20
The ANCHOR Foil Mass., Thursday, March 311, 1966 PRICE 10.: Vol. 10/1 No. 13 © 1966 The Anchor $4.00 per Y.,..,. Greek Primate Awaits Unified Spiritua Iity CLERGY CONFERENCE: All the priests of the Diocese attended a conference SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Archbishop Iakovos, Primate Tuesday given by world-renowned German theologian and Vatican Council expert Rev. ol the Greek Orthodox Church in the western ·hemisphere, Bernard Haering. C.SS.R., left, shown with Bighop Connolly; center, and invited guest declared here the Greek Ol"thodox and Catholic churches Rev;Robert Stephanopoulos of St. Demetrius Orthodox' Church,Fall River. "achieving. a greater 8pir.itual. unity which will lead 1lIS to the same altar and tQ . file same chalice." The arch': hishop, one of 'six presidents of the World C 0 unci I of Morality. Must Reflect Man's Churches, here for the . . Minor Seminary 40th' anniversary celebration of St. Sophia's Greek· Orthodox· Training'Set chUl;ch. He is the. spiritual .lead- er of 2.5 million Orthodox in the Reaction to Goodness of God .Americas. for Homes The historic January, 1964, . In a l'}tir:t;ing address before the assembled priests of the Diocese of Fall River, the PUEBLO (NC) Hig-h meeting of Pope Paul VI and Rev' Bernard Haering, famed moral theologian and expert of the Vatican Coun- lJehool boys wishing to be- Patriarch AthE'nagoras I, leader . of the Eastern Orthodox Church, cil, spoke on the Moral Teachings of the Council. Father Haering is visiting- Professor of eome diocesan priests here still underscores the "closeness" Catholic Theology· at Brown University this year. The world known German theologian will no longer entel' a minor of the Orthodox and Catholic nQj; only spoke on a renewed seminary but will be encouraged fa!ths, the primate said. flo live at home and study at a understanding of Moral The- lief and morality, ull of Christian we do, whatever we preach," the hJcal school while receiving aca- During his visit to the Holy ology but he also delved in- life, must be pervaded by a great theologian said of priests, "we demic· 0 guidance and spiritual Land, Pope Paul held two meet- dynamism. Mol' ali t y becomes must proclaim Christ alone." All to the principles that should preparation for seminary en- ings with the Patriarch. These normal,life when the liver sees the priest's activity must be con- guide the priest in his teaching, trance through a new diocesan were the first such meetings the source of life behind the de- . centrated in the great reality of preaching and administration of £lome seminary program. since the 15th century. mands on life. Morality means ·to love for Christ, as Pope Pa'ul the sacraments. . . Last December joint declara- live united Christ and as a said in reopening the Council Announcement of the program Father did not pluck tions were read in Vatican City sharer of His life. after the deatn of Pope John. WQs made by Father Edwin J. the moral implications of each and IstanbUl, annulling mutual Taking as his text, article 16 Such an attitude must be evi- Schmitt, diocesan director of of the 16 Council documents. excommunications between the dent in the life and preaching '1'Ocations. He said it was being Rather he exposed the great of the Decree on Priestly For- Catholic and Eastern Orthodox of the priest as the people must 1ll1ldertaken in an effort to mod- unity-perspective that the Coun- mation, Father Haering empha- churches. The annulment repre- sized the nec.essity of further see . that morality means to be ernize preparation of students cil has granted us that produces sented the greatest reconciliation studies for 311 priests and the united with Christ. Religious su- iJor the priesthood. a unity in the faith we preach of the two faiths since their periors are told to so manifest Students enrolling in the pro- (doctrine), t.he faith .we cele- necessary repugnance for the schism in 1054. a deep and humble love that will not necessarily be brate (liturgy), and the faith we sepulchre "it· suffices". their subjects will find it easier lldentified, according to Father The faiths, Archbishop Iako- live (moral). "Theological stu die s should Schmitt. but will "be asked to vos said, "are united in the same Both dogma and morality can also be' renewed," the decree to understand God's love for them. This JS the way to preach llkre up to the policies of the spirit and the same aim. We are not be sterile. It cannot be just states, ."by contact with the Gospel. llIome seminary program fully beginning to remove all ob- a series of beliefs or .chunks of the mystery of Christ and the' In administration of the 1ltoth in their homes ··and at Turn to Page do's and don't's.' But all our be- history· of salvation." "Whatever sacraments, . it is the priest's privilege to manifest the human- ]?ueblo area students will at- ity and gentleness of Christ. flend Roncalli High School for 'Only God Remains' Seen Essential Message Though difficult and maybe ter- Illoys and will be encouraged to rifying, the priest must realize participate in all social, intellec- that his people are to see Christ tual, and recreational programs l!)f the school. They will be given through him. - The first demand of a priest Of Christian Panorama Vocation Exhibit' GPecial help in selecting the and his presentation to the peo- j!n'oper course of study for col- "We're exhausted, but it was wonderful ," That was the unanimous reaction of Sis- ple must be a realization of how lege seminary entrance and will ters, priests, Brothers and laypeople at the closing of Christian Panorama, vocation exhibit good God is. Then will respond ltollow a special spiritual devel- held last weekend at Bishop Cassidy High School, Taunton. "I think 10,000 people were the Christian's love first evi- opment program outlined by the liiocesan vocation office. here Saturday," said one weary Sister; but there was a jubilant note in her voice. "Fif-· Turn to Page Twelve teen busloads from the Cape," chimed in another, Pope Contributes to Foundation equally triumphantly, and Archbishop of Milwaukee Forbids equally wearily .. Headed by Attleboro Dominican From whatever part of the Musical Innovations at Mass Diocese the thousands came, NEW YORK (NC)-Pope Paul has made a personal' all were rewarded for their trip. MILWAUKEE (NC)-Archbishop William E. Cousins eontl'ibutioil of :&20,000 ro the St. Thomas Aquinas Founda- Christian Panorama was just of Milwaukee has issued a statement elaborating on "sacred tion. Established by the Dominican Fathers here in March, that, an' outspreading of the music as applied to the Mass." The statement came in the 1964, the foundation has two major projects: the accel- myriad wayiF' of serving God. wake of a directive issued by the archbishop on Church Missionarie-; were there, work- erated completion of a crit- music. He said the first' ers in the home fields, members ate, representi.ng the American ical edition of the works of obtaining funds for the susten- of every type of lay organiza- statement was prompted by hierarchy." ance of the Leoninll Commission [St. Thomas AquiJ:}as and the tion. a "sincere desire to forestall Speaking nbout the sacred and its sections in America and establishment of an Insti- "They certainly chose the good- quality of Church music in the Europe, although not sufficient musical innovations not in of Interdisciplinary Studies. looking ones," commented one directive, Archbishop Cousins for its purposes, in particular for conformity with traditional rev- In a letter to Father Thomas young lady. She was right. said: "It is necessary that the the establishment of the Insti- erence we associate with the lm. McBrien, 0.1'., national mod- Priests, Sisters, Brothers, an principles of sacredness and dig- tute of Interdisciplinary Studies. Eucharistic Sacrifice." erator, Pope Paul wrote: seemed handpicked, all radiated nity which distinguish Church "We are happy to learn that "While encouraging the arch- cheerfUlness and an infectious He said the directive "repeat- music remain intact. All that bishops and bishops to contrib- srour efforts, beloved son, and love-of-life, even after three ed the most recent recommenda- which is merely secular has no those of the dit'ectors of the ute toward ';his admirable enter- grueling days exhibition." tions of the BiShops' Commis- place if'} thp- house of God. WWldation, have succeeded m Turn to Page TwelvCll Turn to Page Sixteem sion on the Liturgical Apostol- Turn to Page Sixteer

03.31.66

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

• eontl'ibutioil of :&20,000 ro the St. Thomas Aquinas Founda­ Christian Panorama was just of Milwaukee has issued a statement elaborating on "sacred Vol. 10/1 No. 13 © 1966 The Anchor 1964, the foundation has two major projects: the accel­ myriad wayiF' of serving God. wake of a directive issued by the archbishop on Church ical edition of the works of obtaining funds for the susten­ of every type of lay organiza­ statement was prompted by hierarchy." WWldation, have succeeded m

Citation preview

Page 1: 03.31.66

The ANCHOR

Foil Riv~ru Mass., Thursday, March 311, 1966

PRICE 10.:

Vol. 10/1 No. 13 © 1966 The Anchor $4.00 per Y.,..,.

Greek Primate Awaits Unified SpirituaIity

CLERGY CONFERENCE: All the priests of the Diocese attended a conference SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Archbishop Iakovos, Primate Tuesday given by world-renowned German theologian and Vatican Council expert Rev.

ol the Greek Orthodox Church in the western ·hemisphere, Bernard Haering. C.SS.R., left, shown with Bighop Connolly; center, and invited guest declared here the Greek Ol"thodox and Catholic churches Rev;Robert Stephanopoulos of St. Demetrius Gr~ek Orthodox' Church,Fall River. ~ "achieving. a greater 8pir.itual. unity which will lead 1lIS to the same altar and tQ . file same chalice." The arch': hishop, one of 'six presidents

of the World C 0 u n c i I of Morality. Must Reflect Man'sChurches, ~ame here for the . .Minor Seminary 40th' anniversary celebration of St. Sophia's Greek· Orthodox·

Training'Set chUl;ch. He is the. spiritual .lead­er of 2.5 million Orthodox in the Reaction to Goodness of God .Americas.for Homes

The historic January, 1964, . In a l'}tir:t;ing address before the assembled priests of the Diocese of Fall River, thePUEBLO (NC) Hig-h meeting of Pope Paul VI and Rev' Bernard Haering, C.~S.R., famed moral theologian and expert of the Vatican Coun­lJehool boys wishing to be­ Patriarch AthE'nagoras I, leader . of the Eastern Orthodox Church, cil, spoke on the Moral Teachings of the Council. Father Haering is visiting- Professor ofeome diocesan priests here still underscores the "closeness" Catholic Theology· at Brown University this year. The world known German theologian will no longer entel' a minor of the Orthodox and Catholic nQj; only spoke on a renewed seminary but will be encouraged fa!ths, the primate said.

flo live at home and study at a understanding of Moral The­ lief and morality, ull of Christian we do, whatever we preach," the hJcal school while receiving aca­ During his visit to the Holy ology but he also delved in­ life, must be pervaded by a great theologian said of priests, "we demic· 0 guidance and spiritual Land, Pope Paul held two meet­ dynamism. Mol' ali t y becomes must proclaim Christ alone." Allto the principles that should preparation for seminary en­ ings with the Patriarch. These normal,life when the liver sees the priest's activity must be con­guide the priest in his teaching,trance through a new diocesan were the first such meetings the source of life behind the de- . centrated in the great reality ofpreaching and administration of £lome seminary program. since the 15th century. mands on life. Morality means ·to love for Christ, as Pope Pa'ulthe sacraments.

. . Last December joint declara­ live united ~o Christ and as a said in reopening the CouncilAnnouncement of the program Father Ha~ring' did not plucktions were read in Vatican City sharer of His life. after the deatn of Pope John.WQs made by Father Edwin J. the moral implications of eachand IstanbUl, annulling mutual Taking as his text, article 16 Such an attitude must be evi­Schmitt, diocesan director of of the 16 Council documents.excommunications between the dent in the life and preaching'1'Ocations. He said it was being Rather he exposed the great of the Decree on Priestly For­Catholic and Eastern Orthodox of the priest as the people must1ll1ldertaken in an effort to mod­ unity-perspective that the Coun­ mation, Father Haering empha­churches. The annulment repre­ sized the nec.essity of further see .that morality means to beernize preparation of students cil has granted us that producessented the greatest reconciliation studies for 311 priests and the united with Christ. Religious su­iJor the priesthood. a unity in the faith we preachof the two faiths since their periors are told to so manifestStudents enrolling in the pro­ (doctrine), t.he faith .we cele­ necessary repugnance for the schism in 1054. a deep and humble love that~am will not necessarily be brate (liturgy), and the faith we sepulchre "it· suffices".

their subjects will find it easierlldentified, according to Father The faiths, Archbishop Iako­ live (moral). "Theological stu die s should Schmitt. but will "be asked to vos said, "are united in the same Both dogma and morality can also be' renewed," the decree to understand God's love for

them. This JS the way to preachllkre up to the policies of the spirit and the same aim. We are not be sterile. It cannot be just states, ."by liv~lier contact with the Gospel.llIome seminary program fully beginning to remove all ob- a series of beliefs or .chunks of the mystery of Christ and the'

In ~he administration of the1ltoth in their homes ··and at Turn to Page ']~welve do's and don't's.' But all our be- history· of salvation." "Whatever sacraments, . it is the priest's

~hool." privilege to manifest the human­]?ueblo area students will at ­ity and gentleness of Christ.flend Roncalli High School for 'Only God Remains' Seen Essential Message Though difficult and maybe ter­Illoys and will be encouraged to rifying, the priest must realizeparticipate in all social, intellec­that his people are to see Christtual, and recreational programs

l!)f the school. They will be given through him. -The first demand of a priest

Of Christian Panorama Vocation Exhibit' GPecial help in selecting the

and his presentation to the peo­j!n'oper course of study for col­ "We're exhausted, but it was wonderful ," That was the unanimous reaction of Sis­ple must be a realization of howlege seminary entrance and will ters, priests, Brothers and laypeople at the closing of Christian Panorama, vocation exhibit good God is. Then will respondltollow a special spiritual devel­ held last weekend at Bishop Cassidy High School, Taunton. "I think 10,000 people were the Christian's love first evi­opment program outlined by the

• liiocesan vocation office. here Saturday," said one weary Sister; but there was a jubilant note in her voice. "Fif-· Turn to Page Twelve • teen busloads from the

Cape," chimed in another,Pope Contributes to Foundation equally triumphantly, and Archbishop of Milwaukee Forbids equally wearily..Headed by Attleboro Dominican From whatever part of the Musical Innovations at Mass Diocese the thousands came,NEW YORK (NC)-Pope Paul has made a personal' all were rewarded for their trip. MILWAUKEE (NC)-Archbishop William E. Cousins

eontl'ibutioil of :&20,000 ro the St. Thomas Aquinas Founda­ Christian Panorama was just of Milwaukee has issued a statement elaborating on "sacred tion. Established by the Dominican Fathers here in March, that, an' outspreading of the music as applied to the Mass." The statement came in the1964, the foundation has two major projects: the accel­ myriad wayiF' of serving God. wake of a directive issued by the archbishop on ChurchMissionarie-; were there, work­erated completion of a crit ­ music. He said the first'ers in the home fields, members ate, representi.ng the Americanical edition of the works of obtaining funds for the susten­ of every type of lay organiza­ statement was prompted by hierarchy."ance of the Leoninll Commission[St. Thomas AquiJ:}as and the tion. a "sincere desire to forestall Speaking nbout the sacredand its sections in America andestablishment of an Insti ­ "They certainly chose the good­ quality of Church music in theEurope, although not sufficient musical innovations not in ~te of Interdisciplinary Studies. looking ones," commented one directive, Archbishop Cousinsfor its purposes, in particular for conformity with traditional rev­

In a letter to Father Thomas young lady. She was right. said: "It is necessary that thethe establishment of the Insti ­ erence we associate with thelm. McBrien, 0.1'., national mod­ Priests, Sisters, Brothers, an principles of sacredness and dig­tute of Interdisciplinary Studies. Eucharistic Sacrifice."erator, Pope Paul wrote: seemed handpicked, all radiated nity which distinguish Church

"We are happy to learn that "While encouraging the arch­ cheerfUlness and an infectious He said the directive "repeat­ music remain intact. All thatbishops and bishops to contrib­srour efforts, beloved son, and love-of-life, even after three ed the most recent recommenda­ which is merely secular has no

those of the dit'ectors of the ute toward ';his admirable enter- grueling days ~'on exhibition." tions of the BiShops' Commis­ place if'} thp- house of God. WWldation, have succeeded m Turn to Page TwelvCll Turn to Page Sixteem sion on the Liturgical Apostol- Turn to Page Sixteer

Page 2: 03.31.66

.1 •

THE ANCHOR-_n;ocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 31, 19662 Proper of the Moss for Second

Sunday of PGlssiontide Sp~ns Cg~h~I;C Hastory in .U.S. Prelate Say~ Florida Ceremony

INTROIT: 0 Lord, be not far from me; 0 my hel~

ST. AUGUSTINE (NC)-Rell ­ hasten to aid me. Save me from the lion's mouth; from gious and civic dignitaries and between these two Masses spans the horns of the wild bulls, my wretched life. My God, my hundreds of spectators crowded the history of . the Catholic God, look upon me, why have you forsaken me? Far from historic St. Augustine cathedral Church in America," he said.

my salvation are the words of my sins. 0 Lord, be not farhere for a ceremony described as The cardinal called the story from me; 0 my help, hasten to aid me. Save me from thespanning Catholic history in of American Catholicism "a

America. noble history, compounded of lion's mouth; from the horns of the wild bulls, my wretched The occasion was the rededi­ many strains which have en­ life.

cation of the cathedral, built riched and strengthened each more than 170 years ago, by other-the Spanish, the Irish, the GRADUAL: You -have hold of my right hand; with William Cardinal Conway, Pri ­ German, the Italian, the Polish - your counsel you guide me; and in the end you will r~ mate of All Ireland. and a hundred others."

ceive me in glory. How good .God is to Israel, to those whoThe cathedral was constructed He said· American Catholicism are clean of heart! But, as for me, ][ almost lost my balance;in the 1790s under ther,udance today is "giving new evidence

of two Irish missionary priests of spiritual depth and intellec­ my feet all but slipped,' because I was envious of sinners at the direction of the King of tual strength and playing an when I saw them prosper though they were wicked. Spain. Florida then was Spanish ever increasing role ill the life territory. of the universal Church." SPEAKER: Joe Mullaney, TRACT: My God, my GOd, look upon me: why have

The renovation of the ~the­ basketball coach at Provi- you forsaken me? Far from my salvation, are the words dral was a major part of !the pro­ -E d .dence College, will be the of my sins. 0 my God, I cry out by day and you answer not; gram of the diocese of St. Au­ Offer very cny main speaker at the testi- by night, and there is no relief. But you are enthroned ingustine and the St. Augustine Foundation CE'lebrating the 400th L.·fe Symbols monial banquet to be held on the holy place, 0 glory of Israel! In you our fathers trusted; anniversary 0: the settlement Sunday, April 17, honoring they trusted and you delivered them. To you they cried, and Christianization of St. Au­ EDMONTON (NC)-8ymbols the Holy Family Basketball and they' escaped; in you they trusted, and they were not gustine by Spanish explorers. of their everyday life, including Team of New Bedford. put to shame.' But I am a worm, not a man; the scorn ofThis was the first permanent a football and textbooks, were ff European settlement in what offered by students of St. Mary's men, despised by the people. All who see me, soo at me; is now the United 'States. High School here in Canada at Aiding Neurotics they mock me with parted lips, they wag their heads.

'Noble History' a special Mass in the school "He relied on the Lord; let, 'h~m deliver him, let him. res-Cardinal Conway· offered a gymnasium. _ Radio' Theme ' cue him, if. he loves him." But they look on and gloat overSolemn Mass during the rededi-

Before the Offertory of the me; they divide· my garments among them, and for .'my.' cation ceremony. Five. other Mass which was concelebrated·,. NEW Y9RK (NC), -: The· , , . members of the hierarchy were by.ArchbishoP Anthony. J.Qrdan,.: .1 Clltholic }Jour on radio will foc4S .' vesture they cast lots.. Save me from the lion's ~outh; present, including Archbishop O.M.I., of Edmonton with'fou..r . ,on ways of helping' neurotics" from the 'hOnis' of the"wild ,·~tills, my wretche.d life.: You

.Joseph P. Hurley. Bishop of ·St. diocesan priests, represen~atives"!'during its progr?ms for the fo.or ·who fear the Lord, praise him: all you descendants of. J~ .~ Augustine. In the congregation of the 800 boys and girls attend- ,: .Sundays of Apnl. . cob, give glory to him: 'There shall be declared to the Lord .,.were hundreds of priests and Re­

ing the school walked.in pro- Dr, Alfred Joyce, a psychia-·: a"generatioil"to c{lme:': and th(' heavens shall show forthligious as well as many Catholic cession to the altar and pre- trist and, dirpctor of Iona Col­'. and non-Catholic'lay dignitaries. sented their offerings. These in-. lege's graduntl' division of pas- ~is justice. To a people that~)'i~n,be born, which the, L,orclt, " -'.,. ,"

Cardinal Conway in his. ser­ clu(1ed' a missal, a rosary,1 !;lCa-· toral counseHng, Father Adr~a!lD '·lias made. -..' ... I' , .•• '.,• I

mon, noted tba' it ;\ViIS 4{)O .. years dt'mic books,"'pompoms Used by 'van 'Kaam;C S.Sp.,·head of Du- 'O'FFE'R'TO''R'y'" I'nsult ha':s·.'.; b'~ken my heart,' 'and' 1 amfrom the time the first Ma!?swas cheer leaders and other sports ,quesne University's religious

;

.. v

offered here tc the time of the equipment. psychology department, and weak; I looked for sympathy, .b~t there was none; for com-Mass he was ,offering. "The arc The students also earried a Dr. E. ~ark Stern, clinical foTters,' and I found none. Rather they put gall in my 1000

clborium of hosts and cruets of psYchologist IDldprofessor at 'and in my·thirst they gave"me vinegar to drink.'N I wine to be consecrated during Iona, will discuss '?,lope -. an~,. ' . .'. . . . ecro ogy the Mass. and an offering of $50 Help f?,r the ~eur~tic on AI?ri! COMMUNION:' Father"if .this cup cannot pass away. APRIL 9 for the poor. . 3 and .NeuroSls, Sm and GUilt . unless I .drink it,' your' will be' done.

Rev, Cornelius McSweeney, on April 10. . .. . ;.' , .,.. ,.' 1919, Pastor, Immaculate c:::on- Father Dominic Rover,. o':P., . ' Please Clip and·,Bring·,to Church Oft Sunday

; ,ception, Fall River.' Mass Or~.o faculty member at St. Stephen's ". '. . . . ..' . , Rev. Edward F, Dowling, 1965,. . Priory in Dover, Mass., and of , ,,,..... . ,. '.

; Pastor,. Immac'llate·C.onception,· '.FRIDAY-Frid,ay ?f P~ion . Providene-_,\ College,.and Dr. ""Wa:~h:"(ilton CO'Ilelte' ·Dorm··.tory· L~n : .Fall River. . Week. ill Class~ Violet. Mass,.. Rober.t M:cAllister, p;racticing ;.. i'i» II!::!! ". "~, , , . .~~

Proper;APRIL,10 No Glory of·C.reed;., psychiatrist and pSYcbiatriccO-"" 'WAS~GTON (NC)"7" A,!,~~~I'16menstudents~t~e,~ " '.' Rev. John P. Doyle, 1944, Pas- ., 2nd Praye:r The Seve;" ·.So~- .' ordinator "01." the Department of. ,. $750;OOOU: S.college .'housing,." ~ictfne Fathers~ College.. , .' .tor, St. William,' Fall River.. rows of, the Blessed Vlrgul .' Defense. will 'iiscuss "Confession" loa.n· fOr .8t: Martin's 'Cdllege, ., .. . ,.'

;Mary; Preface .of.' the. :U:0I•y . and The~apy" on April .17 "and'.' .' Olym.·pia;..Wash;, ~ to eollsttud. 8 .•..,•... ,.', C" ." " I APRIL 11· C T V tive Masses In . , '.. ',!:

Rev. John F. Downey" 1914, ross.· wo O' . "Grace .and .'J:'heology" on 'April' 'new . d,onnitoiy complex ·has.,' . &.

. Pastor, Corpus Christi, Sandwich. honor of the Sacred Heart of 24. . .. "been approved by the C6mmu- d.~ ""Michael'C. AUs.tin

.APRlIL 12 J es11S .perm.itted~ Glory; ~nd' ,. The' CathoUc Hour' is pr~duced' .nity ·Fa~lities· Administ;ration. Rev. Jonn Tobin, 1909, Assi~ Prayer Fnday of Passion· .'by the 'National Council' of,,· The project will include :four

ant, St. ·Patnck, Fall River. Week; 3rd Prayer The S~v~., Catholic' Men in cOoperation-" three-$ry ,donnitories .. .l.nter-APRllL 14 Sorrows of the Blessed VIrgm: ' with NBC. ' . , connected by exterior covered . . . Mary; .no Creed; Preface: of. '. ·,walkways and provide .housing

Rev. Loui~ ·N. Dequoy, 1935~ the :Sacred Heart. Tomorrow. Pboastor, Sact:ed .Heart, No. Attle~ in the 'first Saturday of the, ,Plan 'April 1]2 Tiara:',

ro., . month." r------------.. SATURDAY-8aturday of Pas- Exhibit, illl .Chicago

sion Week. ill Class. Violet.Mission Decree Mass Proper;' No Glory or . CHICAGO (NC) - The hand­CINCINNATI (NC) -A new Creed; 2nd Prayer St. Francis crafted triple-tiered silver' tiara

study guid;) on the documents a Paulo, Confessor; Preface of relinquished by Pope Paul dur­promulgated by. Vatican Council the Holy Cross.' ing the Vatican Council deliber­il with special emphasis on the SUNDAY _ n Sunday of Pas- ation on world poverty as a ges­missionary role of the Church siontide or Palm Sunday. I ture of concern for ,the world's has been published here by the Class. Violet. Mass Proper; No poor will be exhibited here dur­Catholic Stl~dents' Mission Cru­ Glory; Passion; Creed; Preface lng the three-day convention of sade. The book is titled "CSMC of the Holy Cross. In Masses the National Catholic Educa-Study Guide to Conciliar De­ " that immediately follow the, tional Association opening' Apriluees." , 12.

Blessing and distribution of Palms, the Prayers at the

:Foot of the Altar are omitted. The Blessing llndDistribution

FORTY HOURS of Palms. MONDAY-Monday' of Holy

Week. I ,~lass. Violet. Mass. Proper; No Glory or' Cr~;,

- DEVOTION April 3-OUT Lady of the Im­ Preface of the Holy Cross. .

maculate Conception, TUESDAY-Tuesday of Holy;Fall River. Week. I Class. Violet. Mass:

St. Boniface, New Bed­ Proper; No Glory or ,Creed;,ford. Passion; Preface of the Holy;

April 10-St. Paul, Taunton.. Cross. . April 11-St. John the Bap­ WEDNESDAY - Wed{J.esday of

tist, Fall River. Holy Week. I Class. Violet. April 17-0ur Lady of the .. Mass . Proper; No Glory' or

Holy Rosary, New Creed; Pass~on; Preface of the. Bedford. Holy Cross. '

St. Michael, Ocean Grove. THURSDAY-Hoiy Thursday. I, Class. White. Mass Proper; '. Glory; no Creed; Preface of:

THE ANCHOR the Holy Cross; Communican­second Class Postage Paid at Fall River, tes; Hanc igitur; and Qui PridieMass. Publisheo every Thursday Ilt 410

Highland Avenue:. Fall River. Mass.. 02722 proper. Votive Mass in honor by the catholic I'ress 'Of the Diocese of Fall of Jesus Christ the .EternalRiver. Subscription price by 111811, PllStpaldU.DD par year. High .. Priest, not permitted.:

CENJTIER, ·Paint and Wallpaper

Du!'onlJ Paint ­cor. Middle St..

c1Ili 422 Acush. Ave. Q,,&,t . New Bedford

. PARKING ~ Reas of Store

Williams" Funeral Home

EST. 1870 ~ Washington Square

NEW BEDfORD. Reg. fu'nerai Director and

Embalmer PlIVATE PARKDNG AREA

TEL. WY 6-ltftQ8

DOLAN Funeral Home

123' Broadway

TAUNTON VA 4-5000

BROOKLAWN FUNERAL HOME, INC.

a. .Marcel RoY - G. lorraine RaJ . I' Roger LaFrance .'

FUNERAL 'DIRECTORS.' . 15 'Irvington Ct.

. 995·5166 New Bedford

AU~J:~TINE .Funeral Home Inc.

Helen Aubertine Brough William H. Aubertine

Brian J. Aubertine

Spacious Parking Area WY 2-2957 ." '.

. 1~ ~lIe" St. New' Redford

,. inc.

FUNERAL S~VlCE

NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

549 COUNTY mEa

'JEFFREY E. SUlLIVAN Funeral Dome

5511 f ,ocust Stnet Fall River. Mass.

OS 2·2391

Rose E. SulllvaD o.fpH"ey E, SunJlvan

O'ROURKE· Funeral Home

571 Se"cond Street Fan River, Moss.

OS 9-6072 MICHAEL J. McMAHON

Lkensed Funeral Director Reoiste~' Embalmer

~ .,._~: "';"";";",,,o,_~-'.. " '--'.......,;"..

:;====~ O.,D. Sullivan & Sons FUNE~ At HOME' 469 LOCUST STREET FAll RIVER. Mass.

OS 2-3381, : ~ Wilfred·C. James E.

Driscon . Sullivan: ·Jr.

Page 3: 03.31.66

3 Vietnam Bishops Ask Pr~17e!?$

Fer Pe(!J(£@

SAIGON (NC) - South Vietnam's bishops have is­sued a joint pastoral letter calling on this war-ravaged nation's Catholics to pray for peace and to put the ecumenical council's teachings into practice.

Issued at the end of the bish­ops' semiannual meeting here, the letter stated:

"Facihg a war of daily devas­tation and destruction, we, the Conference of Bishops of Viet­aam, . call most earnestly on an 'fue faithful to pray for the rulers 0f our country, for the political parties and for religious leaders ro that they may take measures to overcome all obstacles and seek peaceful, just and effective solutions in order to ·restore ttue and lasting peace to our be­loved fatherland."

The bishops recalled that dur­ing his visit to the United Na­tions, last Oct. 4, Pope Paul VI, "'and with' him the whole coun­cil, launched an urgent appeal to all rulers with the aim of end­bIg war and its causes, for if man does not kill war, war win kill man."

Submit to m,rectioD "But," the bishops continued,

"it is not peace at any price Which must be demanded, be­eause there is no true peace in slavery, injustice, oppression, hatred or vengeance. There is no tnJe peace between victors and vanquished. There can be true peace only in justice and trut~,

in freedom and charity, in un­derstanding and mutual forgive­Dess."

The bishops told Vietnamese Catholics: "You ought to instruct ,ourselves and apply In your public and private life the con­stitutions,decrees and declara­tions of the [ecumenical] coun­cil." They said that the spirit of the council is one of, contact with' the whole world, irrespec­tive of race or religion, even with the enemies of the Church.

The bishops said: "We must seek justice and love in the fam­ily and society, especially in the painful circumstances of our eountry, where many are with­out food or lodging and where there are many orphans."

Better Sermons WASHINGTON (NC)-A crit ­

leal look at current preaching practices aimed at improving the quality and effect of the Sunday sermon will be under­taken at a Catholic University at • two-day June workshop.

NOTRE DAME (NC)-:-Orth()oO'" • cIox are reluctant to take part in joint worship with Catholics be­cause they regard it as express-' lng a religious unity which does not in fact ,·xist yet, an Ortho­dox theologian sald here.

Father Alexander Schmemann, dean of St. Vladimir's Seminary, Tuckahoe, N. Y. explained the Orthodox view of "Communica­tto in Sacris"-joint· worship-at file conference on "Theological Issues of Vatican II" sponsored by the University of Notre Dame.

At the same session Father Thomas stransky, C.S.P., an American on the staff of ·the Vatican's Se~retarlat for Pro-_ moting Christian Unity; said'that while the Church of Christ is "realized and embodied in" the Catholic Church, it is 'not iden": tical with the Catholic Church.

He suggested that there is "a basic communion within the one

Future 'of Church Rests With Schools Secrr~t~IrY Henn~ng S;tr.e~$es ~mlPU'~Yeme[7'f)~

WASHINGTON (NC) - The future success of the Catholic ehurch in this country rests largely upon the Catholic school system, Under Secretary of Labor John F. Henning asserted here.

Speaking at the annual Com­munion breakfast of the Loyola Retreat League, Henning de­clared: "The future of the Amer­ican Church rests largely upon the Catholic schools, upon their continuance, the i r expansion, their improvement, their direc­t1on. Those who would destroy file school, would destroy the Church."

The league is composed of men in the Washington archdiocese. Who make retrea.ts at the Jesuit Loyola-on-Patomac retreat house !'n closeby Faulkner, Md.

Henning, a product of Catholic education from grade school through college and who has a son studying for the Franciscan priesthood, traced the history of

____ ,,;·t

EXCHANGE OF GIFTS: The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Michael Ramsey, is shown about to present Pope P'aul a pectoral cross and chain which the Pope wore at their meeting the following day. It was made by students of the sc~ool of industrial design of Canterbury's college of arts. Center figures are Bishop Jan Willibrands, and the Pope's secretary, ~sgr. Macchi. NC ·Photo.

Explains Reluctance to Joint Worship Orthodox See Unwarranted Anticipation

Church of Christ between the perfect institutional realization of it - the Roman Catholic Church-and its imperfect real­izations" in other Christian communions.

Fathers Schmemann and Stransky discussed the 'ecumen­ical council's decree on ecumen':' ism on the fourth day (March 23) of the week-long conference here. Some 400 Catholic, Protes­tant, Orthodox and Jewish reli ­gious leaders attended.

'No Right Yet' By coincid~nce-, the discussion

of the ecumenism decree occur­red on the same day that in Rome Pope Paul VI met with Anglican Archbishop Michael Ramsey of Canterbury in a major gesture of ecumenical rapprochement.

Fat her Schmemann spoke warmly of the council's state­ments on ecumenism and on the Oriental Churches but at the

begirining in this nation. He re­ then there is no Church, but onlyminded that the first See, the a sundered body, dismembered diocese of Baltimore, was estab­ by anarchists of left and right,",lished in 1789 with Bishop John earroll as the first bishop.

The first diocese reached from Maine to Georgia, from the At­lantic to the Mississippi, he said. There were some 35,000 Catho­lies in the total population of four million anil Bishop Carroll had less than 30 priests to meet the demands of the frontier civ­ilization, he said.

Built by Faith "The American Church was

built by Catholic faith, will and discipline," he said. "These in­gredients are as compelling to­day as they were in the time of John Carroll."

Henning said the test of faith Is if "Christ be not in the Eu­charist, then there is no Church."

And in the matter of discipline, he said, if the laity or priesthood "renounce the authority of the Chair of PetE-r or of the bishops

(ASA BLANCA Jlust Across The

Coggeshall St. Bridge fairhaven, Mass.

Finest. Variety of SEAFOOD

Served Anyw~ere - Also StEAKS-CHOPS-CHICKEN

~ONAT BOISVERT INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.

96 WILLIAM STREET NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

WY 8-5153 WY "7-9167

PERSONAL SERVICE

same time expressed the concern of Orthdox at· the concept of "Communicatio in Sacris"· which the ecumenism decree supports i~ some circumstances. .

For Orthodox,' he said,· "Com­munication' in Sacris" and all it implies "is the unity' of the Church." Thus, he explained, Orthodox feel that by partici ­pating in joint worship' with Catholi<;s at this time they would be· ·"anticipating something to w~icb we have no right yet."

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., March 31, 1966

Prelate Asserts Clergy Cel~bacy

Gives Freedom SPOKANE (NC)-Refer­

ring to recent articles con­cerned with priestly celibacy and its difficulties, Bishop Bernard J. Topel of Spokane said:

"It is past time to see what God has to say about the subject. Our Lord said that celibacy is not for all, but He did add: 'He that can take it, let him take it.' "

The Spokane prelate said that celibacy, rather than denying freedom, "gives freedom. It makes it possible to be entirely at God's disposition and more devoted to the good of one'lJ neighbor."

He also quoted from St. Paul's first Epistle to the Corinthians: "He that is without a wife, is solicitous for the things that be­long to the Lord, how he may please God ¢ « ¢ But he that· is with a wife !s solicitous for the things of the world, how he may please his wife, and he is di ­vided."

Another Christ The bishop said that "Christ,

of course, remained a celibate. In this, too, the priest is truly 'another Christ.' "

While emphasizing thatceli ­bacy is "most desirable--but' not necessary-in the priesthood," the bishop said that Vati.can Council II ruled that: "Celibacy is held by the Church to be of great value i.n a special manner for the priestly life. It is at the same time a sign and a stimulus for pastoral charity and a special source of spiritual fraternity in the world." He said the council made it clear that it "approves and confirms" celibacy for priests.

Could the Church law of cel­ibacy for priests be changed? The Spokane bishop said "Yes." But he said it was his personal conviction that such changes would not be made in the imme­diate future.

Membali' f.D.8.C:.

MONEY .HEADQUARTERS for Any Mon~y Situation, Money Problem, or Money Answerll

• GREATER NEW BEDFORD'S HELPFUIL YES BANK •

'i!1J(J!l

FIRST 1itJ!iJ11#@/lI/MBANKOF NEW BEDFORD

1JJmJ'.iIJJJJL-

Handy, Helpful OHices An Around ·Town tile Catholic Church from the all successors to the Apostles.

Page 4: 03.31.66

4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 3 r, 1966 S@y~ le~ion @f M@ry P~~mJ~~rs

i Ani1'i~~(fj)~~~d RoEe of L@)J[ITj'U~nMcDevitt Warns of Crisis I ' DAYTON (NC)-The role of are and II:. whatever circum­i the laity in the Church as out- stances we find them."

lined by Vatican II was antici- Basic RoleIn Respect for Authority patedby the Legion of Mary The basic role of the laity, he four decades ago, Bishop Paul told the legionaries, is to "go

DENVER (NC)-'I'he top official of the Knights of F. Leibold told a group of Ie- into the world, not the sanctu-Columbus warned that America faces a crisis in authority gionaries ::Ittending traditional ary," 'and Christianize it "not as which threatens the continuation of the country's eminence. acies ceremonies at St. An- errand boys of the priest, but as

thony's church here. apostles called to this office bySpeaking at a K. of C. Communil)ll breakfast here Supreme Claiming that almost all of the Christ."

~{night John W. McDevitt recommendat.ions of the council's In cirder to carry out this role,laid the crisis in respect for

Suddenly our society finds itself decree on theapostolate of the "a new type of spirituality is

:mthority is due to an "ex­ card b1,lmings by rebellious faced with the spectacle of draft

laity are found in the Legion neede6. for the laity," he said,

'llosion of the ego" which young men who fashion their handbook. the apostolic adminis- "or an emphasis. on new aspects trator of the Evansville diocese of spirituality resigned not to

rollow every fancy. . fhid others ooastfully advertis­own definition of patriotism. We"eeks untrammeled freedom to

said that pioneers in the Legion make the laity live more like "We are reaching a situation ing courses iT) deceit and subter­ of Mary movement had realized Religious but to sanctify them,

that. "we mU3t come in actual make theIr. holy, perfect in love'.'{here authority has been down­ fuge to !lelp youpg men dodge contact with people to reach out of God-as laymen."':raded so drastically that it no the draft," he said.

anger has the stature and vigor to them with the love of Jesus "This call~ for not only an 'un­and His Blessed Mother." del'standing ot their sublime call!

. McDevitt said he spoke "with ·a discharg€ its obligation of poignant sadness and excruci­

The home visit program of the or vocation, but also a spiritual'iving order :md stability to so­ ating reluctance" of the disre­.:lety," he de,::Iared. Legion, according to Bishop Lei- formation through -the liturgy,spect for at:thority that has man­

bold, serves as a "practical ex- which is deSigned to form us as pression of this reaching out to members of a community dedi';'

ifested itself in the churches."A distorted idea of personal "reedom which balks at the "Within our . own Catholic "ecognition of any authority" Church, I <fm sorry to -say we God's children wherever they cated to worship God," he said.

"onfronts America in all phases find instances' of - lay people .GENERAL ClHIAJrRlWAN: r f society, he said. challenging the legitimate au­ Bishop Mark G. M'Grath,

This disre~ect for authority thority of their religious pastors. C.S.C., 'served' as general"as crept into elements of the Even sadder, we 'have seen in­

chairman of the weeklongstances of priests publicly chal­i,g army service, some civil lenging the jurisdiction, compe- international conference on ~ollege poputl'tion. youths fac­ ·INDIA: "ghts workers, the states' rights . tence and int,elligence of succes­ "Theological Issues of Vati-. "lovement and even elements 'of can II," at the University ofsors to the Apostles to whom LETTER ,he clergy, McDevi~t asserted. they gave a solemn pledge of Notre Dame. Nearly 400 re­obedience.' . FROM A­Double-Edged Sword

"I suggest that such behavior ligious leaders .particip\ated.Because of ~n exaggerated no:" puts a strain :>11 the faith ofldel­ NC Photo PRIESTf 'on of freedom some students icate member'.; of our Church.

~re "trying to usurp the (ole of and endangers that respect for­· ~achers a ,1 d administrators," THE HOLY FATHER'S MISSION AID "I'D THE DRIIENTAL CHURCHChQ~(]J~o(llll'llfrraDsesthe priesthood that long has beenqid McDevitt. a former teacher, , a mark of American Catholics," -- rin~ipal and superintendent of he said. . Co!;t ll/'llha'lltr lender HElPING The Capuchin priest, Father Anthony, writes us :. ~hools in Massachusetts. from ~uvattupuzha, a growing village in south

While expressing "full sym­ "- SAN FRANCISCO (NC);-The THE India: "It's not the young and healthy men B

HELPLESSleader of thf' st.riking grape worry about; they can walk four miles to the"'lthy" for the objectives of ',Slates $10 MaHon workers in Delano, Calif., has TO parish church despite the heat and monsoon"civic,socia" and racial justice," been described a!> perhaps "the HEAR rains. But what can 0 do for the others-little'°l.cDevitt expressed dismay at Develo.,ment Plan most important Catholic in children, expectant mothers, the aging crippled· ')me of the means used to MASS

with arthritis?" .•. To care for his 800 PeopleJERSEY CITY (NC) - A $10 . California" oy' a national Catho­"~hiev" the;:e He cited the (many of them converts he baptized) energeticmillion ceJ;ltenary anniversary li~ social action leader. , '.ocking or traffic arteries and Father Anthony needs a. simple church. Thedevelopment program that will This description of Cesar· 'le exploitation of children by cost? Only $4,300, since his parishioners wiUgive St. Peter's College here a Chavez, head of the National'\stigating them to truancy. give their labor free of charge.•.• Name the

"It is time to remind such completely new campus has been Farm Workers Association, has church for your favorite sain!,in memory of -,isguided ('jvic groups that, launched. been given b~ Msgr. William those you love, if you build it all by yourself_

lwever noble their objecti '{e, Father Vietor R. Yanitelli, S.J.; Quinn, execut.ive secretary of the Priest and people will remember them when­"\e end do~s not justify the president '')f .the Jesuit college, Bishops' Committee for the ever Mass is offered...• Or send at least as -'eans. They must remember said the timetable calls for com­ Spanish Sneaking, Chicago. much as you can right now ($1,000, $500, $100, · '.at the flOthing of dvil author- pletion of four new buildings by , "The real wal on poverty must $.50, $25, $10, $5" $2). You'" be making it p0s­

· is.a double-edged sword. It 1972. the college's 100th anni- Sible for the helpless to hear Mass, and Gody entail the dignity of the people will bless you!",ay woun~ a good cause more versary.. , it tries to .>erve," Msgr. Quinn

· 'Ian 'it cut~,'Rway obstacles to The buildings include a $1.7 emphasized. "This. dignity is ­•• '~." he said. million library; a $900,000 stu­ 'what Cesar Chavez gives to r,ONVERTS Twenty·six families (about 100 people) became' .

In Catholic Church dent center; an academic class­ Mexican Americans. A Mexican Catholics in a group ceremony in Ayroor, India.' . . J;legarding military service, he' room building, and a fieldhouse American I met. in Santa Rosa INA

last month. They hope to build a chapel andGROUP '~id "we have seen an explosion with multilevel underground said to me. 'When Cesar gets up, school.

,,"',i the ego of..~tomic;proportions. parking. rieel proud.' " ". '

FROM Dear Msgr.: We are enclosing a check for $1,000 for Pope Paul's Mission Aid for Kerala StateSISTERSAnalvze .Lcnge'vitv Recor.ds of Prelates from our Community_ ... We trust it will help aIN THE little towards the eoormous need of the hungry

U.S.A. in India. (Signed): Mother -, Superior GeneraLMore Thein One·Thir.... ComQlete 25 Years ~AKER (NC) - Eighteen de­ hierarchy. Bishop Peter Richard 68. Three lived to be over 90 and

"'~ased bishops of the United Kenrich of St. Louis had the 20 .;>assed thePage 'oi' 80. MASS On a mountainside in Harissa, lebanon (the

':. ':ates were former chaplains in longest service as a prelate-54 The brochure records the fact Holy Land) English·born Father Ronald Roberts

';:e armed forces. One of thef;e, years, four' months. James Car­ that Bishop John N. Neumann, IN will celebrate Mass in sign language for theC.SS.R., of Philadelphia, first SIGN- ~shop William R. Arnold of dinal Gibbons served 52 years, deaf·mute Arab boys in his care, thanks to per­

· 'ew York, spent. 51 years in mil­ seven months. r. S. bishop beatified (Oct. 13, . LANGUAGE mission from Pope Paul. Like to 'adopt' ($10 a1963). was the first bishop to.',ary service. Bishop ,Leipzig's study' points month)on~ of these boy~? We'll send you his introduce the Forty Hours De­ photo, ask him to pray for yo~. .These and other interesting out that the average age of votion i.nto a U. S. diocese.[ ....cts appear in the new edition, members of tj1e American hier­

., somewhat enlarged revision of archy at time of death, has been o brochure 0ntitled, "Longevity 0' the Amencan Hierarchy.After ("~nsecration.' com p i 1 e d by New Missal --'-shop Francis P. Leipzig of mtmJD·'MARYKNOLL (NC)-lVIa.'Y­

FALL RIVER:'aker. Oregon knoll has announced publication Th~ . first edition was pub-'. of the "Vaticap II edition of the

ROBER'f WlSEJ ~\1!',hed in 1902. The p~esenbedi­ Maryknoll Miss111," containing t' on, .embrarlllg a study of bio[~­ the full text of the official En­,o.phie1. of some 449 bishops, WllS glish now being· used in the °.It:~.QVAib.Jr'mpiled as of Aug 15, 1965-­ Mass. ·.·'e 175th an.aiversary of the first (: msecration of a U. S. prelate.

More than one-third (37.5 per - nt: of -these prelates com­;;: .et-ed 25 years or more in the

Pau\list to Speak NEW YORK (NC) -Father

·'''Ihn Sheerin, C.S.P., editor of "e monthly "Catholic' World,"

. ,. ~ll be among the major speak­"S at the annual me'eting of the . 'lited States Confe;'ence for the

"orId CO'l'lcil of Churches, ,ril 20-22, at' Buck Hill Falls,

_a.

CON RAD SEGU IN BODY COMPANY

Aluminum or Steel ( 944 County Street

NEW BEDFORD. MASS.

WY2-6618

"I''', O~ IJ$I" COLOR nDtLun

26th

Record Breaking " Week

:~

EVES.-MJI'. thru Thurs. at 8:00 . Fri., Sat. Eves at 8:39 .

Sun. Eve. at 7:30 Matinees-Wed., Sat:. Sun.

. at.2 P.M. Phone F. R. 1·677·9357

Tickets on Sale In New Bedford Merri Card Shop, 834 Purchase Street

."-Have you made a will? Stringless bequests to

GOOD A

the CATHOLIC NEAR EAsT WELFARE ASSOCIATION (our legal title) will be used for the poor by theWILL Holy Father where needed most.

i-~---------------

Dear ENCLOSED PLEASE fIND $ _ Monsignor fOR _

Please NAMEleturn coupon ---------------- ­

with your STREET _ otfering

CITY .STATE ZIP COOE _

T.HE CATHOLIC· NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATlDR

NEA.REAST' IVIIS81DNS FRANCIS CARDiNAL SPEllMAN, President

Write: CI\THOLk NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc. 3'10 Madison Avenue-New York, N.Y. 10017 TelephDne: 212/YUkon 6·5840

. "',....".. -.;'- .. '

Page 5: 03.31.66

THE ANCHOR-SParish" Press" Schools Can Thurs., March 31, 1966

Aid l~((5n laLmds ~(rn@wl~dge 'Wor~h~p in City' From "'The Ch1l1lrch in the NiCW lLatnrll AmemcaS'il

Them~ of An~ualEllllitiCd IIDy .Jro~1l1l .Jr. CO:l'!Sirl!Erme, M.M:.

Conferences :'Iuch as that conducted by the Catholic Li~MIf~~~g~ W~ek Inter-American Cooperation Program, at which qualified

HOUSTON (NC)-"Wor­Latin Americans present the facets of their culture, prove ship in the City of Man" willan. excellent medium for better understanding; ConferenceS' be the theme of the annualoonducted by North Ameri­national Liturgical Week, 00expense of Latin America, ourean missionaries and laymen

immediate neighbor." be held here in Texas Aug. 22-25.with authentic experience in Father Nevins proposes a A spokesman for the national _Liturgical Conference, w h i c h Latin America can prove quick survey of oar recent his­

sponsors the meeting, said allvery fruitful. However, for torical relations with Latin the milliol\S of our Catholics sessions will "touch upon oneAmerica. Before World War ,II, throughout the President Franklin D. Roose­ facet or another of the problem nation, knowl­ velt's "Good Neighbor" policy we all fa~e in trying to bring edge and un­ our city and our worship into ahad been warm and intimate. derstanding of meaningful relationship."Secretaries of State Cordell Hull Latin America and, Sumner Welles worked hard "Neither the city nor worshipmust be commu­ for good relationships. The re­ can be looked upon as escapesnicated by edu­ sult was that when World War from one another," the spoI{es­cational agen­ II came, our Latin American man said. "The worshiping com­cies, panels and neighbors stood by us. Nineteen munity is an effective commu­eommuni­ of the 20 Latin American re­ nity only when it shares the con­ty study clubs, publics actually put troops in cerns, sufferings, joys and aspi­books, lectures, the field to fight alongside us­ rations of the community in the press and a fact very few people in the whicb it lives." other mass com­ United States remember today. Six genera] sessions featuringmunications agencies. After all, Then came the end of World nine major addresses will bethese are the established agen­ War II. The Marshall Plan di­ held during the conference. Theydes though which the greater rected all our energies to Eu­ will deal with such subjects as part of all our lmowledge and rope. Massive aid went to Euro­ "The P"eace of Christ in theunderstanding is acquired. pean nations to improve\ stand­ Modern Gity," "How Worldly

Let us take care that means ards of living Latin Americans Must the Church Be?." and "The are provided whereby these began to complain that once the Theology of Secularity."agencies may be properly in­ war was won, we no longer had

There will :llso be 16 special­l¥ormed and then proceed vigor­ need of them. They said that the Coun(i~ Challenge ized study group sessions, cover­ously to employ them. living standards in Latin Amer­ . ' ing such subjects as worship ofVehacle to TUllllderrstandiaog ica were far worse than those Jl.!lbi~ee PrelW~~~1i' Shows COLllrtldl !Decrees Ask Spanish speal,ing Americans,A 'primary vehicle to this pro­ of war battered. Europe. They problems of the inner city, sing­gram is the parish. "The use of charged that the United States Chlri$taa~ hilfh~ell'u:e of lB(glpt~:£:ed ing at parish Masses, liturgicalparish organizations to promote was more interested in its celebration for children and ad::Imowledge and understanding of wealthier friends, than in its The/Christian is a man basi­ Would that you ~ere cold or olescents, Jews and Christians inLatin America." Father Vincent poorest ones. cally different from all others hot! And so, because - you are the modern world, education ofLovett, executive editor of the The United States State De-, in the world :md his task here lukewarm and neither cold nor priests for people's needs, andCatholic Reporter, declared at partment reflected this Euro­ -made clear by Vatican 11­ hot, I am going to vomit you out money' and property as possiblethe 1964 CICOP conference, "is pean concern. Secretary Dean will ever be a difficult, not of my mouth.' "threats to renewal."'an important factor in develop­ Acheson and Secretary John softened, one With such a "It is these multitudes of luke­ Major· sessions and exhibiuing the genuinely Christian spir­ Foster Dulles were men who thought in mind, the 'Extraordi­ warm, of the indifferent, of the during the Liturgical Week wil:it that will cause our apostolic knew Europe, who had European nary Jubilee .Masses came to an self-satisfied and self-righteous, be in the Sam Houston Coliseumzeal to overflow into outside­ experience. Under their infJu­ end in the Diocese. whElm the Lord vomits out of in downtown Houston. O"oherthe-parish interests. ence the senior diplomatic offi ­ The final Mass was offered by His mouth that the prince of meetings will be in - nearby"Douglas Hyde has repeatedly cers weI' e European-oriented, Bishop Connolly in St. Mary's Christian poets places on the hotels, haIls and auditoriums.stressed the principle that when and one became hard put to

FINAL JUBILEE MASS: Very Rev. Rolr>ert S. Stanton, rector of the Cathedral; Bishop Connolly, celebJ"ant of the Mass; Rt. Rev. Msgr. Humberto S. Medeiros, Diocesan Chan­

, cellor wh6 preached; prepare for the procession before the Mass.

Cathedral with, Rt. Rev. Hum­ very brink of hell. They are )"OU make mean little demands find~'an informed Latin Amer­ berto S. Medeiros, Dioc,esan those who live without blame on people you get mean little ican expert of any authority in Chancellor md also a Council and without praise.NSPQnse, which is all you de-' the State Depart.ment. Peritus (Expert) preaching. "For, all of us, from the llerve. If you make 'a big demand.­ Remedying Situation Using the words of St. Paul holiest to the most.abject sinner, JIOU obtain a heroic response. President Eisenhower attempt­ and Pope Paul, the Fall River need the' renewal proclaimed by 'fhe pastor who would foster ed to remedy the ~lituation pastor showed the great trans­ the- Second Vatican Council. The Inter - American understanding holy must become holier, thewhen he sent his brother Milton formation and elevation· of Bap­and cooperation must can upon as his special. representative to tiSm and the "appalling spiritual good must become better, the his parishioners to develop this sinner must be converted andvisit the countries·' of Latin and moral condition of today'sbasic spirit, '~his prodigality, this fix his gaze upon the Lord'" .;. '" America. In. his report to the world. Such a "crisis of modern llove." President, Dr. Eisenhower ob­ society" had to be resolved. Dffficullt Following

Press. Schools served that there was a lack of The Vatican Council solemnly "The challenge to be different Of major importance to the knowledge in the United States proclaimed and taught the an­ faces the 'Christian every mo­

effective diSSE'mination of inter­ about Latin America. He made swer: "Christ ",. 01> 0" the continu­ ment of his life," stressed the American undNstanding are ad­ many recommendations in the ation of Christ. "the Church, the Diocesan Chancellor. "The chal­equate services by the press and, report about what could be done kingdom of Christ throughout the lenge to be different is the chal­by our educational systems. to bring us closer together. world, a kinr.dom of justice, of lenge to renew himself daily in Great hopes must be centered in In 1958 Milton Eisenhower love of peacl:!" '" *,,' the spirit of the Gospel and the the roles to be played by the went again to Latin America as', life of Christ.Need of RenewalCatholic pre<;s and our Catholic the representative of his brother. "The challenge r becames al­Gt:hools. Father Albert Nevins, His report found the same prob­ "But for this apostolate of the most irresistible when the Chris­M.M., long active in the incul­ lems he encoantered in 1953, whole Chureh to succeed, she tian comes face to face with the eation of ide~s and ideals in the only magnified, He spoke of the­ must renew berself every day in crucified Son of God: 'If anyoneUnited States, appraised these many misunderstandings t hat 'accord with the image of her wants to De my follower, he powerful instruments at the had become "even more serious Lord and M!ister Jesus Christ. - must renounce himself and CICOP conference. than they were in 1953." He "My 'dear brothers and sis­ shoulder his ~ross:) :) 0' ,

"The people of the United went on to say: "In the United ters,." the Monsignor explained, "Thus Ch~'ist himself is the States," Father Nevins observes, States, the problem stems pri ­ "the Church of Christ which is ever living challenge for the "'have a horizontal approach to marily from lack of knowledge to be renewed is composed of Christian to be different from history. By that I mean we tend· (: (l (lour people do not truly cam.: all of us, Bishop,. priests, reli ­ other men. His invitation to all to look right and left on the prehend the problems and aspi­ gious and laity, saints and sin­ of us to follow Him must ring globe and not up and down. Our rations of our neighbors, and ners, and also of those who, constantly in our ears if we are main attention becomes focused thus we sometimes take action though baptized, are neither to be useful to the Church and on Europe and Asia with the re­ which are detrimental to the with Christ nor against Him, through the Church to the world­sult that we tend to take Canada good relationships' we' wish to those vast numbers of Catholics in which we live and into which and Latin America for granted. foster." who have fallen from their fer­ we are sent 'oy Him to enlighten We know a great deal about Once again III report was writ ­ vor, tempted by the mirages of it and to savp it'" >I' *"

.

BEFORE YOU BUY-TRY -P~.K

MOTORS OLDSMOBILE

Oldsmobile-Peugot-Renault 67 Middle Street, fairhaveD

t &¥- 4

BIG DIVIDEND NaEWS !

a SYSTEMATIC5025% year SAilINGS

a INI/Esn:'.m1r4050% year SAVINGS

a IllEtWLA~4.25% year SAVINGS

Bass River Sa"i~~s Bank • SOUTH YARMOUTH • D.ENNIS PORT • HYANNIS • YARMOUTH SHOPPING PlAZA • • OSTERVILLE

Paris, London and Rome but ten but notlrling very much hap­ the fleeting pleasures of an easy very little about Bogota, Lima Oi' pened. Conditions did not life. Buenos Aires. change until the election of ''They are the millions who

"Latin Americans sense this horizontal preoocupation of ours and they resent 'poor cousin' treatment. r am not suggesting ftlat we forget Europe. Our afety is definitely bound up­

President Kennedy. He enjoyed a tremendous personal popu­l['rity in Latin America, and his Alliance for Progress was a challenging answer to the ills of QUll' neighbors', .

constitute a great potential for good but have succumbed to the softness of the age and wander through life aimlessly, without conviction, 1mable to decide whether to atand with Christ or

with Europe. Economically, Eu­ President Johnson and Secre­ with the devil" .. >I' They are the rope and Latin America take . tary Rusk seem to be keeping numberless multitudes within about equal amounts of our for­ his spirit alive But if there has the Church of today even Christ eign trade. Culturally, Europe been improvement in govern­ cannot suffer or tolerate, as we bkes precedence because our an­ ment, there has not been much read in'the Book of the Apoca­cestral roots are deep in its soH. improvement iE the realm of lypse. It is Christ who says te But this concern for and interest education or the press,. exceDt them, 'I know your conduct. You­ia Europe should not be at ~ by Way of exception. are. not ealdj you are not hot.

NASON OIL (OMPANY 7 Perry 'Our Heating Avenue

Oils Make Taunton, Mass.

Warm Friends'VA 2-2282

Page 6: 03.31.66

6

; . i

l:Ht A",rl-l()~--Djoceseof Foil River-Thurs. Mor. 31, 1966

Handful of Days This Lenten season has provided a wonderful oppor­

tunity for Catholics to learn just how spiritually mature they were. Almost every Catholic likes to think of himself as an adult in the Faith - as one possessing an immense reserve of good wi!) that would make him ready and even anxious to die for Chirst. He likes to think that he has the capacity for sacrifice. .

This Lent has given all the opporunity to test the truth of this.

Perhaps an individual Catholic has thought he could go to his martyrdom easily.· He has found out if he can do such a simple thing'- but a proof of love - as voluntarily deprive himself of some small taste delight or an amuse­ment. This Lent has enabled him to assess the depths of his love of God by seeing just how much charity, concern for others, he ha..<! Jnmonstrated in his home, toward his

. neighbors and 'fellow workers, toward those whom he' does not naturally like. This Lent has let him see just how much he puts GO,d first when it comes to more intensive prayer, deeper communion with God, the readiness to join with Christ and his fellow Catholics at daily Mass in offering himself with Christ and through Christ and in Christ to the Father.

And make no mifltake about it - the Lenten liturgy does not merely ask Catholics to have a spirit of sacrifice,

.it demands that there be a proof of this in acts. It is so very . easy for a person to cJaim to have a spirit - witness those who speak loudly about the love "they have while criticising others for not hav.ing tl).i~ spirit of theirs. No, a spirit of love and sacrifice is ohtained not by talk but by actions of l.ove and sacrifice, it is fed upon these, it is proved by these.

The~e remain only ahandful of Lenten days for Cath­olics to enter into the sacrifices of Christ not empty-handed but bearing the proofs of their own sacrifices.

A Roman Catholic physician and. autho~, Dr. Jack ·C. ~Wi1lke,speaking.in Detroit, has cautioned junior 'high .schools and chur~hes ~gainst· the "escalation" of social contacts among boys and girls by promoting dances and parties. According to Dr. Willke, "Tl).e seventh grade dance with all the lights on may be harmless that night, butyou're starting a ladder of progression. IIi you begin social contacts 'at that age, you are pushing the youngster. I'm not puri-' .tanical , but you shouldn't go out of your way to push the junior high-er into boy-girl relationships. These kids should still be running in gangs of their own ·sex." .

On the matter of ehurch-sponsored dances, the physi­eian .remarked that "just because a church does it; 'does not make it right. The churches are often under the influ­ence of the same factors the rest of society. is. Some of the worst-chaperoned dances and parties 'have been in the church basement. The prie~t unlocks the door, then· go.es off to counsel a cnuple to try to save a marriage, while at the same time he is fostering future broken marriages:o'in·. his own church basement.

. This is an ':lge in which much literature is published and ~any voices are raised all urging parents to enter into their youngsters' lives~ take an interest in them. And that is good. But sometimes parents and' others respond by 'pro:­viding for' yoilngsters; and, indeed, p;essing them into, the adult forms of recreation and entertainment that push the youngsters much too soon into an adult world that they are emotionally incapabl~ of handling.

George Bern"ard Shaw once sagely remarked. that there is one remedy for youth and that is time. Parents and others would do well to let young people grow up at as easy and normal a pace as possible and not escalate them into the problems that will come to them soon enough..

Why There. Are Wan

A~[p)r@w®~ [LQ~[f@[f~ P~@D1 . .

~@©lks rnl©{l8®~'t [b,w ~~<dI@~(Ql~ Goveli'llilm~ll'i1t

Av~n~@lbIe t!'@ [?MMotl:, PIl'D'If~te Sch@@Ds' WASHINGTON (NC)-With­

out fanfare, the U. S. Office of Education has approved plans in 37 states to give pupils in both public and private schools books bought by the federal govern-. ment.

The emphasis in the program is on library resources and the books, charts, maps and other materials already are to be seen in some school libraries, an of­fice spokesman said.

. This disclosure means that the federal government and the states cooperating with it are quickly turning another corner on the private schools.

The rapid implementation of the program, which was funded only' six months ago, and the public-private cooperation .that brought it about were praised bythe . director of the department of education of the National Catholic Welfare Conference.

Asked for comment, Msgr. James C. Donohue said: "Coop­eration between public and pri ­

(News of parish Confraternity fit Christian Doctrine activities is we). comedo for this column, as are suggeS­tion of subjects for future column$. Correspondence may be addressed to Edward P. McDonagh, 5 Hunting Street. North Attleboro, Mass, 02760.l . •

By Edward P. McDonagh

.C C D

Saturday, April 30th, ~ gidy High School, TauntODt, from 8 :30. to 10 :30 P.M. That's the time and place fur 1he CCD Student LeadershlD Day Program sponsored by the Teaching Sisters and BrothelID Committee of the CCD.

For you CCD high schodl teachers, principals and directom who have been looking for tl new way to motivate your stlr dents - this is it. The program planned by the TSBC win show CCD high school students (sophomore to senior) th s,t they have a responsibility fmi' Christian leadership right now and that they will be required 1l@ continue this leadership in whafr, ever career they choose.

This is a real chance to stim.­ulate' your . students and helJ'. them grow spiritually, intellec­tually and socially. It will also give the teachers and other CeD

.workers who attend the leade~ . ship program as sponsors an op­

portunity to have a candid and realistic exchange' of ideas with .the CCD student.

The Conference Leaders who have accepted invitations to the

vate school· administrators who worked together in so many in­"stances to develop the state plans is to. be hailed as a great step forward." .

Has Added Importance : He said that over the· long .

haul the library resources pro-.· program' Vliill discuss the need gram "may have the most far-. for le'adership by the CCD stu­'reaching implications for the dent', their present role - 38 improvement of· elementary and. students _ and in their future secondary. education." roles in the community, in the . "With an ever-increasing em- . church, in business and matloo phasis 'on the development of riage. Conferences in each oil vigorous minds, capable of anal- these areas will be keynoted by yzing events, of exercising recognized experts. . , judgment, of distinguishing fact. Free-Wheeling Sessionfrom propaganda and truth from half-truth and lies, the library Following eac~ conferen~e the program in elementary and sec-' CCD students WIll form dISCUS­ondary schools. takes on added ,sion groups and dissect,. ref~te, importance," he said. . expand and no doubt, Improve

The books and other materials . on the speakers remarks. These are being distributed under. will ,be .free-wheeling sessions

. Title II of the 1965 Elementary and Secondary School Act, a law most widely known for its bil ­lion-dollar aid· for education of poor children. .

. ence on" issues of Vatican II resenting every part of the world sponsored by the University of . felt it necessary to say in the Notre Dame. He discussed the constitution * co * that 'doctrinesANCHOR chapter on economic and social which obstruct the necessary re­

OfFiCiAn. NEWSPAPr2~ OF 'iTHIE DIOCIESIE Of FAU ~~VIE~ life in the Constitution on the forms' in economic life 'under Church in the Modern World. the guise of a false liberty' are

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River The Monsignor quoted the no less erroneous that 'those ,. 410 Highland Avenue constitution's statement that the which subordinate the basic

PrelQte Cofe$ Council Criticism Of. WesterD1 Economic Attitudes

NOTRE DAME (NC) - A· is permeated with a certain eco-Catholic. social action leader nomic way of thinking." . said here th~t the Vatican Coun- ';This is true." th~ constitution

. eil's Pastoral Constitution on the says, "both of nations that favor Church it: the Modern World a collective economy and of criticizes econornic and social others." . attitudes of western nations, in- 'Fal"le Liberty~ eluding thp. United States, as well as communist countries. Msgr. Higgins said the phrase

Msgr. Geofge G. Higgins, di- "and of others" was intended rector of the Social Action De- by the council Fathers to incl~de partment, National Cat hoI i c "some of'· the leading capitalist Welfare Conference and Anchor nations of the world, including columnist, said Americans would the United States presumably." be "well advised to ponder" the He also said Americans should criticisms made by the council. "ponder thp. significance of the

Msgr. Hi~gins spoke at the.' fact that a conciliar commission international theological confer- made up of some 60 bishops rep­

where the students will come up wi.th their own answers.

BesIde~ food for thou~ht, the LeadershIp Program WIll pro­vide foo.d for eating. Each regis­trant WIll be expected to bring along his lunch, but dinner win be provided as part of the. day's activities, as will cakes for lunch, breaks' and the like.

Father Powers, Diocesan CCB Director, plans to provide stin another kind of nourishment iii a Bible Vigil Service on leader­ship. The CCD approach is built on the Gospels - the Living Word-and the Word will have a key place in our program <m Leadership.

Dance Planned To cap the day's activities.

there will be a dance in the B ish 0 p Cassidy Auditorium. Brother Mu]ryan of the TSBc. chairman of the Leadership Day Program, has planned it so that there will be an approximate balance of 'Joys and girls. His secret is his ability to call on either girls from Cassidy or boys from Coyle. Nobody will have t~

dance but the live band' win help and by that time the talks on leadership will have had their effect.

All we need to make the Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151 "basic cause" of imbalances be- rights of individual persons and Leadership Day a· success and

.tween social classes, between re- groups to the collective organi­ worthwhile experience for youPUBLISHER' gions within ('ountries, and be- zation of production.' ." and your students is a flood ofMost Rev. James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD., tween rich and poor countries is The monsignor said the spirit registrations from all parish

GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER that "many people, especially in of the constitution, like the spirit CCD units in the Diocese.' We Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll economically advanced coun- of ·the social encyclicals of Pope need hundreds of students and.

- '-'- ., . .' tries, seem * • * to be ruled by Jolin XXIII, 4ls one of optimism. scores of teachers to come' '•MANAGING EDITOR econpmics, .so th.at· almost their, and· eagetp.ess 'to ·be. of ·service to . Cassidy. Eat'!! parish has beea

Hpgh J. Golden _tire personal and social :we . the world. . 0 Tum ~ Pale Seven

Page 7: 03.31.66

1

T ®®U1J~ Arrufr~(d[9)@tr® l®@@@[?~hfi[0 rQ)~y r ~@[[~, ~cg lQ)~~lliJ@~U1JG'~ G'@ ~~" :~J@u@j , I I

J

~[9)[[D~ 350 ail' C@~~D@2/ [f[Jo@~ With Christian Pand:rama safely in the record books,

teens are looking forward to another "first" for the Di­ocese, to be held, like Panorama, at C a g g i d y High in Taunton. It'g a Leadership Day for high school students attending CCD classes, and Over 300 bOQks were obtained,it'll be held from 8 :30 Satur­ plus financial contributions to day morning, April 30 u,ntil the cause. 10 :30 Saturday niglit. The Basketball was in the news at program will include confer­ Bishop Feehan High in Attleboro ences and discussion on leader­ recently, when 1lI faculty team ship and a Bible Vigil with a whipped seniors, and juniors leadership theme. Participants hailing from North Attleboro will bring lunch, and dinner trounced Attleboro dittoes. will be served in the Cassidy Sodalists at Sacred Hearts cafeteria. A dance will climax Academy, Falll River, have the day. The program is span­ found Sunday a good bowling

day. Girls have organized' asored by the Teaching Sisters team which will bowl Sundaysand Brothers Committee of, the

Confraternity of Christian Ooc­ at Holiday Lanes, Somerset. trine. ' " 'VocatDollJl Programs

At Dominican Academy, Fall At the end of Vocation Month, River, the orchestra has set Sun­ all schools have observed the day, May 1 as the date for their annual eve n t appropriately. annual Sprin.~ concert. Titled Among activities: an all-day Ca­"An Evening of Strings," it will reer Day program at Prevost be directed by Edwin C. Gard­ High, with .representatives of ner. the religious life and various

A Great Pop Culture Contest professions heard from; a voca­is under way at Prevost ~igh, tion Mass at Coyle High in Fall River, sponsored by the Taunton, concelebrated by six Maple Leaf. Due to the "dubiQus priests, with a homily delivered financial assets of the editorial by Rev. Edmund Delaney; a' staff, it's uncertain whether. a panel discussion at Dominican prize will be offered to the win­ Academy with talks by a postu­ner," but he'll anyway have his lant, a canonical novice and a name published in one of the second-year novice, followed by most consistently readable ~d a question period. DA girls also engaging of the Diocesan h1gh attended a vocation Mass, and school papers. Rev. John Folster, brother of,

The contest, directed by .G. junior Anne Marie FoIster, ad­Desrosiers, "High Priest of High dressed an assembly on the Camp," i n v 0 I v e s answering 'choice of a way of life. questions such as "What. was Rev. Edward Mitchell cele­Captain Midnight's real nam~?"; brated the vo~ation Mass at SHA "Who was Jor-EI?"; and "Who Fall River; while girls at Mt. St. knows what 'evil lurks in the Mary Academy were hostesses to hearts of men'?" Who does novices and postulants from know? ' Mother of Mercy Novitiate,

Health Care Cumberland, R. J. The Mount's Freshmen and seniors at first concelebrated Mass high­

Sacred Hearts Academy, Fair­ lighted Vocation Day, with Rev. haven, are taking a course, in Maurice Jeffrey delivering a emergency health care.. This ,homily anlt the other priests government - sponsored course, present speaking on vocations already offered in several other and the symbolillm of the new Diocesan highs, includes infor­ liturgy in the concelebrated mation on radioactive fallout, Mass. A hootenanny directed by sanitation, care of burns and Jacqueline Ewald climaxed the

day.fractures and general nursing pointers. Frederick Kasap' of Collegf' Acceptanees the SHA faculty is conducting Still they come, those words the course. Certificates will be of welcome from colleges to awarded students successfully seniors. At DA Paulette Masson completing ,t. ' and Louise Eaton have been ac­

National Honor Society mem­ cepted at Bridgewater; Maureen bers at Jesus-Mary Academy, Toupin at Salve Regina. At Pre­Fall River, under direction of vost, Robert Messier is "in" at Miss Rita Laflamme, president, Northeastern Tech, Henry De­have requested career material mers at Assumption, and Donald from various sources. Pamphlets Chouinard at Westfield State. and other items they receive Coyle rep:>rts John Badwey,will be placed in the school Stonehill; J 0 s e p h Baptiste,guidance room. ' Stonehill, SMTI; Michael Bates,

Maureen Silvia, junior at Mt. Northeastern; James Fitzpatrick,St. Mary Academy, Fall River, Fairfield, A£:sumption; Charles has placed highest in the scnool Fer rei r a, Northeastern, PC; in the 1966 math exam sponsored Bruce Gordon, BC; Thomas Kal­by the Mathematical Association .. aher, John Carroll, Notre Dame; of America lind the Society!>f John Laffan, PC, BC; John Man­Actuaries. She will receive an ning, BC; Roland Masse, North­award pin. ' eastern; Francis Mendoza and

At Holy Family, New Bedford, John McGarry, SMTI; Edward students are preparing for a tes­ Mirka, Northeastern; Jam e s timonial dinner in honor of the Murphy, Notre Dame; Philipbasketball team, to be held Sun­ Paulson, PC. day, April 17. Holy Family: Robert Gaudreau

National Honor Society mem­ accepted at SMTI and Saleniabers at St. Anthony High, New Oliveira at Bridgewater; andBedford, have replenished their also at HF, Theresa Allen hasschool library via a book drive. won a full tuition scholarship

to Campbell School in New Bed­ford; and Richard Jalbert hasDiocesan CCD received a basketball scholarship to Merrimack which will coverContinued from Page Six, his tuition.provided with registration in­

DA delegates to student gov­formation and forms. They ernment day in Boston partici ­should be returned to Brother

Mulryan, C.S.C., Coyle High pated with other students in a preparatory tour of the' StateSchool, 61 Summer Street, Taun­

ton, by April 8th. Be a leader­ House. They listened to a com­get yours in. mittee hearing, and viewed the

For fur the r information, ,senate and house in action. please contact: E. P. McDonagh, Also at DA, seniors have de­5 Hunting Street, North Attle­ cided to· hold their prom Mon­boro, Mass. 02760 TeL (617) day, June 6i 3lt the Hearthstone 699-25.13. restaurant. Seekonk.

for royalties, props and other production of Camelot. It'll play stage necessities. Tuesday, April 12 through Fri-

At SHA Fall River St. Agnes' ,day, the 15th, with an afternoon ~AVE MON~Y ONand S1. Margaret's teams are matinee Thursday, the 14th for once again in combat as the religious; and the other perform­school conducts its annual cou­ ances at night. pon drive. And Seventeeners at YOUR OIL HEAT!Paulette Castonguay, JMA the Fall River school will hold senior class president, has been

WYmantheir Spring dance Tuesday, awarded first prize in a state­ eattApril 19 in the school gym, while 3~592wide essay contest on "Citizen­glee club members are readying ship Responsibilities" sponsored to ~ppear at the annual Diocesan by the Portuguese-American CHARLES F. VARGAS Teachers' Convention, to be held Civic League. She received $50 254 ROCKDALE AVENUE in May at Bishop Feehan in and a bronze plaque.Attleboro. UN Trip NEW BEDFORD, MASS.

Unusual Stations Prevost boys will participateJesus-Mary sodalists are spon­ Thursday, May 5 in a 'trip to the

soring something different this UN, with side sorties to Wall year for Lent. Each day after Street and midtown Manhattan.

, class a "way of the cross" is held Also at the Fan Riv~r school, the in the scho'Jl chapel, as sug­gested by Michel Quoist, author . of "Prayers." Only one station is considereti each day and ' a DONNrElLY five minute ceremony is follow­edby a short period of private PAINTING

.prayer. , Girls at Mt. St. Mary's heard SERVICE

Rev. Paul F. McCarrick; Fall Commercial • IndustrialRiver area CYO director, as the

Institutionalsecond in a s~ries of Lenten lec­turers. His topic was disobedi­ Painting and Decorating ence on the part of youth and he Fall River OSborne 2-1911 emphasized that respect for au-· thority follows from a strong 74 Williamson Street family structure.

At Holy Family in New Bed­ford, the Msgr. McKeon· Debate Society will go to St. John's Shrewsbury on Saturday, April "You Can Whip Our Cream, but 2; to Eastern Nazarene Saturday, April 16; and to Emerson Col­ You Can't Beat Ou r Milk !"

,.,. fll/Clt tleO.,.'Y.t

<i••~ ~EATING OIL

lege Friday, April 22. Some 117 students at St. An­ Your Gull Hill Route Man ;sthony's High entered a sch~ol

song contest. The field has nar­ Always af Your Sery;ce!rowed to five contestants, and

!FOR HOME DELIVERY CALL WY 8-5691the winner will be' announced in the next issue of "Essa," ,t~e school paper.

The Prevost Mothers' Guild GULF HILL DAIRY will hold a combination supper so. DARTMOUTH, MASS.

,and concert at St. Anne's School

I ~-

'1 I

COYLE LEADERS: Heading student council at Coyle High School, Taunton, are Tom Kalaher, vice-president, left; and James Murphy, president.

Prevost freshman James Reid Auditorium Saturday evening, will represent his school in the April 16. Supper will be served regional science fair the week­ from 6 to. 7:30 and the concert, end of April 1. His project deals by the Mount Assumption Insti ­with climatology. tute Band, will follow at 8. A

, record hop will be held after theDramatics Club officers at SHA Fairhaven are Mary Lou . concert, from 9:30 to 11:30. Pen I e r , president; Leonetti:! And Prevostite Donald Choui­Baurbeau, vice-president; Ger­ nard has been named baseball alyn Forgues, secretary; Patricia team captain. Lupinacci, treasurer. The unit Dates and times have been an­held a candy ~ale to raise money nounced for the Mount St. Mary

THE ANCHOR- " ? Thurs., March 3'/, 1966

new French dull hl's chos<.!:: as officers Wilh~d Michaud, presi., dent; Ronald Guillemette, vice~

president; David Berube, secre­tary; George Desmarais, treasu­rer.

Basketball intramurals are upcoming at Mount, with cap­tains of the eight inter-classroom squads varsity team members. Games start Monday, April 4. Meanwhile, down at the gym, the volleyball team has emerged victorious over DA, Cassidy, Case, Durfee ~nd Stang; and up in the press department, sub­scriptions are being taken for Mercycrest, the yearbook. This will be dedicated to Sister M"ry Rose and Sister Mary Fidelis.

Msgr. Humoerto Medeiros. Di­ocesan chancellor, will address Prevost students Wednesday, April 6 on work of the Vatican Council.

The College Corner at Mt. St. Mary, sponsored by the National Honor Society, is currently spot­lighting U:RI.

And Mount girls have under­taken several projects to raise money for the Bishops' Relief Fund. Students have sold box lunches, and raffled a stuffed an­imal and a r~cord album.

A raffle tuo at Prevost, where a portable TV will go on Mon­day, April 4, with proceeds to benefit a school improvement fund in honor of the golden ju­bilee of the ordination of Msgr. Alfred Bonneau, pastor of Notre Dame Church.

National Honor Society stu­dents at SHA Fairhaven will 'hold induction ceremonies for new membf'rs Monday, April 11, at which time a junior honor society will be officially organ­ized, includbg seventh, eighth and ninth graders at the acad­emy. The older NHS members have had as '1 special project the. tutoring of fellow students need­ing extra help.

•• 'J ••••

Page 8: 03.31.66

M '" .,.,.' ·:M'· t' ••..•••.• " ;8:' .-.T~E :ANCHOR--Diocese of. Fall River-Thurs. Mor. 31, 't'.66 , ercy Iss,oner D of f SpeakerFrom Beginning, Tots Evidence

Sister Mary Regis, R.5.M. was . IIpeaker at the annual Commu~

nion Breakfast of Hyacinth CiF­Individual Differences, Needs cle No. 71, Daughters of IsabellQ held in Holy Name Hall, NewBy Mary 'finley Daly Bedford.

The fallacy that all newborn babies are alike-simply Sister Regis was for 25 yeam bundles of sweetness and innocence, sans individual person­ at the Mission in Belize, British ality-has been dispelled by an expert. Dr. Reginald S. Honduras and told of the work

of the sisters in founding andLourie, director of the Department of Psychiatry of Child­staffing schools and hospitals

ren's Hospital of the District there. Sister said she arrivedof Columbia, in a rec<mt talk This stage of attachment, oc­ there in 1927 from Ireland andcuring between three and five

so was present during the dis­to the Parents' h'1stitute months, is viewed by Lourie as astrous hurricane of 1931 whichsponsored by the Washing- the "most important stage of de­eompletely destroyed the conventton Hebrew Congregation, said velopment." Only when he is and school.that from the beginning of life, sure his needs will be met by

She also spoke of the Sistersbabies evidence the nurturing person, normally work in the prisons and told ofindividual dif- the mother, can a child go to the, many sisters from the Newferences and another stage of development. Bedford-Far River - Providenceneeds that must Without it, he· can never learn to area who are now working illlbe recognized be close to someone. the Republic of Honduras. Thefro m b i l' t h • Early Months schools there are state supportedFro m experi- "If this stage (of attachment) and prayer is permitted in theence in infant is not met, this will become a so-called pubHc schools.and child psy- preoocupation of this person

Mrs. Catherine LeTendre, Re­ehiatry Dr. Lou- throughout the rest of his life," gent welcomed the members andrie noted that Dr. Louirie said. Deprived of guests. The hall was attractivelyinfants un d e r early, normal security that one's decorated with Shamrocks andone year of age needs will be met, individuals greer, ribbons and the tableshave emotional problem:! which seek to esbblish relationships were Spring-Uke with a vase oflater may be hazardous if unrec- on "What are you going to give forsythia on each. Prayer cardsognized. me?" ever seeking more and were at each place."If these differences lire not more as proof that their needs

Rt. Rev. John J. Hayes, Chap­taken into account,"· he said, will be met. lain of Hyacinth Circie, was cel­··this is where later distortions Taking up the subject 'of how ebrant of the Mass and alsGbegin." an individual first learns' what spoke ,at, the breakfast. Mrs.'He Never stops!' is right, what is wrong, the be-Charlott!'! Charron, State RegentAil example he cited ,vas the I ginnings of moral judgments brought greetings of the Statehyper-active child, one ,who and patterns of behavior, this Circle and announced the found­from birth - and even before'. psychiatrist believes this concept

birth - was I constantly active. comes from identification with ing of a new circle in Chicopee Falls.

Sisters Train Maids Such a baby, and mothers of .another as a child continues to

The Glee Club under themany children probably recog- be part of someone else. If de­ Course on Housework Prepares Formosa direction of Miss Hilda Mathews·nize the type is considered "dif- nied proper example in such ent.ertained.

NEW BEDFORD D OF I: Miss Anna Rielly, chairman, center, lights candle in presence of Mrs. Ernest R. LeTendre, regent, left, and Sister Mary Regis, R.S.M., speaker, as the annual communion breakfast of Hyacinth Circle #71, D of I.,

.is about to start. ' ,

ficult." He sleeps a while, then matters, the kind of conscience . Girl·s for Employment goes into action, night and day. which will be developed "has During the toddler stage he is haZards." TAIPEI (NC)-Girls are being for service than we can cope "all over the place," a rllal in- "A good conscience is made trained here· as domestic ser- with." .. iantile home-wrecker. . upon love and a desire to adopt vants by a group 'of Sisters­ ·The Helpers of the Holy Souls

Punishment is not the answer standards," he added. . and there is a long waiting list have accommodation for only 30 in handling a child like this, Project Head Start was ~om­ of families wanting their ser­ girls at a time. Many of the Dr. Lourie stated, 'commenting mended but, the speaker said, vices. trainees are Catholics, but the that these are children whose there is also the. problem of how "It was the apostolic inter­ Sisters accept any recommended "brakes don't work yet" so that to reach babies and to treat nuncio's idea," Sister Francis of girl for whom they have room. ·the wise parent consi:;tently "distortions" before school age... the Helpers of the Holy Souls "We keep in touch with them "lel)ds a set of brakes" in this D uri n g ensuing questi~n-' said. "Archbishop Giuseppe Cap­ after they leave, and almost trying and exasperating stage. answer period came the usual~ rio heard from priests durh1.g his without exception they return These "loaned brakes" may be a "What a b o·u t thumb-sucking trips· through Formosa of the here to see us and m'eet their soothing pat on the arm, or an prolonged unduly?" (Usually'· problem faced by young girls friends on' their days off. This assist with a cup which ordinal'.,. abandoned, aiong 'with hair-· from poor families during ·the·· continued contact and influence ily would be broken and the twisting, etc., by the time per­ years before marriage, and he is, of course, the important part'·quiet assumption that this child· wiment teeth erupt; though· asked us if we could do some­ of our work." will gradually develop hiB own sometimes the attendant hair­ thjng for them." set ot brakes. twisting, security blanket and .Sister Francis, a slight, ener­

"The drive to be normal is tre- the like persist during periods getic Belgian nun, with almost Dean's list Students mendous," ·Dr. Lourie believes. of frustration or boredom.) 30 years experience in China,

Such a drive means that in the '~What about the father's care was placed in charge of the At Salve Reginacare of children a mother has a for a baby?" The speaker 00­ training by her superior. During mighty good thing going for her. lieves there may be too much the last 18 months 80 girls have Sixteen students from the Fan

been trained and placed with River Diocese·have been namedDuring the first stage of life, emphasis on "father being a baby lives in its own world, mother"-that the two have dif­ families in Taipei. . to the Dean's List at Salve Re­Dr. Lourie told his listeners, ferent roles and the difference "The girls are over 16 years gina College on the basis of "but gradually, an awareness of should be made clear to a child. old, but because they have com­ their first semester work. They another person develops, a Parents attending the institute pleted only the compulsory six are Catherine Ellis, Somerset·

years primary schooling they Vivian Lamothe, Fall River;dawning reali7ation that a per- gained new insights on babies son is attached to the source of and their place in the whole have difficulty finding jobs-' Gertrude Ste. Marie Fall River' supplies. He wants to be with human race as a result of lOr. even the factoties require at Susan Aleixo, Tau~ton. ' and a part of his mother." Lourie's lecture. Also Gail Catabia, Swansea;least three years of middle

school education. Sister Catherine Chesbro, O.P.; Continue Contact Andrea DeGiammo, Somerset;

"We give them a quick three' Madeleine Hebert, Fall River;Resounding .Tribute to five months course in house-' . Cecile Levesque, Fall River' work-cooking, Aaundering, hy­ Sarah Manning, Fall River:

World Indebted to Pope John for His Courage giene--and some English, in case Carol Wood', Westport. ' there is an opening with an

Beatrice Abraham, New Bed­And Humanity, Oregon Rabbi Asserts American family. ford; Mary CrOWley, New Bed­Because of the difficulty in

SALEM (NC)-A Jewish rab- ,tion is due totally to that 'giant finding reliable, trained ser­ for~; Kathleen Flanagan, Hy­bi told tht. Portland Archdioc- whose great star shown for only anms; Teresa Nunes, New Bed­vants, there are more applicantl esan Council of Catholic Women four and one-half years above ford; .lean Maigret, Attleboro. State convention here in Oregon the steeples of Rome, but whose the Second Vatican Council's influence may \ be felt for the Oregon Nuns to Staff

. declaration on Jews is "the next four and one-half eentu­sPoken source for better rela- ries," he asserted. Peruvian Mission tions between Jew and Catha­

"Pope John XXIII will long PORTLAND (NC) - A reli ­lItc." He then paid a resounding be remembered as one of the gious, community of nuns heretribute to the late Pope Johlll. greatest personalities of the 20th has announced its entry into the

Rabbi Yonah Geller of Port­ century, ·and his moving spirit foreign mission field with planslIand,said the Council schema' re- . was present during the entire to send four Sisters to a Peruvi­jfuted a 1900-year-old posi tion. sessions of the council. The an mission supported· by the He declared: "The council J9ub­ whole world sj:lOuld be indebted Portlanc:. archdiocese. J1icly acknowiedged that it had to him for his courage and his The Sisters of St. Mary of been in error and was seeking in simple humanity, and surely the Oregon will begin educational U1is fashion to change the course Jew stands in his humble debt, work this year at the mission of of history and relations with the Tamshiyacu, near Iquitos alongfor it was he alone who was able.'Jew." the Amazon River in the Peru­

JFina! Fruition to comprehend the necessity for vian jungle. The mission is cur­"The final passage of this the schema and'" '" '" to bring it rently staU~d by two Portlana

f5&)~~~!1l}q .it;s.s.up9~~}1\ j149»'-1.~J,qt();~.~~o.l\o": 1,-, ,;,[,.~ ; i ., .i pri~ts.•. 'I•• ~ -. I ~ •..,. ".. .

LEMIEUX PIl.UMBING & HEATING, INC.

for Oomeslic -......L~ and Industrial ~ Sales and Service

Oil Burners WY 5-1631

2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE NEW BEDFORD

Enjoy Dining IN THE

JOn.n.Y WHALER -AND­

~g»OlJJJlJ'E~ UNNI ~lES1i"AURAN'if'S

Always Free Parking

Pieasan~ Stree~

Famous Reading HARD COAl

NEW ENGLAND COKE

New Bedford

Page 9: 03.31.66

M,ercy'i,Sister<Says Most Cooks Th-row ;'Vitamiins down Drain

By Joseph, and, Marilyn Roderick Sometimes the simplest plants in a garden offer the

most pleasure.. Little forget-me-nots resting in a border, a wow of wild violets, or a, patch of wild yellow buttercups can capture the eye and charm one with theill' simplicity. The same holds true for veg­

II delicious roast on Sundayetables. There is nothing ex­and let it take a back seat in&tic about the little garden sandwiches the rest of the oweek;

tomato but I defy you to top we stop in pastry shops and fts appeals. We have h'usk toma­ spend large amounts of our food toes, also k..V1own as, strawberry dollar on sweets that are not tomatoes, which grow wild in, nourishing, or even especiallythe garden, and these are loved tasty; and we throwaway in one by the children who gather the' day in our garbage cans or dis­Mttle paper-like 'pods ' and" eat posals more than an averagethe succulent fruit. Indian family eats in a week.

'Another common plant is :rhu-' Well, it's quite a way from 'ba'rb.Nothing is 'more common: New Year's Day but we can stillnn' gardens and yet is looked for­ adopt a new resolution to try to ward to more than' the 'first get more out of our food moneyrhtJbul·b. Just now' out rhUbarb" and more value and stretchabil ­b breaking through the soil and ity out of the food we buy.already some of our neighbors', The following are just a few ehildren have their eyes on it, hints to help you get extra mile­and it is a good thing that we age out of your meals. . have more than enough to go 1) Search for recipes for left ­nround. If you haven't any rhu­ over meat and vegetables. Theybarb in your garden, now iBthe' can taste quite different with time' to plant some although you the addition of a sauce or a few may not get a full crop for'sev':" spices. leraI years to come. 2) Try making homemade

Rhubarb needs' fUn sun and soups using that vegetable water rich soil. You may be able to and see how much better theybuy roots at nurseries which are' taste than the canned variety.full' and which 'contain a large' :I When 10u have whippedgrowing bud. Figure on three to' cream left over, freeze it in in­four plants for a family of four;' dividual dollops, just enough to 13efore planting the roots, dig; top a pudding or a sundae. the soil to It depth of about a foot 4) Store unused egg whites in and add some old manure. If' a covered jar in the freezer com­you have no manUre, 'add sOme partment. Make sure. you labeR commercial fertilizer to the soil" the jar as to mlount. ~10-5-5 will do), spading it ia 5) Don't throwaway the juicewell so that It does not come in from a drained can of fruit. Add contact with the root. lemon juice, orange juice or gin­

Plant the rhubarb about three ger ale to it and you have a re­mches below the surface and freshing drink. Pour it over ice eover with good garden soil. The cream for a tasty tOpping, or first year let the plants grow and combine a few different drained­40 not expect a harvest. the sec­ off juices, pour them into II ond year you may be able to paper cup, place a stick.in ~ pick a few stalks but the smaller middle, place in your freezer atalks should be allowed to grow compartment and ,you have a ~though they should Dot De' al-, fruit popsicle ~or the chUdren lowed to set c;eed. After the sec­ m.8de with pure juices. end year, you may have a full G) Resolve to tRy fish and. barvest of rhubarb which will other -seafoods in your menu at keep coming year ~ year least once a week. They are in­with no end. e,cpensive aod filled ,with food

Rhubarb, incidentally, should valueo DOt be cut when it is harvested. 7) Twirl a couple of day-oldIt should be pulled gently out of : bread slices in your blender and the plant. The stalks should presto, breadcrumbs to be stored break out with DO difficulty. in a tightly covered jar. This is one of the few plants a) Forego the expensive andthat our Southern neighbors, out of season foods. You'll find eannot grow. It is a cool weather you'll enjoy them more whemlll>lant and suffers in hot weather, they are in season. so here in New England we do

9) Discover the meal magic toIllave something which we Clllll be fOund in casseroles, especiallygrow better than the Floridians. for leftovers.In the Kitchen

Even though this is a Lenten 10) Reheat hardened rolls m season with relaxed fast laws, it a medium oven in a brown paper

bag sprinkled with water, and our wastefulness with food, and f.s still a good time to reflect on

find their softness returned., our food dollar. Wastefulness is This is a .recipe that adds dash a sin, especially in our modem to yesterday' roast. 0

era when many are living so Chinese Beef luxuriously and others in under­ 2 cups of leftover cooked beeJZ,privileged veas are dying of cut up thin starvation. . % Tablespoons of butter'

In discussing this 'recently' 1 cup cooked tine noodles with one of the senior °nuns of y.; cup pecans ' the Mercy order, she mentioned'; Z Tablespoons soy saUft a transitjon from the days wheD 2 Tablespoons sUgar . Dot a scrap was wasted to the i) 'Heat the beef slo"';'w ill ~. present time when vitamins are ' butter in a large sidllet. thrown down the drain. The sage 2) When the beef m bot lil1tiI'Sister commented how the cooks fa the noodles, pecans, choppedof today blithely pour into the

~r whole, the soy sauce and flbekitchen sink the water in which sugar.they have cooked their vege­

3) If you have Ii can on yoW'tables and meats when it .could you addbe the delicious and kitchen shelf canbasis of a

Ilutritious soup with the addition ,Chinese :vegetables, wen drained. of a few wbole vegetables and 4) Heat quiddy, stirring BOme barley or rice. She went HOund, until everything ,18 ~

on to tell of the cooks she had known in the convent who had Dot even "wasted a pin,"yet had Reverse Runng served a delicious and varied PITTSBURGH (NC) - ~ menu. Pennsylvania Supreme Court hl!lB

In thinking over our conver­ reversed a Philadelphia Com­sation, I was reminded of how mon Pleas Court ruling which extravagant and unsaving most banned the SSlle of Henry MiK­Qt us are. We serve ow familial ~a ~ '~Qpic of Cancelro­

l ' • , • '

,THE ANCHOR- 9 Thurs., March 31, 1966 0

Cathedral' Gui'ld M,emorial Award

The Rev. Francis A. McCarthy Scholarship will be given for the first time this year by the Cathedral Women's Guild. Ap­plicants must be in the eighth grade or students currently at ­tending hig}> school.

The scholarship is open to either a boy or girl from St. Mary's parish and must be in the upper half of his or her class.

Applications will be available about Aprii 15 at St. Mary's

0RE!ctorY, 327 Second Street fromthe scholarship committee chair.' man, Rev. Robert L. Stanton. 0'

. The committee comprises Mrs. Patrick J. Hurley, Mrs. Eugene' Ponton, ,Mrs. ,Tere Holland, Mrs: Patrick Murphy, Mrs. James A.' O'Brien Jr., ninss Rita O'Lough­lin, secretary, Mrs. Michael J. Mc¥ahon, Miss Margaret Lahey and Mrs. Leo Thibault.

The scholarship will be award­ed at the installation banquet Art June.

CUBAN REFUGEES: One of the two daily flights from Cuba arrives in Miami with some of the 14,000 refu­ Georgetown Hospitalgees who are being re~settled in the United States since the government-sponsored airlift from the communist-eon­ Gets Disease Center trolled island began Dec. 1, 1965. Some 200,000 to 300,000 WASHINGTON (NC)-A com­refugees are expected to be brought to the U.S. in this' munity center for preventingprogram. NC Photo. ' , , kidney disease will be estab­

lished at Georgetown University Hospital here July 1 under It

$4~6,800 Public Health ServiceMove Toward Reality grant. The National Kidney Founda­

o Rehabilitation' Center' in South Texas tion will sponsor the center which will seek to prevent kid~For, Alcoholics, Drug Addicts ney disease by discovering and treating its early effects in chil_o

SAN ANTONIO (NC) - The Hollers, president of the South dren. A spokesman for thedream of a $7.5 million Santa Texas M'edical Foundation, pre­ Foundation called the grant theRosa Rehabilitation Center here senteci Sister Mary Vincent with first of its kind in the U. S.has started to move, toward a deed to 25 acres of land on The foundation said the cen­reality. which the center will be built as

tes' will attempt to conduct a'SiSter Mary ,Vincent, adminis- part of a huge medical complex . practical, community-wide pro­trator, was presented with It now in various building stages

gram on the basis of researcbcheck for $10,000 from the Santa in San Antonio's Oak, Hill dis­that shows many kidney ail ­Rosa Medic<\l Center's general trict. ments in adults could have beenhospita! auxiliary. The check Medical Problems detected and corrected in child­was the down payment on a Also included in the complex' hood. :pledge to contribute $250,000 ~ are the South ~rexas Medical

the project. ' School of the University ofA few days earlier Dr. James

0

Texas, a Bexar County general hospital, the· Methodist Hospital, and a largf' Veterans' Adminis­ BARBERO'SWomen on Cape tration hospiTal. PIZZA-PATIOThe Santa Rosa RehbilitationPlan EV'ents Center is designeQ-J to care for IlOUTE 6, HUmESON AVE. psychiatric cases and for pa­Mrs. Frederick A. English, Near Fairhaven Drive-In.tients with such problems as al ­president of Cape Cod and Is­

Italian Dinners Our Specialtycoholism and drug addiction,lands District No.5, National which Sister Mary Vincent Service On PatioCouncil.of Catholic Women, has ealled "medical, not judicialannounced that the next excu­problems." There is' no suchtive board meeting will be held civilian facility for such prob­on Monday, April 18, at Hyannis. lems now in South Texas.She also announced that the

final open meeting of the Dis­ The Santa Rosa facility, ac­ Offering You ~rict will be conducted on Sun­ cording to Sister Mary Vincent, 3 Savings Plans day. Aprif 24, at the Church of will include a 200-bed psychi­the Visitation in No. Eastham. atric hospital and a 100-bed re­ Home Financing The speaker will be Larry New": habilitation unit. The psychiatric man 0 of Hyannisport, a noted hospital will have 100 beds in a WApl=~AIVI newspaper columnist, who will closed unit for intensive treat­discuss the Viet Nam situation. ' 'ment·of drugs, psychotherapy CO-OPI=Q4TIVFEach' affiliate of the District and shock therapy. Another 100 is requested ,to appoint ';1 dele-, beds will be designed to' give 'the

BA~Kgate and an alternate to the' patient the f~eling of being in a 261 Main St." Wareham, Mas'

0

Diocesan Convention scheduled' ~i-resort type atmosphere" Telephone 295-2460for Saturday, April 3O,at Mt. with heavJ stress on recreational

St. Mary's Aeademy, Fall River. 0 and outdoo:' activities. hot..,...." Sema .YlIl~

Mrs. Gilbert Noonan ill in charge of tickets, and registration win be held at 9:30 the morning of the meeting. 0 '.

A retreat for women at the ',D & °D SALES AND SERVICE,J!)iocesan Retreat HoUSe, East J'reetoWlll, has been announced INC.by Mrs. John Lauzonis.

FRIGIDA.IRENorris H. Tripp SHEET METAL REFRIGERATION

Jo TESER. Prop. INDUSTRIAL APPLIANCES

RESIDENTIAL AIR CONDITIONINGCOMMERCIAL 253 Cedar St., New BedforcJ 363 SECOND ST.. FALL RIVER, MASS. WV ~'''~22

Page 10: 03.31.66

10 THE ANCHO~- ..1

, Tnu'rs., Mardi 31, 1966

Interfaith Peace Conference Aims· To Fill Vacuum

WASHINGTON (NC) ­Bishop John Wright of Pitts­burgh said the delegates to

'the first National Interreli­gious Conference on Peace do not presume to sit in !udgment on the moral IQ's of th£' nation's leaders.

"To pretend to do so would be faintly hypocritical," he said. "But the fact is that religions have been only indirectly con­'cerned with religion. The result 'has been a vacuum. .' "We're here to fill that viic­uum," 'he .stressed. , '., ',' . " .

'The Pittsburgh prelate' was "one of the 'founding 'fathers 'o~ 'the conference which brought­500 representatives of major i~-· ligious faiths in the United' States here to "seek a religious consensus for peace.", .

. With three 0:': pis co-chairmen ;~Dr·. Dana McL,ean Greefey,. "p'resident of, the .Unitariant!n~.: versalist Association, Rap b 1

Mmirice'N. Eisen~rath"presidei,lt ~f the Union 'of 'Amerhian .He­brew Congregations, .and Meth­odist 'BishOp John Wesln~ Lord of: Washington, Bish'dp' Wright

"discussed. the. purposes .of ·the 'iiriusual, gathering.'. ",

c. "As·churchinen. 'we believe ;. that tJi.ere ,de moral iHid spirit.u­'tal bases for peace; and that:these ;'t,ases are ·essential.' ':;. " Seek .Guidelines . ,

. "Wh~n a patient is brough~ to , a hospital, the immediate con­.cern .of the ,staff is to save: him.'

'. Meanwhile. 1n the. research lab, import!lr\t . work is, progressing which wili save the lives of fu­

religion had talRed'a great deal about peace, we thought perhaps it could do something about it.

'hBishop Wright told us that. muc. of our work was wishful think­ing ul).til we were able to devel­op a dialogue among ourselves," he said.

More Faculty Yonce In College Affairs

, JERSEY CITY (NC) -- ,St. 'Peter's Co!.lcge has, named a three-man !·xecutive council, in­cludmg two elected ,lay, mem­bers. ·to inc!"ease the faculty's v.o,ice i~ collzgeaff~rs. . All academic and non-aca­

demic busin2ss will come uoder ~utomatic review by the coun­cil, \'lhich WIn report to Father Edmund G. Ryan, S.J., executive vice"-president, after its twice monthly rrie-~tings.

A TIl 0 n g the items to be screened i,)y' th~ c.ouncii are!1~­missIOns pro.:edures and policies, academic standards, b u i 1din g plans: finances, student activi­ties, athletics and faculty affairs.

'h1terfaithMee'ting SAN FRANCISCO'( N C)· -

Catholic, Je\;iish and Unitarian Umversalist representatives will participate 'April 26 and 27 in the 27th annual conference on religi('us al'chitecture for the

'first· timc' in ~he history of the

SACRED SITE: Ancient olive trees, some centuries old, shade beds of flowers in the Garden of Gethsemane which lies at the foot of the Mount of Olives and Jaces the 'Golden Gate of Old Jerusalem.NC Photo.

Faculty 'Members ProtestVi'etnam Policy co In'structors' Vie.w in Paid Advertisement

WASHINGTON (NCj~Thirty­five members of the 'faculty of Catholic University of America have signed an bPen'letter to President Joll11son expressing

" disagreernentwith ·tti'e adminis­tration's policy in 'Vietnam. ' The letter, which appeared as

a ·"paid political ,advertisement" in the Catholic Standard"arch­diocesan newspaper, 'originated 'with and was' sponsored by the

'Movement for Peace and Free-' doin in Vietnam, an :ad',hoc com­

,'mittee·of university studentS 'and 'faculty.

,Recognize' Viet Congo 'Recognizing'the, complexity of

the' issues'and the honest efforts of the' 'administration to .find a peaceful sqlutipn, .the signers. be-' lieve: "the war' our'coimtry" is

'ture' patients perhaps even root, waging in Vietnam 'is-not";:',!l 'in':" .6ut the cause~ ofdisease. No oile· strumenf 'of' justice abd 'is'not deriles 'th'e necessity' 0f ' tha~' such as' to aid 'in the coristroction 'work" Bishop Wright said'. . . of' desired world order,"· They

, ." '... "We're iikc the' men in.the· said: ;. '. -" ': :' -.. ' , i>~al:iorato~y.'wc· arc 'iiiterf:!st~d)n' , ,".~~; muslfranldy, tleclilrc our

.searchinlCout , gl,ligcliiles' .w!liCh: .; ,_.' ." .. :., '"'::i~~~~~~ ac~~:It::'~af~t:~~,~!~ ~ , ,~~W ~.ci n..: ·:A,j)~s~o.l ~.te eoritinued. . .' H' .N .,'Q' . t" .. ,. . . D'r. ,G'ree'ley "said ,m.·uch p'rep':'. :,., .a.s ,e~.,·', ~.,a.i'" ~~s, ,,,... Ii

'. ,a'ratio;" wen~ int~_thc cQJ;l~erencei :,._,WAS,HINGTON (NC) ~ ·Th e: : 'Three. Yea.~s ago ;the four of us internationahoffice Of the ,Na­

came together'. ~i~li a commi;m' . lional. Ne~i)'lan:. Apqstoli,l,te 'is ,h()pe and :~ision. 'We k~'rw tJ1at:moving·,~o,ne~ quarters in New:

. eye­Protestant-o.l'!,ginated co.nfercnc~.. ".. S1;ght, ..

york City. ,,:." ..... · ... r· ,,'.

. Established. in ; Auglist; ,\965,~~nd. heade(by )!',athe.J;. Laurence' T. Murphy, M.M., Ph.D., the.of­fice is' desigm~d to .help Newman foundations on, sec!Jlar 'campuses relate to international education.

Father Mu::phy, a former Navy officer whr was ordained in 1954 and has taught philsophy at the University 1>f Notre Dame and Maryknoll College, Glen Ellyn, 'Ill., said the office will continue to provide information on the needs of international students and- faculty, represent the 'view of the Newman movement on matters affecting intemational education, co.)perate' with other agencies in the field' arid pro­

.. mote the' realizaJiori that 'today's university is an' international' community.

Pope Hai'ls Prelate On 190th Birthday ,

ROME (NC)-The former ar­chivist of the Rome vicariate and: member of the papal cere­

,monia! 'household 'celebrated his 'iOOth .~irt!lday, wit:h. ~ telegram of gooawis!ies from Pope .Paul. . Msgr; Andrea De Horatiis; who

began working in :vatican City more than 53 years ago, became

,Rollie's oldest 'priest on his birthday; Ma'rch 17. A' family

,spokesman said the ·priest is 'mentally.. ' alert and is·· in fine ,health .except' ,for' failing

willingness' to negotiate with the National Liberation Front and allow· them their due place in the' for'matiop: of a provisioilal\ South Vietnamese government, a necessary antecedent· to" any Geneva-type eonference."

Universal Authority :. The signers suggest as' a prep­'aration for' :lUeh a 'c.onference, a "phased withdrawal Of American troops and military supplies in­troduced into South Vietnam since Feb r u ary, 1965." The

.. withdrawal should' be under the supervision of the United Nations and "should not be con­ditioned by· requiring the estab­lishment. of an economic or po­litical system: of any particular type'. ·As an: immediate measure,

C'olorado' Dioceses. " ,

FormCorifer~nce " DENVER" (NC)-Archbish'op

Urban J. Veh'r of Denver and Bishop' Charles. A.. Buswell of

.:OU~~~hho~~:' ~~m:~e~~~. Co'lora-' '. T"h':" .. t .. d'· . ." .

.' IS new, '111 er lOcesan con.,fer~nce of laymen .and priestsis :beirig: formed to exchange

. ideas:' and' to eoordil;uite'st'a'te­wide'Cat)ioliC efforts jr-the

','fields of health, education 'and welfare: " ,

' . 'The' cOhfel:ence' wiiI start with eight repre'sentatives, four' fro,m

.. each see. The Bishops' will des­ignate specialists for' the .four diocesan. departments to be af­fected at this time: edu<:ation, ,hospitals, social service and law.

Bishops from other states have established similar c~nferences. These include Kansas, Texas, Ohio and Pennsylvania. The two

. sees of Denver and Pueblo cover ,the State of Colorado. '

Honor Shriver DAVENPORT (NC)-R.· Sar­

, gent Shriver; director of the Office of Economic. Opportunity and' first director of the Peace Corps, has been named for ,the Davenport Catholic Interraciai Council's third annual Pacem in

.... Terris peace and freedom award.

ELECTRICAL Coritractors.

944 County St. 'New Bedford

the signers favored a cessation of all bombing by the U. S. .

Recalling the plea of the Fathers of the Second Vatican Council for a "universal public

'authority, acknowledged as.such · by all," the signers' believe that ,our foreign' policy 'must' be 'guided toward this' goal rattler 'than "let anti-communism' 'make a holy war of what began as a'nd

'still remaiIis essentially a' revolt · agalrist 'foreign occupation and

i:.ppresaive, non - representative : government." .

Offer School Space To 'Ousted Classes . MUSCATINE (NC)-Space m Hayes' Catholic High School here. has,been offered to. the first ~hristian church for its Sunday s~hool classes which have been

i,Q.\.lsted;{rom a public· school. '

, ' The 'Christian' church Sunday ' ~ch601 'had-teased space in Mus­~atine 'school' since iast Septt~'m-

Dominican Urges' Nuns to Better Influence Role DAVENPORT (NC)-On}g

by the exercise of personall initiative by individuals and religious communities wiDX nuns be able to fill the Church~ need for apostles who can infltlF ence the world.

"There will always be a ten­sion in the lives of active Rel~ gious between conformity' anell initiative," ,said Father KeviJlll D. O'Rourke, O.P., dean of the school of theology at Aquinas Institute in Dubuque, "but i$ seems that in our time the drive for conformity has overcome the drive for initiative and hence apostolic life. has been severe~ hampered.

~r~~r. BaJaDce . "For this reason,". he told 4~ nuns attending a .Marycrest C~·

lege workshop. "Religious have remained upon the fringe ., those who influence society."

He urged superiors and those 'under them to work together .. achieve' the proper balance be­tween obedience and' initiative~

. Directing nis rertll~rks to sa­·pt;riors, _Fath~r O'Ro\lrke said: . ",Expecting Religious who are

"not consulted to be avid in the matter of obedience or to exer­cise iniliativ(' is highly unre~~ istic. Such a positionabstracUl from the psychology of goocll human relaiions. The vow fJtI obedience is' not designed to • '~iolence 'to human nature." : ,

\\Trong Way Energy ..At the saine time, the Domin­ican theologian called on • nuns to !'look upon superiors all

'co-workers" and to accept pelf· sonal responsibility even wbelll' disagreeing. '

. "MY!Qwl1 experience of ~ last· few years, and I am JlCl6 alone in this~ opinion, convineee me that many, Sisters are .eo»'; ,panding psychic energy in th!t

...wrong way/' he stated, "II)stea4\! of devoting themselv~s to doing

.. ;1.)1 th~y <;an. ~ update their ow. · bel'. The 'lease expired' 'FeD.' 1; .,w,or~, ,to bringing their own ,atu-: · I~w~ Atty:. ·Gen..i;.awr~nce .Sca':1udes. in line, with .the. tpinkin,

bce 'rul.e~ .ther~ 1S no. low!:!, ~.aw .' f;( the cpunl::il,an.d t(?, helping s,u':' ·.p~rmittwg. the' practice of leaSIng periors' with constructive anCl "publics~hOoI property. for reB:- i worthwhile suggestions, they 'ale "~ious ,pufPoses." , .... enervating' themsEiives by criti~

Father' F. J. Lenoch, p~i~cipai ~izing' .authority and all ~ of the, Catholic schpol, uponwl!iks.""', .,­hearing ofihe Christian church's plight, offered the facilities of the Catholic high school. The Rev. Ernest Worden, minister of tlie' .Chiistian church,' 'said he 'would discuss Father Lenoch's offer with his church committee.

,,0_0_ ...0-0_0_0_0_"_.,_...

;Plan To ~uild?l I See Us i i About I .,I low Cost Finan'cing I i 'WAR~HANI' !

~jI~~~l~~~. . ,

NO JOB ,TOO BIG NONE TOO S~LL

SULLIVAN BROS. PRINTERS

Main Office and Plant 9S Bridge St., Lowell, Moss.

Tel. 458-6333

.A~xiliary Plants

BOSTON CAMDEN, N. J. OCEANPORT, N. J. MIAMI PAWTUCKET, R.1. PHILADELPHIA

FOR· FAMILV'BANKING

FIRST"'NAIIONAL BANK· ~rTLEBORO

so. ATTLEBORO ...... SEEKONK

MEMBER Fll>IiC'

Page 11: 03.31.66

11 Seeks, to Limit Court's Bans;:· On 'Prayer

WASHINGTON rNC):­The issue of prayer in pub­lie schools has' been resur­rected in Congress by Senate Minority Leader Everett M. lDirksen af Illinois.

Dirksen told the Senate he will push for a constitutional amendment to limit the U. S. Supreme Court's ban on reli ­gious exercises in public schools.

Co-sponsored by 16 other Senators, Dirksen's amendment would stipulate that nothingm the Constitution would prohibit public authorities "from provLd­ing for or permitting the volun­,tary participatlon !?y students or others in prayer." .

To underline his determilia­tion, Dirksen held a press con­ference before his 'Senate speech Dnd said that if the proposal does Dot clear committee, he would attempt to add it as a rider to another bill.

''This is for keeps," the Sen­ator told, newsmen. "I thin~ ,it will stand, up and have, an, ap­,peal to, the country, Once plore, prayer is going to be an issue." , 1'L prayer amendment was sponsored unsuccessfully in the

. House last' year. It failed to

. dear the JudiCiary Committee 'and an attempt to bring it to the floor by a 'discharge petition fell

':'Bhort of its goal. , "Roa,d Mail to God' '

I' The Dirksen amendmel,lt, which would have to be ap­proved by Congress and then 'two-thirds' of the state legisla­tures, would pro\'ide that "noth­

" ,jng contained in this article shall 'authorize ailY such (public) au­thority to prescribe' the form or eontent of any prayer."

Dirksen claimed that "81 per eent of the people" disagree with

, ,the series of Supreme Court de­'cisions which have outlawed re­';ligio\lsactivities ,ranging f'rom

'.' formal Bible read,ing to recita­,tlon of a simple prayer' before' ,'meals. in the' primar.y grades.,; , ," The Illinois legislator 'said that 'the '?al'ert· hours'" in school pro­

"\lide, the time when' "the habit' of ''prayer can' best 'be' nurlured."

"'He' added:" ",,' r. , "Pl'ayer, is' fhe road' map ',' to ,God. It should become the great­

'''est adve,ititre" for yOung "minds. Each must find the way for' him­self. This takes some doing-the ,development of right habits, the building of spiritual muscle. This can only come from prac­tice and reh~arsa: day after day when minds are alert."

Cath.olic Biologists Win Federal Grants

)

., WASHINGTON. (NC) - The Atomic Energy Commission has approved 'educatiolral assist3lice grants totalinl; $274,789 to 26 colleges and universities, includ­ing six under Catholic auspices.

The grants provide for pur­chase of laboratory equipment and radioactive sources which can be used to give instruction in the nuclear aspects of the life sciences.

Catholic schools qualifying for awards are: University of Notre Dame, $16,526; Boston College, $12,335; Marymount ColI e g e , New YOl'k, $'3.000; St. Bonaven­ture University, $8,000; Seattle (Wash.) University, $7,500 and St. John's University, Jamaica, $23,100.

, Texas Visit DALLAS (NC)-Josef Cardi­

nal Beran, exiled Primate of Czechoslovakia, will visit Dallas and Ennis, rex., next month as pal't of ;l tour of the United States.

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., March 31, 1966

Supreme Pontiff Favors Wise Use Of Mass Media

VATICAN CITY (NC)­At an audience granted to communications ex per t 89

Pope Paul VI said the wise use of mass media for evangel­ization is a necessity.

The 34 experts-priests, Reli ­gious and laymen-represented 19 countries, including the U. S. All are consultors of the Ponti ­fical Commission for Communi­cations Media. They met iEl Rome from March 22 to 26 to prepare a pastoral instruction to

IN DIAJ.JOGUE: Among leaders at the University of Notre Dame's International implement the ecumenical coun­conference on the theological issues of Vatican II were, left to right: Rev. Thomas cil's communications decree. Stransky, C.S.P., of the Vatican's Secretariat for the Promotion of Christian Unity; Rabbi' Pope Paul said (March 25-)

that implementation of the doc­Abraham J. Heschel, of Jewish Theological S~mjnary and Union Theological Seminary, ument was to be their principal!New' York City; Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan of Atlanta; and Rabbi Marc Tanenbaum, work and that for this reason h61

director of interreligious affairs of the American Jewish Committee. NC Photo. had enlarged the commissiOil. and extended its competence la~ year. . He said the council "couhllUrges Jewish-Christia'n C90 perationl not get down to details of the application of the general prin~ q:iples relative to the audio-vip.,Temple Congregation Honors Prelate ual techniques which are so eJ!oo

-nETROIT, (NC)--Archbishop "We must abolish such prac­ "The final· text wall more tensively used in the wo'rld to-a John F. Dearden of Detl,"oit tices as genocide, abortion, and measured and prllcise and there­ day.." ,~sked a Jewish audience here euthanasia, for to diminish our Jore less dramatic. In the inter­ Broad Outlook to join Detroit Christians "in concer;l and reverence for the est of accuracy and precision, "The council," he continued, service to our fellow men and human person in one area is to the language became more sober, "set out above all to manifest iUi

, in 'service to our God." 'diminish it in all." . which was true of every council interest in this field-.,.both com­The archbishop was honored ''These goals center ih values ,document," the llrchbishop said. plex· and entirely new for tl

at a testimonial dinner by the that are esteemed by us' all," he , He said that all references to council-of the modern means 01 ,congregation of Temple Beth El. continued, "We must' pool our the "Jewish people" was deleted social communication, and te An award was presented to him efforts to root out what is evil from _the text ,and the word trace the broad outlines of the by Rabbi Richard C. Her'tz, who and reestablish what is just." !'Jews" substituted to dispel any doctrine and action the Chur~ paid tribute to his "high ecu­ feeling that it applied to the should take regarding them.Archbishop Dearden also dis­menical spirit with reference to people of any country, "This gelleral orientation no'1117cussed the Vatican Council'sCatholic-JewiSh relations." He ,said the document denies needs to be studied, concretize.:!declaration on relations of the

Archbishop Dearden said Jews explicitly that modern 'Jews and complet~d with competeneeChurch to: noil-Christian reli ­and' Christians shOuld, take 'a share ,blame for the death of, and with a broad outlook in ae-­gious especially its statement onlead "from the council's docu':' Jesus; cord with the spirit of the coun­the Jews. ' ment 'i>~ the Church in the mod­ cil, particularly as manifested illHe said the document has ,beenern world. , the two gre'at' constitutions' &I)criticized; probably because, in

,"It spells out in explicit lan­ ,University Honors t.he Church itseU and on t~their search for precise languageguage the need to' recognize and Church in the Modern' Worlttthe council' Fathers may have revere the dignity of 'the 'human , This spirit, as you' know, consisi.$

I sacrifice~, dramatic impact. 'Former Diplomat,p~rsoll', ,a furi~arnental value that of religious fervor, a /lense ~ ,giv.es' meaning ,to, man,'y 9f, the , co1l1munity, ~reater charity, dia­'SANJUAN" (NG)~Teodoro

Moscoso, :a 'Puerto Rican' whojhin,gs fo'rw~i.ch we ;ire all,stl,"i:v-. . 'Calif. Gi'ap~ Pick~rs' logue" operme.~s andunderstan~ served as coordinator' of the AI­ing,"he sa'id." ' ,~P)g lor aU 't\iman activity. "

, ' , J~i~ EfJ;orlS , " , Hold Protest 'March Hance for Progress and as U. S. 'J

. . ~ Ambassador to Venezuela, wasArchbi~hop.DeardCI.l said, ':,NVe DEL.r\1'{OCNC) - Some 150 presented wHh the first A'lonso, rou'st join: ou,~' ~ffprtsto win, for

,men and wOI:nen are I:llarching ,Manso Award'. of the Catholic. ,our' fellow .ine,n .What is due' w. H. RILEY300 ,miles to the state. capital, at University of Puerto Rico.them because of their, lluman , ',:Sacramento tc protest pay and'nature. ' The presentation was made by

, ' ,w:orking conditions for grape ';Msgr. The',) d o'r e 'McCarrick, & SON, Inc.}>ickers h'ere. . " founder of the medal' and rector ,Nam~s A~~hbishop " Carrying a banner of Our of the university in Ponce. The CITIES SERVICE'Lady of Gu'adalupe, the march­ 'award is named for the 'first DISTRIBI '....,RSChaplain, Delegate 'ers, most Mexican-Americans, bishop of Puerto Rico who was

set out on a 25-day journey enthroned in 1511. ArchbishopALBANY (NC) - Archbishop scheduled to end on Easter Sun­ Luis Aponte of San J,uan pre­ GcisolineJoseph T: Ryan of Anchorage, day. sided at the presentation.Alaska, has been named chaplain The marchers left without Fuel and Rangedelegate of t.he armed forces. in food 01' plans for shelter. Theythe 13th area, including the hoped to receive assistance from OILSAlaska Com!1land, the Alaskan workers along the way.Air Command. the Alaskan Sea OU. BURNERS'Earlier, Cesar Chavez, leader Frontier and the U. S. Army in of the striking grape ,pickers,

For prr-" - deliveryLAlaska. told a U, S. Senate subcommittee He was appointed by Francis & Day & Night Serviceon migratory labor that' the

Cardinal Sp()])man of New York, workers are "ready for our free­ MONTHLY CHURCHMilitary Vicar of the Military dom." G. E. BOILER BURNER UNITSOrdinariate The archbishop was "I am hoping we don't have to consecrated in the Cathedral, of go as far as the Negro revolution BUDGET ENVELO,PES

Rural Bottled Gas Servicethe Immaculate Conc~ption,here and its resulting bloodshed to by Cardiilal Spellman. prove that farm workers are PRINTED AND, MAILED 611 COHANNET ST.

The archbishop will leave here tired of occupational discrimina­ TAUNTONfor Anchoragf' on Tuesday, April Write or Phone 672-1322tion and that we are ready for 12, and on Thursday, April 14 Attleboro - No. Attleboroour freedom," said Chavez, head will be enth"oned at a ceremony 234 Second Street - Fall River 'of the National Farm Workers Tauntonwhen the archdiocese of Anchor­ Association. age also wUl be proclaimed for­mally.

illlllllllllllltltltlllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllltltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~

~ ~ATWOODSuspends Sentence § Th~ Gannet 1§ § §NEW YORKER (NC)-David OIL COMPANY ~ ;s ~oming ~ Miller, self-styled Catholic paci­

fist ,and first person convicted under a federal law prohibiting SHEll the burning Of draft cards, re­ceived a three-year, suspended It~:::g Live.....HEATING OilS sentence from' Federal District Judge Harold R. Tyier,' Jr" who ~ ~South • Sea Streets put "the 23-year-old member of ~, Maclean's Foods ~ the Catholic Worker Movement on', a two.:.Year probationary Hyannis Tel. HY 81 ~ UNION WHARF, FAIRHAVEN Tel. 997-9358. ~ period. , ~lIlll1l!lIl1l1!lllIlllIItI!IIllIIlIlIIlllIIlllIllIllIllIllIlIlIlIlIlIInlbll3l1l1Dlllmllllllllllllll1III11IIII1IIIIIIIIIIUIUIII~·... '

I

Page 12: 03.31.66

12

View Re~~tion of Sex Behavior, I

T., Sttr~~U'M,rr~s of Society DAYTON (NC) - A Catholic way' you smell or dress has

and a Protestant clergyman who something to dp with your abil ­serve university students de- ity to have a healthy kind of bated the proper course to pur- relationship with another per­sue in a culture saturated with son," he said. views on sex which ofter con- Challenge Premises ruct with the Christian concept. Failure to acknowledge that

Father Norbert Burns, S.M., "sex sells" in affluent society is religious community director at "part of the root of what is shap­the University of Dayton, said 'ing our difficulties," he said. Christians should challenge those "Part of the answer to this lies' '

Loving the Poor

God Love You By Most Rev. Fulton JJ. Sheen, D.D.

We have just returned from R~me where we attended ~ Commission Meeting on the Miss~ons. One, of the subjects dis­

ed was how daily sacrifices for the Jl'Dor oi' tbe world shoullll1l =are the way for Mission Sunday dedicated ~ .The Sociew for the Propagation of the Faith. Love Is something ~at we ean never take' for granted. It has to be earned dally. Buml&il courtship too often ends when. a couple becomes married; !ilQl

, further efforts are put forth to merit the privilege oil the otber'a affection.

It is the same ~th our love of God. Three instances are men­tioned in the Scripture where He would have passed us by if we

who hold opposing views and in challenging the premises of also for restructuring society. society." " ,

The Rev. Richard E. Leidberg, Father Burns advocated chal-Protestant chaplain at Wayne lenging the structures of society State University, Detroit, con- in so far as they exploit sex. He tended the emphasis should be said youth needs "something to placed on the reshaping of sod.- hold on to," values they can rec­ety. They were parielists, at· a ognize as valid and can use to , University of Dayton program see their own problems in on religion in life. c, proper perspective.

Some of the forces' Bhaping "We maintain that man's life views on sex are associated with iaKes on significance only to the the mass media, the Rev. Leid- degree that he gets outside him­

. berg said. self," Father Burns said. "It_ "In the advertising game, ,has meaning to the degree that

youth is constantly being bom';' he is able to commit himself to bardea, as all of us are, by ad- something other than' himself vice on what to wear, ,bow to '" * '" to a life of creativce Bctiv­smell and how to be popular. ity because of the love of 11

The idea seems to be that the woman in God."

Reacti()n to Goodn'ess of God Continued from Page One

denced through,fraternal charity. The whole mission of Christ was simply to demonstrate the extent of the love of the Heavenly Father'" '" '" this is also the work of, every priest, •

:Theology must also be re­formed through a contact with the history of salvation. This is more than a reading of the Old Testament. The absolute actual­ity, of God's Word present as'He Is in the liturgy, where He ac­tually preaches, and touches, us as He did those of the Old ~es­tament, must be realized.

Here it is not important to giadly see that the Risen Christ has somehow gotten a foothold mour secular world of t~ay. What is imPortant Is that the horizons have been open~: that we realize the presence of Christ in the world of today and pres­e+t to lead us to His final com­lng-His final and complete vic­tory over '~l1 creation.

This world is not simply sec­Dial' with Christ's ,Heavenly Je­nisalem somewhere in the fu­ture. We have already begun to live that' heavenly life as Sons of

,God'" '" '" we should already be longing for death so as to begin that more perfect life with Him.

The Christian's contribution to ...secular life is not a kind.of vic­

tory over it, but a greater in­volvement that is evidently springing from our inter~st in Christ's, final coming.

,Moral Theology The decree states that: "Spe­

eial attention needs to be given to the development of Moral Theology." This, Father Haering explained, was the most positive manner of rendering 44 amend­ments that were violent criti ­cisms-for the most part all neg­ative~against the manuals. '

"Its sci e n t i fie exposition (Moral Theology's) should be more thoroughly nourished by scriptural teaching," the decree continues. Philosophic systems 191 u: s out-of-context quotations are not enough, the theologian pointed out. What is important Is "How d:d Christ preach!".

Though He used various ap­proaches, the fundamental was always the same: show your­selves joyful witnesses of the joyous news (Mk. 1:14-15). True these are troubling times ~ven bad tImes-for some. But what must be stressed is rather the great opportunities that are present to further Christ. We must realize how terrible it must

';7 be to be a ~ICM ~y.~~ ~' ,', !

Christ's bidding must be our answer: to be renewed in mind; , to put selfishness to death and to trust ourselves in ,his Good Tidings.

The object of moral theology, its work, is that "it should show the nobility of the Christil!Jl vO-: cation of the faithful·" ·what must be experienced is that God has first loved and called us ~n,d

life is our response, our showing of the same generosity toward God.

This life of grace must shun two' dangers: (1) the establish­ment of limits (the dangerous implication of "how far can I go without committing a serious sin). Man must not be without limits but must in~nd to go over them and surpass them in his expression of love..

The Christian must alSo shun' (2) a kidn of adolescent person~ alisrn' which has the "ego" be ~

the measure of all acts and one's ,desires as the rule 'of all values. Here ChristiAn personalism (the person of Christ) must clash with Adamic personalism. Chris­tion life me~ns to be called and the great reality of life is that

'we may abide in Christ and share His own life. ",

Why all this? ''To bring forth fruit in charity for the life of the world," says the decree. The egotistical "save my soul" 'has no place in the Christian morality. This does not mean that one is not occupied with saving one's soul. It is the duty of life. But the perspective must be that

, "'He are saved only if we bear fruit in charity for the life of the world," the theologian con­cluded.

Greek Primate Continued from Page One

stacles which are prejl,ldieial and in error."

''The day will not be very far­-although it is in the hands of God-when all Christians will discover one another through their Redeemer' - Our. Lord, Jesus Christ," he said.

''The Second Vatican Council was the greatest council of all," he said, "because of the spirit of humility anlj charity present during the counci,J's four years which helped other, Christians see the pr'ilsent day Roman Catholic Church in its present day light-the light of Christian humility and anxiety that we

did not reach out to grasp Him and hold him in oUr embrace. In the first incident, God took the form of a wrestler who fought with Jacob and begged him to let Him go at daybreak. Jacob answered: "I will not let Th~e go unless Thou ble~ me." In the New Testament,' when OurPLANS' VISIT:, Franjo Lord as a stranger walked with two dis~ ,Cardinal Seper, Archbishop ciples on Easter Sunday ''He made as

of Zagreb, Yugoslavia, a though He' would go further" and e~rlier, .prominent ,figure among the' when walking on the waters of Galilee Council Fathers at Vatican at night, "He appeared as though He

would have passed them by."Co~ncil II, will visit in the U. S. during April. NC Photo God desires to go if we do not want

Him to stay; It is the nature of love to be wanted, to be needed. The desire .to have God' remain with us binds Him to us. AUOppose Judicial .His struggling and wrestling with us has been aimed ,~t evokiq

(:" our response. And when we do reach out to make Him stay, HeReview Bin -,

, WASHINGTON (NC) - Two spokesmen fo:' the Citizens for Education Freedom have op­posed as unwise and undesirable a Senate proposal' for judicial" review of U. S. aid to church­related institutions.

Dr. Edwin H.Palmer, pastor of the Grandville Ave. Christian Reformed Church of Grand Rapids, Mich., and chairman of CEF's board of trustees, said the bill would "needlesSly stir 'up religious, animosities." , William D. Valente, professor of law at Villanova University Law School, Philadelphia" said the measure "would threaten in­juries which clearly outweigh its

, intended' effect." The two appeared before the

subcommittee on constitutional rights of f;he Senate judiciary .committee. The' subcommittee held 'six days 'of public hearings on a bill which would permit individual taxpayers to launch court challenges aimed at knock­ing church-related hospitals and colle~es out of federal aid pro­grams.

Aquinas Fund Continued from Page One

prise of scholarly research, we ' wish ourself to give the example, by sending you, for the activi­ties of the foundation, our per­sonal donation."

A 'fund-ra!sing campaign has raised more than $1 million

A corps of research scholars, known as the Leonine Commis­sion, is undertaking the critical restoration of the philosophical,

_theological and scriptural writ ­ings of St. Thomas Aquinas. Sec-' tions of the commission are es­tablished in Rome, Ottawa and Paris. New .teams ,of scholars, skilled in paleography, medieval Latin,. philosophy and theology, will soon begin work in the United States and, Spain.

The Dominic;a~ project mod­erator is a native of Attleboro in' the Diocese of Fall River.

Building Contractor

Masonry -,

VICTOR

FLEURENT '7 JEANmE SiReET

FAIRHAVEN m1 4-7321 "

"~; {ll1 be one." \:', I ", ,., , , " , ,. "=;:S::lCI:=:S:E:::::g::::la;:D::C;:S::~

Is overcome.

, How many, earthly loves have been lost, how many friend­ships have vanished. how many fellowships have withered because we never reached out to ,them by letter, by an inquiring word, by a voice ,"Stay with \tS for the day is far spent"? So it is with the Love we "fall just short of in all Love." .AB children we had deeP faith· then we prospered and its light grew dim. We found bright tin"sei and our fires of prayer went out. We never wrestled with God we never bade Him to stay, nor reached out our hand to Him' on the, water, nor invited Him to the breaking of bread on the "road to'Emmaus.

Believe me, It takes a heap ,01 Iovln~ to keep love lfolq ',and a lot of dailY sacrifice to keep the Cross of Calvary from falling down on the shifting sands of our fallen nature. When.

, therefore the Commission diseussed daib' saeriliees for the Mis­, . sions, it was not just to keep the MIssions. Il was to help you. It

has been our solemn resolve ever sinee the Holy Father pm 115 'in charge of begging for aU of the Missions of the world. that we would never seek to eet your money without ~ettlng yoa. What good is that which is yours nnless we bave )'ou? Not nnW you love, mm Wh~ strugghs wiUl you In tile clarlmess, as Be did with Jaeob. will you ever make a sacrifice for the poor. The

.- Holy Father's Society for the Propagation of the Faith, then. Is destined to help 1'011 love this Tremendous Lover and' we kiIow no better way to do It than to make YOIl practice lovin= the

,poor. The rich are already cetting rich. even In the Chureh. Christ Is not In the rich beeause they are rich, but He Is In the poor simply beeause they are poor. It Is only those who aid Him In the poor who wiD be told OD the last day, "Come Into the Kingdom." As they say in the dog food advertisements "All YOU add is love." You might even tlUnk of helping the poor wbUe you are being helped, b;y taking out an annuity with The Society for the Propaaration of the Faith. Write to me for more infOI'lDa­

tiOD. In an;y case, love daily, and, God Love Youi

GOD LOVE YOU to L.VoM. for $500 "We are greatly over­blest and wish to share it with the needy." ... to Sgt. P.G.W. for $10 "I'm very new at this business of giving. It seems to me that I've been taking all my life and now I 'think it is my tum tb give." . .. to A.D. for $5 "it is heartwarming to· know that what li.ttle we send is used so wIsely."

Cut out this column, pia, your saerffice to It and mail Ii to Most Rev. Fulton J, Sheen, National Direetor of The Sodality for the Propagation of the Faltb, 366 Fifth Avenue. New York, N. Y. 10001, or yoarDioeesan ,Director, 81. Rev. Msgr. Raymond T. Considine, 368 North Ham Street, FaD BJver, Massaehusetts.

CONV~NIENT,BANKING WITHOUT, TRAFFIC & PARKING PROBlEMS

o at the ,

SLADE'S FERRY TRUST COMPANY SOMERSET, MASS.

The most friendly, dem~ratic BAN~ offering

ComplefeOne-Sfop Banking Club Accounts Auto Loans

Checking Accounts Bu:siness Loans Savings Accour.ts Real IEstate Loarw0

At Somerset Shopping Area-Brightman St. Bridga

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Page 13: 03.31.66

,. 0'· ~.. , ,... "" ..' THE AN<::HOR-Diocese ofFo":Rive,-'Th~'fJ. Ma,. 24,1'66 13·

CATHOLIC CHARITIES APPEAL Special Gifts April 18-30

House to House: May 1-10

Sustaining 28 Community-Serving Institutions and Agencies Open to the Sick, Retarded, Unwanted, 'and Needy

She Cares •••

• . . Do You

.. "IrO 1l"HE YOUNGD tl'!hJ~ @Hdl @fl'@ ~~fl'@Fi'll ~orrgctH/'~P1'il.

TO THE MIENl'A!DlV !HJ lEAl1l"IHl 'Yo frhe exc::e!Plti'i@nGl~ ~M~dl as Illlrrollutl@Wlltl0

TO THl E WEllo t'he cancel!' pcmtienfr is «»'tfell'~ookedl.

Bufp to the Catholic Charities these unfortunates are G eDGily concern.

Pledges of $] 0.00 OtT more are acceptable. Publicity is restricted-to gifts 'of $15.00 or more.

Piedges are payab~e: MonthlyD QUClIrterlyD Semi-Annually

This Me$sage 's Sponsored By The Following Individuals. ...

flJJnd Busine$s Concerns in Greater Fa" RDyelf:

.AnlJ'll [»~Ie f!l'@crllllDds. ~IIlJC. ~. A. MceWMrrr CmnpCllrllY Gera~clJ E. McNally, Conti'fCld@r §obo~cff BrothersBtJody 1E~e(Chic ~~ppl1f ~@. Ofl'j)terlilat'u@fI'j)@~ Il.QJdues S)~srr~Bl11)g B\eveD'a~e$, ~!!1lc.

C(QJ$l\:~dtSl [Q)lJ'lW~ (£;;@. GQJIl'Mellil~ W@!i"i<ers IUJrili@n1 1Tem~i~e W@rksfl's

~~@b€' M~I7ilI.\JJ~(QJ«:~l1Jlli'irrt~ ~@. .M~(1;~eli'\ma@ ~ WDIl'll$~@W, ~nc. l\.D!'lIoell'll of Amerro«:«'JJ. AF!lA:DO H~ieMV'i,~~Il'.\ODn ~~o, .. MelSOlll, fQ,llrlrnohlJVe Shl~wlJ'oomf!\ y~I~@w t~b Comp~fiY

Page 14: 03.31.66

I

TI ~ THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 31, 1966

~: ." .~:

'::[P[[@D~®~ ~@lliJ(1)(~O~O~ [?@~U'@[[@~

Co~stituti@n on Church . By Msgr. George G. Higgins

• (Director. Socia) Action Dept., N.C.W.C.) The Vatican Council's Pastoral Constitution on the

Modern World will be of particular interest to Americans working in' the field of economic and social reform. It is my impression that, in general. the document is being well received in the United States. The only people I applicable to each of its several

chapters, but to none so much have met who are completely as chapter III of part II, which dis a p poi n ted with it deals with economic and social are those who expected to find in it c:.~finite answers to some of the more ur­gent problems confronting the modern world. Actually, how­ever, as Bishop Mark McGrath a f Pan a m a poi n ted 0 u t when he pre­sented thE doc­ument on the floor 0 f the eo u n c i 1 last Fall, it was never meant to be a handbook of ready-made an­swers to specific problems. , Bishop McGrath served in the

eouncil as the Relator or com­mission spokesman for the intro­ductory chapter to the Pastoral Constitution.

General PrincipDes . , 'Because ,of the very nature of

tile document. he pointed out,' it, was necec;sary that the real ~ndition of today's world 'be described at least in a general way, before any judgments were made about it... ' ..This inductive or descriptive methodology, he pointed out, was set forth in the introductory chapter and was followed throughout the entire schema. " , "Finally," he noted in conclud­ing his Relatio, "the very new­ness of ,many of the questions, proposed and their diverBity * '" • '. Uhpose limits on our document. General principles, either doc­trinal or moral, are ..proposed, which principles frequently do ­not touch upon completely con­crete solutions either because, the problems involved require more mature <-xamination, or 00­cause they must be considered by,' the faithful in a partic.~lar' way in each region, under th~, gUidance of their pastors." '" . . Benefit Everyone ' ,

, ":'The same point is made as follows in the text of the consti ­tution itself: "Undeniably this ~oricilar program is but a gen-. etal one in several of its parts,"

' andimmense.deliberately so, situations.. giv~,Il,variety of the: .od.olog;- of document., ,lF ===_=====~=_tc5),'''Thus,'' thethe bishop stated, "the, • ' and forms of human culture 'in .. Introductio Expositiva (intro­the we-rId. ' .. ductory chapter)',ought to serve'

In dee d while it presents" teaching already accepted in the Church, the program will have, to be followed up and amplified since it sometimes deals with matters in a constant state of development. Still, we have re­lied on the word of God and the spirit of the Gospel. ,

Hence le entertain the nope that many of our proposals will prove to be ot substantial bene­fit to everyone, especially after they have been adapted to indi­vidual nations and mentalities', In this respect, the document is by the faithful under the guid-: ance of their pastors."

Conditions Vary , This preliminary word of cau­

tion with regard to the inherenf limitations ()f the constitutlonis

Folk Music TORONTO (NC)-"The Can­

ticle of the Gift" is the tit.le of a new long playing record album of religious folk music composed

:01' adapted and perlormed by !lItudents of 5t Michael's College New Bedford ' ,:In the University of Toron~~::>: ~ ""rJ

,.'. ~.: .;.:1/·_i::~:~;~ ..... '; ~ .....

the purpose of, our schema: namely, to speak to the.. entire world, with a serious stuily' of.. the problems which now con­cern its peoples, so that we may enter into a sincere, dialogue with them, bringing forth the' light of Christ fot the solace", strength, peace, and more

,abundant life of all men in God." The tone of the' entire eonsti~

'tutiOn, then, derives from this purpose, namely, to enter into a dialogue with the modern world.,

closely modeled after the exam­pIe set by John XXIU in his major encyclicals.

LARIVIERE1S Pha rma'cy

Prescriptions called for and Delivered

LOFT CHOCOLATES

600 Cottage St. WY 4-7439'

life. . In the very nature of things,

this chapter deals with highly contingent matters which are in "a constant state of develop­ment" and consequently do not lend themselves 'readily to a univocal application of general principles, ",ither doctrinal, or moral.

This will explain why the council decided-wisely, in my opinion-to confine itself to the restatement of certain general principles and proposals which, hopefully, to repeat the words of the Constitution, "will prove to be of sub,;tantial benefit to' everyone * * '" after they have been adapted to individual na­tions and mentalities' by the faithful, under the guidance of their pastors."

Recalls Encyclicals The word "restatement" of

principles is used here advisedly to suggest that this particular chapter of the 'constitution does not pretend to break-any new ground in the field of Catholic social teacl-.ing.

For better or for worse, it is simply a brief'restatement-or; if you will, a bringing up to date, -of some, but by no means ',all , of the key principles and ideals outlined in papal social pro-: nouncements of the past 75 years and, more specifically, in the two major encyclicals of Pope John XXIII, Mater et Magistra

,and Pacem in Terris. It is the council's hope that

Christians, may be led by these ideals "and all mankind en­lightened, as they search for an­swers to questions of such com­plexity."

Enter Dialogue

The constitution's explicit ref­erence to the fact that mankind must search for answers to the complex q'.1~stions of the mod­ern world, and -,that the Church wishe~ on~y to be .of service t.o

,mankmd In carrymg. out. thIS, searc!l, ~as ec~oed In BIShop McGrath s RelatlO on the meth­

.~_::::==§======_ ,U1, ~R SMT.OROAGOlEyfE

/PIn ~ /).. ~Fl ~ll'lH~ ~lbl::f;ffil~U~I;J;;,~~

== 34-44 CohCClnnet St~eet == ~ '!Taunton VA 2-6161 ~

,~IIIII11II11"III11I1I11I1"lIInllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll~

Sturtevant 6­, Hook

Est. 1897

Builders $~polies 2343 Purchase Street

New Bedford WY 6-5661

CORREIA (& SONS ONE STOP

'SHOPPING CENTER

e Television • !Furniture • Appliances • Grocery

104 Allen St., New Bedford

WYman 7-9354

"""'''''''',."".".---,-7'"''---......, ~'-'-'----­(.

, RELIGION IN INDIA: MADRAS-Witnessing to his faith, this elder.y gentleman wears a rosary and scapular about his neck as he turns the pages of his book, well­thumbed from use. NC Photo

Job. Finding los Angeles Archdiocesan Program Benefits Whole Community, Says Urban League Head

LOS ANGELES (NC) - An official of the Los Angeles Urban League believes the Catholic archdiocesan job finding pro­gram is opening doors, changing minds and benefitting the entire community.

Calvin Harper, director of job development and placement for the Urban League, says the five­month-old program has "estab­lished a number of solid rela­tionships where .these did not existe before,"

The job findinfg program was instituted la<>t Fall after consul­tations between league execu­

:!Il1II11II11II1II1I1II1II1I1I1I1I1I1II1I1II1II1I1I1I1I1I1I1II1II1~ ~ lOR" CLIEANNG ~ ~ and ~

tive director Wesley Brazier and James Francis Cardinal McIn­tyre of Los Angeles. ..

The archdiocesan job bureau has found l.8oo job offers for clients of the Urban League, the California State Department of Employment serving the Watts area and several other agencies~

JANSON'S Pharmacy

Arthur Janson, Reg. Pharm. DIABETIC AND SICK ROOM

SUPPLIES 204 ASHLEY BOULEYARD

New Bedford WY.3-8405

FAeRHAVE'~

LUMBER COMPANY

Complete line Building Materials

8 SPRING' ST., FAIRHAVEN

WYman 3-2611.

ON CAPE COD

,JOHN HINCKLEY & SON (0. BUILDING MATERIALS

'SPring 5-0700 '49 YARMOUTH ROAD

HYANNIS ~ AMPLE PARKING

[NJ @@ [[ ~@ ~U' rJ={] ®@@

[NJ®~ ~[[~[}u[IDD~[}u@[9)

Q[7i) A[)1)d)1)@[[@@®

ALBANY (NC)-A Bi~h­op is given authority to build his flock in truth and holiness and to be the ser­vant of Christ and of the people of God, the congregation attend­ing the consecration here of the first Alaskan archbishop has been reminded.

This was the message of Bish­op Thomas A. Donnellan of Og­densburg in his sermon at the consecration of Archbishop Jo­seph T. Ryan of Anchorage.

The new 52-year old prelate will be enthroned as the first Archbishop of Anchorage on April 14. He is a World War II Marine Corps chaplain.

Archbishop Ryan will head a vast See cut out from Alaska's two other dioceses, Juneau and Fairbanks. Within the archdio­cese's 138,985 square miles are

- 130,000 perso?J.s, about 17,000 of whom are Catholics served by 21 priests in eight parishes, six mis­sions and seven stations.

The Churcn of the Holy Fam­ily has been designated cathe­dral of the new archdiocese.

For the ;;>a5t eight years, the Albany priest has served the Catholic Near East Welfare As­sociation, Vatican agency based iQ New York, It trains priests and Sisters and supports mission activities in 18 Near East coun­tries.

He also was president of the Pontifical Mission for Palestine, the Vatican relief agency assist ­ing in the care of 1.2 million Arab refugees in the Gaza Strip.

Educators To Me,t BROOKLYN (NC) -"Edti~a­

tion for Freedom" will be the theme of the annual Catholic College Educators' Conference for the Eastern Seaboard here Saturday at St. Joseph's College for Women.

THREE WAYS TO SAVE••• ALl With INSURED PROTECTION

On=~~~"J'1 . -% Inv,estmentSavings42

1 "cert;r,..tefol1ll.inunilsof$l~

fEll ANNUM ,No n,liu of wilhdr....1roqulrcd

BONUS SAVINGS PLAN Save I filell meent SYSlVmatlcally eacb moelb Ie earn up 10 I" ID1lro Iban Ihe rate 'Dn regular sayings.

1 Cllrrent rale on

_rJI Regular4•,470 Savings Dividends twiu. yoat,

Ii'Ea ANNUM on June 3O.nd Dec. 31.

SAFEI,V INSUliED BV U. S. GOVT. AGENCV Save by MaU ••• We pay PG,tago both "'ISo Dividends exempt from State Incomo Tax.

FIRS'T"FE'fi:ElIAL~' '<$AVI NO'S";,

and lOAN ASSOCIAtiON

OF FA.l L R'I VER I North Main Street,Fall River, and 149 GAR, Highway, Rte, 6, Somerset

Page 15: 03.31.66

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs: Mar. 31, 1~66 -1 B

./ " .~ '.<.

',d)

18,000 Visit T'aunton Vocation-Missi'on Panorama

..

I

Page 16: 03.31.66

• • • • • •

16 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 31, 1966

from the Arthur J. Schmitt . to spread understanding of the "" d ti B d' ill t Eastern Churches. ,'" oun a on, roa View, ", 0 .' Th ' rti' .' •t' ' underwrite graduate fellowships . e nun,~ pa Clpa mn. was in science and engineering, and '. mte~~ed ~o pomt out the grea~er as an annual series of "Chal- participation of.. ~omen. which llenges in Science Meetings" for has been t!"adltIonal' In the undergraduates., . Eastern Churches. :

A grant of $75,000 will be used principally to establish seven Honor flmll'ley first year fellowships in science . PROVIDENCE (NC) - The and engineering for each of the Ancient Order of Hibernians next three years. A $7,500 grant has selected James A. Farley, will finance the undergraduate former Postmaster General, for "Challenges in Scienclll 1\IIeet­ the order's first President John mgs," to be held three times Fitzgerald Kennedy Memorial each semester. Medal.

.,' ..

Continued from Page One Tiny Sister Janet, star of the

<children's TV program, Little Flock, was at the booth of Our Lady of Victory Missionary Sis­rers. Her dimples flashed as she explained, "I'm just teaching on TV-the same as I do w:ith my I83techism class in North Easton,"

Mother Ascension, superior at m. Anne's Hospital, Fall River, was in charge of the gay exhibit of the Dominicans of the Presen­ootion. Little figure!l of Sisters depicted the various activities of the community. All. operating room team was in full swing and a' classroom scene even included • little boy in a comer. Mother Ascension said that the exhibit was the work of Sister Stephen' of the Sacred Heart and Sister Angela Francis, both originally from Taunton.

Space Age Several booths were decidedly

1!lP to the minute. :O~e was that of the Sacred Hearts Fathers and Sisters, themed in tune with the space age. Prayer, proclaimed their posters, has "Greater Transmission than Telstar," and, ftl; "More Powerful than the Laser." Responsible for this ap':' proach to, vocations was Sister .Julie Lo~se, SS.CC.; a native, lIIawaiian, who 'has been on the lraculty of Sacred Hearts Acad­emy, Fairhaven. for the past two :rears: Abetting her at the booth was Sister Eleanor Marie, a mative ltairhavenite.

The Stigmatine Fathers and Brothers managed to include a llarge Batman poster in their dis- . play, to the huge delight of, :roung visitors: and another cehild-pleaser was a large con­gress of dolls inside Cassidy's front entrance, loaned by Mrs. Ralph Patun'Jff.

Artwork produced by young-

Notre DlEDm~ A,ward

for ScienceW~rk

NOTRE nAME (NC)-Father t'heodoreM. Hesb'urgh, C.S.C.,'presldent,' has announced the University of Notre Dame has' received grants totaling $82,500

sters of Attleboro Christian F ami 1 y M'lVement members highlighted the CFM booth; and Sister Louis Bertrand of Domin­ican Academy, Fall River, was largely responsible for the at ­tractive display offered by the Dominicans of, St. Catherine of Siena.'

The hugely successful Pano­rama was sponsored by the Di­ocesan Vocations Bureau under ~irection of Msgr. John J. Hayes. Priests from aU parts of the Dio­cese aided in arrangements and publicity was handled by Rev. Edmond L. Dickinson and Rev. F. Buckley_

Glowing Windows Setting the mood of the e~-

hibit for all who entered was a 'series of glowing windows, cre­ated from colored cellophanes and masking tape. by Sister Teresita, S.U.S.C., head of Bishop Cassidy's I1rt department.

Roualt-like in their intensity of color, the windows depicted the people of God, the role· of the priest, the sacraments, the' kingship of Christ and the wit­

,ness that Christians must bear to 'the world.

''They are too beautiful to take down," said admirers. ,"Not' at all," said Sister Tere­

sita serenely. "The fact that . they're so' perishable, only, cel­lopliane, seem!' to me a symbol of the transitory nature of all earthly things. Only God re­mains." ~

In three words, •she summed up the essential message of Christian Panorama.

N IWn Re(O)d!s; IEl?istl'le At ByzQllrntl'oliile Mass

EDMONTON (NC) - A con­gregation of seminarians and priests heard the Epistle read by an Edmonton nun at a Byzan­tine-rite Liturgy (Mass), in St. Joseph's Seminary her e in Alberta.

The nun participant is Sister Beatrice of the Sisters of Chill':" ity. The Mass was part of a study

day sponsored by the'seminary's St. Basil's Society which seeks,

NAMED AUXILIARY: Msgr. Edward J. Herrmann, Vice chancellor of the' arch­diocese. of Washington, has been named by' Pope Paul to be Titular Bishop of Lamzel­la and Auxiliary to Arch­bishop Patrick A. O'Boyle of W:ashington. NC Photo.

Continued from Page One "For this reason, the use of

guitars, drums, and other per­cussion instruments. commonly associated with secular music is strictly forbidden during all religious sel·vices.

Religious Parodies "Spirituals and similar songs,

,including popUlar hit tunes,re­ligious parodies on folk tunes, jazz and the like do not conform to the requirements for liturgical music laid down in recent offi ­cial documents and hence are' not to be used in our 'religious services. The Church has im­mense, possibilities for deep'. ef-­fective and, uplifting action, without hav1ng recourse to means which are very dubious, and even, by consent, harmful."

Citing references in the Con­stitution on the Liturgy, Arch­bishop Cousins stated in- bis March 22 letter: ' '

"Sacred' has a specific mean­ing that distinguishes music S(t

described from that which' is strictly secular. It cannot be, rated at a morning Pontifical taken to mean 'popula.r: 'semi.:- Mass, and Paul Emile Cardinal classical,' 'operatic,' etc. Nor can Leger of Montreal officated at it refer to folk music, ballad forms, etc. '

One of the general norms of the constitution clearly states, 'No person, even ~f he be a priest, may add, remove or change anything' in the liturgy, on his' own authority' (No. 22, paragraph.3). It is evident that confusing private interpretations are logically to be avoided."

Say! Wrocreation, [Love Equal Fanctors Sam~ ~@rroking for ~oth A$pects" Priest A!)serts

PROVIDENCE (NC)-Procre­ tract," .Father Haering rela~. ation and love between husband, The ,word "contiact," he' said, and wife, are mutually competing comes from the time when mar­factors in marriage, an interna­tionally k now n theologian stressed here.

Fat her Bernard Haering,e.ss.R., told more than 100 dioc­esan priests at a pastor21 study program that the Second Vatican

, Council deliberately passoo over the customary teal::hing. that ranked procreation as the first aspect of marriage and love be­tween the marriage partners as'

, BeCondary. The German Redemptorist said

the new teaching ranks both as­pects equally. The first right a ehild has i.s that his life begin as an act of love, he said.

A number 0': bishops, chiefly from Spain, were anxioUs at the eouncil to retain the old termi­lllolog)" of' the "marriage con­

riages were arranged between families, and involved extensive business transactions.

God's WiD . The Council illustrated the

Biblical spirit which animated it by rejecting this word in favor of "covenant," he' added. Father Haering 'said thi~ Scriptural word goes back to the decisive moment when God proposed to man that "You shall be my peo­ple and I shall be your God."

Marriage too is a mutual giv­ing of husband and wife to each other, not according to their wills, but according to the will of God the Father, he said.

Father Haering, when asked 'about the source of his own theology, acknowledged his non­academic schooling.

He learned of the primacy of love in Christianity, he said, from "my own dear parents"-to whom he dedicated his three­volume worl{ on moral theology, "The Lav- of Christ." He has six sisters who are nuns, one in an Amercan community in Indiana.

I

fam~ll5s for QUALITY and

SERVICE! '

Swedish TheologBan Says Soviet ,V;®w of R~~m~o@n

STOCKHOLM (NC)-Is reli ­gion truly the product of the imagination? Were the ancient philosophers Seneca and Philo the forerunn€'rs of Christianity? Is St. John's book of the Apoca­lypse the oldest book in the New

'Testament? The ,answer to all these ques­

tions, according to communist, writers iIi the Soviet union, is "yes." Moreover, they maintain Ulat Christianity was born among the lower-class peoples to console them for being op­pressed by Roman Empire cap­italists.

One of the world's foremost experts on the Soviet view of religion is Dr. Haralds Biezais,. a Lithuanian-born Swedish the­ologian whol teaches at Upsala University..

Marx's Comment He maintains that the Soviet

anti-religious !deology, is expe­riencing 'no real change. In fact, he says Russian theorists are still using the same sources and slo­gans used by communist evan­gelists Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels a century ago.

Nearly all communist thinkers still believe that the most illu­minating thing said about reli ­gion is Marx's comment that religion is the "opium of the people.~' They maintain, said Dr. Biezais, that the first humans had no religion. Then, oppressed by physical and social hardships, they c~~ted religion to alleviate their suffering.

Modern Soviet ideologists show little variance from the basic theme. Aft e I' having looked into recent archeological finds, they declare with certainty that Christ never lived. Christianity, they say, was a spontaneous movement arising among the ne­

15,000 Attend Rites . ,

At Oratory Shrine MONTREAL (NC)-Two car­

dinals and more than 15,000' per­sons took part in' ceremonies here on the feast of St. Joseph at the famous St. Joseph's Ora­tory shrine.

Maurice Cllrdinal Roy of Que­bee, Primate of Canada, offici ­

the closing midnight Mass; ,

The shrine, founded by the ,late Brother Andre, C.S.C., is the largest in the world dedi­cated to St. Joseph.

•••a.~EB••M.B.B.~.' : LUMBER CO.:· ."

: So. Dartmouth : : and Hyannis :

• $0. Dartmouth WY 7-'»84.

• Hyannis 2921 •

f'••••••••••••••••,

QJ~~rJ:y@lfU~®d glected slaves of the Rom3lJ1 Empire.

Soviet Aims Explaining how the commu­

.nist thesis.is developed, Dr. Bie­zais said the slaves were dis­couraged because their rebel­lions failed. They hated their Roman rulers. They, wanted some religion to give them com­fort, but the old gods of 'Rome were of little use.

The primary aim of the Soviet explanations, said Dr. Biezais, is not so m.uch scholarship as prop­aganda. They hope to discredit religion as a serious human ac­tivity.' '

Secondly, he said, recent Sovi­et ideologists have added little or nothing to' the basic religi'ous theory' given to them by Marx and Engels. Their pattern is clear: religion is seen as a move­ment that divides people into classes. In order to reach the perfect society. religion as well as capitalism must be overcome.

Fair Publishing Code NEW YORK (NC) - The'

Catholic Press Association has reprinted its code of fair pUb­lishing practices, originally pum­lished in 1955. The code was prepared for us'e' by Catholic newspapers and magazines of the U. S. and Canada by the As­sociation.

~I'" ~ DEBROSS OIL C ~ co. ( -. Heating Oils ~ ~ and Burners ~ ) 365 NORTH FRONT STREET C ~ NEW BEDFORD ~

~ WYman 2-5534 ~

\..,.....""~~!

Where A

GOOD HAME

Means A

GREAT DEAL

GEO. O'HARA :. J B = III •

.CHEVROLET 1000 Kings Hwy.

NEW BEDFORD

Open Evenings

WH ITE1S Family Restaurant It. 6 at The Narrows in North Westport

When. The IEntire Family

Can Dine Economically

FOR RESERVATIONS

PHONE OS 5-7185

Page 17: 03.31.66

117 1fHE ANCHOR-Diocese ()f Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 31, 1966

The Parn§h Parade

VISITATION GUILD, NORTH EASTHAM

The Guild will hold a social tomorrow night at the home of Mrs. Arthur Cestaro, Surrey Drive, Eastham. A drawing for an Easter ham dinner will be held.

A clothes closet sale originally scheduled for Saturday, April 23, will be held beginning at 10 Sat­urday morning, April 16.

ST. ANTHONY, MATTAPmSETT

A Couples Club has been or­ganized in the parish with Mr. and Mrs. Frank O'Driscoll as president. couple; Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie Price, vice-president, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Lewis, treasu­rer; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pierce and Mr. and Mrs. Donald Flem­ing, secretaries.

ST. MICHAEL, OCEAN GROVE

The Catholic Women's Club will hold installation ceremonies WednE:sday night, April 27 at Stone Bridge Inn. To be seated are Miss Rita Martin, president; Mrs. Harold Hodkinson, vice­president; Mrs. Robert Thibault and Mrs. Robert Peloquin, secre­taries; Mrs. Richard Dumaine, tresasurer.

Mrs. William Mahoney, instal­lation chairman. will be at the church hall fro~ 7 to 8 Wednes­day evening, April 13, to accept reservations

D'lMACULAl'E CONCEPTION, FALL RIVER

The Women's Guild will meet at 8 Monday night, April 4 in the church basement. Mrs. Helen Pascoal will be chairman. Mem­bers will receive corporate Com­munion at lJ o'clock Mass Sun­day morn;",!:!. Anri] 3.

ST. JEAN B-\·PTISTE,. FAT_L 'liVER

The CouncIl of Catholic Women announces a Jeanola and penny sale at 7:30 Saturday night, April 16 in the church hall. The event, co-spon::ored by the coun­cil and the Holy Name Society, will have as general chairmen Matthew Labecki Herve Proulx, Mrs. Adrien Baraby, Mrs. Ernest Mercier. Mrs. Armand Thibou­tot and Mrs Oscar Martel.

Booths will include country store. specialities, and sweets. Refreshments will' be available and door and ~pecial prizes will be aw"rflp.d.

lB 73c

LB

OVEN READY

ARMOUR STAR - Choice Grade Lean and Tender

Young Tender Pork for Roasting. Perfect for Hearty Appetites

Tasty Chops and Pieces for Stew

Combination Lamb LB 43c

FRESH SHOULDERS lB 46c

CORNED ROUNDS LB89c

!i~79CB Ji~ 63c .

lB 69c

No Waste - Easy to Carve

Lamb Roast Boneless

CLOVERDALE - Sliced

BACON

.ties' Morsels .les

ARMOUR STAR - Skinless

FRANKFORTS

SWORDFISH

Your Best Meat Buy This Weekend ... Tender, Light, Soft-Meated Lam.b

Scot .Towels

GERBIER'S or

Baby Food Strained -'All Varieties

Big RolI-White, Colored, Decorated

3 200CT 79.CROLLS

Chocolate \ Semi-sweet ,

~ 9' c ;;1. '~~; 3 ..

....OUR LADY OF FATIMA. SWA~';:EA

Parishioners will hold a testi ­monial banquet for Rev. James McDermott, nastor since the founding of tJ>e parish and now transferred as pastor of St. Pat­rick's Church. Somerset. The event will take 'place at 6:30 Sunday night. April 3 at Steven­son's restaur:lnt. North Dart­mouth. Reservations may be made "dth n;>r;ohioners.

ST. JOHN BAPTIST, CEN1'J1"L VTLI,AGE

The Ladies Guild plans a rum­mage sale from 9 to 12 Saturday morning, Ap"j] 16 in the parish hall. Chail'!TIpn are MI·s. Mary Best and Mr" Emily Costa. A Mother-Dau;rhter brea1dast will foHow 7:30 Mass Mother's Day morning. Sunday, May 8. at Esther Lou;.:;c restaurant, Dart­mouth. Reservations should be made as soon as possible.

New Library PONCE (NC) - The Cathollc

University of Puerto Rico plans to construct a $1.25 million,

I Prices effective in Fall River and Somersetlibrary to house 350,000 volumes.

ten. , . ~. :1 '/" f Ii.

.1 - J 1 0: -. , I , _ ~.~. ;: ..... I~';'-"'-'

Page 18: 03.31.66

-

--

-

-------

--

non-Catholics. He said this'D~s'pernse§ Priests From Reciting Office w'o u I d "certainly contribute much to make better known the, . conclusions of the council."TpwQS Pre!at~ Lists 14 Occasions

1 .•.18 r·lrS., M:.~.1.31, 1966

Lc lWd ~f(<<:fru~B~d~@lP

O~ #' ~r.<>lQWICl\"'Ci:>~fJ'W

SAN ANTONIO (NC)-More than 1,000 persons heard civic and religious leader:; laud Arch­bishop Robp.rt E. Lucey of San Antonio at a Chamber of Com­rner.:e-spO!lsored dinner mark­ing a triplp 'anniversary for the Texas prelace

Archbishop Lucey is observing his 75th birt:'lday. his 50th year as a priest, and his :!5th year as archbishop t)f San Antonio.

Principa. speaker at the ob­servance was the Rev. Dr. Ster........ !In''" Brown, president of the Natio.nal Conference of Chris­tians and ·Jews He praised the ,arch9ishop's .lOng leadership in effort!! to extend full I;ights to 'all cltizens, and prEsented him wH'o a silver brothNhood me­dallIon of apnreciation from the NCCJ

Archbishop Lucey was also the recjryient of a plaque from the people of San Antonio citing "his

· vision and w'1rk for all our peo­ple In 'hellJ,ng them find and know a better way o~ life."

Among the many s('nding con­gratulatory mc>ssage!:' were Pres­

: idem Johm:on. Vice President , 'Hubert H. Humphrey~ and Texas

Governor John Connally.

Atll"H1CY to Cd'wtufy · p,... "' .... ~i ... 6 ir~"'''"~ers

MILWAUKEE (NCl-A cen­tral agency to certify teachers in Wi!!consin Catholic sl:hools has been established in the Milwau­kee archdiocesan department of education.

The agency will be direct!!d by Dr., George Vander: Beke, a con­sultant to Msgr. Edmund J. Goe­bel. archdiocesan superintendent of schools. Vander Bel<c said the

.State's five dioceses decided to eertify teachers because paro­ehiai school teachers. according to l~w, cannot be licensed by

· the state. . The new plan will affect about

10,(1"0 Religious and lay.teach­ers'. Their certification will be.

VISITATION BY ALL FAITHS: Mr. and Mrs. Richard Masse of St. Michael's Parigh, Ocean Grc,ve, explained the baptistry, one of the eight stops made by more than 600 people in the Swan~ea Chtm:~h.

Council Teachings Source of Inspiration, Aid Catholics Apply Dt'ctrine to Daily Lives

NOTRE DAME (NC) - The teachings of the Second Vatican Council. should .be a "vital" source of inspiration and en­couragement to Cathoiics, the papal Secretary of State has de­clared.

A m let 0 Cardinal Cicognani urged that Catholics study the

. based on the education require-' . council documents as an aid. to ments of the state department of applyi ng the Church's teaching pub" c instruct.ion. . to "their daily lives." .

DALLAS CNC')-Priests of the diocesc of uallas':Fort Worth have been dispensed from reci­tatk r of the hreviary on '14 dif­.fere~t occasions.

. B;~l,Op Thomas K. Gorman' gave the disilensation in order that priests at liturgical services' rnigl-Jt "partic;pate in the service rath-:r thaT' read the Divine OfficE'."

The dispeilsation is from all of the Office except Lauds and Vespers. It i~ granted only to priests who, "\n addition to cele:' brating Holy Mass themselves, assist. and truly pa!·ticipate" in' the liturgy.

Midnight l\iass Thp prie9ts,are dispensed from

the )bligation to recite the Di­vin.e Office when participating in: Mass celebrated or presided 0ver by the bishop or his dele­gate; nuptial or funeral Mass; Mass celebrated on the occasion 9f an ordinatIOn; Mass on occa­sion of religious profession, mar­riage or jubilee thereof; first Mass of a newly ordained priest;

lFi~ht SMInl«l1COlY ~ale$' NEWARK (NC) -.Sunday

sales by supermarkets, which are permitted to operate on Sundays under local crdinance exceptions to ,tate law,;. have become' the target of labor and citizen groups in' sections of New Jer­Sey.

Confirmation with or without Mass; Fo.rty Hours devotion; and clergy confe.~ences.

The' same dispensation is granted for the following pas­toral reasons: trination (offering Mass three times in one day). hearing confpssions for three or more hours. preaching at three or more Masses on any Sunday or holy day of obligation, and attendance '1t meetings or con­ventions exceeding four hours of any given day.

According to the dispensation; "if the liturgical service or other occasion is conducted. in the morning, the priest is obliged to recitE: only Vespers; if in the afternoon, he is obliged to recite only Lauds; if both the morning and afternoon. he may choose to recite either."

Furthemore, priests who cele­brate or assist at Midnight Mass on Christmas Eve are dispensed from all recitation of the Office

GRACIA BROS. Excavating Contractors

9 CROSS ST., FAIRHAVEINI

WYman 2-4862.........•......~

K of C Insura'nee At Re~ord High

NEW HAVEN (NC) - The Knights of Columbus total in­surance in force and assets at the close of business Dec. 31, 1965, reached newall-time highs, as shown by the annual report of the society to the In­surance Commissioners of the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico.

The total insurance in force with the 1.2 million-member fraternal organization amounted to $~,473,525.156 on Dec. 31. This represented a net gain of $90,357,281'-6.68 per cent-over the amount in force at the start of the year. .

Supreme Knighi John W. Mc­Devitt said: "I feel confident we shall pass the $1.5 billion mark by April 1." The ,insurance cov­ers the lives of members, their wives and their children.

Assets During 1965 the society's as­

sets increased by $23,231,072 to a total of $281,228,300, a rise of 9 per cent. Liabilities, including reserves on insurance certifi ­ca.tes, amounted to $237,036,750. leaving a surplus of $44,191,~50.

Total benefits paid in. 1965 came to $6,965,947, bririgin~~ the tot"al' paid by' the society during its almosi-84-year existence to $170,168,884. In addition, divi­dends to poi:cyholders' ior 1965 were $3,689,770.

Prelate~~~dintor ROSARIO (N.9)~Archbishop

Guillermo Bolatti of Rosario has agreed to act"' a~ rnedi!lt9r in the strike of some 2,000' employes of the John Deere Company here

, in Argentina.

Complete

BANKING SERVICE

for ,Bristol County

.",i~tol County Trust Comoany

TAUNTON, MASS.

.•THE ·RANK ON TAUNTON GREEN

Member. of Federal Depos"

"Now is the time for the fruits of the council to' be "brought effectively. into the modern world," he said in a letter to a major theological conference on Vatican II' being held at the University of Notre Dame.

Some 400 theologians and 're­ligious leaders from the U. S., Europe and Latin America are attending . the conference on ''The Theological Issues of Vat­

.ican II," this week. Among the participants are a

number of Protestant. Orthodox and Jewish scholars' as well as ,Catholics.

Cardinal Cicognaniexpressed' the 'good wishes of both himself and Pope Paul VIfor the success of the conference..

The cardinal particularly· noted its ecum,enical aspect, sig­naled by· the participation of'

He quoted a statement by' on both Christmas Eve and Pope Paul urging efforts to see Christmas Day, and those who how the council teachings fit celebrate 'or assist at the Easter into the "doctrinal patrimony of Vigil services are dispensed from the Church" and declaring that

IInsuranee Corporationall the Office on both Holy Sat­ "the 'spirit of the council' in­urday and Easter Sunday.' te~ds to be the spirit of truth."

....~•••~~ ~ $.$•••

BlU~R~BBO~ BIS~WflJIAON'S LAUHNDRV GARAGE

273 CEN1l'RAL AVE. WreckeD' Service WY 2-6216

653 Washington Street,' Fairhaven NEW BEDFORD WYman 4-5058 ........ .~

SCHOOL Maintenance Supplies JEREMIAH COHOLAN

SWEEPERS. SOAPS DISlNFIECTANYS PLUMBING & HEATING

lFlRE EXTINGUISHERS Contractors sinee 1913 I

DAHilL, CO. 1886 PURCHASE STREET WYman 3-0911 703 S. Water Street I

NEW BEDFORD • New Bedford . WY 3-3786

- I

Page 19: 03.31.66

Form New Cape Circuits:

Mansfield, North Eastol1J Bid For Hockomock Loop Crown

By Fred Bartek

~o scholastic baseball clubs on the northern periphery of BrIstol County expect to battIe it out for "the Hockomock League championship this seasaon. Coach Bill Sullivan's young and veteran Mansfield High diamond nine ready­ing for the season's openerin a couple of weeks has one

. . . objectIve m the up-coming camp'aigh and that is to dethrone th~ defending champions at Obver Ames in. Nor t h Easton. "i,: But, Coach Bob f (Buddy) Wooster' and his charges have oUler ideas. The Nor t h Easton mentor is banking heav­ily on shortstop Tom Heenan and third baseman Tom Clay to lead Oliver Ames to another title in the eight-team circuit.

Sullivan's Green Hornets, who open at Randolph on April 18, will bank heavily on Captain Kevin Fallon, combination slab

. artist and fim sacker, and Doug Hayner, a versatile infielder, to wrest the title from their North Easton rivals. This is Randolph's last season in the Hockomock.

The other crown aspirants are 'Stoughton. High (which Oliver Ames plaYs in its April 18 open­er at Frothingham Field, Easton) Franklin, King Philip Regional of Wrentham, Foxboro and Sharon.

RAMBLING THOUGHTS: Durfee High hoopsters, kings of all Massachusetts II c hoI a s tic teams, are the 'darlings' of Fan River. Featured in a downtown parade and hosted at a Mayor Desmarais banquet, the State champions d~monstrated the i r' poise in winning the Mass. Class A crown that marked their play 1

throughout the season: It was a great year for the Fall River. Hilltoppers who corralled the championshi~ of the Bristol County League, the Eastern Mass. Tech tourney and then the . State elimination competition. .

Durfee nudged Weymouth, 50­45, in the Bay State clincher." II Cl... And, congratulations to Coach Tom Karam, as good a court coach as there is Qo.. The wholly unexpected resigna­tion of Al Boucher as New Bed­ford High track coach has caused some eyebrow lifting. The Class A Crimson indoor State cham­pions open. their Suburban Track league season on April 21 at Newton. "This is the best rve ever had and I feel badly about leaving," the veteran mentor of 12 years commented. His resig­nation is effective immediately. Boucher, like Karam, has had his clubs at the top of the State pile year after year.

MORE OF THE SAME: Holy Family High basketeers of New Bedford will be tendered a testi ­monial dinner for' their success in capturing the Narry League crown Q Q Q The New En­gland Class B Catholic tourney victors will be honored in Acushnet on April 17. Chalking up one of th'=! best records in the history of the Whaling City Pa­rochial school, Coach Jack No­brega's boys finished with a 21-1 mark. 0) 0) 0) Portsider Dick Trabucco and right-hander Bob­by Lovenbury form the mound corps nucleus at Norton High, defending champions in the C 10 v e r Valley Conference. Coach Pete Bartek, who also directs the gridders at the county's northern school, has taken over the reins from Bob Ford DOW an assistant principal

' at a Connecticut high school.Bartek, who excelled on· the diamond when he attended Coyle in Taunton, is counting on a repeat performance by lusty­hitting shortstop Steve' Prosky who compiled a better than .400 batting average last Spring. ProskY is as adept with the bat and glove as he is in swishing the hoop twines. He caged more than 1,000 points in his varsity court career. Norton is the only team in the county and diocese in the conference.

STILL RAMBLING: Supt of Scnools Harvard H. Broadbent is receiving applications for the Barnstable H i g h basketball coaching job. And, 15 have al­ready filed bids for the Barrr­

_stable gridiron coaching berth, including interim mentor Ray Hosteter who succeeded Dick Lasse whc"J. the latter resigned last year to become athletic di­$..rector and football coach at Curry College in Milton. Tom Clarke's appointment as track 'boss' this season has been approved by the Barnstable school authorit!es. .... CoaCh" Joe Bettencourt is drilling,91 3!M pirants for the New Bedfoi-d High .football team. The Crimson face a tough Suburban League schedule next Falll. "All posi_' tions, offensive and defensive, are open," Bettencourt com­mented whe'l queried about the prowess of his lads in the Spring drilling season. ...... 'High .Jersey from people who origi- A total of'1,147 patients have' school boys who want to com- 'nally planned 8 trip to the been treated since the center pete in sports have plenty of op-' morgue. . opened, and all survived.. portunity. They have ,8 choice' '" Elizabeth Henry, supervisor of Almost half of last year's between the contact. and the..,. the' hospital's emergency room, , cases were toddlers. "One wor- . non-contacl ~ames. RIght now, said. that 91 suicides have 1;leen 'ried mother called to ask if her practice is gomg on in basebaD, averted in the seven years of child was poisoned," Miss Henry track, golf, tennis and soccer, .' the Center's' existence. said. "The youngster had just at some schools; and Spring foot-· ""oIt" t I th' ti drunk the dog's bath." ball " s .no a ways e ViC m·· A staff member just assured

. .", who calls," she ~oted. But if it., .'the woman she wouldn't have to MORE RAMBLING: Six smaD ,.. is "We talk to him, tell him what

Cape and Island schools.: are· planning a conference' in base­ball and basketball. The mem­bers win be Martha's Vine­yard regional, Chatham, Nauset regional~ Provincetown, Sand­wich and Harwich. ... '" • The new loop will be established' due to the fad that four' larger' Cape Schools will enter the newly created CapElway Confer­ence. Joining the latter circuit will be Falmouth, Dennis-Yar­mouth, Bourne and Barnstable. ~ ... The latter quartet and some of the clubs entering the Cape-V.lneyard Conference have comprised the now defunct Cape Cod League. l)" ~ There isotalk that the winners and run­ners-up in 'both the Capeway Conference and the Cape-Vine­yard circuit will meet in a post­season tournament to decide the best schoolboy club ill the tecre­ational area of the Common-' wealth.

RAMBLING TO HALT:. Five games will get the Narry base­ball league underway n ~ x tTh

Ursday. Ten clubs make-up the loop which will playa reo­ord OO-game schedule. The open-. ers are: Diman of Fall River at Somerset, Westport at Holy Family in New Bedford, Ap­ponequet of Lakeville at Prevost in Fall River, Case of Swansea at Old Rochester in Mattapoi­sett, and, Seekonk at Dighton­Rehoboth. Coach Roger Hill's Se~konk nine hilS drawn the defending champions in its league debut. l) .. €I The first half of the Bristol County base-' ball league campaign will be feoo'

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., March 31, 1966

.COUB'nC~~ Advisor~

S~Qrt ~!J'@~rr~m ""

. htl f?1lJ~r;.f'@ Ri«:o PONCE (NC)-A progran

designed to bring to th(· . people a greater understand­ing of the meaning of Vati­can Council II is being launchef' at the Cat~olic University 0: Puerto Rico here.

The "Peritus - in - Residence" Program, financed by a privatI' foundation in the United States. enables theologieal experts who served at the council as periti or .official advisor to take ur reSIdence at the university a: various periods during the 196C post-concilliar year.

Each expert will give onr

't-ii PREVOST CAREER DAY: Among speakers at Career

Day program at Prevost High School, Fall River, are" from left~ Norman Brogan, civil engineer; Robert Landry, .busmessman; Raymond A. McGough, police safety instruc-' tor; Roger Lizotte, student; Roger G. 'Fournier, funeral director. Also on the'day's program were a priest, brother and layman, discussing vocations to religious life. The event was sponsored by the student council.

Emergency Service Hospital. Poison Control Center Ave~ts

Suicide, Accidental Death TEANECK (NC) - The eailiJ line until the local pollee .ean .' come during the night: I wanted get to him."

to die but now I've changed my All Survive . mind." The Poison Control Center was

The calls are received at the not set up specifically to handle Poison Control Center of Holy suicides. Accidental victims still Name hospital here in New provide the bulk of the clientele.

to do. We try to keep him on the

stricted to seven-inning en­counters. The clubs will play the regulation nine-inning stints m the second h~1f.

Joe Lewis has already swung the ax at Durfee. He has reduced his squad to 19 players whom, he says, should make-up "one of our fastest teams." The Fan Riverites open April 11, travel­ling to New Bedford to meet Vocational. Then, three dayS later the Hilltoppers will enter­tain Bishop Feehan High from Attleboro in the northern end of the county.

St. Francis Residence

FOR YOUNG WOMEN 196 'Vhipple St., Fall River Conducted by Franciscan

Missionaries of Mary ROOMS - MEALS

OV~RNIGHT HOSPITALITY Inquire OS 3.2897

• •••• - •• •••••• • .

~~~t~e P~umbing & He~iing CO., Inc.

Reg. Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M. MONTLE

Over 35 Years' of Satisfied Service

806 NO. MAIN STREET Fall River OS 5·7497

throw out the baby with the bath water.

:Abbey Dedication MORRISTOWN (NC) - The

new $2.5-million monastiC com~ plex of St. Mary's Abbey will be dedicated here in New' Jersey July 16, Abbot Patrick M. O'Brien, O.S.B., announced. In­cluded in the complex is a church seating 800, living quar­ters for 90 monks, novices and clerics, an abbot's suite, 14 chapels, a basement fallout shel­ter, a kitchen and 8 refectory.

lri-City Office Equip. 427 Second St. Cor. Morgan

.Ed. McGinn, Prop.

OLiVEnl Calculators-Adding & Acc"t.

Machines We Dc Duplicating

Tel. 679·6712, 675·7806 .7807

With at

NEW BEDFORD-ACUSHNET ·t

CO-OPERATIVE BANK 115 WILLIAM ST. NEW BEOfO~D,· MASS.'

~ • -i_

major address during his ~ay i,. Ponce and wie also be availabk for informal conversations witt faculty and students at the uni­versity and with members of thf r clergy an~ laity in the area, it was explamed.

The program was announced by Msgr. Theodore E, McCar­rick, university rector, who said t.hrough the program, "the u'ni­versity hopes to fulfill its role of catalyst in the formatiOn of an educated community in Ii new and more meaningful way."

Starting off the program' as resident "at the university durinll March is Father Francis .X.

.Murphy, C.SS.R., widely known scholar and writer.

Names Catholic An-.~m~r;cans

BROOKLYN (NC) - Provl· dence College',; Jim Walker wa~

the only repeater selected for·the 14th annual Catholic College All-American basketball team of the Tablet, Brooklyn diocesam newspaper. '" ,;

Joining him on the squad were John Austin, Boston Col­lege; Henry Finkel, Dayton, Matt Goukas, St. Joseph's, Phi!­adelphia; and Bill Melchiollil!1~, Villanova. ,.,

Coach of the year honor.; were shared by Jack Ramsey 01 St. Joseph's, Philadelphia, and George Ireland, Loy01a of Chi­cago.

Picked for the small college dream team were Gary De YuIia, LeMoyne; Bill Popp, Bellarmine; Joe Mucha, St. John's (Minn.); Duane Kalmer. Quincy; and Ken Broussard, St. Joseph's (Ind.) The selections were made by college basketball coaches in aJlw.

.,sections of the country.

White6s Far", DVirJ "SPECIAL MILK From Our Own

Tested Herd" Acushnet, Mass. viY 3-4'JJ5b' • Special Milk . • Homogenized Vito D Milit • Buttermilk • Tropicana Orange .h..ice • Coffee and Choc. Mitat • Eggs - Butter

Page 20: 03.31.66

20

1.#

~HE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. Mar. 31, 1966

. 'Nt3tional Organizcitions Seeking More Anti-Pove'rty" Aid for Women,' WASHINGTON (NC)-Spokes­

men for four national women's organizations protested "sex dis­erimination" in fighting povert~'

and said' programs for women should, get a fair share of federal poverty funds. . , They praised the concept of fue anti-povert~' wal"s Women's Job Corps but urged that it be expanded substantially,

At present, they told' a House poverty subcommittee; there are oniy 1,700 girls in Women's Job Corps training centers compared to 17,000 boys in centers for males. .

"We have been sadly disap­pointed with the size of the Women's Job Corps program be­cause we have seen the immen­sity of the problem." Mrs, John

The furniture Wonderland

of the> East

R. Holden, social action chair­man of the National Council of Catholic Women told the sub­committee. '

She and representatives of three other women's groups that form WICS-Women in Commu­nity Service-testified in sup­port of poverty programs for women and' asked that they be ·stepped up.

They' also reported, that WICS has fostered interreligious and interracial. cooperation. Besides the National Council of Catholic Women, the progl'am includes the National Council of Negro Women, the United Church Women, and the National Coun­cil of Jewish Women. '

. WICS recruits and screens un­employed. out-of-school young.

women aged 16-21 from POOl!' families for Women's Job CorptJ centers at which they get educa­tion and training.

The spokesmen for the wom­en's groups said the program hali had notable success in giving new hope to young, women in the poverty bracket, But th~ Women's Job Corps should be far larger than it is., they saiell.

Open Daily 9> A.M. to 10 P.M.

Including Saturdays

THE GRfATESIPIANO VAlUE OF THE YEAR A Full-size; glorious tone

BIG 40"CONSOlE FOR THE PRICE Of ASPINET!' WE CAN OFFER THIS SPECTACULAR SPECIAL PURCHASEVALUE FOR SHORT TIME ONLY ••• SUPPLY IS LIMITEDI '

MANY DISYINCn'VE STYLE and' cotnR COMRINATIt\...S

.. "

,BUY NOW AND SAV!. HUNDREDS OF~~F;rt OOlLARS

. Pay While " Join Our p. J Ou Play

'Ono and 0 . See Our c' 'gonFamou omplete S I

8' sMoke p' e ection of Y KIM8ALL 'anos and 0

and MAG fgansA SMALL 0 NAVOX

"MAKES l'O~WN PA l'MENT-Q A MEMBER

.," o· ....

FREE DELIVERY

ALL NEW DESIGNER STyLED MODELS illt Contemporary, .

or' Italian Provincial (shown) • • • wood and finish choices include Deeptone. Mahogany; French Walnut,' Oil Type Fre~ch Walnut, Warm .Cherry.

... I

ANY STYLI AND FINISH, , (Matching berich optional)

comparable values' , - ..... "l:; +,.. Cl:Qq5