. ' "'11', ".' "',,

stead of hiking. over to some the, ,goq of -th ..emdustry,~or. n The 'big'push-iIi pon'ti'cs, eca:" staid .emporium,. jaunt .( or jog) the ;.good ..of.. th~ farlT\er --::- the. nomics and :religion:-is' toward .

creature they all say, they rep- ·t S· t "T'h' ., M ... ' ..down to' .t1:tat sqlart little bou- \ ' "". ' . '. um y IS er omas ore as­tique anq. indulge l1lj!r with a resent. Th7y .are. 111~e:este,?' m serted. , .' frilly blouse a d b 11 b tt d only one· thmg. bemg nght. "I h h' thO t 'th ' .. . n. ~ - 0 orne ....., - ave ope a e same_ pants a lao Harl~w. . The nun also criticized. 'farm- unitarian effort is on the' brink' .

'Vi,etnam Honors CRS Offici·al

SAIGON (NC) - In a" short ceremony at. Independence Pal­ace here President Nguyen van Thieu awarded Vietnam's second highest national decoration to Msgr. Joseph J. Harnett of the U. S. Ca-tholic Relief Services (eRS) fo"r his work for V:iet­namese refugees since 1954. The highest national decoratioH~'is given only to chiefs of state.' . ,

Ml;lgr. Harnett fi~&t 9~j11E?'11o VietJ;}am in August, 19:Hhl\M~~n., . refugees frqm North \Y~~~~lJm . were .already str~aming'!.Q,to:;tl).~ SOl,\th. ,·.fI~set up theJ·.S.~iggl)., of, fice of Catholic Relief..;~!l~i~es

... anOc~~Aravelled :,~xtensi~~J,.y ?ij!ll

:"

.." '.;": ::~""f'l" ,,,' ,'.j

'.

,',;

1,

ch~'riiable heart~"r . ...;' ':. :, T,l}!!!,citation state!:!: '(~drfl.':)'_'_"

W· . . d," Ith 'spI,flh~aJ;, an. '. lIlaterial means he made ~ yaluaplE! con­tribution during. the 1954 exodus of>~'e~rlY pne, milli9.lkdtefugees

leaying NorU). ;Vietnamrffor the South, to E!scap~,froql..,th,e·com­munist yoke.. From '}95~,to 1966, he visited and comfonted the refugees throughout South Viet­nam. Because of.' bis ) notable wor~ and his :~ig~!spirHi~f'sac­rifice the VJetn.a~e!>e ~ ,people will remember Monsignor·, Har­nett with respect and~c.admira­tion."

,; ,"Takes Office'-l)f'·'IV.L J~ ,-,~~: ~:Jd'i v ~"~l('" ".'

MIf'\-%J J(~~ hG'"",!h1,e\VIl,y,li!~rs", ag9 ~oe, La.ng .KE!rshI'\W, ~6,.be­

came the first Negro member of Miami Council, Knights of' Columbus. Now he has become the first of his race ~since the' 1880's to take the oath oJ!, office as ,ll ,;F.~orida l~gislafoI.

··~.•1·"'" j" .)l!bC'ii ;',

;,!.-,

:::

Page 9: 12.05.68

9 Advent Offers Opportunity To C,eme,nt Family Bonds

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

Did you ever notice that }t's the 9ther fellow ~ho gets a deal on everything he buys? It seems that MarIlyn and I always buy something and then. see it for. sale a week 'after we' have paid top dollar for It. ,Well, thIs year we managed to 'get ourselves a deal of which we are very proud. For the past few years we have been giving the children manger figures for the feast of St. Nicholas and of course buying them one at, a time we have been paying the going price.

This year we took advantage of a reiocation sale at our local religious goods store and bought our St. Nicholas Day gifts at a discount.

So tomorrow the children will receive the Three Wise Men and another sheep for their manger. At the present rate we ought to have it completed by the time the olrl1dren are ready for col­lege, but I am sure we will ap­preciate our manger more than someone who buys it complete.

December 6th is St. Nicholas Day and we have made it a praet1ce to have a little celebra­tion on that day as part of our Advent observance. We don't pretend that St. Nicholas brings gifts, but we do give the chil ­dren small gifts on that day. St. Nicholas does not have the impact of Christmas, nor does he replace Santa Claus in the eyes of the children, but it is a good time to impress them with the spirit of Christmas and the meaning of giving and sharing.

In the Kitchen ' Marilyn usually makes c'ookies

on this day and one of thse days we hope to pick up a St. Nicho­las, cookie mold so that We can go along with that custom of so many years. But for the present we will have to stick with what­ever Marilyn can' design to fit the purpose.

As with any of these observ­ances, we feel that it really doesn't make any difference how you celebrate the occasion, but what's important is that you do make a special event out of a special day in the Church cal­endar. We don't even' try to" teach a lesson on these days, but let them' ta'k'e care of them­selves. The children take from it Whatever they want to, any­way, so it really doesn't make too much difference what you think is important. Too much stress ~n teaching might end up souring the day for them any­way, so the less said the better.

In our household Advent takes on as much meaning as Christmas Day itself and like so many other important events in our lives preparing for it is nine-tenths of the enjoyment. From the stirring, of the fruit cake on "Stir-up Sunday" to the opening of the last window in the Advent Calendar and the lighting of the final candle on the Advent wreath, it is a time of joyful preparation for the birth of Christ.

This year, because of the re­cent death of my ,beloved fathe~,

I am way 'behind on my prepa­rations. I haven't decided what fruit cake recipe I'll use, the ingredients are, still resting in that, specialty shop and not on my kitchen shelves, the candles'

.labor leader SANTA BARBARA (NC)

Alling farm labor leader Cesar Chavez is a guest of the Frands-. can Fathers here while he is utldergoing.\physieal1therapy for

haven't been bought for our wreath, and yet I know that Advent will be celebrated in this house and that it will bring with it a special joy and peace of mind.

New Year As the new Church year be­

gins with the holy season of Advent, it is the perfect time to keep Christ in the home as well as in Christmas. Customs that help Advent become more meaningful to the children of the family also bring the famil)' closer together. In a world that is constantly being told that the family structure is weakening, any'effort on our part to cement it is no effort at all. When I view the families of our good friends who work so hard at making their children awa-re of Christ at all seasons I take of­fense at all these articles about careless parents; but it is during such a season of joy as Advent that we can renew the family.

Here's a good basic cookie to use if you're for'funate enough to own a St. Nicholas cookie mold, or any other· cookie cut­ter for that matter. '

SPECULAAS 1 cup butter 1 cup shortening' (other than

butter) , ·'2 'cups brown sugar, firmly

packed 1,1! cup sour cream If.! teaspoon baking soda 4 'teapsoons ground cinnamon

% teaspoon ground cloves . 4% cups sified all-purpose flour

% cup chopped nuts 1) .Crea'm together the butter,

'shortening, and sugar. 2) Add the sour cream alter­

nately with the' sifted ingre­dients to the creamed mixtu~e.

3) Stir in the nuts" .' . ' 4) Knead the dough and shape

into rolls. Wrap in clear wrap and put in the refrigerator at

" least overnight. . 5) Roll the dough very thin

and cut into shapes with a cookie cutter or if you!re artis- . tic you can whip up a cardboard pattern of the good Saint and cut around it.

6) Bake 10 to 15 minutes in a 375 0 oven.

7) Decorate with colored icing.

Aid to Pdvate Schools Realistic, !Bishop Says

AUCKLAND (NC) '-In con­sidering stepped-up assistance to independent schools the New Zealand governtment is "simply being realistic," Bi'shop John P. Kavanaugh of Dunedin said here: ,

The New Zealand government is currently looking into the question of making loans for independent school 'buildings and increased per capita grants.

Bishop Kavanaugh, who is chairman of the New Zeal~nd

Catholic Educational' ,Council" said at St. Paul's High School here that in, giving timely assist ­ance' when' independent schools are fighting for their existence, the government will. save. a a large amount of money later.

He said the alternative t<> state aid could well be the clos­ing of many independent schools. He .then cited the c0':l- ~ g~l. H~ ,.~l.s?,:.~ri.ti~iz~d.,l~bor-.... ..' .. "se~uefiees ofr'a: 'cutbacK';irr:lhe D

management' .relatIons -m.P.ortu- ..:AC,,'~A)D~MY BlJl~D1N~:; ,F,~l~. ~IVER" 'MA .

NO GENERATION GAP: There are no gaps for five gen­erations of the family of little Kelly l. Smith,~eing held by her great. great grandmother, Mrs. Mary C.ormler of Sacred Heart' Home, New Bedford. From left, standing, great grand­ma Mrs. Edward Morris, grandma Mrs. Raymond laPorte and mommy Mrs. Barry Smith. No babysitting problems here, but there might be a spoiled baby.

Form' Battle Lines Pr~ponents vs Opponents ·of State Aid . To Illinois Private Schools

SPRINGFIELD (NC)-Famil­iar battle lines are being formed again on the matter of state aid to private schools in Illinois.

Chief proponents of such aid in'clude Citizens for Educational Freedom '(CEF), the National Association for Personal Rights in Education (NAPRE), and the Catholic bishops of Illinois.

Opponents include Americans for Separation of Church and State, the American Civil Liber­ties Union;. the American Jewish Congress, and the Seventh Day Adventists. .

In between are the Illinois' legislators, most of whom ~ave

remained publicly uncommitted on the matter.

Several .legislators have ex­pressed sympathy, in prinicple, for the idea of state aid for financially distressed private schools (most of which are Catholic), but none has advo­cated specific proposals for such aid - partly through fear of committing themselves too soon, partly through a lack of knowl­edge about the proposals, and partly because of reservations

Portuguese Bishop's .Return Rumored

LISBON (NC) - There are widespread rumors here that Bishop Antonio Ferreira Gomes of Oporto, who has 'been in exile since 1959, will be allowed ,to return to the country.

Former Premier Antonio de Oliveira. Salazar exiled Bishop. Ferreira Gomes after the bishop had 'sent the premier a letter criticiZing his policies and warning that Portugal faced the threat of a violent upheaval of­an anarchic-communist nature.

It was reported that the-bishop said the threat was due to the "autocratic" form of Salazar's government, which led to social injustice.

According to the bishop, "rags and tatters, hunger and misery"

about the constitutionaUty of granting such aid.

Among the proposals being made by the various advocates are: tuition grants for parents and students, free busing, text-. book loans, provislons for the teaching of secul~r subjects, and auxiliary services.

First. Amendment The key objection alleged by

opponents of these requests is that the state, by granting any or all of them, would violate safeguards contained in the, First Amendment to the Consti ­tution which provide for sepa­ration of church and state.

Of secondary concern to some opponents is the fear that state aid to private schools would open the way for future con­trols .being put on private edu­cation by the state.

For a few persons, there is fear that Catholic attitudes and practices will "creep" into the secular educational system in Illinois.

The most frequent comment made by opponents of state aid goes somethirlg like this: "We have no objection to religious schools as long as those people involved are willing to pay for their own system and do not force others to help foot their bill." . ~

THE ANCHOR­Thurs., Dec. 5, 1968

Renew Emphasis On Bible Reading

NEW YORK (NC) - A long­range program to observe the 200th anniversary of American independence with a renewed emphasis on the Bible was given the green light here by the 50th Advisory Council meeting of the American Bible Society.

The proposal calls for steppi ng up the distribution of the Scrip­tures in the United States to ex­ceed 100 million annually by

. 1975. Other goals of the "Assign­

ment'76" campaign are to have a Bible in every American home and to encourage more persons to practice daily Bible reading.

This year for the first time, a representative of the Roman Catholic Church participated as a delegate of the Advisory Council. Father Louis F. Hart­man, C.SS.H., director of the Catholic Biblical Association, told the council members he "could see no reason" why good translations of the Scriptures made by Protestants could not be used by Catholics and vice versa.

The Advisory Council com­mended the United Bible Socie­ties and the Vatican Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity for "Guiding Principles for In­terconfessional Cooperation in Translating the Bible," released last May. Its purpose is to guide scholars and translators in many lands who are now involved in joint translation projects.

Vatican Releases Series Of Christmas Stamps

VATICAN CITY (NC) -The Vatican has released a series of three postage stamps for the Christmas season, depicting the infant Jesus of Prague resplen­dent in a robe, wearing a crown and holding an orb in his right hand.

The issuance of the stamp, in values of 20, 50 and 100 lire. marks the first time in several years that some form of Nativ­ity scene has not been used,

The stamp was designed by miniaturist Casimira' Qabrowska.

DEBROSS OIL co.

Heating Oils and Burners

365 NORTH FRONT STREET NEW BEDFORD

992-5534

~ .

F. ·L. COLLINS .& SONS INCORPORATED 1937

GENERAL CONTRACTORS and, ENGI NEERS

JAMES H. COLLINS, C.E., Pres. Registered Civil and Structural Engineer

Member' National Society Professional Engineers

FRANCIS ,L. COLLINS, JR., Treas.

were still widespread in portu-THQ""~~~,....~OLL.I~~,~~cy."",. ',.'" ".'Ss a'·back ailf!1~\ !~a ~ap~B<trl'" . ~.atll~li~ .•sc~9Qt:,~Yst!!.m,.l;lecause ~ g~jl an~."l~,e,n.~,u 9-~rd. t,he, ~.d.en..i.a_,l . , . , , bilra hosp'i~l~ .•. , . ~ .. ~ ',','; '.~t.f~lj\!~~i~.I~J?J:o~l~mi·.~·~1 v o 1h~:J'T.'I.a.<1ht.".~ ,~)', ~••••!.. .. ? strike.", ; n .; ~~~ :

' "..J ' 1\ .·.~l){ J,' !" '. ,~I ..~~• .! \ ..CLt~ :(.. \ r c." .• ;"~ r t: c'C..:r_ ~;.; : ~ I' :. ::~.: ~.: ~ _-__• .:_-:1 .:. :. C~ .:,-.;-:..~ [";;::~.,;>":lt.':"X.~. -..:-., ""':::,.'7.t,.:-.. - .':'a.~~~ _-_::--0:--.. 0 1:;~·c.:-~: ...r'·_...t.~~~ ...l"...~ ...:'"'"~•• '" : ....~.~.;.::. .... ~ ~ .... _'ll_.

Page 10: 12.05.68

~. . ~~. ~t.·';~-l'''''l ,....;,1"'" . ~.. "-. '.;:

10 "THE ANCHOR-' '. ,.. ". .' . s C ;'Thu,rs., Dec:- ;:f;'H'r9~:~ '1(ilnt~tfaith .Service at t~ ,James hurch

Contrasts Public, C'atholic Systems .5Ch00I B Udgets

CINCINNATI (NC) Archbishop Karl J. Alter of Cincinnati compared the op­erating 'budgets of public and Catholic school systems here to underscore the critical financial

situation of the Catholic schools. The archbishop tol9 a pas­

toral council meeting 'here that the Cincinnati Board of Educa-

I

tion spends more than $500 a. year for each pupil in. public schools, whereas in schools of the ,archdioc~se the, per-pupil cost is from $165 to $200.

The Cincinnati- public school, board, responsible' for 85,000 pupils, has a -budget of more than $52 ,million now and has hopes of increasing i,t to more than '$58 million, Archbishop Alter said.

The archdiocesan schools, "with nearly 91,000 pupils, have 'approximately one':third as ,?uch money. "But there is n~t. Just one budget for the CatholIc schools," .the archbishOp empha-' sized. "The parishes are sepa-' rate legal entities, each with its own budget."

Teachers' Salaries Totat" receipts in all 260 par­

~shes of the archdiocese come to about, $25 million, but the 105 parishes without schools account for only about $3,3 million, while the balance comes to the 155 parishes that operate schools.

"And 70 per cent of all parish income goes to school opera­tions," Archbishop Alter stated. . ?ne of the major .factors in

rISIn? school costs IS teacher sa~~nes, the archbishop noted.

In. t~e past year teachers' ~~la;;e~ In .fl~r S,;h~Ols ~;nt up

. mI I~n, ~ sal . Be­cause of the increasing propor­tion of lay teachers-now 52 per cent of. the total, 'and the "con­t t ' 1 l' f .S an . esca a Ion o. salanes,"

Archbishop Alter said, "I don't see how we're going to make it. Not that th l' th' h" " e sa anes are 00

Ig , .

Archbishop Alter recalled that I t Fl' . a~ a I, whe~ lay teacher sal­

anes were raised generally to 95 per cent of comparable pub­r h 1 I' .IC SC 00 sa anes, pansh coun­cil d b d fs an oar s 0 education ~onducte? an archdiocesan-wide informatIon p g . d t . . ro ram 'al~e . a Increasing weekly ·pansh In­come by 12 to 15 per cent. "But we didn't reach our goal," Archbishop Alter said.

· Moreover, iot would be impos­sible to operate the parish church and rectory on less than the 25 to 30 per cent of parish receipts now available for that purpose, he said.

Tuition for archdiocesan high schoQls will have to be increased in order to maintain them, the archbishop indicated.

Noting that "our people vote every Sunday with their pocket­book," and that "65 -per cent of our people use church support envelopes," \ Archbishop Alter said: "We ask our people please to understand our problem."

Is f'irst for New Bedford Catholics By Patricia, Francis

An estimated 700 pevson's gathered in St. James Church in New Bedford la'st week has been established by the for an Inter-Fa-ith Thanksgiving Service,' the first such program 'ever conducted in a' Miami, archdiocese 'in 'the'· Oatholic c'hureh in -the city. The program, Rev. Albert Shovelton, director of St. Mary's heart of the ghetto area' 'here to ' Home'in New Bedford, ex,plains, "was a continuation of the Ecumenical Dialogue group", offer a variety of services:;'de-· that previously had spon- . sored three other inter-faith services in the city. The first was held at Keith' Jun­ior' High School, the second at TI'fereth Israel Synagogue .a'nd the thl'rd at Dartmouth. HI'gh School.

Co-sponsoring the program were the Inter-Church Council of Greater New: Bedford, "through which we contacted members of the Protestan,t ml'n­I'stry," and .the New Bedford' Exchange Club, whl'ch ·asked to participate as part of its "One Nation Under God" project.

Principal speaker was Rev. Leonl'das Contos, fI'rst presl'dent of the new Hellenic College of Brookline; who was introduied ­,by Rev. Constantine Bebis, pas­tor of St., George Greek Ortho­

,dox 'Church.

Blessing, 01 Loave~ Dr. Contos, speaking at the

Thanksgiving service, told his friends of other faiths that in the Greek Church, "'we have a brief but beautiful office for the blessing of the first fruits of the vineyard on the 6th of August,the Feast of the Transfigura- AT tion, Then there is the· lovely service_ in office of the Blessing of the are from

'.signed ,to meet needs of the' ~rea :'

ECUMENrCAL SERVICE: At ecumenical Thanksgiving New Bedford, first to be held in city Catholic church, left, Rev. Robert L. Carter, president of Southeastern

Loaves, literally the breaking Massachusetts Ministerial Alliance; Msgr. Hugh, A. 'G'allaglier, of loaves,' ,which implies thanks pastor of St. James Church; Rev. Dr. leonidas C. Contos, ,first through sharing. president of Hellenic College of Brookline, and principal speaker.

"It calls to mind not only the' 'munificenc~ of the Creator,.but" man car kno}V how to identify,-" of Temple_ .. ;Sin.~i, ..<;hait~an .of, also the nuracle oLthe feeding., with other men.'" " . '. , , the Exchange Ciub's: "O"e"Na-' In short," Dr. Contos ,said, "in a. . "People '01, God .. :., ,tion,UnderGod" commH~~:' ... -"·health cllmcs for injeotlons: .... , world ~raught with danger and. "Identification' with +"'olhe'r ," ,:' Closihg'·th"e'service\,\Yas· l ij joiilt ()(Op" ;: 0';',1'',;''; .. ' 'E'?I'~'~ .

Didn't Reach Goal" . a ~ oug main ?Isle of St. James to their

~nce~ta~nty, stalked by the spec- men" was the hallmark of the blessing by all the participating er 0 . unge;; a largely hostile ecumenical service at St. James. clergy.

world In WhICh man has had to Th . wrest his living and his security ~ar~~? g;th~re::Oget~e~ - cede: ~~:ti~: f:~;::::~s:;e~ by dint of his strength and his a °dICS, d.rdo es. ant sand .e~s p'anel dl'scussI'on at the we'ekly

" . - ·an so I pnes s an mlms-WIt, 'It IS natural that many cul- ters and a rabbi. Exchange Club luncheon at the tures shoul~ have produced tra- Th 1 d d' th' ,New Bedford Hotel ditions of thanksgiving." b e cfergfYf.' resse hind . elr P l' t . '

ro es 0 0 Ice, marc e In a ane IS s Included FatherDr. Contos reminded his all- formal procession down the S'hovelton Rabb'i Colton and

faith congregation th t lth h ., .' remos~~f us tah g~neratIons re- seats In the sanctuary. Father

move rom e soIl, yet harvest Shovelton was marshal.~ime renews our identity with Msgr. Hugh A. Gallagher, pas-It, just as Springtime does with tor of St. James and dean of Cath­its assurances of new lI'fe An·d I' 1 . G N

. 0 IC Cergy In reater ew Bed­the words we speak and the ge f d ff ed th' . s- or 0 er 'e opening pray.­tures we make under the hold ' h-h f 11 d b -,was

of such feelings are the clearest her, w llcd b 0 bo~ed hY ' a ymn e y a com Ine c Olr,measure of our spiritual stat- comprising students of New

. B~dford, Dartmouth and Stang To return thanks, said Dr. Hlg? Schools. .

Contos, "is no mere matter of - .Bible lessons were read byspeaking our gratitude. It is SIster Kathleen Doyle S N D

f St H' h S ,. . . the nature of God's blessings 0 ang 'Ig .ch~ol and 'Rev. that they impose a corollary Robert Carter, preSident of ~he' duty on him who receives them." ~out?easte:n Massachusetts MIn-

The one gift bequeathed to Istenal Alliance. man that clearly marks him, Joint Blessing said Dr. Contos, "the thumbprint Rev. Sydney Adams, executive of God, is the' gift to love. I secretary - 01 ,the Inter-Church believe this is what Paul finds Council of Greater New Bedford, 'the unspeakable gift,' ,the inex- led the recitation of -the litany, pressible talent, the most lavish with responses by the congre­of the graces God elected to gatidn. share with His creature." Emlie J. Lemoine, cantorial

The Greek priest and teacher soloist of Temple Sinai, New noted that "Christianity shares Bedford, sang "The Lord Is My many great moral' intuitions Shepherd." Organist was Rob­with other world religions. But ert Coutu of St. James.

J.am~~ Wal~sle~, a layman ac­tIve In ~he funct,lOns of the Inter-Church Council The topic was'

. <'See '\:Estoblis'he'SL~~cJ~: Service Center,'

In Ghetto·Area:".'~ MIAMI (NC) -:- A ce'ntfal

Coinirionity 'Service Center

people. . Dr. Ben Sheppard; directQr ofthe Catholic Welfare Bureau, of

which ,the center wiHlIube" a branch, said the JeWisli:''Child 'and Family Service office' C has

' ..' hvolunteered to participate in t e ' .project and has' assi'gned' -al!soclal

worker 'to do family 'counseling on a part-time basis; In addition, the U:S: Depar.tment of Housing and Urban Developmerit"(HUD)

. , ,.'announced it will appoint a'liai": ' . .son officer fo the center.. 'i. )~

,.'Dominican Sister" Miriam, a member of the Acad'emy of Cer.. tified: Social Workers'and"a~vet-· eran of aid programs ·lor('Cuban

. ,. ~ n 'exiles here, will direct center operations.

- . Meet 'Rear Nee'ds . ~ < . l' ~t r " .• ,.

Dr. Sheppard 'said the center is a "concrete outgrowth" of the Va.tican Councii's' 'm'~ridate; :to meet-the very' ~e'al-needs of.. the modern world.

"The center will focus on a program of what we: rliight call preventive medicine,"-IDr.Shep­ard explained, ',"inasmuch:tas it will help to p,revent' the 'case of the unwed mother ,and'-will help to prevent school drop-'outs.!' . One ·of the first steps in :the program will be to determine

,the number of.children:who have" not been immunized ,against con-· tagious diseases, Sisterl' Miriam said. Volunteers already 'are be­ing recruited to t,r?nsport ohil ­

.,dren of ~la.ck famllies',to county

"Does God Need Peo Ie?" 'C.P." 'provincial of. ~he H~ly ,.P'. Cross (western) pro\,'l.nce, saId.

The panel diSCUSSion was re- The ,purpose of the senate is -to p at d th f 11' . ht· , . e . e e 0 OWing mg on provide a consensus posItIon in-WBSM' 0 L' • t d fs pen Ine program, sea 0 an executive decree in

Approximately 30 priests and -the use of authority, ·he added. .' t t' . .miniS ers ·par .Iclpated In the

ure" 'St. James serVIce. '

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to aid the engineering and inter­national business programs of the Jesuit-operated Sophia Uni­versity here has been made by , General Electric Japan, Ltd. The school is currently building a I5-story tower' structure to house its expanding. interna­tional graduate education com­plex.

it is unique in this: It confesses faith in a God who identifies with man, a God who 'empties himself,' takes on the form of setvant; not in the' manner of those legends in which a king goes about disguised as a beggar to test the devotion of his people, but in that dimension of sacrificial· love .that puts him inside human weakness and temptation and fnistration and pain, An~, it is uniquely throu&,h the grace of such a God' that

The closing prayer was given by Rabbi Lawrence M. Colton

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Page 11: 12.05.68

Study "ProsF ·Cons Of Using Metric System in U.S.

WASHINGTON (NC):..,...ln the mlidst of the world money crisis, it ·has been' re­vealed here that we are al­ready eqgaged in a study of the advanta,ges and' disadvantages that could accrue to the United States from adoption of the metri~ system of measurements. Congress ordered the study last Summer, bU,t its inauguration went unn9ticed in the campaigns and natio!,\,al elections. '

The balance of payments ­whether mor.e money is going out of a l;ountry or more is com­ing in-is' l~ c~ucial factor in the money crisis. It ~s also involved in the study., of whether we should ,adopt t~ metric system.

There are those who contend that ·the adoption of the meter would help, our balance of pay­ments. They point out that 90 ' per cel!t"9(~he peop,le of the world use ,meters 'and, grams in measurements, and that busi':" nessmen in these countries pre'-' fer to buy good's tIiat are meas­ured il'\ ternis they are familiar with. And/){ p'~easlnFthem will stop the' "aouar drain," they argue, we should please them.

T~o Sides However, "it is not as simple

as all that. "Ji'or ,one thing, the change over -would. lead to early confusion and' some staggering costs, it seems agreed. At the same time, it .is argued that in the long view. the gains could be very great.· .

There are arguments on both sides. Right now, the Bureau of Standards here is weighing the pros and cons. At the end of three years, or earlier perhaps,. it is to make some 'recommenda­tions to Congr.ess,' '!H ". '" .,I'

The metric system, which in little less than two centuries has come to ·be used by 90 per cent of the world's people, is gener­ally regarded as being more scientific. The older forms of measurements, keyed to parts of the body, like the foot, have varied from time to time, it is pointed out.

Already In Use The meter is a unit of length,

and the basis of the system. It is about 39.37 inches in length, while our yard is 36 inches.

The gram is a unit of weight. In comparison, it is 'about one­twenty-eighth of an ounce.

The liter is a unit of volume. It is slightly more than a U. S. liquid quart, and a little less than a dry quart.

Those surveying the situation already have discoverd that in the U. S. the optical, electrical~ pharmaceutical, photographic and some othe industries, scien­tific textbooks, medical text­books, some hospitals, and some phases of the army's work al­ready employ the metric system.

The study is a big one, and very complex. People feel strongly for and ,against the metric system. And it is a ques­tion, not only what would hap­pen soon if a changeover were made, but what would happen in the long run. Right now, the whole thing is just being studied.

Papal Satisfaction OTTAWA (NC)-Bishop Alex­

ander Carter of Saulte Ste. Marie, president of the Cana­dian Catholic Conference, has announced the Holy See has acknowledged with satisfaction receipt of the Canadian Bishops' statement on Pope Paul's ency­clical on birth control.

ADULT LECTURE SERIES: Participating in opening session of adult education series at Bishop Cassidy High ,School, Taunton, are; from left,. Rev. William J. Cullen, S.J.; Mr. and Mrs. Edward McDonagh; Sister, Miriam Gabriel, S.U.S.C; Mrs. John T. Flannery and Mr. Flannery.

l' .' •

\THE ANCHOR­ 11_ IThurs., Dec. 5,' 1968

IReport on Future Of DentaI School Under Study

ST. LOUIS (NC) - A re­port by_ a consulti'ng firm on whether the St. Louis Uni­versity Dental School should be closed is currently under study by a special committee of the university Medical Center trustees.

The committe is expected to make its recommendations in January to the university's board of trustees, which decided a year ago that the school would be phased out at the end of the 1970-71 school year because of excessive costs.

A group of the school's alumni, seeking to keep the school run­ning, financed the survey, con­ductedby the consulting firm of Taylor, Lieberfeld and Held­man of New York.

Alumni Pledge Aid Dr. Calvin Weiss,. chairman

of the University Dental Alumni Ad Hoc Committee said the uni­versity administration cooper­ated fully in the survey.

Dr. Weiss said his committee

Priest' Gives Opening' 'Lecture in Adult Education Series atCassid,.r High School had obtained $276,000 in pledges

from dentists who want to save By Dorothy Eastman the school. The group will try

to obtain more pledges from I

Rev. Wmiam Cullen, S.J., chai'rman of the theology department of Bishop Connolly alumni, he added. High School in Fall River, faced a brand. new type of class one recent evening when he The alul)'lni committee chair­gave the opening lecture in an adult education series at Bishop Oas'Sidy High School man asserted that removal of

the dental school would causein Taunton. "You're a lot quieter than my sophmores" he told the audience of Taunton fragmentation of the total health. area adults. At the request care program of the university'sof Sister Miriam Gabriel, had to face, Father Cullen told had much food for thought and Medical Center. Although thehis audience. The Reformation lively debate, forming into

S.U.S.C., director of reli- was a similar period of unrest, groups of eight, drinking coffee closing of the school has been gious education at Bishop as was a great part of the 19th and talking for several hours. announced, he said, there has Cassidy High School, Father century." . been 'no shortage of applicants.

Authority seemed to be theCullen, six' ,other ,Tesuits, ,Rev. , "There'was no TV then, so it subject uppermost on everyone's~Ji:>hnM~9Je" C;:~$!?i'dy chaplilii), ·,.,::was a quiet ·crisis.·compared to mind. The new m.orality, new Nun Resigns and Mr.. anq Mrs; Edward Mc- this present one," he quipped. movies, civil rights, young LOS ANGELES (NC)-SisterDonough directed an evening Change will have an effect on people's attitudes toward reli ­ Mary Corita Kent, 50, widelyof lively discussion. McDonough ri,tual, too, the Jesuit said. We gion, the Pope's newest encycli ­ known "op_pop" artist and ecu­is Diocesan CCD Coordinator. ask ourselves in each age, "Does cal were further topics of great menist, has resigned as a SisterThe Jesuits, all on the faculty our present ritual express the interest. of the Immaculate Heart of

A native of Cambridge, Fatherof Bishop Connolly High SChool, soul of the people?"

Mary to ,become Miss Coritawere Rev. John Karwin S.J., "We would be foolish to Cullen holds graduate degrees Kent, subject to approval of herRev. Richard Wolf S.J., Rev. chuck out tradition," Father in. history and philosophy from resignation in Rome. She hasMr. Francis McManus S.J., Rev. Cullen asserted, "but we put Boston College and Harvard been on leave of absence inMr. William Nolan' S.J. and this tradition in terms of our University. Before coming to Boston since August. Rev. Mr. Thomas Wass S.J. age and we color it with the Bishop Connolly High School,"Why is change necessary?" personalism of this age." he taught at St. Thomas More was the theme of Father Cul- With' Father Cullen's talk as Prep School in Connecticut andlen's presentation. He discussed a basis of discussion, the group at Boston College High School. the concept of change in rela­

tion to authority, ritual, theol­ He has also directed a pro­ogy, tradition, grace and mys­ Ordain 76-Year-Old gram for underprivileged boys tery. in Roxbury and the South End

Texas Businessman of Boston. Not the First The present authority CrISIS DALLAS (NC)-Father Arthur "rHe is at present chairman of

is not the first the Church has C. Hughes, 76-year-old Dallas religious education for the businessman who was converted Diocese of Fall River. to Catholicism more than 50

Calif. Jesuit College years ago, has been ordained to the priesthood in Sacred HeartTo Hear Cleaver LARIVI ERE'Scathedral here.

SANTA CLARA (NC)-While Bishop Thomas K. Gorman of the University of California at Dallas-Fort Worth, long-time PharmacyBerkeley fought bitterly over a friend of the new priest, ordain­ Prescriptions called for proposed lecture series by Eld­ ed him. In October Bishop Gor­ and deliveredridge Cleaver, onicial of the man had announced that Pope IDEAL LAUNDRY LOFTmilitant Black Panthers, the Paul had given special permis­ CHOCOLATES 373 ~ew Boston RoadJesuits at Santa Clara Univer­ sion for Father Hughes to be 600 Cottage St. 994-7439sity are continuing with their ordained without meeting the Fall River 678-5677New Bedfordplans to invite Cleaver to a canon law requirement of four three-day conference next week. years training in theology.

Cleaver is the Black Panthers' In requesting permission for gJlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllUlIIlIlIIlIlIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIllIIlIIlIllIIlIIlIlIIllIlIIlIlIlIlII1111111111"minister of information, p-resi­ Father Hughes' ordination, Bish­dential candidate of California's op Gorman wrote: "He has per­Peace and Freedom Party and sonally given instructions iii. the IColor Process Year Books Iauthor of "Soul on Ice." He had faith to more than 110 people been invited to give 10 lecturel­ ~ * (0 and has counseled hundreds Booklets

"

Brochures at the sensitive Berkeley cam­ of young people and adults in pus of the University of Califor­ problems of faith and morals. nia. Father Hughes was reared as

But university administrators, a Presbyterian. He has received fearful of the possible repercus­ the National Brotherhood Cita­ American Press, Inc. sions, cut the schedule to one tion from the National Confer­talk. ence of Christians and Jews, the OFF SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS

Meanwhile, the University of Pro Deo et Juventute award Santa Clara announced that from the National Council of 1-17 COFFIN AVENUE Phone 997-9421 Cleaver would be one of 15 Catholic Youth; and the Texas New Bedford, Moss: speakers at a Black America Social Welfare Association Conference next week. award. f.illlllllll 1111 1111111111 III 1111 111111 11111111111111111111111 1111111111111111 111111111 III 1111111111111111111111 1111111 11111111111111111111111;'

Page 12: 12.05.68

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Dec. 5, 1968 12 I Su,pport Job Corps for Disadvantaged WASHINGTON (NC) - In a "millions of cLtizens living in ab­ training of youth whose livesTop Russian Scientist Cans joint statement-with three other ject poverty midst great prosper­ heretofore have been without

nirtional women's organizations, lity," they said they hoped the hope or promise." the National Council of Catholic new administration would not They noted that more thanFor World Dedication Women endorsed retention of "seek to dismantle' or greatly 31,000 young people are present­the Job Corps and other pro­ alter ,th'e many programs de­ ly enrolled in the Job Corps and

By Barbara Ward grams 'for the disadvantaged. signed to give the disadvantaged said: "Your consideration of the The organizations - NCCW, the tools, i.e., education and morale .and well being of theBeyond the divisi-ons-:-of ideology or race o.r n~tional­ Church Women United, the Na­ training, needed to achieve up­ youngsters ·now enrolled in Job

ism-that split our world, voices of reason and compassion tional Council of Jewish Women ward mobility in our society." Corps Centers and those who can be heard. to remind all the earth's peoples of the risks and the National Council of The women, whose organiza­ urgently need the opportunity to they 'share 'and of the true tasks of survival. One such voice Negro Women-have a combined tions have worked with the Job improve their basic education

membership,of mor,~ than 27 mil­ Corps, said they know that the and skills will be deeply appre­was raised this Summer, sur­lion women throughout the coun­ Job Corps is not perfect but ciated."prisingly 'at the very top of umn will attempt to look at try. They sent _a joint letter added: It is our deepest convic­ The letter was signed by Mrs.· some of these changes' in the.· the Soviet scientific estab.· to President-elect Richard M. tion that it provides the best Norman Folda, president ofpractical' context of the encycli ­

lishment when .Andrei Sak. Nixon. possible opportunity for the ba- . NCCW, and the presidents of the'cals and also in the deeper light· harov, inventor of Russia's hy­ Expressing concern for the sic education and vocational other three organizations.of our Biblical hope. For per­

drogen .bomb, called for con­ haps the first' affirmation that. · trailed disarm-·

<

.

Christians should offer today is feel to the depths of their being But it was in the midst of ern as .on ancient efforts of re­ament; 'for' a. that it· is worth making the the meaningless vacuity of a such darkness and confusion form and revival.joint dedication · great efforts needed for sur­universe in which man, is cruel that Christianity first reached' If we love our world, we dob y developed vival. This planet, for· all its and absurd and God is dead. the urban masses of the ancient not pollute it either by our ter­nations of '.'20 pains. and . injustices and de­

· per .cent of Like the men of Imperial·Rome world. And what the Christians rible weap'ons or our carelessspairs, is neverthelsss a precious -a city resembling some of our chiefly conveyed to the' wonder­ commercialism. If we 'love ourtheir national place, an 'arena of· creative cities .in its scale and disorder ing pagans was, precisely, a' neighbor, we do 'not wait, indif­income'~ in or­ growth, Ii possible community

der·. to" . bridge and deepening crisis-they look capacity' for active, hopeful love. ferent; for the point of no returnof lovers and .friends, a drama of ·the' . growing to nothing but a· perpetual night The conditions are, admittedly, -:.. of famine in the developingfreedom, "a valley of soul-mak­

in which all must sleep and if almost inconceivably different continents, of d~spair in' thegap petween ing"-in the words of John they have heard of truth, like in our mode~n technological ghetto cities. In fact, we do notthe w 0 I' 1d's' · Keats. Pilate, they -do not stay to ask order. But the stamp of love­ wait at all but hasten with the

food supplies; population and

These are not the affirmations what it might be. On such de­ love in the unsentimental sense urgency of God's charity to meet made to us toda)' by many of spairs we cannot build a sur­ of actively willing our neigh­ our neighbor's neeas and "workand for policies to end both the. our· artists and writers. They viving planet. bor's good-can be put on mod- while it is day." physical contamination of our

'planet and its cultural "pollu­. tion" - by mass pressures and hatreds and fears.

. I .it,Broad Agreement These aims are not far from

those put forward in all the great social Encyclicals' of the last decade-Mater et Magistia,

/

THE FIVE YEAR MIRACLE. \ .

Pacem in·. Terris, Populorum Progressio. And, if, on the basis

. of scientific insight and rational ... 'wisdom, Catholic and Commu­

nist can formulate at least some -of the great issues in common terms, ·we are entitled to per­haps a modest hope that a hu­man dialogue is possible and mankind is not destined, Ibefore the century is out, to end all dialogue in nuclear annihilation.

The"Sakharov Proposals clearly include some of the theses which Christians will have to take up in their search for understand­ing' with non-believers. Equally, however, . these realities . and propositions are. very far from being accepted among Chris­tians. Nominally, at least,.·the Western world derives its cul­

~, ture from' a Christian ·past. A ~

sizeable minority in each Atlan­tic nation wo'uld call itself' ac­tively Christian. Yet 'it is very largely "the wastes and radio­active materials and poisons and insecticides of these "advanced" nations that are filling up the When she was 8 years old, Ma Boke Sone was brought to streams, killing the lakes and contaminating' the' oceans whicl\} . .' .' . .

a Catholic Mi~sion in Rangoon-an advanced, seemingly hopeless, are everyone's patrimony.' At '. . .' .the level of culture, it is among

Western peoples that some of case of leprosy .. ~iye years later tha'nks to treatment with the most mind-stunning exer-. cises in trivial entertainment, sulfone drugs, she was entirely free of symptoms and without deformity, advertising and conditioning takes place. a pretty smiling young girl of 13.· These same Christian peoples spend more than one hundred billion .dollars a year on arms and compete with each other all around the world to sell weap­ .. ·SHE THANKS GOD,-AND WE THANK YOU. ons to poorer nations. Equally, they collectively balk at spend­ Ybtlisatrifice todaycou!d bring 'about another such miracle tOrIlOrrow.ing e.ven $6 billions a year on

.internatioryal development--cer­. tainly not Mr. Sakharov's 20 per .. cent of national income; it is not

even one per cent,. in fact. L..--...;",.,;-.--~:SALVATION 'AND SERVICE ARE THE WORK OF-----:.----''Self-Examination

So it is not unrealistic to sug­~est that the great work of 'THE SOCIETY FOR::TH.irPROPAGATION OF THE FAITH thought and conversion and dedication needed to wrench SEND YOUR GIFI' TO "­our world off its disaster course The Right Reverend Edward T•.O'Meara The Right Reverend Raymond T. Considine. 0

had' better begin among our- National Director O.R Diocesan Director . ". selves, with a sober look atour'. . . 366 Fifth Avenue 368 North Main Street

o

own deficiencies and an un- ". . New York, New York 10001 Fall River. Massachuseti~027io flinching look"'at'jthe'~caie of .. $ _·r ~.~_.. LIJ. ~' .. ,:~t.~. .~,·'T~.: ·~3j·fu .. t:":A::·,.~! "'·.:~·.3·.T". \.:.}i.'j .....~ .. ;. .=~~::'. ';{ :':'~\ ···l\.. · .. "'J';

~rcativc ctiahlfe jfh~a't slie'ehYsur:''')·'/~t.~~·~ ::' ~. ;/·/it~·.:~~. )I'c"!·\},> ) ~I t;':: , .'J,1.!''t.. ,'.:, ~.:.. ~ \,,,·v·; ~ (: .r: :..\)\.~~;! <i. c: .. ':r:' ~, , II;' { ,'r ~ ~ , ~~~ ,~., .,0: ~',,'(if.. ( ({l:f I.

~ival now demands.f,-a.;( ......~ "Y.'" • ~ J -) Ifl':/:·;.l -j.·j:t"'t='<...) If.?'t''I:. \~f-.!~'i~ !._.~~'~,,' _"'l:...~ ..'~J,~ \·~fn:'G'.t·,i, .-....~\ ,":,:.'.c :~.. ,t~~~1;"~ ~:~~ '4;f~ I' .. I,:.;~n~ ,:'Over the next ··'!.;;...~.·s",·.·th{s"·~.!-'\\ .:.,\ .~<\"~.".J.... .,..••r'",\:, NAME f -, .•, " ,. IlOODrSS, ~~', .., '-'1 "v,·,·· '1 I ZIP , . ~ •... ... ",,--.;;'2' l,..v "... ' _ t i' :t -.\~ ... tl _.::....'-:l,,~-'D"-'.[,"".i':7I;-;~":':l[;';"-"~~ ';:-'7G9:iU7.7~;l;j'"{"'l:l7'o:.:.~n~. """"":-:.''~":'::'."~"~''F'_-::'~7.~:;:-;JJ::::,.o:,;' :-=:'7",::-:-<'·;.:i9:;.~:;.(·!:.;\i).:.:,·!;<,.:;~ ',..::o::n~(I:..., ~ft;:.9~n;w:-...:.::.:::~'j'::,)~.~SI!j c' ,F..:. '~n r j~ ... !.~ d ! t." t'I:« •••..••:.... < .•• ->._.• ~ ..." •• ~ •• ,•. 1'.•.•• ,: •.•,,.,"'.__....... ,,.,."'.,·..-:'.," ..."''''''.r.o._...''..........",.l ... ·1\1'··1 :,Hlh!')rlt"di b'I,. h'lo:J"J!JI 9liJ '10_ WYh.il')i<.j :,:,:~ ()J '.')')'>11 .flu.la,Jfl 'Xo ...~A ,fJr~,.?,,'lU l.,.••.

.,

Page 13: 12.05.68

I

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Dec. 5, 1968 13

..... 1

I

...-.: I

WORLD SODALITY DAY: Students from 13 high schools, in and out of spiritual director; Diane Dufour, Jesus-Mary Academy. Center, Rev. John Camp­the Diocese, ..rr'eet at Bishop Connolly High in Fall River for World Sodality bell, S.J., National Director of the Sodality, Apostolate and keynote speaker. Day program. left, from left, John' Ford, Prevost High School; Marianne Mooney, Right, Patricia Harrington, Holy Family High; Ronald Perrault, St. louis Regional Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River; Rev.. William Cullen, ;S.J., sodality council , High, Maine; Jane McDonald, Mt. t. Mary Academy; Ro.ger levesque, Prevost.

I • . , • .

1 • ~ " \.

Honorary CitizenBoston Catholics' VIENNA (NC) - ArchbishopWorld Sodality Day Program Highlights

To Honor: Saint Franz 1Cardinal Koenig of Vienna has been named an hon­orary citizen of Vienna. He is By Pilgriri1age' Holiday' Weekend for Dioc~san Teens the first Catholic Churchman' to receive this highest distinctionSTOCKHOLM h (NC)-St. 'I'opping :teen events over ·the ,holiday weekend was World Sodality Day at Bishop of the Austrian capital.BO:~lIph ~f Ic~n .~\ a b~e~- Connolly High in' Fall-- River. Students from .Prevost, Cassidy, Dominican, Sacred

e~ cen ury ~I 18 .a .0, Hearts, Mt:· St.' Mary, Jes'us-M~ry, Holy Eamily, 'Coyle and Stang joined the Connolly

::ll ~ne ~~~o~~dJ?t~~lf;~~tt~)..~{~dents .~of'· ·th·~r .;dliJ;-l()ng.:~~g~am. They "were' j-oliJed by' .'represen·tatives of St. Marie Boston, whose name is Ii devel- HIgh of Manchester, ~.H." . Higher Earnings opment of Botulphstown. Notre pa;m~ of .Fitchburg····upcoming memory' ,book. And also at Feehan the Art

'f ' And at Feehan High in Attle- Club has for president Elizabeth Sponsored by Richard Cardi- and St. Louis Regional 0 boro, girls are in the midst of Barrows, Suzette Messier is sec­ ON YOUR SAVINGS

nal Cushing of Bqston, the pil- Ma'ine. Theme for the day 'the basketball'seas()n under the retary and Sister Marie Donna grimage will visit arltain and was "Wake Up, Tune. In, But, direction of coach Mrs. Elaine is facu!ty advisor. Meetings are 01.. Per Annum Scandinavia, both t placCIi where': :'Reach Out," aod. keyn()tespeaker Condon, So far the team has ,held Mondays after school. 10 Ask about the saint is honored. ',';. '.. w~s .Rev', .'.JQhfi' Campbell, S,J., lost a game to Bay View and Johp' Hogan of Prevost was in

v, 't' 'St kh! l' /t 1 ,,'nation'al directorof·~the· soladity won over M.mint St. M.ary, Much charge of the senior class'Q an- INVESTMENTlSI 109 OC 0 mop an ' '. ... . ., the pilgrimage, George E. Ryan apost()~l;ltEl.,.. " . more to come., nual whist, which was termed SAVINGS

·• f Th P'l t Jesuit· schol.l;lstIcs 'led diSCUS",: : Acceptances are' coming in for "high.lY successful," giving a bigof the news, burea", 0 e 1 0, ", ·Ct',··, d th " . '. ' paper of the Boston archdiocese, S1C~nS~11 "~lI)gmg an e sen~ ':.1)ext year's scholastic endeavors, 'boost to class treasury, CERTIFICATES

'd th .' f th' II' ,ous part of the day concluded~ ,. With Nancy Sullivan of 'MountJohn' again. He's cll-chairman stal f led~lmt °h E! pstgrBlmatgle hIS with a con,pelebrated Ma~s..suP-,· :', ,:81. Mary Academ,y..,being, tapped, . with Michael Albernaz of the SAFEry -',Savings insured sale by anwo 0 . 0 onor . 0 up, . .' d' . 1 h f 11 d '" .. '<, • and to renew boritacts with p~~an ~ s~cI~h' ~rt~B°w.e}{, '. "!;iy Katharine Gib1?ll·'.and ;~uzett;· .: senior prom committee, with agency ot. the. U. S. Government. Catholic~ and Protestants in ~I StUSI~, Yh ,e .J;l\~ ~·?t ... ~anterre, also a Mounti~,.plan- willi'ng workers including Ed AVAILABiliTY - No notice reQuirell.Britain and Scandinavia. 0 ,thang Ig' In.,:,. 0\..' .. :- ..~r-_,,,:,·:,.:j1}ng to enter the nursing school Larue, Alan White, John Fortier Your funds available when neellea,

) , Ii I mou . .at Mass. General Hospital. and Wayne Ameen, SAVE by ~MAll- We process promptly"Never i~ the 33~-year. histo,ry And yesterday at. Sacred Want to know who won 'that Junipero, Serra Club mem­anll pay postage both ways.Of, Bo~ton has a ~nbute of qUite Hear~s Academy, Fall Rlver,~he student-faculty volleyball game bers at Holy Family have heard

Anots over $4t,OOO,000th~s kmd been'pa~~ tO,the n~me- Spanish.' ~lub :. ,and SpamsQ, at Dominican? 'Twas the fac- talks by community members on samt of the City, Ryan said. H~nor Society Jomed t? enter- ulty, but no one's saying what law and criminals; the new

Little of certainty .is known ~am studen!sfrom S~amsh clubs the ,'score was; Church; and Communism. And FIRST fEDERALabout St. Iiotulph. He is said to 10 other DlOc~san high schools. A' DA th D "1 HF students are anticipating an '. All saw the film "Flamenco" a Iso at , e omlm og t f h' h 1have been born In England,. to 'd . fl' d" . staff held its third annual folk ex ra copy 0 t elr sc 00 paper, Savings and loan Associaiion

have becolne a monk on the '. ocumenta~y on A atme~co pa~lc- night this' week and folk en- Hy Fy Spy, which will put out E t · t ... t . h 109 starnng n 0010, I ar " , a Chrl'stmas specI'al of fAll [jUV~R

uropean con men an4 0 ave· L' MiL d th B 11 t thusiasts at t'he Fall River school ' 1,' d' h' h'" opez ar a uZ.an e a e '. .Company lPresidentsre turned t0 Engal) were e E ' 1 Will go to Boston Sunday to ~ ~

founded a jnonasterYI at, Icaphoe, s~ano . d d hear Judy Collins sing, Speak politely to Feehanites : First Fe~eral Savings & lean Ann. : a location Inow generally iden- j ,revost s~':l ents. sp'onsore an , John Carvalho, Susan Kerrins, ~ 0'f' d 'th B t area National Honor' Society 'Representatives for the annual I. Nerlh Main St., Fall /liver, Mass. ~

tI Ie WI os on. 'td t th Gary Knight, Linda Lapierre, : Zip: 02722 Phono G74·4661 ~ i workshop recently, followed 10 student .gove~nmen ay a ',e Patricia Lee and Joseph Zahc- ~ Make applidtion bY' 'Phone II YOu wish. ~

Dire'?ted, by Brother the evening by a mixer for stu- State House 10 Bost~n are belOg man, all of whom are presidents ~. 9

A b' f is' ."'i .... r,dents from prevost, SHA, Con- chosen and Prevost's man is of Junior Achievement com- ~ 0 Indivi.dual Account 0 Joint Account ~ num er 0 aahu navI ..n . " 11 .' d J',.{' M r' "AI" John Hogan Also in Prevost : please open ,a savings account. Enclosed:h ,;. d d'· 't d t 'th .' no y an '",sus· a y: so on, " panies, groups which seek to churc es ..re e Ica e ' 0 e th NHS' d t P t news is basketball, Practice ses- , Name(s) . - ..- _ - ---- ~

't I . h h' T b e agen a a revos was leam the principles of business'" ~ sam 'St nk~ia lC utrh~ ~n aed'~" induction:of' hew members, in- sions have, begun at the ~a~l administration by forml'ng' and ' -_ - _- , , ~_..-..--- 0 near oc ,0 m, t:re IS a me 1- cluding six J'uniors and one River Boys' Club and home ' Address - _ -._-, eval wall Icture of St. Botolph, ' games will be played at Bishop running small ·businesses. : Is a ch~ek.!~ tlie amount at $ -;-:-:-- : d ' 13th t b semor. T t P F ' one In . e ce~' ury y To Present 'Salome' Connolly gym. urn 0 age ourteen ' , .,;., .... Albertus Prctor. In thiS church, Glee Club ,. ,. ,.. ' now LuthElran, a Mass will be ,~~e dr.a.';"~ cl';1b .of ;HolyFa~- ". ,.. .' " " "f'*"-..........,..-.......#o#o-.......#o#o-.......#o#o~_,....~~,.....-_-.."#o##o#o~~~

t d··f-:-':h·-'·'l·-'I'· .._- -I'ly 'HI'gh"I""'New Bedford- WIll' ·"The· Jesus-Mary, Glee Club,c'ce e ra e or. e Pi gr ms. . .... " ". ...."., . '. ' " present "Salome" by Oscar Will be heard Monday night at

1 b WEBB OIL COM'PA"R:Y'u, S, priests wor~ing,1.11 'l',aeb~\ Wild,~ at:,ot~, e,~hristm~ll ~·~t\\den..h s.)yvite'~ ~esta~r,!n~ )Vhe.n:stu~e~Jf '." -... . . ' Fathers Donald Dietz and. Rob-'~'''bOdY; assemb'iy~ Le'ading "roiell'" enteI'taln the Notre Dame Coun-··... f ~ .,. , '.' " .1;,

ert Olson, both Oblates of Mary will be played by Les~ie.!,~l-•.',.c:il .. o.~ Catholic ~omen. Directing TEXACO FU'"EL' "OILS Immaculate, have formed ecu- meiri as Salome' Michael Pois....· ~ the' . group Will be Mother menical discussi~n groups with},.:,son as Herod; :~~bert O'Neil, as Denise. ..' the Lutheran mmi-sters, John the Baptist; Anne Zer;::, '. -A guitar .group has . been DOMESTIC & HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERS

U. S.-born Bishop John E. bonne as Herodi~s;., and Richard'" formed at Feehan to accompany Taylor, O.M.I., of Stockholm Cormor as Tigellius.,..... singing at folk Masses offered Sales - Service - Ins'tallation . and Bishop John W. Gran, Candidly speaking, says Char- in the ·school. Players include if) ~~;;:.~ :,: If .'I't: ·~'I':I. ,0 '1.

O.C,R., of Os\o, Norway, will re- lotte· Levesque of Jesus-Mary Jane Fernberg, Mary Ellen MAIN OFFICE - 10 DURFEEJ ••S;TRE£J,: fAIlL··R'~ERi'tl(:·· , ceive the pilgrimage, directed Academy, l},tudents were ready Foley, .Iq,~p.n Santos, Luanne 'Ii )';,1,:·1-> ,r·it, .. ',.'f , and organized lby Brothe~g.l!!":"". wh_en-Pho~r~JZ!.t,~r.~~~rlved.1B.!L.Cha!?~tf~t't J~o_e_s~I~!'J.JYc::hl!td. __ ~i~:J.\!o\ Phone 6 7.5:-1A8~1I't. 1'(',:; ...,oJ ''},''.. ard Brassard, A.A., of Boston. week to laKe pictures lor the McLeod and Katherine Pollis. ~,....~_,...."#o#-.-.......#o#o~~#o#o~ __~_,....~_,....~_-.."#o#'_

Page 14: 12.05.68

--14 THE: ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Dec. 5, 1968 The Parish .Parade

Publicity chairmen of ST. JOSEPH. parish' \ organizations are FAIRHAVEN asked to submit news Items A Christmas party for mem­for this column to The bers of the Association of the Anchor, P. O. Box 7, Fall Sacred Hearts will be held Sun­

Reviews .10 Recent Books With Concise Comments

River 02722. day, Dec. 8 in ·the school audi­torium, beginning at 6.30 with a

,\ By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy ST. JOAN OF ARC, potluck supper. Members are ORLEANS . . asked to donate one dollar toA collection of writings by missionaries or' with a

The Parent-Teachers' Guild­ charity in lieu of a gift ex­. missionary 'aspect is presented in The Maryknoll Book of will sponsor 'a dinner dance at change, but "joke gifts" to costTreasures, edited by F1ather Albert J. Nevins (Maryknoll the school Saturday night, Dec. not more ·than .25 wlll be

·Publications, Maryknoll, N.Y. 10545. $5.75) Over 100 pieces,· 7.·A buffe.t will be served from brought to the .meeting by mem­in ·prose -and in verse,' are 7 and dinner music will be of­ bers for distribution.

ful array of photographs. O'Neill fered by the Singing Nuns. is a fascinating character, made

here gathered, and the au­ IMMACULATE CONCEPTION,Music for dancing will be bythors include both Maryknoll FALL RIVERclearer in this minute scrutiny. the Mel Von orchestra. General The 50th anniversary of Troop ,personnel and such world­ Another playwright, of con­ chairman Ike Hampton is assist­

18 of the Boy Scouts of the par­famous figures as Martin Buber, siderably less stature, is Marc ed . by Mrs. Lucy Carey, Mrs.Graham Greene, Evelyn Waugh Connelly, whose greatest suc­ ish will be commemorated at aPenny Duffy, Brian Harris and

'and Isak Dine­ Communion breakfast on Sun­cesses (comedies~ were about Gordon ~arris, committee heads. sen. Each entry day morning, Feb. 9, 1969, fol­is short and

contemporary with the major ST. JOSEPH, lowing the 9 o'clock Mass.

pithy; some are works of O'Neill which were

FALL RIVER Ail former scoutmasters, as­tragic, others

staged during the lifetime of the latter. In Voices Offstage (Holt, The school hall is open every sistants, committee men and

have ,a comic scouts who have been associated flavor. William·

Rinehart and Winston, 383 Madi­ afternoon and evening t~is. week with the troop' over its -half cen­son Ave., New York, N. Y. to receive contributions to the tury of existence are asked to

written a pleasant, random auto- The parish council will meet contact either Victor Hennessey 10017, $5.95), Mr. Connelly has Bishops' Clothing Collection. H. Whyte, who

r;:" added an ex­ FR. O'NEILL biography, which dwells nos­ at 7:30 tonight. at 4-1873 or George Thomas at

comm on vo­opression to the

talgically on his formative years Christmas decorations for the 4-6766. cabulary when and catches some of the excite­ church may be offered in mem­ Closing date for reservations he wrote The ment and glitter of the Broad­ Education Head ory of departed friends and is Jan. 15. Organiz at i iOn way world of the 1920s. family members. OUR LADY OF VICTORY,In New PostsMan, now takes a look at the Tellhard:s Thought CENTERVILLEST. ELIZABETH, pressing problem of city arid Of the innumerable .books Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill, su­ Parishioners joined in honoringEDGARTOWN su~urb at present and in the about the thought of Tielhard perintendent of diocesan schools, Rev. James F. Lyons, pastor, on . A slate of officers for the years ahead. de Chardin. Father Christopher has been named by the Com­ the silver jubilee of his ordina­coming year for the Women's

F. Mooney's Teilhard -de Char­ misshm on Independent Sec­ tion. A folk Mass with music by This he does .in The Last Guild will be presented at adin -and the Mystery of Christ ondary Schools of the New En­ the Proud Heritage, a group. of Landscape (Doubleday, 501 meeting Monday night, Dec. 16

Franklin Ave., Garden City, must rank among the best. gland Association of Colleges students from St. ·John's Semi­by Mrs. Donald A. Berube, Miss No one is going to render and Secondary Schools to serve nary, Brighton, began an after­N.. Y. 11531. $6.95), which Mary I. Medeiros and Mrs. J.

abounds in insights, prophecies, Teilhard utterly simple. But a three year term as delegate­ noon program. Mass was fol­Warren Norton.at-large. lowed by a reception and pres­and proposals different from Father Mooney makes his theo­ Members are invited to attendlogical intuitions' comprehensi­ He is replacing Father Con­ entation of gifts and spiritual' .. what we commonly get from a Holy Name Society supper

gloomy experts. The problem is ble by the ordinary reader. His nolly, S.J. who has served in offerings. CCD classes, altarJan. 19. . not insoluble, he holds, and the treatment is direct and orderly, ,this position for the past three boys and CYOmembers gaveAt the last meeting a demon­

without distorting the scattered years. the pastor felt banners with de­prospect is not hopeless. But stra'tion of the art of makingtimely action is required, and and occasional .matter with signs symbolic of the priesthood.Father O'Neill has been ap­ Christmas decorations was pre­

, he prescribes a course to be Which he is dealing. pointed· by Governor Volpe to sented by John Perkins. Refreshments were served by taken. Another. Image Book paper­ members of the Women's Guild. serve on the newly ~sta;blished

Urbane Past back (501 Franklin Ave., New 'HOLY' NAME. . .~lie W0J1,lel1's,9uild will spon­Massachusetts Educational Com­York, N. Y. '11531) is Father FALL RIVER sor a Christni'as' Rose bazaarThe microcosm of conIege or munications Commissi.ori and Raymond E. Brown's New Tes­ Contemporary music will ac­ from 1 to 8 Saturday, Dec. 7.university has been the subject will represent parochial schools tament Essays, priced. at $1.35. company the 5 o'clock Mass A -ham and bean supper will beof innumerable novels,many of. throughout the state on this'

• Wrjtten by a foremost Scripture Sunday afternoon, Dec. 8. served from 5:30 to 7:30 and athem satiric or a way of paying Commissi.on. expert, it falls into two parts.' Clothes may be brought to .television set 'Yill be awarded.old scores. Gerald Warner

The first is addressed to con­ the school for the Bishops' Toys, decorations' and foods willBrace, in .The Department temporary Biblical research and ClothIng Collection until 8 to­ be among itelns available for(Norton, 55Mh Ave.; New York,' its ecumenical significance. 'The Sodality' Day night. Donations will ,be packed purchase.N. Y. 10003. $4.95), has. written second. gives examples of such Continued from Page Thirteen tomorrow.. Co-chairqten for the bazaarstill ariother, ,the .central figure research as it bears on specific Christian Womanhood class Choir .rehearsals are held at 7 are Mrs. John McBarron andof which is an English teacher

about to retire. questions concerning the Gos­ members at· Mount 5t. Mary Wednesday evenings in the and Mrs. John ROderick. The stock elements are, un- pels. Academy heard talks from Rev. choir loft. Volunteers are urged

surprisingly, found in it, .but it LlsteningChurch Donald Messier and Rev. Robert to join this group. is less hectic imd more· adroitly Father Eugene Hillman is an Kaszyriski last week; and at DA ST. PATRICK, composed than most or-its kind. American priest who for sixteen, students 'heard Traffic Safety FALL RIVERIt makes a good story, and the years has been a missionary in Officer Raymond McGough, The parish school board istelling is urbane. Tanzania. In The Wider Ecu- . who discussed highway safety. sponsoring a ham and bean sup­

The jacket of Alan Levy's menism (Herder and Herder, Christian Womanhood per from 6:30 to 7:30 Saturday

The Culture Vultures, (Putnam, 232 Madison Ave., New York, night, Dec. 7. Proceeds will ben­200 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. 10016. $3.95) he considers Also at DA, the annual Christ ­ efit the school. Dancing will fol­N. Y. 10016. $6.95) informs us the missionary task of -the mas <:oncert will be presented low supper from 8 to 12. Inthat he and his family now live Church in the light of Vatican . ,by -the glee club Sunday, Dec. 22 charge of the event is Johnin Prague, and shows us Mr. II. in the school auditorium under Mitchell:Levy standing waist-deep in He argues for a theology direction of Sister Jeanne de Next regular school boardwater there. One does not know which is not ·bound up with the Chantal and with Madeleine meeting is set for 7 Mondaywhat that has to do with -his thought and experience of Euro- Delisle and Danielle Desmarais _night, Dec. 9in the school hall. subject, which is the frenzied peans and Americans, but taltes as accompanists. Tickets will be pursuit of culture in the U.S.A. into account those' of· the mil- available from glee club mem-

He pummels the book clubs, lions living elsewhere. The ·bers. " the lecture circuits, the art Church has to exist for 'allhu- HF seniors are rejoicing over

racket, Broadway, etc., crying manity, and has to listen to all their class pfctures, although "Fraud!" at the top of 'his far humanity, and in' so doing she some might not agree that re-

I from modest voice. He 'makes will. transcend the effeteness 'joice is ·the word. some good points, but his ten- and pessimism of our small Future Teachers at Feehan dency is' to overdo the indict- world. ' are acting as ·teachers' aides and ment, and he is not so amusl'ng Prayer both personal and' re­. . are also observing techniques inas he thinks himself. IIIted to the social> imperatives

of the Gospel is necessary today, Attleboro primary and interme­. He Wrote Tragedy says Gerard A. Pottebaum in . diate classrooms. .

A few years ago Arthur and the preface 'to 1029 Private Also at the AttleboroschQol Barbara Gelb published a mas-' Prayers ,for Worldly' Christians sophomores 'attended a Mass sive: ,biography of America's (Pflaum .Press, ·.38 W. 5th St., offered by Rev. Joseph Powers, greatest' playwright, ..~: Eugene Dayton, Ohio 45402. ..Price not <:haplain, in memory of class­O'Neill. One might have thought indicated), which has been pre- mate Peter Hinski, killed in a that nothing further on the su,b- pare~ by him and Joyce Winkel. Summer accident. Mr. and Mrs. ject would appear for a long The book comprises pages Hinski and Peter's brother, .time..~oubly slit: in .the top portion is Gregory, a Feehan senior, were'

But now Louis Shaeffer gives 'a scriptural text, in the middle also in ·attendance at' the Mass. us O'Neill, Son 'and Playwright one a ph~tograph, in tne .bottom Peter had 'been elected sopho­(Little, Brown, 34' Beacon St., one an advertising slogan. By more class presidE;nt at the end Boston, Mass. 02106. $10), which varying the combinations it of the freshman year.

I is the first t",q\yolll~es\ ¥d''''~BaY~:t~rev 1,209 prayer f6rms The.annuaichrlsim'as·:Oh6ral~'

Norris H. Tripp SHEET METAL

J. TESER, Prop. RESIDENTIAL

INDUSTRIAL. COMMERCIAL

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CORREIA &SONS ONE ~TOP

SHOPPING CENTER • Television •.Grocery .• Appliances • Fruniture

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:: c.overs only. 32yeat~;;jjf'O'N~nl'f"· t~? b'ef realized. Often stri~ing~:~::~ill:~.pe:.~~re~e~ie(r.at::=F:e.epan"::;;:.- ,} .. :~:' .~: ;.:~•..- ~ ....,.. _ ";". . . " .~" ,,> ~,:" :.~ ~ :: ~: I hf~.. Amazmgly, Mr...Sha~~fer , thiS tends ,to th~ >m~rely -tricky. . Wednesday night. Dec..11 . with ,~~ r . .• ~ .' •••••.•.I

I "h'a'9lctfuledup' with a bbMiiza','o~ AcknGwleEtgelTie'n·tl;rs due-Corita"'Sister Mai-yt;Ev.a~· "'in-" "~r e --' ... ,115.·... WltUAM,"ST:', NEw)r·BEDFO·RDJ;;;MA.~.C·' ,.l 'ne'W-'iriro'rirlatt~h'McYlf'\\ion'd'e~!' of the progra~':' g~,.. ~ ~q. g ·d· ,",')" I'f ,.' f\'IV; 'o.i~ :; ..._' .'.' '. ~tr.! '"~~Kent'fM'S6fu~'(jr iffe')1cfea~:''

Page 15: 12.05.68

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Dec. 5, 1968 15

I I>

........., ~

SCOUTS RECALL SWITZERLAND TRAINING PROGRAM: Stephen Mello and Robert Fugere examine the handerchief map of their English camp. Center: Robert S. Fugere and Frank Jason demonstrate the use of a rope in mountain

climbing. John Landry, Leo Landry and Joseph Ephszaro admire souvenir brought home from the affair. Tl:le trip plans were over two years being

Bishops Assert Pol ish'; Freedom To Endure

BONN (NC) - "No one will ever 'again dare to vio­late" the freedom of Poland and "wIpe' the name of Poland fi'bm the map of Europe," the PoliSh bishops told their countrymen in a joint pastoral letter. .

Issued on,tM 50th anniver­"sarytif tHe 'restohiTIon' of 'Polish independence,'''the pastoral ex­pressed the hope that "the re­gained freedom be fortified in our interior spiritual lives, so that all of our nation feels free and able to use this gift of God unimpaired."

"We believe in such a possi­bility for the Church in our homeland," the bi'shops added.

"We are' convinced that the new times in which we live will strengthen In a new fashion new rights for the complete freedom and sovereignty of the state," the pastoral continued, "and that nobody will ever again dare to violate this freedom and wipe the name of Poland from the map of Europe', as the great powers once did by 'dividing Poland up among themselves."

Poland has been partitioned several times in lots history. The division that took place in the 18th century was finally ended after World War I and it became an independent nation.

Meanwhile, the Yugoslav daily Vjesnik, published in Zagreb, praised the Polish bish­ops' pastoral, declaring that the document- means more to each Pole who' yearns to belong to a nati,on capable of a life of freedom than official speeches by the Polish Communist party and government functionaries.

Vjesnik said that the bishops' pastoral rep'resents "an authen­tic document which reports dis­passionately on the history of Poland and the inherent moral and freedom-loving qualities of the Polish people." ' ,

The paper added that the in­fluence of the Catholic Church in Poland will be retained with undiminished strength so long as the Church understands its responsi1bility for representing itself "to the' 'nation as ·the· bearer not orily of moralahd ethical but - also' of national values." '

finalized.

Diocesan Boys Enjoy Tour of Boy Scout Landmarks in Countries of Europe

By Patricia Francis

More than two and a half years ago, Robert S. Fugere of St. Margaret's parish, Buzzarrds BaY,-Boy Scout Council commissioner of Wareham-went to 'a world Jam.: boree of Boy Scouts in Idaho. There he met some men who had visited the Boy Scout chalet in Kanderstet, Switzerland, where Scouts from all over the world are given courses in mountain climb­ing. Bob Fugere, whose own Bedford; Allan W. and Joseph two sons are acU.ve in SCQut-' E. Wilson,' 'both of Troop 34, 81.·

-in-g, beganthiinking about the exclotement it would be for Boy Scouts from this area to visit some of the places in Europe made famous by Lord Baden-Powell, the founder of ,the Boy Scout movement.

"It was two years in the plan­ning," he said the other day. But, some night before Christ ­mas, Robert Fugere will present 50-Miler Awards to the 20 Boy Scouts who helped make a dream come true with visits to Boy Scout points of interest in Europe last Summer.

"The boys saved a little everyweek while they were planningthe trip," Fugere' says. "It cost each boy approximately '$475."

When the Scout caravan started out on its Europeantravels the group included the 20 boys and the seven adults who accompanied them.

Among the adult chaperones were Fugere, Frank Jason Jr., scoutmaster of Troop 17, St. John the Baptist Church, New Bedford, and South District Leadership Training Chairman; Leo C. Landry, scoutmaster of Troop 16, St. Anne Church, New Bedford; Richard J. Ward, neighborhood commissioner of Cachalot Council, and Mr. and Mrs. John R. Manter of South Dartmouth. Manter is scoutmas­ter of Troop 58, Congregational Church, South Dartmouth, and Mrs. Manter is a trainer for Cub Pack leaders.

Participating Scouts included Fugere's sons, Robert and Peter, both of Ship 34, St. Margaret's Church; the Manters' three sons, James and Kirk of Troop 58 and Donald of Pack 58; six Scouts from St. Anne's Church, Richard

. Margaret's ',. Ciiurch;Peter L. Breton of Matta,poisett, Troop 23, American Legion POlit 280; Jonathan Chace of Dartmouth, Troop 74, Smith Mills Congrega­'tional Church; Andrew L. Cur­rie of South Dartmouth, Troop 58; Robert T. Mullen Jr. of Som­erset; Bradley L. Sell of Marion, Troop 32, and Dwight E. Moyni­han of Pittsfield.

Seventh adult member of the traveling group was Leroy p. Ellis of Onset, Pack 35 commit­tee chairman, who celebrated his golden jubilee as a Scouter during the trip.

Unlimited Energy

Average age of the Scouts was in the 13-to-16 year group and all, according to adult com­panions, had unlimited energy.

Highlights of the trip included a mountain climbing course for younger members of the party at Kenderstet; a training session at Gilwell Park in London _ "where we saw a coed encamp­ment, boys and girls from about 20 different nations camping to­gether.

"They all put on shows and demonstrations, with folk dances, native songs _ all of it was properly supervised and I was amazed at the adult attitude they had," Fugere says. - "There were 5,000 to 6,000

kids there and there were abso­lutely no incidents. Everybody worked together well."

After their junior leadership training course at Gilwell Park, the Scouts and their adult com­panions moved onto Blair Castle in Scotland fot a national jam­boree and visited famous Brown Sea Island in Poole Harbour, England, where the first Boy Scout encampment in the world

H. Aubut, Gary Gomes, John M. was held under the sponsorship Landry, Stephen A. Mello, Mark of Lord Baden-Powell. M.or~llcy. and Joseph P. Szaro;"; , The~' Scouts previously' had 'Edward '.A.rlderson Jr. of Fair- stayed' at Lord Baden-Powell's haven, •a . membe.. Qf Troop 23, house in' London, now' used as a Grace' Episc'opal Church, New': Boy Scout hostel.

While at Brown Sea Island ­located between Bournmouth and Wareham-the Boy Scouts from Southeastern Massachu­setts handed out' souvenirs of their home area to the Lord Mayors of the two communities, Fugere recalls,' "packages of cranberry products from home."

At Gilwell Park and Kander­stet, directors were given camp and trip neckerchiefs and scrim­shaw tie slides by the visitors from Massachusetts.

Former Member One of the bright spots in the

trip was the arrival of a former member of St. Margaret's Troop 34 to join' the party.

"He was Michael Crowley, whose father is in the Air Force and now is stationed at. the

. American Embassy in Madrid," Fugere explains. "He came by train himself from Spain to Switzerland and then traveled back to England with us."

Turn to. Page Sixteen

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OMAHA (NC) - Archbishop Gerald T. Bergan of Omaha has announced that junior college students at St. John's Seminary, Elkhorn, Neb., will be reassigned to other schools as part of a revision of the archdiocesan seminary training program here for young men preparing for the priesthood.

In a joint announcement Archbishop Bergan, the archdi­ocesan seminary board and offi ­cials at St. John's stated that the Elkhorn seminary will be devoted exclusively to training high school students.

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Page 16: 12.05.68

... THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs;, Dec. 5, 196816

Need Action to Implement Statements of Principle

By Msgr. George G. Higgins

'Uhe National Oatholic Reporter, in oommenting (11­20-68) on the recent U.S. Bishops' Statement on Farm Lahor said, 'among ot,her things, that if the bishops had endorsed the California grape boycott, "they would h~ve made news, the news would have had impact, the workers I would :have had real help--.and the pr-inciples the bishops en­dorsed would have been, a lot clearer." I -am inclined to go along with this opinion. I also agree with the editors of NCR that it's highly dubious that a mere restate­ment of ,princi­ple from the NCCB is "going to make much

'difference." I had hasten to add, however, that the same thing could be said even if the Bishops' State­ment on Farm Labor had en­dorsed the ,boycott, as I, for my , own part, had hoped that 'it

'would.' ' ,In other words, no "mere"

restatement of ,principle -', in- . cluding one which supported, the boycott - would be worth much more than the paper, it was printed on.

That's why it is important to note that one of the California bishops urged on the floor of the NCCB meeting in Washing­ton - and so reported at ,the press cOliference - that the sev­eral dioceses and the appropriate USCC and other Catholic agen­cies take the Statement seriously and try to get it implemented.

~PoUtical. Action,

Our own USCC Division on Urban Life, which· has been

Boy Scouts Continued from Page Fifteen Michael's older ,brother, John,

was a former member' of Leroy Ellis' troop and Mr. Ellis asked Michael about him. ' '

'''He's married and ~ow he's in Vietnam," Mich'ael said.

Last week, adults in the party attended a memorial service at St. Margaret's in Buzzards 'Bay' for John, killed just weeks ago in Vietnam. His grandmother, Mrs. Grace Steele, lives in' Buzzards Bay.

The memories' that will be re-, hashed during the 50-Miler presentation within the next few weeks will include "the fabulous receptions,we had from the mayors of Bournmouth and Wareham," the training sessions -information from which now is being passed on to Scouts,who did not make the trip-and "the tremendous number of people from the area that we met while we were traveling in Europe," Fugere says.

'Worth Effort The jaunt was a long-planned

one and Mr. Fugere is convinced it was worth all the effort put into it.

"It's' the first ,time in more than 50 years that a Scout group from here has visited historic Scout places in Europe," he says.

From the enthusiasm in his voice, it appears the Scout leader is ready to take off on a repeat junket w,henever' ,he gets the word. The Boy Scouts who

,went on the trip have the same reaction.

working on this problem at the nitty-gritty political level for many years, will continue to do its part, in cooperation with a a number of other 'Catholic, Protestant, and Jewish organi­zations.

When all is saidan<I done, however, we cannot· do very much from this end of the line-­and neither can the 'Bishops from their respective chanceries. '

Organizing farm workers 'and getting, protective legislation en­acted calls for rough-and-tumble economic and political action on the 'part of thousands of people not associated with the, eccle­

, siastical bureaucracy. Ditto, incidentally, for the iin­

plemeniation of the Bishops' re­cent poItcy statement on selec­tive conscientious objection, the draft, nuclear,deterrence, etc,.

"Mere" sta'tements of principle on these controversiaL issues, and other crltical matters of public policy will not be very effective. Of course not. More­over I am afraid that they wouldn't be much more effec­tive even if they were worded twice as stro{lgly.

They would" make more news, of course, but, in my opinion, this news (pace NCR) would not have very much impact unless' interested priests and, above all, concerned' and committed lay­men were prepared to do their part. Are we (they) 'so pre­pared? "I hope so, but, frankly, I have my fingers crossed.

In other words, I get ,the im­pression that we still find it more congenial to fret about what the Bishops say or fail" to say on controversial matters of public' policy than to do some­,thing practical about these issues

'on our own initiative, regard­less of what the Bishops say or do, or fail to say or do, about them. ' ,

First step

In brief, if there are any NCR readers or other interested par­ties who would ~ike to help the, farm workers either economic­ally or legislatively and don't know where' to begin, may I suggest that they write directly to Cesar Chavez, president of the United Farm Workers of America (Delano, California) and/or to the National Commit­tee for Agricultural Democracy (110 Maryland Avenue, N.E., Washington, D. C. 20002).

The latter organization is an ad hoc interreligious agency which, for the past several years, has been. concentrating exclusively on trying to per­suade the Congress to include farm workers under the cover­age of the National Labor Rela­tions, Act.

If enough-people write to this organization and follow its rec­ommendations, the clergymen in charge of its operations may be able, in due time, to bow out of the picture and turn their atten­tion to other matters. '

For the time being, however, I am afraid they will have to go

, on pinch ,hitting for the laity. Too bad-that's the way it goes in this post-conciliar world of ours.

SR. MARIE ANGE, O.P.

Sister to Mark Golden Jubile'e

A reception from 1 ,to 4 Sun­,day afternoon, Dec. 8 at Domini­can Academy, ,Fall River, will honor Sister Marie Ange, O.P., on the completion of 50 years of religious Hfe.

'The religious, born 'in' 1894 in St. Simon, Quebec, is one of 13 children. Her family moved to. Rhode' Island when she was a small child and her early educa­tion was in Harrisville and Cen­tral Falls schools. The family then moved to Fall River, where Sister' Marie Ange entered the Dominican community in 1916, making first ,profession of vows Dec. 8, 1918.

In New York

Sister Marie Ange has served in missions in Plattsburgh, Peru and Cohoes, N. Y. and in Fall River and Acushnet in this Dio­cese. Her work has included cooking, sewing and sacristy care.

Dele9at~s Meet SAN FRANCISCO '(NC)

Delegates from 12 western dio­ceses met as Mission Dolores Center here to select regional representatives ,to the newly es­tablished" United States Cath­olic Conference Advisory Coun­ell. Three of the delegates came from as far away as Guam.

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The annual Christmas bazaar sponsored by the parish will take place -tomorrow and Satur­day nights from 7 to 10 as well as, from 2 to 4 Saturday after­noon. In addition to tables fea­turing jewelry, homemade food, candy, aprons and knit goods, there will be a country store stocking, specialty food items, fruit and canned goods.

An auction of new items will be held on both Friday and Sat­urday. To be up for bids will be toys, games, radios, electrical appliances, dolls and ot,her gift items.

Parish men will be respon­sible for preparation of refresh­ments.

ST. MARY'S CATHEDRAL, FALL RIVER

The annual Women's Guild Christmas ,sale will be held from 1 to 9 tomorrow' in the school. Articles may be left at the school tomorrow morning.

OUR LADY OF ANGELS, FALL RIVER

Children of Mary will hold an installation banquet and recep­tion of new members following 5 o'clock Mass Sunday evening, Dec.8.

ST. JEAN BAPTISTE, FALL RIVER

The Council of Catholic Women will hold a Christmas party at 6:30 Sunday night, Dec. 8 at White's restaurant. Gifts will be exchanged and the ticket dead­line is today.

FDR THE'FRIEND WHDHAS EVERYTHING

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What to give at Christma~ to thefri~nd who has everything is a problem, no longer.~ow, in his name (orhers), you can wipeout'hardship.... Young 'men need your help to b~come good priests. Millions of' babies, are hU,ngry all the time. Christmas will be happy if you help people

,like these, in your friend's name. -We'il send him (or her) a new artistic personalized Gift Card in time for Christmas, saying what you have done. ... To train 'a native priest costs only $600 all told ($100 a year, $8.50 a month). To train a Sister costs merely $300 ($150 a year, $12.50 a month). Give an altar to a mission church ($75), a-chalice ($40), a ciborium ($40), a ,tabernacle ($25), a sanctuary lamp($15)~ For as little as $10 you can feed a family of refugees for a month. ' ....,. Build a church, and name it yourself for the saint of your choice? :You can dol,itfor much less than you think..The Holy Father. says a church is urgently needed in'Combolcia;Ethiopia ($2,400), for instance; in' Mazrant Abou;SleibY,·Lebanon ($2,950); in Ambalamugal, India ($3,100), and scores of poverty places. What an appropriate, lasting gift at. ChristmC!s "in youJj loved ones' memory! . . . Write to us. All gifts are tax­deductible, of course, in 'the U.$.~irl:l ~, . • < '. ~~ ~ foH t-

In Bethlehem, orphan girls will find t\1eir Christ­mas stocking empty. Like to be ~,!nta Claus to, one of t,hem? You can '!ldppt' a Iittl!,! girl for only $10'a month ($120 a year). We'II-{~er;Jd you her photo, ask her to write to you.....,. The MidnightMass in Bethleh~mwill be offered for the members and benefactors of thjs Asso­

. ciation. This is our Chri.stmas Gift ... Day by day, all year long, members share also ir;J,the Masses,

OUR prayers, and sacrifices of our mission priestsGIFT and Sisters. In time for Christmas, enroll your­

TO self, your family and friends? The offering (usedYOU for the poor in 18 developing countries) is very

low. You can enroll 'your family in perpetual membership ($100) or annual membership ($10). To enroll an individual the offering is $25 (perpetual) or $2 (annual)...-. Ask us to send Gift cards before Christmas, if you wish.

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Page 17: 12.05.68

THE ANCHOR­ 17 ,

infallibility as a mission of Holy TrinityINTERFAITH CONCIERT: Principals in program of sacred music are Rev. John J. Carajanes,Church and ... the knowledge· of Church, West Harwich. In 1948director left, and Rev. Wiliiam G. Campbell of St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, host for therevealed mysteries:" It' should Immaculate Conception was at ­be more clearly stated that the occasion. tached to. the new S1. Joan of infallibility of the Church does Arc parish in Orleans and in not give· he'Fonlya safe course',· 1961 it became a parish in its in continual research but the own right, serving Brewster,.To Feature lewis'h Cantor 'at Interfaithtruth in 'maintaining the doc-' Dennis and Pleasant Lake Cath­trine of fMthl~nd" fnexplaining~' olics until 1963, when Our Ladyit always in the same sense of the Cape Church was built.Concert at St. Mary's iCathedral Difference . It has now reverted to mission

8. The ministerial or hier­ status and is used only duringarchical ·pri~~thood. "'and the An ecumenioal program of. sacred music, f<eaturing soloists and choiTs representing the Summer m\?nths, since the power of tea~hing. a!,~ ruling in the three major faiths, will be held in St. Mary's Cathedral, Fall River, at .3 Sunday new church is able to serve per­the Church".· The catechism ft D 8 h· Sshould mak~l·c':i.ear tha.t the min- a' ernoon, ec. . Te major work, Johann ebastian Bach's Sacred Oantata, No. 140, manent residents better than the isterial priestl)ood differs essen- "Wachet Auf Ruft uns Die Stimme," will replace, this year, the traditional holiday per- old building.

Pastor of Our Lady of thetially fro th i formance of Handel's Mes- . . m e common pr est- "Messiah," they have performed hattan, New York, has studied Cape is Rev. Henri Durand, M.S. I)ood of the faithful. . siah cantata. The sacred works of Faure, Brahms,and St. several years abroad, has lec­ and assistants are Rev. Marius Furthe~~r~"J~~. ;·..car~~nal§ . qc:~p.;t~ta, 'an inspired exhOTta- Saens.· Noted. for their inter-~ tured at Yale on Jewish music, Bordenave, M.S. and Rev. Real

~sked that ·the new catechism Uon to spiritual awakening, faith activities, they were in­ and taught 'n Connecticut Richard, M.S.schools. In 1966 he gave theclearly recognize that the will be sung by a 75-voice cho'" vited to' sing and participate at Megansett MIssionfirst concert of Jewish music~eaching authority and the rale. Presenting the masterwork the First Ecumenical Dialogue The Megansett mission of thesponsored by a Catholic insti ­power of ruling in the Church is will be the combined choirs of held in the Fall River diocese Immaculate Conception is at ­tution, Albertus Magnus Colleg'e given directly to the Holy St. Mary's Cathedral and Grace in 1965. This was sponsored by tached to St. Joseph's parish,

. in New Haven, Conn. .Father and to the bishops joined Lutheran Church, Malverne, the· Cape Cod Council of Woods. Hole. It was establishedRev. Carajanes received hiswith him in hierarchical com- N. Y., accompanied by the Churches and the diocese, and over 40 years ago in an old

musical training at' Concordiamunion, and ·that it is not given Cathedral Chamber Ensemble, was held in Hyannis. theatre by Rev. Thomas F. Ken­College, and presently Is study­first of all to the People of God with David Carrier, organist at . Since both Father Campbell nedy, and has been enlarged and

to be communicated to others. the Cathedral. and Rev. Carajs-nes left Fal- ing at Union Theological School, renovated over the years.majoring in organ and choralThe bishops receive their man- Rev. John J. Carajanes, direc- mouth, they have kept up. a During the Winter, two Massesconducting.date from God· not from the tor of the Grace Lutheran close association and have spon­ are said every Sunday at the

people. . Church choir, will dIrect the sored a yearly musical program, David Carrier, Cathedral or­ mission and attendance averagesThe catechism is also to point concert. Rev. William G. Camp- even though being stationed in ganist, studied piano and organ 150 adults. In Summer there are

out that the Holy Father and the bell, director of the Cathedral different states. Last year Rev. with Normand Gingras of Fall six Sunday Masses and a daily bishops in their teaching office Choristers, will host the Inter- Mr. Carajanes came from New River, and James Bennett of Mass, and attendance swells to do not merely assemble and faith gathering. York to direct the Interfaith Providence. Presently al stu' ­ some 3000. Sacred Hearts Fath­approve what the whole com- f dent at the New England Con­For the first time in the his- conced 0 Handel's "Messiah." ers from Fairhaven aid Rev. munity of the faithful believes. tory of seasonal publl·C l·nter- The Cathedral Choristers trav- servatory of Music, he·is major­ Edwin J. Loew, pastor of St.

It is also to be presented that N ing in organ with Yuko Hayashi. Joseph's, in 'ministering to thefai·th c')ncerts held at the Cathe- elled to ew York last January

'"'Co'

1968

Virgin Mary Continued from Page One

1904 and is built of stone quar­ried from the ledge on which it stands. There has always been a record of cooperation between the parish and the J{oly Cross Fathers of Stonehill College and Piux X Seminary, both within Immaculate Conception's boun­daries. Holy Cross priests have aided in parish work and sem­inarians have conducted cate­chism classes.

In 1962 a parish center was dedicated, one of the first of the forward-looking buildings de­signed to serve catechetical, athletic and social needs of a parish without a school.

Older Than Parish Immaculate Conception mis­

sion in East Brewster is in the unusual position of being older than the church to which it is attached, Our Lady of the Cape, Brewster. It can also boast of having been part of three par­ishes, as well as itself being briefly a parish church.

Its story began in 1910 when the present building was erected

Thurs., Dec. 5,Dutch Cc:itechism COI).tiqued from Page One

3. The conception of Jesus by the Virgin Mary. The catechism should teach that the Blessed Mother was always a virgin in fact and not merely in a sym­bolic sense.

4. The "satisfaction" made by Christ 'our Lord. Jesus, the son of God, freely died for our sins and thereby abundantly com­pensated for them.

5. The sacrifice of the cross and the sacrifice of the Mass. The sacrifice of the cross is per-. petuated in the Church of God as the Eucharistic sacrifice. In the Eucharistic sacrifice, Jesus as the principal priest offers himself to God through the con­secratory oblation which priests perform and to which the faith­ful unite themselves.

Real Change 6. The Eucharistic .presence

and Eucharistic change. It is necessary that in the text of the catechism it be brought out be­yond doubt that after the con­secration of the bread and wine the very body and blood of Christ is present on the altar and is received sacramentally in Holy Communion.

7. The of the

the Holy Father has the fullpower of ruling. dral, a Jewish cantor will par- to sing in an interfaith program, Dogma ticipate in the program. Cantor and will do so again next month

William Crausman, director of to repeat tbis Sunday's concert. 9. Various points concerning

dogmatic theology. The cate- music at Temple Beth El, Fall Soloists chism should stress the value of River, will be tenor soloist in Soloists in the Bach Cantata contemplaUng the mystery of the sacred Cantata. He also will will include Miss Anne Marie the Trinity, not only in the sing a Hebrew melody, Eli-Eli-, Lingard, soprano, and John economy of salvation, but also which draws upon the Yiddish Bezubka, bass. Miss Lingard in the eternal life of the vernacular as well as .proclaim- studied voice with Sister Ga­divinity. i·ng the faith of Israel, "The briella, in Fall River, and later

Care must be taken that the Lord Our God Is One." at the New England Conserva­catechism does not seem to say Other selections will include tory of Music in Boston, under that miracles can only be Mendelssohn's "He Watching Madame Maria Elsberg. Having brought Il'bout by divine power Over Israel," "Thou Must Leave given vocal programs through­insofar as they do not depart Thy Holy DweUing Place," by out southeastern Massachusetts, from that which the forces of Berlioz, and an arrangement of s'he sings with the Cathedral the created world are able to "A Mighty Fortress Is Our God" Choristers with which she is produce. by Gerald Phillips, for brass soloist.

The catechism should openly ensemble and choir with des- John Bezubka, curI:ently solo­refer to the present enjoyment cant. ist ·at the First Congregational by the souls of the just of the Co-Founders of Choir Church, Fall River, and Temple vision of God. Director Carajanes and Father Beth-El, Providence, studied

10. Cer.tain points of moral Campbell were co-founders of voice with Germaine Barre of theology. The text of the cate- the Falmouth Interfaith Choir Fall River, and later with chism is not to make obscure' when both were stationed' in Madame Maria Elsberg at the the exIstence of moral laws Falmouth. Rev. Mr. Carajanes New England Conservatory of which we are able to know and was pastor of Christ Lutheran Music. Having appeared in TV express in such a way that they Church, while Father Campbell and radio performances with the bind our conscience always and was assistant at St. ,Patrick's Peloquin Chorale, he has con­in all circumstances. Solutions Church. Since its foundation in certized extensively in Massa­of cases,.of conscience should be 1964 the choir has performed chusetts .and Rhode Island. avoided which do not suffici- . several works..in southeastern .cantor Crausman entIy attend to the indissolu- Mas·sachu$etts. In addition to Cap·tor Crausman, a graduate bility of marriage. four performances of Handel's of Ye$hiva University in Man-

Tum to Page Nineteen Megansett Catholics.

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Page 18: 12.05.68

mat(e~"whe're it may lead. . JESUITS EXPELLED FROM IRAQ: The firstgr.:lup of Jes~it prie~t-educa!ors .expell~d J~om·.. lr,aq, 1 Ven~sh of .J?lle~ pI;.' said he:~ . Maione suggested that teach­

are greeted in Boston by the New England Jesuit Provincial, Very.Rev. Willi(Jm Gu.ihdoh'·(se.~C?n'd·. ::hOU~?tlthe.~~th)~Pll~ery well ., ers ,lise' 'the 'w'eaknessof adver­tisirig as .pa~t; of a c.iirJ;iculum from rig,~t).. From left, Father ofrederi&~. Kell~;.S.J.~ Roslindale;.' Fath~~, Fr~ae.I'i~~r,·,?:;,;~,cL~o~,~·!.'}:~~~~~~:~R~l~h.~~.'i~,~n~~~

S.J., Dofdlester; Father leo J.'·Guay,' S:J.,'·lacon1a, N.H;; 'andFather' John' P.:B. ,Banks, IS. J." -. b it-l'i"til" Jl.~,rl., ~~J;~ \,fP,. of'li~e" ; " . J

, ;. "The English teacher should Milton. They had taught, until their. ex~uls!on,,~'t:A}-Hik":,:a Univer.sity;· Baghdad.' NC Photo.':, ">'~A~{£bi:~6!prEf~~.eHtY§r:iHun_ ask studlmts to listen 'to~ an eve­ '-'ll:'eler (W'Kians~1City, karr!:~'said" • ',' .:-'. • • , .' .. ' .'. ..' J

.ning .{)f adv.ertising and. analyze "it from. the light of grammar." Prelate Hi'nts .,PolitD~cS :>in Bia;frCi, FO"rI11i1e ~\·l:;.~e~ fH:;;~:~~:~~~:~~,;~:~~u~i

. The mathematics teacher, too, .. . . ", ;,., ' ; " ..,., 'J -; " •. '",";' " ("j' sho\lI~l,a1<;li.,usvm tkgrtHlfilll1)ent

could,obtain a,world of practical .Stresses ·B. rita. in~s" ':Int~r~'st : in" :. Nlg:":erid<')'~' ~; ,.;; '_.:::0~_9,u~Ciyjc ,Ci~.ti~~·.'\,.> ';~l;':!C.e.xer~f~es for,)';is. students from commercials. ,. . '., ' ':"'H ">'1 " '· ..·-T·t':~·:;;/·jt· ,,';:bl ')~~:J:er$'e~:tnr~i'I'r.·~~tor.s·;:!

":the, students .could. ha,ve for SEATTLE (NC)-Questioning '. Natio'ns and·the Orgah'lzation' ," ow. ong mus :t"lS "err~ e"' A' . "T,)., ':">T-fi~1 ~!T'~O~' "..'.hJ

their homework to figure o,ut . the role of international politics of African Unity to end the war, . condition continue?" ,the arch-' " liege ·,Lock!", ut" .' the reai costsQf.~'loanOfromthis in the present hunger plight of lift the blockade, and bring the' bishop asked.:llA;'re' we' going to' LIV:INGSTON"(NCj:LTwenty­

... loa~: company," ,he said. "And the Biafran people, Archbishop necessary relief to the 'BTafrans, . sit 'idly' by and wat~h" this pres-" '~eve1i of"3CY'teaeHePs'1fFthe high :" the'tr.uth shall set'you free.'" Thomas A. Connolly of Seattle the prelate declared. . '''entgenoClde campaign'reach its . school;'Co'j{fr~'tertlih~' of,IChris­, . ';, "', Warning . has asked "why' our State De­ Implying the blockade was . ultimat~g6al-tfie ~ra'sure of a tian DoCtrine program at' St.

" ' Fisher sounded a. ~ord of partment turns a deaf ear" to being sustained because of Brit- whole people'''frorn I the: face' <;>£,'1. PHilomena's I parlsl'i ifiere' 'have . "_.. I . • .

warmng, the appeals reaching it from ain's interest in Nigeria, A"rch- the earth. I thou~ghi'li1is. typ-e of· i bee'J-i"'barred'ftbWi1ihe program "Intelligent people like you across the country to aid the bishop Conriolly said "the rich' activity cease"d with Hiile'r:" , ,.' f6r agltaiii'i~' for 1T;¥J'p'arlsh coun­

, and' me 'reject the· organized starving of the beleaguered Af­ oil lands of Biafra are being Pending action' on the 'political: . cil:, '.;!',' ~. '1:~ ,no!Vl :'

bamp.oozlement of the: captive rican nation. ' bought at the cost of a baby's frorit, :Archbishop Co~nolly said :Don "Jac'obsen1,r i1resfClen.t of a 'communications industry . . . "Is it because we are commit­ milk." ' immediate assistance is needed regional CCD 'b'oatd which em­

but 'we' unconscious~y, accept the ted to safeguard and protect He quoted a recent article in by·the'Biafrans. To'this end he braces '25-""parisIl'es 'in Essex - philosophy 'thiit' ,the production British interests in' Nigeria'!" the 'the London Daily' Express' that announced that a sp~Cial collec-Coi.m'ty; ~nd;- 'a'/!iTiemlJer 'of the

and consumption' of goods at lUI archbishop asked in an official bombs, allegedly being made in tion' will'be,taken'in the Seattle' 'archdr6c~san "(ceo" ex~cutive j, .' ever-increasing rate is necessary, communication to' all pastors in Britain, are being dropped on 'archdiocese on'the Sunday after committee',has':~hargediHafthe

for ·the health and survivai of the Seattie arch,Jliocese. Biafra and fired at those planes Thanksgiving, in" connection parish's mod~l l~CD "'pr:ogram our Western way of life," he Pressure must be. brought on ,attempting to get f90d and med- with the US bishops' annual - has been junked' by the'pastor,said. ' , the Unite'd States" the' United' ical suppJies to the Biafrans.clothing drive.' . Msgr. William A. McCann.

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Teachers' Guide Cont~nued .from Page One

Fishe"r' asked'. "What., if' some 'middle . class ~xponent of un-" bridled' free enterprise thinks you're_ braJnwashil1g . l'\~s child with 'veiled socialist "ideas?"

.' Support Teaclllers , Fishe~ sai'd there is'no easy . ,ans'w~rtQ this question; 'but sug­, .geste9 that .e·~ch ,teacher act ac­'. cording .to: '~he ,dictiltes of his

conscieJ:l'ce. He \irg~d ·p.rincipals and'·~ educational' supervisors to

.have the,' cO.1.1rage : to' support teachers in, the implementation of th~. ideal to ,pursue truth no

~~tion's Bish~ps Preview Film

WASlfiNGTON' (NCj"':"'Special showings of :a .new filmstrip, "The Right to ;Lif~,";'inc,onjunc­

-tion with the National Confer­ence "Of Catholfc Bishops'.' meet­ing here produ~ed, favorable

; .';~omment from sever.aV'iprellites. .' . ,:." ,The', ~il,m, n,,~rf,:~'t~,~ .b{,~ctfess .

Loretta Youngi.~rilI~e~'t:(.aga!nst·

relaxation of~{~imnt4~p~:r~ion , .,..., laws: After the"spet:i8'l -showings, ;', ,,..., .:sever~).l;Ii~hPP~)a.c.ed"l?.rq,er~,for,,' \,' the frrntl

, ;~'J ~i~t~~'Il:q ,,\';!l~,

, • <. 'A'uxif(~~y'BiShOpJ~;ph' M.

Pernicone, o~;t;Ne1Njt.rrYS!.rlr 3aid: 1< 'rrNf'!iJT§th~fwi1l11i1Pffi'~~ y well ""'inevery parish. It isa beautiful

jiltt~~~~li~ir:ln~pt~lnOnd J.

1968 THE ANCI10R­Th~rs., Dec.' 5,1~'

J.. j

Page 19: 12.05.68

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SCHOOLBOY SPORTS IN THE DIOCFJSE

By PETER J: BARTEK Norton High Coach

~rising Little Nantucket:

All Winning Bourne· Tops 27 .Area Gridiron Clubs Undefeated and untied :Bourne High today stands alone

atop the final 'standing of the 27 competing scholastic foot­ball teams which compete within the conf.ines of the diocesan territorial limits. ChampIons of the Capeway 'Conference­one of the strongest circuits Thanksgiving Day victory.,in the Commonwealth­ Coach Joe Bettencourt's sec­Coach Russ Burns' OaJpe' ond-ranked Whalers secured Canalmen, with their un­ their runner-up spot 'by besting blemished record in nine con­ their traditional rival, Durfee, tests, also annexed ,the State in the season's finale. Coach Class C championship in com­ Don Montle's Bristol County piling their best over-all season League titlists,as a consequence mark in several years. of their holiday loss, not only ~dent New Bedford dropped back to fourth, but, lliso

High, whose all-winning nine­ saw the Class t State pennant game record was ruined !1S a sUp from .theIr grasp into the result of a tie with Msgr. Coyle hands 01 the area's only 'all~win-High of Taunton, is second in . ning combine,' Bourne. the 27 team cOmpilation while Oliver Ames of North Easton, co-tWist Mansfield High of the where Coach Val Muscato di­Hockomock loop in the northern rects the gridiron aggregation, section of the county eased finished in' a fourth-place tie into third place ahead of fourth­ while dividing the Hockomock ranking Durfee of Fall River. first . place honors with Mans­

The Crimson Whalers, who field and North Attleboro. re1HTn to the Bristol County It is interesting to note that League next Fall, chalked up Old Rochester of Mattapoisett, eight wins in their nine-contest which corralled the Narry season while Coach Ed Cunning­ League title in its first season· ham's Green Hornets finished after an absence of many years with a 7-1-1 record as they from the' circuit, wound up in moved into''tlie'three-way Hock-" i5th place in the '2't'-game stind-' omock tie by virtue of their ing.

High Ca'peway Conference Evaluation Somerset and Seekonk, second that schooois are free to pick

and third finishers in the Narry their non-league opponents to race, placed far ahead of Old help in· rounding-out a better Rochester in the final over-all over-all season's average. How­rating, ending-up in a four-way ever, many "choosey"· schools seventh place deadlock with have been embarrassingly sur­Barnstable and, Dennis-Yar­ prised in the past when they did mouth of the Capeway Confer­ not achieve their hoped-for ence. There are some football result. "smarts" who contend that late

The Capew~y clubs' amassed on-rushing Barnstable was the a total of 15 out of 20 out-of­finest second-'half season 'club the-league games for a .750 av­in the entire area, barring none, erage. The Narry contenders,but it paid the price for a not,..' with an even-split, captured 11so-good early season effort.

,out of 22 non-league encounters The balance of the Cape ; as the Bristol County clubs

league, which many believe were successful in nine out of rates with the best Class B com': 20 for a .450 mark. The tri ­petitions in the entire State, was champions" of the Hockomock demonstrated by the fact that league were able to win only all its representatives did very tWo of six for a .333 mark. well in non-league contests with clubs from the Bristol County; One of the big surprises in the Hockomock and Narry. circuits over-all competition is the sixth while the Hockomock clubs, {or place standing of little Nantucket 'some unknown reason this Fall, . of the 'tape' & Isla'nds loop did not do nearly as well when which completed its campaign they went· outside their own with a 6-2-0 record, and, by so league. Nit,], doing, rates in the top quarter

There are.:U\ose who contend of the area clubs.

Here Are Season's Final Records .I

Every ooe ,of the 27 competi- Somerset 6-2-1 tors eked out a tie at least. 11. Attleboro 6-3-0 Small Martha's Vineyard, dum­ Bishop Feehan 6-3-0 ped in five contests, gained the Falmouth 6-3-0 satisfaction of gaining a tie in North Attleboro 6-3-0 its sixth contest, thereby avoid­ 15. Msgr. Coyle 4-3-1 ing a complete all-lost season. Old Rochester 4-3-1

17. Fairhaven 4-4-1Here are final records: 18. Bishop Stang 4-5-0

1. Bourne 9-0-0 19. Norton 3-5-1 2. New, Bedford 8-0-1 20. Case 3-4-1 3. Mansfield 7-1-1 21. Provincetown 2-5-1 4. Durfee 7-2-0 22. Dartmouth 2-7-0

Oliver Ames 7-2-0 Taunton 2-7-0 6. Nantucket 6-2-0 Wareham 2-,7-0 7. Barnstable 6-2-1 25.' Dighton-Rehoboth 1-8-0

Dennis-Yarmouth 6-2-1 New Beaford Voke 1-8-0 Seekonk 6-2-1 27. Martha's ~ineyard 0-5-1

Excels, \Vith I~aurelcrest Prep Collegians Bid for' Cleve.r Ball Carrying Back By LUKE SIMS Vocational' was dealt a 26-15

setback but the better than 8,000John Quintal is working fans that jammed Sargent Field

his way up the -scholastic left the premises singing the ladder t{)wardathletic BUC­ praises of John Quintal.

John had his finest game ofcess. The son of Mr. and M'ra. the season rushing for 109 yardsJacinto Q\lintal of 223 Myrt~e and accounting for all 15 of his St., New Bedford, John attends team's points. The first scoreLaurelcrest Preparatory School came on a fake punt when Quin­in Bristol, Conn. and is. being tal raced 35 yards into the endtouted as one of the top prep zone for a six-pointer.' In theschool football payers in the waning moments of the firstcl;luntry as tfle result of out­half, he intercepted a Spartanstanding success in the season pass, and raced 6G yards to thejust completed.· ,

. Stang 10 before the gun sound~dIn his second year at the Con­ending the period.necticut school, Quintal was

His second score came on anamed to the New England All­40-yard pass play in the finalPrep Honora.ble Mention., team . period. He also caught the twoas a quarterback. • point conversion capping anHis greatest claims to fame in outstanding individual effort onthe 1968 season came in vic­a losing night. .tories over. the Yale freshmen

Quintal is ·perhaps the mostand Cheshire Academy. complete athlete to come out ofIn the 14-6 triumph over the New Bedford Vocational in theyoung .Elis, John rambled for last decade. Besides football,both touchdoWns, one a 90-yard John was an outstanding base­return of a kickoff. In the same ball player and earnet!' a pOIlI­game he rushed for 11~ yards tion on the baskeball varsity as and passed for 90 more. well.His 75-yard scoring scamper

As a freshman, he was an All­in the early minutes of the Bristol County selection as aCheshire . game, enabled his JOHN QUINTAL member of the school's soccermates to roll to a 14-0 victory. team. His love of football, how­Quintal's running a,bility came

as a surprise to no one. His A year later, Quintal fulfilled ever, prompted him to give up the pitch sport. passing prowess, however, was the promise of stardom. be­

a .most pl~asant di::;covery. stowed upon him. It happened As a high school baseball While attending New Bedford after 40 minutes of losing foot­ player, John was scouted by the

Vocational High School, the 6-1, ball to Bristol County League Detroit Tigers and received fa­185-pounder was a brilliant power Bishop Stang. vorable reports. halfback for former Coach Besides his high school ath­Harry Kummer's Artisans. letic career, Quintal devoted a

'Soimpressive was' Quintal Directs Urban great deal of time to CYO sports that 'Kummer called the back­ in the Holy Name Parish of field ace, "potentially the hest Task Force which he is a member. all-around football player I've WASHINGTON (NC)-Father A college career is in the off­ever coached at Vocational." Charles D. Burns, S.V.D., assist­ ing although the New Bedford

Kummer's praise came in ant provincial of the Divine native is undecided upon a John's junior year and prompt­ Word Fathers' southern prov­ choice. Whatever the eventual ed the coach to add: "Unfortu-' ince, has been named executive choice will be, that college ath­nately, he's still a year away field director of the Task Force letic program is sure to benefi t from being outstanding." on Urban Problems of the by his presence.

United States Catholic Confer­ence.Jewish Cantor Don't Neglect Slipping The appointment was an­

Continued from Page Seventeen nounced by Task Force execu­ FALSE TEETH ... tive secretary, Msgr. Aloysius J.·.Though only 18 years old, he has Do false teeth drop, slip or wobbleWelsh. The Task Force was when you talk. eat. laugh or sneeze?gained prominence through his Don't be annoyed and embarrassedestablished by the U. S. bishops extensive organ recitals he has by such handicaps. FASTEETH. an at their Apri~, 1968, meeting in alkaline (non·acld) powder to sprin­given in the past two years. kle on your plates. keeps talse teethSt. Louis to promote and coordi­Known' for his ,brilliant inter­ more firmly set, Gives confident teel· nate the work of Catholic agen­ Ing of security and added com.tort.pretation <if the organ classics, No gummy. gooey taste or reeling.cies on urban and racial pl:ob­he will play the "Prelude and Dentures that fit are essential tolems. health. See your dentIst regularly.Fugue in C Minor" of Johann Get FASTEETH at all drug counters.Father Burns, 36, was ordainedSebastian Bach as a prelude to in 1962 and received a masters'the Concert. degree in education from the

Father Campbell, also a grad­ 'Catholjc 1Jniversity of Arrterica uate of the New England Con­ in 1963. servatory of Music, expressed . 5.50% a yearFather Burns has had broad the hope that "the public will ecumenical experience in the

TERM DEPOSlr CERTIFICATEStake advantage of this outstand­ South and has worked on educa­ing ecumenical event, where tional programs for the Divine Daily Interest Catholics, Protestants, and Jews Word Fathers with the National Units ot $1000.will combine their voices. to Catholic Conference for Inter­ One Year Maturityshow the brotherhood of man­ racial Justice. ki~d in sacred song."

Admission is free, but an Bass River offering will be taken. Sturtevant & Savings Bank Consider Miracles Hook Bank by MailAttributed to Nun Est. 1897 we pay tne postage

VATICAN CITY (NC) -The Builders Supplies Congregation of Rites has con­ • SOUTH YARMOUTH • HYANNIS sidered two miracles attributed 2343 Purchase Street'

• YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLAZAto the intercession of Blessed New Bedford • DENNIS PORT • OSTERVILLEMaria Vittoria Teresa Couderc, 996-5661 a French nun who was beatified

in 1951. She was born' at Le Mans,

France, Feb. I, 1805. In 1837 she HIGH SCHOOL AND COLLEGE MEN, in your vo­founded the Sisters of Our Lady

cation p~ans consider the teaching Brotherhood. of Refuge of the Cenacle, and died Sept. 26, 1851. She was For information write: XAVERIAN' BROTHERS beatified Nov. 4, 1951, and her C/O Brother Guy, c.r.x. cause for canonization was 601 WINCHESTER STREET NEWTON HIGHLANDS, MASS. 02161

opened in 'Rome in 1953.

Page 20: 12.05.68

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