20
An Anchor of the Soul, Sure a/nd Firm - ST. PAUL q \ 1 FIVE NEW DiOCESAN PRIESTS: Gathering with their shepherd following cere- mony on Friday night in the Cathedral, were five priests who are to serve in the diocese. Rev. James R. Mclellan, Rev. Joseph D. Maguire, Rev. James W. Fahey, Bishop Connolly, Rev. Thomas L. .Rita, and Rev. Thomas F. McMorrow. PRICE 10¢ $4.00 per Year © 1970 The Anchor Fall River Mass., Thursday, May 1, 1970 Vol. 14, No. 19 Upholds Church Tax Exemption Gifts "Nothing in this national atti- tude toward religious tolerance and two centuries of uninter- rupted freedom from taxation has given the remotest sign of leading to an established church or religion and, on the contrary, it has operated affirmatively to help guarantee the free exericse of all forms of religious beliefs." Several months ago, a New York City official said religious institutions there own $692 mil- lion worth of property. Taxes on it would have brought in $36 million. Douglas feels the present in- volvement of government in re- ligion as typified in tax exemp- tion may seem inconsequential but "it is, I fear, a long step down the establishment path." "Perhaps J have been misin- formed," he said. "But as I have read the Constitution and the philosophy, I gatherered that in- dependence was the price of liberty." The First Amendment to the Constitution provides that "Con- gress shall make no law respect- ing an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof -' (, *. - Burger rejected Douglas' "es- tablishment" fears. He said if tax exemption is the first step, "the second step has been long in coming." New Bedford prelate asserted. Two parishes have already gained a place on the honor roll for "going over 'the top"of their highest previous totals. are: Notre Dame, Fall River. Our Lady of Angels, Fall River. Rev. Msgr. Anthony M. Gomes, diocesan Appeal director, fore- sees the probability that many more parishes will be added to' . the list. A new plan, inaugurated last year divides the 1194-square mile diocese into five areas, listing the five leading parishes in each section. Previously, the leaders were ranked regardless of loca- tion. The areas include Cape Cod and the Islands, the AttIe- boros, Taunton, New Bedford and Fall River. United States Supreme Court if there is to be any definitive res- olution of the problem." Turn to Page Twenty State law which exempts church- owned property from taxation. The 7-1 majority opinion was written by Chief Justice Warren iE. Burger. Justice William O. Douglas, the sole dissenter, based his objection on the belief that tax exemption. is the first step to state establishment of reli- gion. The test case was brought by Frederick Walz, Bronx lawyer who owns a parcel of land-22 feet by 29 feet--on Staten Is- land that is taxed $5.24 a year. Burger said Congress from its earliest days had viewed the re- ligion clauses of the Constitu- tion as authorizing statutory real estate tax exemption to reli- gious bodies. He declared: Mixed Marriage, N'ew Directives WASHINGTON (NC) - Pope Paul's new mixed marriage norms drew generally enthusias- tic reaction among Protestant, Orthodox and Jewish religious leaders. Most of those interviewed were enthusiastic about what they saw as progress and liber- ality in the way Catholicism is now approaching the problem, although some thought the papal document did not go far enough. The Pope's 28 mot!! Turn to 'Page iEleven our Shepherd because the Ap- peal is a tribute to him on the occasion of his silver anniver- sary in the episcopacy," the First. Appeal Total $305,9.24 The complete text of the bish- ops' statement read: . "The communication of a Turn to Page Sixteen WASHINGTON (NC) - The United States Supreme Court has' upheld the con- stitutionality of a New York See Highest.Court Deciding Legal Problems of Abortion WASHINGTON (NC)-The U. S. Supreme Court will ultimately settle the legal problems of abortion, a California attorney has told a meeting of the Diocesan Attorneys Association here. Joseph J. Braildlin of Los Angeles says: ·"It appears clear that the basic issues as to the rights of the unborn child will have to be finally decided by the Off to an' excellent" start, first returns from 114 san parishes for the Catholic Charities Appeal total $305,- " 924. "It is most heartening to see the initial parish reports in ex- cess of those of last year," was the enthusiastic comment of Joseph C. Murray of North Dighton, diocesan Appeal lay chairman. Auxiliary Bishop James J. Gerrard, too, applauded the laity of the diocese for their generous response to the Appea! honoring the quarter-century jubilee of Bishop James L. Connolly as a member of the United States hierarchy. "The first returns indicate that the Appeal donors are honoring These tools must be used "to help young people to inform and form themselves, to out the real problems of the world, to seek the authentic values of life and to live up to their call- Turn to Page Six ing in Bishop Feehan High school auditorium. The recipients: Sister Teresa of Jesus, O.P., Turn to Page Three Pope Cit es Of Communications Media , VATICAN CITY (NC)-The powerful effects that mass communications today can have on the development of young people places "an immense responsibility" on every- one involved in the media. This was the message of Pope Paul VI writing on the theme of World Communications Day, to be observed this year on May 10. The theme. of the day is "Social Communica- tions and Youth." . World Communications Day is sponsored by the Pontifical Com- mission for Social Communica- Pope's message said that Bishops Reaffirm Reliance men must make good use of the 0 D. .... extraordinary opportunities to n locesan reach young people today by the press, movies, radio and televi- SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-America's Catholic bishops sion. gave an unequivocal and unanimous expression of support to the nation's Catholic press in a statement released at the seqliannual meeting of bishops here. Adopted without dis- sent by a voice vote, the bishops' resolution acknowl- edged "We are especially encouraged by the positive contribution to human under- standing and to the knowledge of the Church provided by the diocesan newspapers under our jurisdiction and at the same time conscious of their journalistic re- sponsibilities to all who read them." iExpressing their "earnest hope that the diocesan newspapers of this country will be welcomed in- to every Catholic home," the bishops stated that: _ "As bishops of Christ's Church, charged with tile continuing dis- semination of Christ's essential message to the world, we rely strongly on the Catholic press." Twenty educators, four of whom have devoted more than one-half century in the development of children in diocesan schools, were awarded the Marian Medal in rec- ognition of their service at the annual Catholic Teachers' convention in Attleboro to- day. Bish6p Connolly, who originated the highest dioce- san award, presented the medals before a capacity gather- Marian Medal Awards Honor 20 Educators Tells Vincentians To Update Work For Indigent JERSEY CITY (NC)-The So<;iety of St. Vincent de Paul must get away "from the food basket image" and become involved in a broader way in work for the poor. The observation came from Luke' J. Smith, executive secre- tary and veteran worker for the society in the Rockville Centre, . N.Y., diocese, at a meeting here .' of 200 delegates of the'society's iEastern Region. Speaking on the theme of up- dating the society in modern times, Smith said the members Turn to Page Three

05.07.70

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WASHINGTON(NC)-TheU.S.SupremeCourtwill ultimatelysettlethelegalproblemsofabortion,aCalifornia attorney has told a meeting of the Diocesan Attorneys Associationhere.Joseph J. BraildlinofLosAngelessays: ·"It appears clear that the basicissuesastotherights oftheunbornchildwillhave tobefinallydecidedbythe thereof-'(, *. - WASHINGTON (NC) - TheUnited StatesSupreme Court has' upheld the con- stitutionalityofaNewYork SANFRANCISCO (NC)-America'sCatholicbishops AnAnchoroftheSoul,Surea/ndFirm- ST. PAUL

Citation preview

Page 1: 05.07.70

An Anchor of the Soul, Sure a/nd Firm - ST. PAUL

.~.q\~ \ 1

FIVE NEW DiOCESAN PRIESTS: Gathering with their shepherd following cere-mony on Friday night in the Cathedral, were five priests who are to serve in the diocese. Rev.James R. Mclellan, Rev. Joseph D. Maguire, Rev. James W. Fahey, Bishop Connolly, Rev. ThomasL. .Rita, and Rev. Thomas F. McMorrow.

PRICE 10¢

$4.00 per Year© 1970 The Anchor

Fall River Mass., Thursday, May 1, 1970Vol. 14, No. 19

Upholds Church Tax Exemption

Gifts

"Nothing in this national atti­tude toward religious toleranceand two centuries of uninter­rupted freedom from taxationhas given the remotest sign ofleading to an established churchor religion and, on the contrary,it has operated affirmatively tohelp guarantee the free exericseof all forms of religious beliefs."

Several months ago, a NewYork City official said religiousinstitutions there own $692 mil­lion worth of property. Taxeson it would have brought in $36million.

Douglas feels the present in­volvement of government in re­ligion as typified in tax exemp­tion may seem inconsequentialbut "it is, I fear, a long stepdown the establishment path."

"Perhaps J have been misin­formed," he said. "But as I haveread the Constitution and thephilosophy, I gatherered that in­dependence was the price ofliberty."

The First Amendment to theConstitution provides that "Con­gress shall make no law respect­ing an establishment of religion,or prohibiting the free exercisethereof -' (, *. -

Burger rejected Douglas' "es­tablishment" fears. He said iftax exemption is the first step,"the second step has been longin coming."

New Bedford prelate asserted.Two parishes have already

gained a place on the honor rollfor "going over 'the top"of theirhighest previous totals. ~ey are:

Notre Dame, Fall River.

Our Lady of Angels, FallRiver.

Rev. Msgr. Anthony M. Gomes,diocesan Appeal director, fore­sees the probability that manymore parishes will be added to'

. the list.A new plan, inaugurated last

year divides the 1194-square milediocese into five areas, listingthe five leading parishes in eachsection. Previously, the leaderswere ranked regardless of loca­tion. The areas include CapeCod and the Islands, the AttIe­boros, Taunton, New Bedfordand Fall River.

United States Supreme Court ifthere is to be any definitive res­olution of the problem."

Turn to Page Twenty

State law which exempts church­owned property from taxation.

The 7-1 majority opinion waswritten by Chief Justice WarreniE. Burger. Justice William O.Douglas, the sole dissenter, basedhis objection on the belief thattax exemption. is the first stepto state establishment of reli­gion.

The test case was brought byFrederick Walz, Bronx lawyerwho owns a parcel of land-22feet by 29 feet--on Staten Is­land that is taxed $5.24 a year.

Burger said Congress from itsearliest days had viewed the re­ligion clauses of the Constitu­tion as authorizing statutoryreal estate tax exemption to reli­gious bodies.

He declared:

Mixed Marriage,N'ew Directives

WASHINGTON (NC) - PopePaul's new mixed marriagenorms drew generally enthusias­tic reaction among Protestant,Orthodox and Jewish religiousleaders.

Most of those interviewedwere enthusiastic about whatthey saw as progress and liber­ality in the way Catholicism isnow approaching the problem,although some thought the papaldocument did not go far enough.

The Pope's Apr~l 28 mot!!Turn to 'Page iEleven

our Shepherd because the Ap­peal is a tribute to him on theoccasion of his silver anniver­sary in the episcopacy," the

First. AppealTotal $305,9.24

The complete text of the bish­ops' statement read:. "The communication of a

Turn to Page Sixteen

WASHINGTON (NC) ­The United States SupremeCourt has' upheld the con­stitutionality of a New York

See Highest .Court DecidingLegal Problems of Abortion

WASHINGTON (NC)-The U. S. Supreme Court willultimately settle the legal problems of abortion, a Californiaattorney has told a meeting of the Diocesan AttorneysAssociation here. Joseph J. Braildlin of Los Angeles says:·"It appears clear that thebasic issues as to the rightsof the unborn child will haveto be finally decided by the

Off to an' excellent" start,first returns from 114 dioce~

san parishes for the CatholicCharities Appeal total $305,-

" 924.

"It is most heartening to seethe initial parish reports in ex­cess of those of last year," wasthe enthusiastic comment ofJoseph C. Murray of NorthDighton, diocesan Appeal laychairman.

Auxiliary Bishop James J.Gerrard, too, applauded the laityof the diocese for their generousresponse to the Appea! honoringthe quarter-century jubilee ofBishop James L. Connolly as amember of the United Stateshierarchy.

"The first returns indicate thatthe Appeal donors are honoring

These tools must be used "tohelp young people to inform andform themselves, to ~ri':lg outthe real problems of the world,to seek the authentic values oflife and to live up to their call-

Turn to Page Six

ing in Bishop Feehan High schoolauditorium.

The recipients:Sister Teresa of Jesus, O.P.,

Turn to Page Three

Pope Cit e s Respo~sibility

Of Communications Media ,VATICAN CITY (NC)-The powerful effects that mass

communications today can have on the development ofyoung people places "an immense responsibility" on every­one involved in the media. This was the message of PopePaul VI writing on the themeof World CommunicationsDay, to be observed this yearon May 10. The theme. ofthe day is "Social Communica-tions and Youth." .

World Communications Day issponsored by the Pontifical Com­mission for Social Communica-

tiO;~~ Pope's message said that Bishops Reaffirm Reliancemen must make good use of the 0 D. ....extraordinary opportunities to n locesan I~ewspapersreach young people today by thepress, movies, radio and televi- SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-America's Catholic bishopssion. gave an unequivocal and unanimous expression of support

to the nation's Catholic press in a statement released at theseqliannual meeting of bishops here. Adopted without dis­sent by a voice vote, thebishops' resolution acknowl­edged "We are especiallyencouraged by the positivecontribution to human under­standing and to the knowledgeof the Church provided by thediocesan newspapers under ourjurisdiction and at the same timeconscious of their journalistic re­sponsibilities to all who readthem."

iExpressing their "earnest hopethat the diocesan newspapers ofthis country will be welcomed in­to every Catholic home," thebishops stated that: _

"As bishops of Christ's Church,charged with tile continuing dis­semination of Christ's essentialmessage to the world, we relystrongly on the Catholic press."

Twenty educators, four of whom have devoted morethan one-half century in the development of children indiocesan schools, were awarded the Marian Medal in rec­ognition of their service at the annual Catholic Teachers'convention in Attleboro to­day. Bish6p Connolly, whooriginated the highest dioce­san award, presented themedals before a capacity gather-

Marian MedalAwards Honor20 Educators

Tells VincentiansTo Update WorkFor Ind igent

JERSEY CITY (NC)-TheSo<;iety of St. Vincent dePaul must get away "fromthe food basket image" andbecome involved in a broaderway in work for the poor.

The observation came fromLuke' J. Smith, executive secre­tary and veteran worker for thesociety in the Rockville Centre,

. N.Y., diocese, at a meeting here

.' of 200 delegates of the'society'siEastern Region.

Speaking on the theme of up­dating the society in moderntimes, Smith said the members

Turn to Page Three

Page 2: 05.07.70

~i

,I

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., May 7, 1970I ' ,

•• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •.• • • •• I

$35A Friend'Richmond Granite & Marble

Works$30

Mozzone Bros. Lumber Yard$25

Bacon Felt Co.Bristol Athletic ClubWilliam P. Crowley & SonsHodgman Manufacturing Co.Memorial to Edward & Isabell

MurbyPlank & HansenPoole Silver Co.Taunton Building Trades

CouncilA FriendTaunton Venetian Blind Co.

I. Cape Cod, ,$100 .Mr. & Mrs.' Lawrence C. An­

tonellis, FalmouthSmith's Surrey Room, Fal­

mouthFalmouth Diner

$50Falmouth National Bank

, $25John's Liquor 'Store

North Attleboro$159

Residents of Madonna Manor$125

Donley Manufacturing Co.$50

Beauchaine's, Inc.$25

Art's,3 Hr. CleanersH. F, Barrows Co.Mr. & Mrs. Mark FlahertyMiss Ethel Rounds

Taunton$150

St. Vincent de Paul Society­Sacred Heart Conference

$100Alfred S. O'Keefe

. $50John Bright Shoe StoreFarrell Insurance AgencyOrsi Bros.Frank J. SmithSowiecki Funeral HomeSt. VinGent de Paul Society­

Immaculate Conception Confer­ence, Taunton

J. R. Tallman & Co.Taunton News CompanyTurin's Market-Wash and

Shop$40

Cornelius J. Murphy .Insur­ance Agency

~ROOKLAWNFUNERAL HOME, INC.

R. Marcel Roy - Go Lorraine RoyRoger LaFrance

FUNERAL DIRECTORS15 Irvington Ct.

New Bedford995-5166

LAMOUREUX.FUNERAL HOMEALBERT J. LAMOUREUX

Embalmer - Funeral DirectorTel. 997·9044

177 Cove St., Cor. So. Second St.NEW BEDFORD

AMPLE PARKING NON SECTARIAN

ASt>rving all fdllh~

676=192 1)

Sumner James WARING Incorporated

y,r r§;ff#11A1"fI/ Pt;'l'l"n-",1

CitY:,Location 178 Winter St. Fall RiverSuburban Location 189 Gardners Neck Rd. Swansea

States Nitewear Co., Inc.Pierce & Haworth Electrical

Contractors

Constant StruggleJ,-ife to the great majority' is

only a constant struggle for mereexistence, with the certainty oflosing it at last. -Schopenhauer

$40Silverstein Family

$35Browne Pharmacy

$30Cox;s Candy

$25·Acushnet Saw Mills Co.Michael J. Austin Funeral

HomeBettencourt PharmacyCapeway Sheet Metal Co.Central PharmacyFamily PharmacyGaudette's Pavilion Inc.Lincoln PharmacyDr. & MrS. Michele E. MerollaBrodeur's Machine Co., Inc.Fibre Leather Mfg. Co.N.B. Joint Board, Textile

Workers Union of America,CIO-AFL

Paragon Tours & TravelWeinstein's, Inc.Babbitt Steam Specialty Co.Dr. Max Blum

. Bradley & Halliwell MachineCo., Inc.

Gilt Edge Textile Mills, Inc.Greater New Bedford & Cape

Cod Labor Council AFL-CIONew Bedford Typographical

Union No. 276Park Motors, Inc..

$3000

$5,000

o HYANNISo HARWICH PORTo SOUTH YARMOUTH

Special GiftsNafi.onal

DOAN,o'8£.ALoAMtSINCOR.POR.ATEO

A Friend

A Friend ./$600 ,

Fathers of the' Sacred Hearts, $500.

Rev. Msgr. William H. 'DolanRev. Msgr. FranCis McKeon

$250 'Rev. Msgr. Alfred J. Bonneau

$100Sullivan Brothers PrintersA FriendRev. James F. Greene

$25Jolicoeur & Resmin'i Co., Inc.

DI,OCESAN WOMEN MEET: Among the 300 members of theDiocesan Council of Catholic Women who convened at FeehanHigh School, Attleboro on Saturday, were: Mrs. Richard Des­chenes, No. Attleboro; Mrs. Harry Loew, Attleboro; Miss Angela'Medeiros, Seekonk; Mrs. Charles landry of Seekonk, president ofthe Diocesan Council.

New Bedford$350

American Press,$300

Catholic Women's Club$100

Blue Ribb'on LaundryFairhaven Institution for

SavingsNew Bedford & Acushnet Co-

operative BankA FriendArlan's Department Stores Inc.National Bank of Fairhaven

., Perry Funeral Home$75

Ashley Ford CompanyGeneral Plastering & Tile Co.

$50·Ell Vee DeeCoater's, Inc.Macedo Pharmacy

, .

1,770.00

4,422.003,9~4.50

3,567.005,665.00

740.00

1,122.001,1WOO

8?5.00!

Taunton AreaTaunton-

Immac. ConceptionSacred HeartSt. JosephSt. MarySt. Paul

North Dighton-,#St. ,Joseph

North Easton-Immac. Conception 5.233.50

Raynham-St. Ann 2,799.00

. Attleboro Area'St. Mary,

North Attleboro 6,560.09St. Theresa, Attleboro .4,571.00St. Mark,

Attleboro Falls'St. John, AttleboroHoly Ghost, Attleboro

NecrologyMAY 12 I

Rev. John F. daValles, 1920,Chaplain, United States Army.

MAY 13Rt. Rev. Osias Boucher, }'955,

Pastor, Blessed sacrament,lFallRiver. '

I

.Leadlnll;,Ar~:Parl~she. ~

TOTALS

Mass OrdoFRIDAY-Weekday. Mass

(Choice of Celebrant). I

SATURDAY--:-Memorial. White.St. Gregory Nazianzen, Bishop,Doctor of the Church. :

SUNDAY-Sunday After Ascen­sion. White. Mass Proper;Glory; Creed; Preface I ofAscension,. Mother's Day.'

MONDAY - S5. Philip andJames, Apostles. Feast. Red.Mass Proper; Glory; nb Creed;Preface \)f Apostles.

TUESDAY-S5. Nereus. Achilles, 'and Pancratius, Martyrs. Op­tional. Red.

WgDNESDAY-5t. Robert Bel­larmine, Bishop, Doctor of l theChurch. Optional. White. I.

THURSDAY-Week.day. Mass(Choice of Celebrant).

Cape &. Islands Ar'eaSt. Francis Xavier,

Hyannis 5,013.00Our Lady of Victory,

,Centerville 3,722.95St. John, Pocasset 1,995.50Sacred Heart,

Oak Bluffs 1,199.00'St. Patrick, Falmouth 990.00

Fall Rivl!r Area II

Holy Name, Fall River 12,694.50Our Lady of. the Angels,

Fall River 10,571.75St. Mary, Fall River 8,806.11Notre Dame, Fall River 6,575.25St. Thomas More, I

Somerset 6,538.50

New Bedford AreQMt. ,Gjlrmei,.

New Bedford. 7,939.00St. Joseph, Fairhaven 7,784.25St. Mary, New Bedford 7,770.25'Holy Name,

New Bedford 3,969.02St. Julie, '

North Dartmouth 3,2~5.00

ITaunton Area '

St. Mary, Taunton 5,665.00Immaculate Conception,

No. Easton 5,233.50Immaculate Conception, i

Taunton' . 4,422.00Sacred Heart, Taunton 3,994.50~t. Joseph, Taunton 3,567.00

990.00

5,013.00

2,026.00

4,012.00~,538.50

1,480.70

7,784.257:38.50

4,285.003,447.504,462.50

3,969.027,939.001,805.75·

250.00504:50

1,019.002,671.001,310.002,360.002,052.004,770.251,926.25

3,072.00

8,806.111,094.001,423.001,213.00

12,694'.506,575.25

10,571.752,705.502,381.004,382.775,996.001,924.85

203.002,187.253,154.001,440.003,853.003,747.00

. 4,472.001,690.754,122.00

972.502,118.00

$ 825.001,110.001,122.004,571.00

1,199.001,995.50

Area

Ii.,

2

May 17-Villa Fatima, Taun-ton. i

Sacred Hearts Conveflt,Fall River I .'

Convent of, the SacredHearts, Fairhaven.

THE ANCHOR

Second Class Postage Paid at Fall River.Mass, Published every Thursday at 410Highland Avenue, Fall River, Mass, 02722by the Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall'River, SUbscription price by mail, postpaid$4.00 per year.

••••••• 4•• t ••••••••

Day of PrayerMay 10-St. Mar:y's, Hebron­

ville..• I

St. PatrIck, ~almouth.

Mt. St. Mary Academy,Fall River.' '

I

PARISHI

Attleboro AreaAttleboro­

Holy GhostSt. JohnSt. MarkSt. Theresa

North Attieboro---,.St. Mary 6,560.00

Cape & Islqnds Area. 'Centerville- '

Our Lady of Victory 3,722.95Falmouth'-

St. PatrickHyannis- ,i

St. Francis XavierOak Bluffs- :

Sacred HeartPocasset-St. John

FaU Riv~rFall River-

St. Mary iBlessed SacramentEspirito SantoHoly 'CrossHoly NameNotre DameOur Lady of AngelsOur Lady of HealthHoly RosaryImmac. ConceptionSacred Heart iSt. Anthony of IPad.

,St. Elizabeth iSt. John the BaptistSt. JosephSt. LouisSt. MichaelSt. PatrickSS. Peter and PaulSt. StanislausSt. WilliamSanto Christo

Assonet----:St. Bern:ardCentral Village- I

St. John BaptistNorth Westport-:

Our Lady of Grace 3,452.00Ocean Grove- '

St. MichaelSomerset- :

St. John of GodSt. Thomas More

Swansea- ''Our Lady of FatimaSt. DominiCSt. Louis de France

I

New Bedford AreaNew Bedford-

Holy NameMt. CarmelSacred HeartSt. BonifaceSt. HedwigSt. HyacinthSt. John the BaptistSt. Joseph .. 'St. KilianSt. LawrenceSt. MarySt. Theresa

Fairhaven-St. Joseph' ,Sacred, Hearts . I

Mattapoisett- !SOt. Anthony I

North Dartmouth-t-St. Julie 3,235.00

Westport-St. Gedrge 3,162.00

!

Page 3: 05.07.70

3

Christian SoundTo Sing Sunday

The Christian Sound Choir, in­chiding students from Connolly,Jesus-Mary, Prevost and DurfeeHigh Schools, all in Fall River,will present a Mother's Dayconcert at 8 Sunday night, May10 in Jesus-Mary Academy au­ditorium on St. Joseph Street,Fall River. John Danis of Con­nolly High is director.

The program will range fromclassical selections to hard rockand will include solos by DeniseRheaume of Jesus-Mary Aca­demy. Proceeds of the concert,said Danis, will go towards ex­penses of cutting a record by thechoir.

Approve

THE:ANCHOR-Thurs., May 7, 1970

DOWNTOWN FALL RIVER

Bouquets of prayers and flowers toyou, Mom-in sincere and gratefu~ ap­preciation of the uncounted tireless andseemingly thankless jobs you do everso willingly and eHectively-so beau­tifully and uhoughtfullyl so have a goodday, Mom-Queen of the Dayl

I,:~. ·18tl·ZenS SAVINGS1· BANK.A

flOil"l.m;'i!'-

Day!

Happy

Mother's

"Catholic School Journal","Encyclopedia Britannica" and"Turkish Management Review."

He is also the author of anarticle in the "Proceedings ofthe American Catholic Philoso­phical Association," and abooklet, "The' Psychology of theDouble Image."

In addition to his professionalmembership in the AmericanCatholic Philosophical Associ­ation, Brother Francoeur holdsmembership in the NationalCatholic Education Associationand the Metaphysical Society ofAmerica.

A principal speaker at severalAmerican colleges, he has oftenmade television appearances. Hewas a delegate to InternationalCongress of Philosophy meet­ings in Mexico .eity (1963) .andVienna (1968).

College GrowthBrother Francoeur spoke in

Ankara, Izmir and IstanbulTurkey in 1968 on the philoso­phy of management as a par­ticipant in the Turkish-Americanmanagement seminar.

A member. of the YoungstownDiocesan Ecumenical Commis­sion, he serves on the ExecutiveCommittee of the Stark CountyMental Health Board.

In 1960 Walsh College open­ed its doors to 66 freshmenwith a faculty of seven Broth­ers of Christian Instruction.There were two buildings' onthe then 50-acre campus.

Today, there are over 1,000students, 75 faculty membersand five buildingS, with a sixthunder construction, on a 120­acre campus.

Brother Francoeur, one of theoriginal seven faculty members,continues to teach as well asserve in an administrative ca­pacity.

BROTHER' !FRAN.COEUR

Virtue CornerstoneSelf-respect-that .cornerstone

of all virtue. -Herschel

Update WorkContinued frolp Page One

fac~ "a glorious 'opportunity towork for the poor in a broaderway."

"It is essential now that welift ourselves up to a little higherlevel; away from the food basketimage and devote ourselves tostudy of the problems of thepoor, bringing the expressions ofour charitable minds and hearts,individually and collectively, tobear on community leaders,civic leaders and political lead­ers,!' Smith said.

The society's Eastern Regioncovers New Jersey, Pennsylva­nia, Delaware, Maryland, Virgin­ia, Wetst Virginia and the Dis­trict of Columbia.

Sees Need IncreaseMsgr. John F. Davis, Cranford.

N.J., keynote speaker, expressedbelief the society will be neededby the Church "more and more .in the days ahead." He caution­ed the members against compla­cency, declaring there always is"more, more, more, to be done."

Auxiliary' Bishop Martin W.Stanton of Newark, offered Massfor the delegates in St. Aedan'schurch. Another speaker at themeeting was T. Raber Taylor,Denver, the society's nationalhead.

Smith said in its work the so­ciety's must come to know bet­ter the people "we are dealingwith" and their problems. Hesuggested that poor families bebrought to local society meetingsand questioned so they can ~e

helped better."Find out what they want, ask

them how they think they can behelped better, rather than weimposing on them our thinkingand our ways, because possiblyour ways are not their ways,"Smith said.

a contributor for EncyclopediaBritannica in 1962; listing inWho's Who Among AmericanEducators in 1963; the Directoryof American Scholars in 1964and Who's Who in Midwest in1965.

He was elected to the Execu­tive Council of the AmericanCatholic Philosophical Associa­tion in 1965.

Brother Francoeur has written20 reviews for "Best Sellers";two reviews for "New Scholas­ticism" and' articles for the

Senate MeetingThe Senate of Priests of the

Diocese will meet Friday after­noon, May' 8, at 1:30 at theCatholic Memorial Home in FallRiver.

10 School Clubs GetCitizenship- Awards

.WASHINGTON (NC) - Tenclubs in parochial schoolsthroughout the country receivedGood citizenship Awards fromthe Commission on AmericanCitizenship of the Catholic Uni­versjty of America here. Honor­able mention certificates went to20 other clubs.

There are some. 1,500 clubsactive in parochial schools. Theyparticipate in a variety ·of. proj­,ects in their respective commu­nities, such as work with thelocal government, communityprojects, volunteer efforts to aidthe elderly and underprivileged.

The commission was estab­lished in 1938 by the U. S. Cath­olic bishops as an educationalproject in Catholic elementaryschools. The annual competitionis .conducted by the commissionwith the cooperation of, YoungCathoic Messenger, weekly peri­odical for Catholic schools.

Admirable Ability

"I have the greatest respectfor Brother Francoeur's abili­ties to move Walsh College onto greater physical growth andacademic achievement," saidBrother Farrell. "He has shownan admirable ability as a teach­er and a remarkable acumen asan administrator."

In accepting the appointment,Brother Francoeur said "Walsh'sgrowth under Brother Farrellhas been remarkable and will bea challenge to match. The Boardof Trustees has entrusted to methe responsibilities for futuregrowth and academic achieve­ment. I hope I will be deservingof the trust they place in me."

Brother Francoeur, whose spe­cialty is philosqphy, attendedthe University of Fribourg inSwitzerland; . the University ofParis and the Catholic Institutein Paris during a year of grad­uate studies in Europe during1952 and 1953 academic year.

The dean of Walsh Collegesince it opened in 1960, he pre­viously was dean at Walsh'spredecessor, La Mennais Col­lege in Alfred, Me., from 1958until 1960. Prior to being ap­pointed dean at La Mennais, hetaught at elementary, second­ary and college levels.

Academic' Honors

His academic honors includethe Province of Quebec Psychol­ogical Association Award in1944 for the high.est average ineducational courses; an assist­antship at Boston College in1949; a teaching fellowship atNotre Dame University in 1955;

Brother Robert Francoeur, Fall River Native,Named President of Walsh College

Brother Robert A. Francoeur, Fall River native and academic dean of Walsh College,Canton, 0., since it opened nearly a decade ago, has been named to succeed Brother Thom­as S. Farrell as president of the co-educatio nal liberal arts institution, effective July 1.Announcement of Brother Francoeur's appointment to the presidency was made by thecollege's Board of Trustees.Brother Francoeur, 47, grad­uated from. Notre DameHigh in Alfred, Me. in 1939;received his bachelor of arts de­gree from the University ofMontreal in 1944 and his mas­ter of arts degree from BostonCollege in 1950.

His doctorate degree was re­ceived from the University ofNotre Dame at South Bend, Ind.in 1958.

AwardsMarian

Prot. Hum. 2/70/Asavoie vs. PiresL1gamen

EDICTAL CITATIONInsofar as the whereabouts of Gilbert F.

Pires, respondent In the case of Savoie vs.Pires, Prot. Hum. 2/70/A (Halifax), are un­known, We cite the said Gilbert F. Piresto appear before the Tribunal of the Dioceseof Fall River on May 12, 1970, at 9:30 A.M.,.at 344 Highland Avenue, Fall River Massa­chusetts, to give testimony to establiSh:

Whether the marriage In question be null?Pastors and others having knowledge of

the whereabouts of said Gilbert F. Pires areadvised to notify him In regard to this edlc·tal citation.

Reginald M. BarrettePresiding Official

Given at the seat of this Tribunal,Fall River, Massachusetts, on thisthe fourth day of May, 1970.Henry T. MunroeNotllry

Priest, 50, ReceivesHeart Transplant

TORONTO (NC) - A 50-year­old priest was reported in faircondition at St. Michael's Hos­pital here after undergoing aheart transplant operation.

Father Edward F. Madigan,pastor of St. Monica's parish inToronto, received the heart of a14-year-old Marlene James ofLindsay, Ont.

Continued from Page OneDominican Sisters, Fall River,prioress general.

Miss Nancy Walsh, Domini­can Academy, Fall River, teacher.

Sister Alice Gregoire, C.S.C.,St. Anne's School, New Bedford,teacher for 40 years in diocese.

Sister Alphonse Marie Paren­teau, S.S.J., St. Joseph's Con­vent, Fall River, teacher for 49years in diocese.

Sister Mary Angela Lavoie,S.S.J., St. Joseph's Convent, FallRiver, teacher for 40 years inthe diocese.

Sister Mary Cherubina, O.S.F., St. Mary's Home, New Bed­ford, Home superior and teach­er.

Sister Mary Fidelis McGuire,R.S.M., Moun.t St. Mary's .Con­vent, Fall River, teacher andprincipal for 50 years in thediocese.

Sister Mary Rose Murray,R.S.M., Mount St. Mary's Con­vent, Fall River, teacher andprincipal for 50 years in thediocese.

Sister Mary Zita Foley, R.S.M.,Nazareth-on-the-Cape, Hyannis,12 years of service to exception­al children, in the diocese.

Sister Charles Francis Dubu­que, R.S.M., Holy Family School,New Bedford, principal andteacher.

Sister Lia Oliveira, F.M.M.,Espirito Santo School, Fall River,teacher for 35 years in the dio­cese.

Sister S'tanislaus Joseph John­son, S.U.S.C., Bishop CassidyHigh School, Taunton, teacherfor 52 years in the diocese.

Miss Mary McMahon, BishopCassidy High School, Taunton,teacher and guidance director.

Sister Jean Baptiste Deschenes,R.J.M., Jesus - Mary Academy,Fall River, teacher for 39 yearsin the diocese.

Sister Pauline Frezal, SS.CC.,St. Joseph's School, Fairhaven,teacher for 35 years in the dio­cese.

Sister Agnes Paulet, SS.CC.,Sacred Heart Academy, Fair­haven, teacher for 55 years inthe diocese.

James Lanagan, Msgr. JamesCoyle High School, Taunton,teacher and athletic director.

Brother Dominic, F.I.C., Msgr.Prevost High School, Fall River,teacher and superior.

Rev. John G. Cornellier, S.J."Bishop Connolly High School,Fall River, principal.

Sr. Madeleine Clemence, O.P.,former director of St. Anne'sSchool of Nursing, Fall River,and presently serving as the firstdean of Southeastern Massa­chusetts University School ofNursing.

Page 4: 05.07.70

Attlebcuo ' .,,,I

$1200I

Krew, Inc.$200

First National Bank of Attl~.boro ,

II,I, ,

I "THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., May 7, 1970,

, I ' Diocesan OfficialAt Conference

Unjust SuspectThe natural man has"a difficult

time getting along in this world.Half the people think he is ascoundrel because he is not ahypocrite. -Howe

The Commission on Servicesto Unmarried Parents of the Na­tional Conference of CatholicCharities held its Tenth Anni­versary Institute· "Directions forthe Seventies" in New York Citylast week.

Representing the Fall RiverDiocese at the Conference wasMr. John M. Clements, Case­work Supervisor of the CatholicWelfare Bureau of. New Bedford.Representatives from .Diocesesthroughout the country werepresent for the three day Insti­tute. All facets of Agency ser­vices to the unmarried parentswere explored.

His Excellency, Most Rev.Edward D. Head,. D.D.,' Execu­tive Director, Catholic Charities,Archdiocese of, New York, gavethe opening address, "The PastDecade - Anniversary Survey"reviewing the aims of the Com­mission as having been organ­ized to develop and improve ser­vices to unmarried parents. Healso counseled that it is neces­sary for the Commission to takea 109k at its past that it mightinfluence its future.

The main speaker at the Con­ference was Mrs. Patricia Gar­land Morrissey, Associate Pro­fessor, Fordham University,School of Social Services, NewYork. Professor Morrissey's topic"The Forward Look-Directionsfor the Seventies" consideredwhat the needs of the unmarriedparents of the 1970's will be andhow the Community can bestserve them.

Helen Murray, Edward Bou­dreau, Mrs. John Boudreau, Mr.& Mrs. William Gallagher, Mr. &Mrs. Coy Folcik

Phyllis McClellan, Rita O'Don­nell, Elizabeth Brady, HelenBrady, M~. & Mrs. Wm.. MacLean

Mr. & Mrs. Richard Cayer, Mr.& Mrs. Joseph Torres, Mr. & MrsRaymond HarrIson, Gertrude Mc­Breen, Mrs. Luke 'McBreen

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Ross, Mar­garet McCarthy, Mary McCarthy,Mr. & Mrs. Joseph O'Neill, Mr.& Mrs. Manuel 'Rebello Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. John Curley, Mrs.Mynette Dewhurst, Mr. & Mrs.James Corliss, Mary E. & HelenU. Cronan

The Welch Family, Mr. & Mrs.Louis Cook

- DISPENSING OPTICIAN-

Antone S. FenoJr.Prescriptions for eye glasses filled,lensefi duplicated. Frames repaired.

19'7 Bai1k St. (Comer Purcba8e)Fall River. Tel. 6'78~0412

Hours: 9.5 Mon.• Fri. Sat. 9 - 3ll'riday Eves by Appt. Closed Wed.

STONEHILL COLLEGEi'

N. Easton,' Mass. 02356 - Tel. 238-2052 • 696-0400

TauntonSACRED HEART

$400Very Rev. William A. Galvin

$35Mr. & Mrs. Francis Andrews

$50The Misses ReillyMr. & Mrs. Thomas VardenMr. & Mrs. John Monaghan

$40Mr. & 0 Mrs. Edward TrucchiMr. & Mrs. James Cooke

STONEHILL COLLEGE'Summer Session Evening ClassesJune 22 July 31 6:30-9:-15

UNDERGRADUATE COURSESo \ Liberal Arts • Bus. Admin. • Math.

Write: Director of Summer Session

.. .. .... .. . .

o ' $30Mr. & Mrs. Ge'orge A. MoitozaMr. & Mrs. Patrick Murphy &

'FamilyRose O'DonnellMary Kennedy

$25Arthur Marron, Mr. & Mrs.

Michael Barber, Mrs. EvelynDragone, Mr. & Mrs. GeraldDoiron; Mrs. Anne MacHaffie

Anna Maguire, Barbara Peck,Mr. & Mrs. Walter Travers, Mr.& Mrs. Edward Feeney, Mr. &Mrs. David Longton

Charles Goldrick, Mr. & Mrs.Stanley'Roberts, Mr. & Mrs. Li­doino Severino, Mr. & Mrs BrunoAlegi, Mr. & Mrs. Richard Peyton

Ralph Barboza, Mr. & Mrs.John S. Tripp, Mr. & Mrs. AlbertScully, Mrs. John Devlin, RuthBrady

$100Anonymous

. PocassetST. JOHN

$400Rev. James A. McCarthy

$150Mr. & Mrs. George TowersSt. Vincent de Paul Conference

SwanseaST. ' DOMINIC'S

$200Rev. Daniel E. Carey'

, $75 .Mr.,& Mrs. Norma.n E. Ashley

'$50Mr. & Mrs. Paul HastingsMr. & Mrs. Manuel TraversMr. & Mrs. Fred J. Rudd

$35Mr. & Mrs. Philip Griffin

$31Julia Rose

;,:&,,~~. ~..\/ 0

L!/

ASTRONAUTS SPEAK ABOUT PRAYER: Apollo 13 astronauts,Copt. Jcim~s A. lovell, left, and John l. Swigert, Jr., stand atthe podium a's they tell a Washington news conference that~heir flight" ... united the world" in prayer. NCPhoto.

$50Mr,& Mrs. Peter Becker Jr.H. Sprague SpoonerI.t. Col. Marie V. Lawlor

, $30", ,Mr. & Mrs. Peter M. Fernandes

Sr. . , . ;Mr~ & Mrs. F. Mackedon

$25Mrs. Manuel P. Britto, Mr. &

Mrs. Charles F. Collins, Mr. &Mrs. Kilmer Joyce, Mr. & Mrs.Cornelius Minihan, Mr., & Mrs.Frank Flanagan

Mr. &. Mrs: Henry Thomas,Anonymous (2), Mr. & Mrs. Ed­~ar Beauregard, Mr. & Mrs. JohnNelson

Mr. & Mrs: WilliamJ. Shea,Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Dunlavey,Mrs. Ralph Emerson & Mrs. Hig­gins, Paul Nugent

$30Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Paiva'Mr. & Mrs. John Fitzgerald

$27.50Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Marum

$25Mr. & Mrs." Thomas E. Ryan,

Mrs. Malcolm McLeod, Mr. &Mrs. John Mell9, Mr. & Mrs.William F. Johannis, Mr. & Mrs.Bertrand R Boulay •

Jean Berard, The Clement fam­ily, Evelyn Ryan, Mr. & Mrs.Robert LaChance, Mrs. Cath'erineHeald

Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Cavanaugh,Mr. & Mrs. Roland Martelly. Mr.'& Mrs. Kenneth Kelley, Mr. &,Mrs. 'George V~ntura

Co.Co.

Parishes.

Gifts

Central .Villag~"

ST. JOHN' 1"HE' BAPTIST"!'$275 • ,

Rev. Edward C. Duffy$250·

$32Leedham Hardware

$30Chas. Thomae & Son

. $25Foster Metal ProductsAttleboro Sun Pl!blishingState Line General Scrap

A Friend

J. Fred Beckett 8~ SonNebel Heating Corp.Bayside UpholsteringPlante JewelersLewis Gray Sons Co.Swansea Oil CompanyAlbert G. PierceApex Shade Co., IHarold C. Nagle Ins. AgencyCoronet Print, Inc. ILuza American Macaroni Mfg.

Co." iSherwin-& Gottlieb ' .Pilgrim -Casket Co. ~ .-Fall River Sales & Supply Ind.General Paper & Supply ,

$125Dante, Inc.

$100,Leach & Garner Co.Swank, inc.Stephen H. Foley Funeral

HomeA FriendSadler Bros, Inc:

$50 .Harry J. 130ardman Insurance

Agency

North DightonST. JOSEPH 0

$120 i,In Memory of the Skelly Fam+

i1y I$100

Rev. Thomas C. Mayhew :Mr. & Mrs. James E. Williams

$50 IMr. & Mrs. Arthur A. Enne~

$30' I

Leo Pivirotto i$25 I

'Mr. & Mrs: Walter BoulayMr. & Mrs. Levite Carrier !Mr. & Mrs. Oliver Collard, 'I

Mrs. Beatrice DevineMr. & Mrs. William DTlJmi

mond 'I

Leo Duffy, John Egan, Mr.& Mrs. Robert Hebert, Mr. &!Mrs. Norman LaFrance, Mr. &!Mrs. Thomas Marsdene "I'

Mr. & Mrs. Timothy Neville,Mr. & Mrs. Harold Mendoza,!Mr. & Mrs. Robert McConville,'Lillian M. Pivirotto

. $120Mr. & Mrs. Charles Yocum

$100Dr. & Mrs. Joseph T. BaldwinMr. & MrsfWilliam Forrest

$50Mr. & Mrs. John CostaMr. & Mrs. Antone DeCosta

$31Mr. & Mrs Lynwood Comstock

$30Mr. & Mrs. David L. Buckley

Jr.$25 ~

Mr. & Mrs. Jos. Andrewskie~wicz, Patricia Clancy, Mr. & MrSCharles Costa, A Friend, Mr. &

, Mrs. Lawrence 'DolanMr. & Mrs. Bernard T. Kelly~

Mr. & Mrs. ·George Leach, Mr. &Mrs. Francis·J. Mah'er, George T;Leach, Mr & Mrs Daniel B.o Souz~

I

4,

ISpecialFall Riv~r

$1200 IFall River Electric 'Light Co.

$1I00 JFall River Trust'Clo. '

$600Duro Finishing Gorp.

$500 'I

Mr. & Mrs. Henry J,. Feitelberg .Mr. & Mrs. James E. BullockAmy Lynn Draperies, Inc.

$400 I'

Cherry & Webb Co!.. $300 :

St. Vincent de, Paul Sodety­Notre Dame Exchange

Fall River Savings Bank' 'Union Savings Bank

.' $200!A Friend I '

From a friend in gratitude to 'Bishop Connolly ;

$175 I

Lafayette Cooperative Bank'. :' $140 i

Mr. & Mrs. Michael J. Mc-Mahon :

$130 ,Fall River News Co:., In~

$125 j

Henry J.' Duffy Pha~acy-Mr.and Mrs~ Harold Ward·

$120 IJ. 0.' Neill Supply Go.

, " '$100 IColonial Wholesale Beverage

Corp. ;.D & D Sales & ServiceDr. Americo AlmeidaNational Contractiri~ Co.

'Stafford Furniture~o.

Motor Truck Sales iLaura Curtain & Drapery Co.,

Inc. I

Riveredge Printers,: Inc.Manuel C. Hilario Real EstateGeneral Cleaning&; Sales Co.,

Inc.In Memory of Rev! James E.

O'Reilly . I,Salvo Machinery CompanySalvo Golden Foods'

. . $75'"Fall River Lodge Nc? 118 BPO

Elks '$60 i

John F. McMahon & Sons, Inc.$55 i

O'Neil Tire Service:$50 .

Irven F. Goodman, 'ArchitectEdward BraytonAtty. Francis MeagherDr. William FreemanDurfee-Buffinton Insurance

Agency, Inc. IRB. Negus Lumbe~ Co.Harvey Probber, Inc.Fall River Sheet Metal WorksCorcoran Supply Cd. ,Robert L. Germane ContractorSpindle City Dye WorksSimon's Supply Co.,; Inc.Holy Name Women's GuildCharles Daby !

'Atty. & Mrs. John J. Harring-ton I

Flynn's Package St~re, Ihc.Gamache'Trucking Co.

$25 iAI's Tire Shop IVermette Lumber, Inc.

/ Esquire Package StbreAllen's Cut Rate IT. Elias Fuel Co. iJ. C. Roofing Co., Inc.

$35 IThe Spectator ILion Automotive Stores, Inc.Dr. David S. Greer !

, $25 ISantos Trucking ColLeonard Pharmacy !Travis Furniture Co.John's Shoe Store. IEastern TV Sales & ServiceMunroe Electric SupplyBuffinton Florist IF. R Florists SUppliY Co.

,Somerset Motel IFeldman Furniture <l:o.Tom Ellison, Inc. iLiberty Loan & Re,:dtyJ. A. Boynton Co:, Inc.Brightman Package IstoreSterling Pkg.' StoreF. W. Woolworth Co.

Ii,,

Page 5: 05.07.70

PLAN YOUR PICNIC, OUTING NOWSpecial Arrangem'ents for School Groups

FOR DETAIIl.S, CALL MANAGER

636-2744 or 999-6984

THf ANCHOR- 5Thurs., May 7, 1970

SwanseaST. LOUIS DE FRANCE

$500Mr & Mrs Normand J. LeComte

$300In Memory of Joseph F. Dufour

$225Rev. Msgr. Arthu.r G. Dupuis

$200Dr. Raymond A. Dionne

$75St. Louis de France Conference

St. Vincent de Paul$50

Mr. & Mrs. Andre CarrierMr. ,& Mrs. Maurice LincourtMr. & Mrs, Pierre PicardMr. & Mrs. Emile CoteHoly Name Society, St. Louis

de France ChurchSte. Anne Sodality, St. Louis

de France Church$30

Mrs. Michael C. KirkhamMr. & Mrs. Armand FrancoeurMr. & Mrs. Albert MichaudMr. & Mrs. Francis LussierMr. & Mrs. Edward Plante

$25Mr. & Mrs. Richard Lucas, Mr.

& Mrs. Herman W. Lapointe Jr.,Mr. & Mrs. Alphonse Mendoza,Mr. & Mrs. William Dickenson,Mr. & Mrs. Roland Goddu

A Friend, The William J. Bou­rassa, Family, Mr. & Mrs AdelardLaRue, Mr. & Mrs. George Le­vesquQ, Mrs. Omer Trudeau

Mr. & Mrs. Emile aoilard, Mr.& Mrs. Roger Dufour, A Friend,Armand Levesque, Mr. & Mrs.Francis McCurdy, Mr. & Mrs.Charles Menard

CORREIA &SONSONE STOP

SHOPPING CENTER

• Television • Grocery• Appliances • Fruniture

104 Allen St., New Bedford

997-9354

Methodists OpposeAbortion .Laws

ST. LOUIS (NC) - Delegatesat a five-day' general conferenceof the United Methodist Churchhere called on state legislaturesto repeal all abortion laws onthe grounds that abortion is apersonal matter between a wo- c

man and her doctor.The Methodist resolution also

called for the removal of legalbarriers to voluntary steriliza­tion and urged church membersto limit their families to twochildren in an effort to protect"the quality of life."

Only a few hours before theMethodist statement was issued,the nation's Catholic bishopscondemned current efforts to re­lax abortion laws around thenation. Speaking at their semi­annual conference in San Fran·cisco, the bishops said that relax-

, ing or eliminating abortion lawswas not a valid way. to dealwith population problems.

Morals &,MannersTo have a respect for our­

selves guides our morals; and tohave a deference for others gov­erns our manners. -Sterne

$25

Anonymo\ls, Anthony Martino,Thomas Eaton, Michael Pat­koske, Eveline Sullivan

Donald Sheehan, Rita Swen­son, Arthur J. Lynch, Anony­mous, Joseph Haddad

'William McDonald, FrancisSheehy, Angelo Lanza, JamesMahon, Doris LeClair

'John J. Shaw, Gertrude E.Tynan, Edward O'Donnell, Jo.seph E. Colgan;, ;.Mrs. Dennis J.O'Connor

William Marnell, Alice A.Brady, Margaret Haley, Mrs.Wendell S. Henderson, WilliamF. Mackin

Raymond" Duffy, Henry J.Healey, William Gagnon, Fran­cis P. Patti, Myles Heffernon

Benjamin Muse Jr., JosepJ'lLawler, James H. Kennedy, Le­roy Baker, John Grimes

Mrs. P. Bennett, William Ban­non, Lawrence Kenney, WilliamF. Erisman, Francis X. Collins

Gerald Bruen, Francis Cloran,Joseph Kenney, Daniel Healy,Bernard Murphy

Joseph H. Jasper, Mrs. Thom- 'as Hague, Edward Robinson,George Milligan, Jeremiah Her-lihy ,

Robert Manchuk, Claire Har­rington, 'Francis R. Murphy,Mrs. Francis McGuerty, PeterMcNamara

George Lucier, George Ma­gurn, Mrs. Lawrence Lippard,B. S. Kenney, John Curley

$30Charles EagerJoseph D. EversGeorge FlanaganRalph Altavilla

Straight StrengthThe more weakness, the more

falsehood; strength goes straight.-Richter

Al LaNinfa

South YarmouthST. PIUS X

$600Rev. Msgr. Christopher L.

Broderick$HOO

Rev. Philip A. DavignonJames H. QuirkAnna MoorhouseJoseph F. MitchellAnonym~us

$75 '-Donald W. ThompsonAnonymous

$60John Coyle

$50William SmithStephen CrowleyRaymond LuddenMrs. Thomas GrewPaul SullivanFlorence HatchThomas M. Hennessey

$35

PRINCIPALS AT MEETING: Bishop Connolly, principal con­celebrant of the convention's Mass; Rev. John R. McCaH. S.J., ofWeston College, guest .speaker; Rev. Msgr. Thoma:; f. Walsh,pastor of St. John's Parish, Attleboro and director of the DiocesanCouncil of Catholic W9men.

. $30Mrs. Vincent R. DorseyR. J. McNallyHelen McGannEdward J. Blain Jr.Eugene Murphy

$26Mr. & Mrs. Saul Strein

$25Edmu,nd F. Bagley, Edward Sy­

nan, Mr. & Mrs James C. Noon~nMrs. Leonard N. Bilodeau, MaryE. Judge

Matthew Murphy, Thomas J.Daly, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Tinsley~Francis J. Kilgrew, Mrs. JamesE. Sullivan. Raymond F. Soares

Mr. & Mrs. James M. Judge,Edward J. Kellev, Robert P. KileyLillian I. Hadad

ArthurF_ Cassidy, Richard A.Mello, Harold Meehan, CharlesE. Demers, Frederick Storch

Louise Coleman, George W.Crombie, Mrs. Douglas E. Chap­man, Norman M. Simmons, Wil·Iiam Moran

Edward Casper, William V.Mahoney Jr.

SomersetST: PATRICK'S

$425Rev. James F. McDermptt

$250Dr. Roger E. Cadieux

$150Dr. Roland E. Chabot

$125HaroldJ. Regan

$100Joseph H. FeitelbergJohn D.~Keegan

$50Mr. & Mrs. David DunneH. Leo CreamerAngelo E. FlynnCarleton D. BoardmanJoseph MatthewsEdward I. Pettine

$40Vincent J. RileyMr. & Mrs. Fernand E. Auclair

& Robert

New BedfordST. HEDWIG

$200 .Franciscan Fathers OFM Conv

$25Helen Podgorski, Mr. & ,Mrs. '

Stanlev J. Szulik, Albert J. DaleyMrs. Elizabeth Patta Family, Mr.& Mrs. John Robak

ST. HYACINTH$200

Rev. Ernest N. Bessette$100

Mr. & Mrs. Gaspard Lafleur$50

Mr. & Mrs. Wilfrid RousseauA Friend

$25Mr. & Mrs. Normand Brassard,

Mr. & Mrs. Leo J. Fournier, CoraGuilmet, Rita Powers

FairhavenSACRED HEARTS

$25Rene Harbeck, Mr.. & Mrs.

Joseph L. Martel, Mr. & Mrs.Raymond Vary, Mr. & Mrs.Leonard Cejka

J. CollinsMr. & Mrs. L. Cushing, Mr. &

Mrs. Armand Goulet: Mr. & Mrs.Francis Walsh, Mr. & Mrs.Ubaldo Nugnes, Mr. & Mrs. Wil­liam Dacey_ Mrs. James Colgan, Mary A.Cardigan, Mr. & Mrs. StanleyMcLean, Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Le­May, Hazel Connor

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Child, Mrs.K. R. Liston, Mr. & Mrs. EdgarLevesque, Anna Dacey, Cather­ine Dacey

Mr. & Mrs. Frank G. Williams,Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Terry

$35John DiogenesWilliam F. Ready

North AttleboroSACRED HEART

$100,Irene Boule & Rose Bourassa

. $50Mr.' & Mrs: John 'Burke

$40Mr. & Mrs. Normand AchinLouis Bardier

$30Dr. & Mrs. Paul Achin

$25Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Achin, Mr.

& Mrs Roland Alix, Henry AubinMr. & Mrs. Ernest Beauregard,Mr. & Mrs. Wilfrid Bourgauit

Aldea Brais, Mr & Mrs CharlesClavette. Mrs. Olive Deschenes,Mr. & Mrs. Albert J. Desilets,Mr. & Mrs. Albert Desilets

Mr. & Mrs. Edward Dion, Mrs.Cedelie Gagnon. Mr. & Mrs.James Hannon, Mr. & Mrs. Nor­

, mand L'Homme, Juliette & Lilli­anne Labrie

In Memory of Rev. J. OmerLussier, Mr. & Mrs. FrancisOuellette, Mr. & Mrs. NounandOuellette. Mr. & Mrs. JosephPaquin. Eva & Florence Rainville

Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Roy

$40Joseph L. Normand

$33Mr. & Mrs. Rene Racine

$31Mr. & Mrs. Roland J. LaBos­

siere$30

Mr. & Mrs. James M. HaworthIn Memory of Alfred A. Lang­

lois$25

Mr. & Mrs. Rodolphe Arcou­ette Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Bar­rette, Leo Bocher, Mr. & Mrs.Gerard Charest, Mr. & Mrs. LeoN. Coons

Mr. & Mrs. Leo G. Gelinas,Mr. & Mrs. Raymond J. LeBlanc,Bella LePage, Mr. & Mrs. DonatLetendre, Mr. &, Mrs. RonaldPimental

Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Sleight& Family, Mr. & Mrs. GerardSurprenant, Louis M. Sylvia, Mr.& Mrs. Willia:n J. Yeary, Mr. &Mrs. James R. White

AttleboroST. MARK'S

$200Rev. Joseph L. Powers

$40Manus Foley

$25Richard Canavan, Grace Fitton

John Rioux, Anonymous

AcushnetST. FRANCIS XAVnER

$50Mr. & Mrs. Arthur H. Gron­

lund

CentervilleOUR LADY OF VICTORY

$200Rev. Raymond W. McCarthy

$100Dr. & Mrs. Austin A. O'Malley'VIr. & Mrs. James MurphyDr. & Mrs. John Curran

$75Mr. & Mrs. Robert DonahueMr. & Mrs. R. Pendergast

$50Mr. & Mrs. Richard GriffinMr. & Mrs. John KilcoyneMr. & Mrs. John LebelHon. & Mrs. Henry L. Murphy

$35Mr. & Mrs. George Reale

$30 'Mrs. Matthew FinnMr. & Mrs. Peter NugnesMiss Kalliope G. GaroufesMr. & Mrs. John MurphyMrs. Graham Scudder

$25Mr. & Mrs. Charles L. Maher,

Mr. & Mrs. John Dean, Mr. &Mrs. Bento Correia, Mr. & Mrs.Wayne James, Mr. & Mrs. Aus­tin O'Blenis '

Mr. & Mrs. Robert Cannon,Mrs. Arthur Linnell, Mr. & Mrs.George A. Smith, William D. P.Murphy, Mrs. Harold Bragle

Dr. & Mrs. John McVey, Mrs.William E. Mullins, Mrs. GeorgeGaroufes, Mr. & Mrs: StephenO'Brien'Sr., Mr. & Mrs. William

BrewsterOUR LADY OF THE CAPE

$250Mrs. James J. Cosgrove

$50Mr. & Mrs. Thomas PerkinsRaymond L. W. BenoitMr. & Mrs. Bernard Rasmusen

$35Mr. & I\1rs. James a,esso ;~..Dr. J. Edmund Bradley

$30Mr, & Mrs. Harry J. CaseyCol. & Mrs. Dean YountHelen Mullen & Mary Nolan

$25Mrs. Marion L. Sullivan, Mar­

garet Blake, Mr. & Mrs. LeslieUsher, Mr, & Mrs. Louis Crock­er, Mr. & Mrs. Fred L. Hewitt

Mr. & Mrs. John F. Herrick,Mr. & Mrs. Walter Dawley; Mr.& Mrs. Joseph Craffey, Mr. &Mrs. Richard Hassett, Mr. &Mrs Frank E. Lajoie

Page 6: 05.07.70

their personal freedom and theirGod-given individuality.

The monster of war and des­truction has become the indes­tructable Frankenstein thatcertainly will destroy all men.

The Vatican Council, in itsPastoral Constitution, told allmen that "blind obedience" cannever be justified-even in war-time. ,

"It is one thing to undertakemilitary action for the just, de­fense of people and somethingelse to seek the subjugation ofother nations." The Council goeson to say: "Nor does the posses­sion of war potential make every,military or political use of itlawful." (Pastoral Constitution n.79)

In the light of the Fathers ofVatican II, in the light of all menwho see the light of freedom, inthe light 9f Him who is thePrince of Peace, may we attemptto dispel the darkness of themilitary complex and expose itsmachinations to the light oftruth and sincerity. ,

The generals certainly havehad their night.

May the American people nowhave their day!

II.' ,,,mllllllumllUlIlllllllllm. ,1I111l1mmmll1Il+ltlllllll1f1ltlllllllllll ""l/1l1IlIlI1/11t'

Happiness nn WorkThe person who studiously

avoids work usually works farharder than the man who pleas­antly confronts it and does it,

, Men who cannot work are nothappy men. -Hubbard

News Media Dut"Continued from Page One

- ing as individual persons andChristians."

Noting that, these modernforms are taking over from thetraditional means of communi­cations such as the home" theschool and the parish, the Popesaid that now they provide newsources of knowledge and cul­ture and that therefore they mustbe directed to "the service ofthe whole of mankind and ofthe whole man."

Unfortunately, he added, thisis not always the case. "We wit­ness young people and children,used as easily secured consumersby an industry that makes itselfits own end, beinlt dragged intothe pitfalls of eroticism and vio­lence or led along the perilouspaths of incertitude, anxiety andanguish," he said., On the other hand, asked thePope: "Who is unaware of theurgency of putting to good ac­count the means of social com·munication with their stirringmodes of address through sound,image, color and movement, tomake of them real modern in­struments for communing amongmen that meas!1re up to the ex­pectations of young people?"

'Remain Passive'While modern communications

are "exceptionally powerful in­struments for the service ofyouth," Pope Paul said, youngpeople must be trained in howto use them and how, to judgeand assimilate what they areseeing and hearing.

"Not much can be achieved,"said the Pope, "if the youngpeople themselves remain pas­sive as though under the spell ofthese powerful attractions, heldcaptive by desire and incapableof self-control." ''LPope Paul ,noted that "millions

of' men -have shared the ,samethrill before the images broughtto them of man's first steps onthe moon."

He asked if the same "deepemotion" could not be shared bymeans of modern communica­tions "before the God of lovewho came down to walk theearth as a man."

truly effects the destiny of theSoviet world is the militarycomplex. .

This phase of Russian life, in "the last 10 years, has become soinfluential that it determinespolitical policy. It seems thatthe Army now truly rules Russia.

But, what is true of the eventsin the Soviet Union is also trueof the entire international scene.

It is the military complex thatcontrols the destiny of peoples!

Why should American peoplethink they are in any differentsituation?

The facts indicate that thepresent destiny of this countryrests in the hands of generals,and the massive industrial com­,plex that they have created forour economic survival.

The people can vote and theCongress can veto but the Pen­tagon goes on its way, un­checked and unchallenged,

Rev. John F. Moore, B.A., M.A., M.Ed.55. Pe~er & Paul, Fall River

themooQlnCj

Night of the·GeneralsThe President,of the United States has ordered American

troops into Cambodia without the consent of Congress orthe real advice from the Senate Foreign Relations Com­mittee. He acted, obviously, as the Commander-in-Chief ofthis country's Arm~d Forces.This action brings into focusa most serious constitutionaland political development.

Could the President have actedotherwise? Has this complexbecome so enormous and power­ful that it is the true govern­ment of· this country? In thenight, have the generals assumedtotal command?

These questions may seemridiculous to many, and, mayeven' seem un-American toothers.

The facts indicate that thequestions are not so foolish orrebellious as they might seemat first. .

A national news weekly, in itslast issue, devoted a great dealof space to, a report relative tothe events of power in Russia. Itconcluded that the one self-sus­taining all-powerful' body that

.. -.

BMcmW U'1fil~ !?'eop!® N@'W []=l]~w® 1f~~~(J' DarBThelibn's share of the national indication of the Pentagon's

budget, for the pas~ .30 years, power.has gone to the w'aror defense It did this without the knowl-effort. ,,; edge, advice, consent or coop-

The, world of simple bombs eration of the' Congress of theand flame throwers has now United States.developed into the complex uni- This force is so influential 'andverse of missiles 'and satellites. so controls the life of AmericaBut, it's the same game! War, that it 'can even ignore basicdeath, destruction and self- ~onstitutional directions, and, Iannihilation. . . am sorry to ,say, get away with

In the night; the general~ ha~e it.assumed control. "

In the ,present hour of conflict, In the riight, the generals havethe expansion of the war, from assumed control.

,; the area 'of Vietnam, to include This obvious trend must beall of Indo China is but, a mere . opposed by free men who love

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., May 7, 1~70!

@rhe AN(HORiI

OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF 'THE DHOClE51E OF FALl. RIVER

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the DioceseClf Fall Riverj, ,410 Highland Avenue _. . -

"Fall River, Mass. C2722 675-7151," PUBLISHER

Most Rev, James L. Connolly, 0 ..0., PhD. 'GENERAL MANAGER -ASST. GENERAL MANAGER

Rev. Msgr. Donie] F.Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. DriscollMANAGING EDITOR'Hugh J. Golden, J.D.

~leary Press~Fall River

A Critical PointThis year's Catholic Charities Appear is off to a good

start. " .' i;,But, at this point, it has also reached a. pe'riod of _cri­

sis. This is the time in, every Appe'al when the' added wotkmust be done-return calls made to those who were notat home, calls to those who may have been overlook~d

in the initial phase of the Appeal. :It is the time, too, when those who are hesitatin1g

about giving to the Appeal must heed the promptings qftheir own hearts and realize that one person and his giftcan make a difference in the life of another. I, ,And every gift, from each person is given with thatin mind. Every dollar given to the Appeal makes a' dif­ference in the life of a child who may be, retarded, irthe life of a confused young person seeking help at asocial agency, in the life of an aged person finding hap,­piness and care in a home for the elderly or chronic sicK,in the life of a person looking to, burn off energy in ayouth program, in the life of a child unwanted or unableto be cared for by his fami'ly. ' ,- I

The, Appeal answers the silent cries for help fromall these, persons. The' facilities aided by the l~ppeal anL

swer the needs of aU these. When less money is given,the needs are that much farther from being realized. Whe~more money is given, expansion to care mote deeply ari<J.for more people is possible. 1

, - I

The final push at this point in the Appeal is neededto make the Appeal more responsive to more needs thatmore people have." !'

6

Month 01 the Elderly i

Among other worthy appellations, May is', also theMonth of the ElderlY.i

It has been said that the civilization of a country 'isindicated by the way it provides for its senicir citize,nsi

, There was a time when older folks continued tore­main a part of their families and lived out their days sur­rounded by children and grandchildren. From them ~he

younger members learned wisd<?m and patience and theart of getting along with ano,ther generation. i

Many older folks like the independence of living apartfrom their married sons and daughters and feel that thisalso gives their children the opportunity to live their ownlives in their own way. .

But for all too long a period of time tl~eir dependertceon fixed and small pensions 'and government checks m~detheir day-to-day lives precarious ones. They lived a mostfrugal existence. Not too much attention was' paid to t'heutilization 'of their skills and abilities, ,'to their recreational. _and social lives.

The past few yearS have seen ari emphasiii on helpihg,older people. It is a good thing. .,. Home for the elderly-and a striking example of this

is seen in the diocesan homes-are not places for peopleto live and die but, rather, places to live with -a minimumof stress and with a maximum' of care. ' i

More facilities and programs for the social and recrea-tional aspects of their lives are being provided. ,I

A boost in government checks is taking a, more real­istic'.view-not much, but a little-of costs that confrohtolder folks when they shop.

A worthy society cares for all its peQple. AJI too lo~gwere. the aged the forgotten ones. At least they are cOqI­ing more into their own. '

Page 7: 05.07.70

DEBROSS OILco.

Heating Oilsand Burners

365 NORTH FRONT STREETNEW BEDFORD

992-5534

Cites Two KindsOf Pollution

ST. PAUL (NC)-University ofNotre Dame president FatherTheodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C.,warned here that America iscreating two kinds of pollutio'1:the atmosphere pollution ofsmokestacks and car exhaustsand the human pollution of racialprejudice.

Speaking at a press conferencegiven before he addressed mem­bers of the Universal NotreDame Club, Eather Hesburghcharged that housing, employ­ment and education inequalitiesare dividing the country into twonations, one black and onewhite.

The priest, chairman of theU.S. Civil Rights Commission,said that a ,combination of lead­ership and "a change of heart"could solve the nation's racialcrisis. He added that he was op­timistic that the country wouldcommit itself to solving theseproblems in the next five years.

In an aside on Catholic edu­cation, Father Hesburgh warnedthat Cahtolic schools should finda gold mine or an oil well. Hea,dded that the exodus of "freeprofessional help, namely nunsand priests," might make theCatholic educational system fi­nancially unworkable even withgovernment subsidies.

THE: ANCHOR- 7Thurs., ,May 7" 1970

Diocese SponsorsHousing Project

SPOKANE (NC) - CatholicCharities, Inc., of the Spokanediocese is sponsoring a thirdapartment complex for low-in­come elderly. Federal financing

'has been approved and construc-tion contracts granted for the$649,000 project of 55 units.

Known as Fahy West Apart­ments, it will adjoin Fahy Gar­dens and Cathedral Plaza, theother projects sponsored by the

. Catholic group. The projects arenamed for Father John F. Fahy,retired pastor of St. Joseph'sparish.

ANDERSON & OLSENINDUSTRIAL and DOMESTIC

HEATING-PIPING' and

AIR CONDITIONINGCON'rRACTORS

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DAUGHTERS OF ST. PAUl-combine 'a life ofprayer and action. Bringers of the Gospe~ Mes­sage to souls everywhere by means of personalcontact: Pauline Missionaries labor in 30 Nations.Members witness to Christ in a unique missio~propagation of the printed Word at God.' TheSisters write. Illustrate. pnnt and bind their ownpublications and diffuse them among people ofall creeds; races and cultures. Young girls. 14-23Interested in this vital MisSion may wri~e to:

REV. MOTHER SUPERIOR50 St. Paul's Ave" Boston. Mass. 02130

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Imperfection ShieldNature has given us pride to

spare us the pain of being con­scious of our imperfections.

-Rochefoucauld

Mary Harvey, Margaret HealeyMr. & Mrs. Lawrence Kavan­

augh, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Kelly,Mr. & Mrs. Thomas F. Kent Jr.,Mr. & Mrs. George Kna9P, Mr..& Mrs. William Lupica

Mr. & Mrs. J. Joseph Lyons,Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Lyons, Mr.& Mrs. William McAndrews, Mr.& Mrs. Charles McCarthy, Dr.& Mrs. James F. McCourt

Mr. & Mrs. Andrew McNa­mara, Mr. & Mrs. Francis Ma­honey, Mr. & Mrs. John Mar­shall, Mr. & Mrs: John Meehan,Mr. & Mrs. John Mello Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. James D. MullenSr., Mr. & Mrs. James D. Mul­len Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J.Murray Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Valen­tine Muscato, Mr. & Mrs. Ste­phen Nolan Sr.

Mr. & Mrs. William O'Con-'nell, ,Mr. & Mrs. MichaelPugliesi, Mr. & Mrs. John Rear­don, Mr. & Mrs. David Read,Mrs. Benedict Scully

Mr. & Mrs. William Simon­son, Mr. & Mrs. Alvaro M. Sou­za, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Stone,Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Wilde, Mr.& Mrs. Fremont Wood

Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Wood,Mr. & Mrs. Robert Wooster

373 New Boston Road

Fall River 678-5677

IDEAL LAUNDRY

North EastonIMMACULATE CONCEPTION

$100The Buckley FamilyVincent L. GalvinKathryn HealeyMr. & Mrs. John B. P,arkes

$50Edward Coughlin' ,Mr. & Mrs. Walter GallagherMr. & Mrs: Albert GiordanoHarvey's MarketJames HealeyMr. & Mrs. Dominic IngemiMr. & Mrs; Joseph A. Palano

" Mary' & Agnes SweeneyDr. & Mrs. Vincent P. Wright

$40Mr. & Mrs. James Simonson

$35Mr. & Mrs. Clement J. Cough­

lin$25

James Abreu, Mr. & Mrs.' Vir­gil Andrews, Mr. & Mrs. LewisAries, Mr. &, Mrs. Alan LeeBlackwell, Mr, & Mrs. JosephBodio

Mr. & Mrs. William Bucht­mann, Carl Chace, ElizabethCoughlin, Mr. & Mrs. John De­Coste, Mr. & Mrs. Charles De­Feo

Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Desmond,Mr. & Mrs. James Doherty, Mr.& Mrs. Michael Goldsmith, Mr.& Mrs. Alfred Gomes, Mr. &Mrs. Raymond Gosselin

Mr: & Mrs. John ,Graca Jr.,Mr: & Mrs. Edward F. ,Guest,Mrs. Michael Harkins; Alice Har­very, Anna, Harvey

Catherine Harvey, Mr. & Mrs.C. J. Harvey Jr., Grace Haryey,

NEW BEDFORD, RIEPRESENTATIVES: Coming from New Bed­ford to the annual convention at Bishop Feehan High, Attleborowere: Mrs. James Hesford~ Mrs. Alphage landreville, Mrs. R.Marcel Roy, and Mrs. Charles H. Weaver.

Guatemala Envoy'sStatus tn Doubt

SAN SALVADOR (NC) - Thepapal envoy in Guatemala maybe asked to leave as an upshotof' his criticism of Guatemalangovernment activity in the kid­nap-murder of a West Germandiplomat. '

According to' reliable reportsreaching here, Archbishop Giro­lamo Prigione, the apostolic nun­cio, may be declared "personanon grata" because of his publiccomments that Guatemalan of­ficials failed to make adequateefforts to save the life of Am­bassador Karl von Spreti.

The German diplomat was kid­naped by guerrillas early in Apriland killed after their attemptsto exchange him for 25 guerrillasheld by authorities failed.

Archbishop Prigione played aprominent mediation role in theefforts, and said at funeral ritesin Guatemala City that vonSpreti's death was "a useless,senseless sacrifice which couldhave been avoided by the good'will and the patience needed forfurther negotiations,"

writing tool at all. Just a littlepeanut butter left on their fin­gers, and they could get smudgeson the ceiling as well as theirhomework. Anyway, if the kiddidn't smudge the work himself,the baby did the job for him.

We reached a deadlock. Sis­ter wanted cartridge pens. I hadhad it. Nothing was declared asregulation, so I went back tosupplying ball-points.

Defeated on one front, Sistermust have' stayed up nightsdreaming of a replacement.

"Sister Says we have to havered pens."

"What on earth for? J justbought a gross of blue pens tolast the whole family for the fullyear." •

"That's okay. We have to havered and blue pens,"

"Why?", "'Cause Sister Says that when

, we do our spelling words in sen­tences, the word has to be un­deriined in red ink-not blue ink,not red pencil, but red ink!"

Knowing the 'difficulty ofkeeping them equipped with anypen at all, I pictured what itwould be now that the problemwas doubled.

"Why don't you tell Sister, 'MvMother Says' .;: .;: .;: on secondthought maybe you'd better not,"

No Crayons

I guess Sister figured she hadme on the run, since I bowedto the red pen dictum withouta protest. Actually, I found thered pen business a riuisance, butweighing It against the possibil·ity of returning to cartridges, itseemed the lesser of two evils.

This afternoon I got the nextsalvo.

"Sister says maps for homework. have to be done in fullcolor, with crayons!"

That did it. J flatly stated,"Tomorrow you will very polite­ly tell Sister your mother said 'she has eight children and justfinished re-decorating the livingroom with white wallpaper. Shehas thrown out every crayon inthe house and the first kid whobrings one in gets murdered!"

Cardinal TisserantVisits Canada, U.S.

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Card­inal Eugene Tisser~nt, 86, French­born dean of the Sacred Collegeof Cardinals, has left Rome fora month-long visit to Canada andthe United States.

The prelate plans to visit anumber of U.S. cities In the per­iod from April 28 to May 19.His Canada stops occur beforeand after the U.S. segment of histrip. .

While in Canada, CardinalTisserant will confer with civicand Church leaders and receivean honorary degree from theUniversity of Laval. As GrandMaster of the Order of the HolySepulchre, he will participate infunctions of that order.

Now Sister brou~ht out herbig gun! "Cartridge pens writeneatly" Sister said; and thenconcluded with a decided dis­taste, "ball point pens smudge."

"Ah ha," J thought, "Littleblobs of ink on papers upsetSister's esthetic sense!"

I said I felt sure my kids couldsmudge anything - given any

Fifth Mark of True 'ChurchUndoubtedly 'Sister Says'

By Mary Carson

Every time one of my kids comes home whining"Sister Says" I feel like screaming. It's not so much thetwo words, as the sing-song inflection, and the absoluteinfallibility, of whatever is to follow. "Sister Says we haveto have cartridge pens."

Sister has never tried towash out the ink that getsall over the sheets when akid changes a cartridge. Whoknows why the cartridge wasbeng exchanged ;::~:::::;,

in bed - bud?:that's how my:'kids do things.Besides, it seemsthat pens are to ilose and for ti,some unknown iIi::::::

~ea:~~~h~~~~~~li::~:!!:~::new car~ridgetpen much (aster~

than they lose~\the old 19c ball-Rpoints. J decided to approachthe probliem calmly and askedSister why it had to be cartridgepens?

Sister explained it was a "di­ocesan regulation. "Her tonesounded as if she considered itpart of Canon Law.

Curious, J asked when thatregulation was put in effect­and if it' was still. She admittedthat it was regulation severalyears ago,' but she didn't knowif it was currently.

Slowed on that front, Sisterstarted a second approach."Using a cartridge pen improvestheir handwriting."

J recalled hearing that argu­ment for stick pens and inkwells. J said J felt the only thingthat improves handwriting is thesudden desire on the part of thechild to' do it! If the kid, reallywants to, he can write beauti­fully scratching with a nail. Mykids can make "chicken-tracks"with an electric typewriter.

I questioned the added cost.Sister explained that they onlycost a dollar or two. J turnedpale, and tried to explain how,because of loss and leakers, itsoon adds up to 15 or 20 dollarsor two.

Sister credited that to thechild's irresponsibility. J knewthat, but it didn't reduce thedrain on my budget.

Big Gun

Page 8: 05.07.70

653 Washing~on Street, Fairhaven994-5058

COUNCIL MEMBERS IFROM CAPE COlD: Miss Kathleen Roche,Harwich; Miss M: Ursula Wing; Buzza~ds Bay; Mrs. James H.Quirk, So. Yarmouth; Mrs. Gilbert J, Noona,n, Falmouth wereamong the \delegates from District No.5.

amous forQUALI'TY and

SERVICE'!

Protestant Organization

Elects Catholic PresidentCASPER (NC~Mrs. Jan Wil­

king, a Catholic" has been.elected president of WyomingChurch Women United, the firstcouncil in the nation· to elect aCatholic woman president of"their state unit. In this officeshe is a member of the NationalBoard of Managers of ChurchWomen United, a primarilyProtestant group.

Mrs. Wilking is immediate pastpresident of the Cheyenne Dioc­esan Council of Catholic Women,past· president of the CasperDeanery Council of CatholicWomen, and former presidentof the Casper Service League.

At present, Mrs. Wilking, themother of four children, serveson the Cheyenne Diocesan Ecu­menical Commission, WyomingCatholic Charities Board, CasperReligious Education Board, andis a member of the Casper Dia-logue Group. .

Pledges to Work ~

For Inte9rotionWASHINGTON (NC) - United'

States Commissioner of Educa­tion James E. Allen promisedhere to work for school integra­tion of alI types whether it is .'based on law (de jure) or oncircumstances (de facto).

Commissioner Allen's pledgecame in the wake of the integra~

tion effort promised by Presi­dent Nixon in a March 24 speech.The President promised his ad­ministration would move to endde jure segregation, but adciedthat it was powerless to stop defacto, segregation usualIy stem-'ming from local residential pat­terns.

Dr. AlIen called on educatorsto step up efforts to achieve

,desegregation and to point out"the harmful effects of segrega­tion on alI our people." Hepromised to "continue to empha­size the educational value of in­tegration and the educational de­privation of' segregation regard­less of cause."

, Although White House spokes­men made no comment on Dr.AlIen's statement, governmentofficals .announced here that thebulk of federal aid to publicschools would be going toschools in the process of desegre­gating.

In areas where de facto segre­A~ation exists, officials added,funds would be devoted to in­tegration efforts and to. bene­fitting racialIy integrated pro­grams.

•••••••••••••••••••••••••

BISAILLON'SGARAGE

24..HoUIf Wrecker Service

LEMIEUXPLUMBiNG & HEATING, INC.Sales and Service '

for Domestic _-.Jl~~nd Industrial~

Oil Burners' --=995-1631

2283 ACUSHNET AVENUENEW BEDFORD

John Korkuc, Mr. & Mrs. JamesMcDonald, Mr. & Mrs. JohnLangwelI, \VIr. & Mrs. CharlesSchultz, Mr. & Mrs. RobertSawyer

,M~ttapoisett'ST. ANTHONY

$475 .Friends of Bishop ConnolIy

,$300Mr. & Mrs. Charles McGowan

, $100Mr. & Mrs. Joseph CollinsMr. & Mrs. William McCarthyEugene PhelanMr. & Mrs. Frank SylviaMr. & Mrs. Clarence Verdi

$75Susan_McGowan

$50Mr. & Mrs. Charles Crowley Jr

$40Dr. & Mrs. Clayton KingMr. & Mrs Timothy J. Manning

$30Mr. & Mrs. Paul Keane

$25Mr. & Mrs. Miguel Brito, Mr.

&' Mrs. Howard Chadwick, Mrs.William Corey, Mrs. TimothyCrowley, Mr. & Mrs. DonaldFleming

Mr. & Mrs. F. McKeone, Mr.& Mrs. Mark McIntyre, Mr., &Mrs. Melvin Miller, Dr. & Mrs.Stanley Mysliwy, Mrs. AgnesPelczar

Mr. & Mrs. William QuinlanJr., Mr. &.Mrs. Ross Steeves

SeekonkMOUNT CARMEL. .

, $500Mr. & Mrs. Lavyrence' Weyker

$150Mr. & Mrs. Fritz Ulmschneider

• $50'Thomas J. BradyMr. & Mrs. Stanley F. YoungJohn HendricksMr. & Mrs. Raymond Corrigan

,Russell F. ThomasMr. & Mrs. Arthur BerrimanMr. & Mrs. Richard Fagan'Mr. & Mrs. Richard YoungMr. & Mrs. Philip Hill

$45Mrs. Louise Oakland

$35Mr. & Mrs. Edwin W. ArnoldMr. & Mrs. Ralph Turner

$31Mr. & M,rs. Robert CarvalhoMr. & Mrs. Robert Lessard

$30,Mr. & Mrs. Raymond KeoughAntonio Ribeiro, Jr.Mr. & Mrs. H. FoleyMr. & Mrs. James LeonardoMr: & Mrs. Augustine Ferrei-

ra '(in memory' of Deb.orah AnnFerreira)"Mr. & Mrs. Myron Perry .

$25 .Mr. & Mrs. Henry Bilodeau,

Helen E. Browning, Mr. & Mrs.Manuel Santos, Mr. & Mrs.James Murphy, Barbara Burns

Mr~ & Mrs. Joseph P. Trojan,Mr. & Mrs. E. McPhiJIips, Mt,.Carmel Women's Guild, EmilyMedeiros, Mrs. Louise FalIon

Joseph Medeiros Jr., Mr: &Mrs. Leon Breault, Mr. & Mrs.Freeman Treacy, Mr. & Mrs.Wilfred Blanchette, Mr. & Mrs.Louis Dupere , ,

Mr. & Mrs. Cosmo D. Miran­do, Dr. & Mrs. Richard Murphy,Frank E. Murphy, Mr. & Mrs.John P. Searles, Mr. & Mrs. Al­fred T. Morris, Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Raul Pereira Jr.,Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Byrne,Mr. & Mrs. Charles Grossman,Mr. &, Mrs. Maurice Holland,Mr. & Mrs. Preston Schultz

Mr.' & Mrs. George Taylor,'.Mr. & Mrs.' Frank Gamboa, jo­seph Amaral, Mr. & Mrs. JosephAnthony, .Mr. & Mrs. Walter

.Gerula , .Mr. & Mrs. John' Unsworth,

Mr. & Mrs. George McGee, Mr.& Mrs. Robert Sloane, Mr. &.Mrs. Robert Kaveny, Mr,,& Mrs.'James Urquhart .

Angela Medeiros, Mr. & Mrs.

Welfare AgendesOpen Membership I

NEW YORK (NCr-The Feder.!ation of Protestant WelfareAgencies has ~ new policy eXlpected to make marked changesin its board of directors mem-Ibership. ;

The federation, which includesl

250 agencies in the New ,York:Metropolitan area, at its annuallm~ting opened board member-Iship to persons Of all religiousfaiths. In addition, the new poHicy will encourage. welfare re-Icipients and others who usualIy,deal with the member' agencies:as beneficiaries of charity andwelfare services to seek posts aslpolicy makers on the ·board.

Board members of the federa-Ition, which has been called the:most inclusive religious charit-

I

'able group in the nation,. tradi­tionaily have' come from topranks .of business, professions:and Protestant church groups.Current president is William F.Treiper, first vice-president, Fed­eral Reserve Bank of New York.

John J. Keppler, federation ex-.' ecutive vicecpresident, said 'the:

new policy would .givE! the ,board Imembers "who will reprelsentthe views of the total commu- inity, including persons of alI re-.ligious" faiths, ethnic and racial 'I

backgrounds, with emphasis onrepresentation by redpients of's~n:,<;es thems_elves,~'

, iTHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thur~;, May, 7,'197\08

Uncertainties' Face Fashion'i

Buyers Ch,oosi,ng Fall.lionel!

Predicts New YorkAbortion Surge

NEW YORK (NC)- A· NewYork City health official pre-,dicted' here that the demand forabortions at the (:ity's hospitalswould be somewhere between20,000 and 100,000 a year afterthe new state abortion law goesinto effect July 1.

City health serviCes adminis­trator Gordon Chase predictedthe rise in. abortion' requests inthe wake of New York's lawallowing abortions within 24weeks of conception with, theconsent of the woman. N,ewYork's law has no age or resi­dency, r.equirements...

:By Marilyn' Roderick

A. fashion buyer's job always seemed e;(citing andadventurous to me but this season I don't think I wouldwant it for an the rice in China.. The dilemma that the~will be facing when they go to market ,to buy their Fall -:',line will be so ov~rwhelming .

sion, especially 'in the small~rthat only prophets need ap- towns where it takes fashion laply. Their problem of course year or two to filter down frotnis that they are going to the larger cities. ,have to project themselves into The hemlines ,still seem to ~e

Fall 1970, place themselves in following the curve of the mar-the shoes of the ket and as the stocks sink lowermillion or so fe- and lower the skirts appear tomales that make be following suit so if the buyerup the feminine could only search in a cryst~lbuying public ball and come up with what's gil-and guess at the ing to happen to the markJtlengths that the then perhaps she could equallychangeable fe- well predict if the longuette jsmale' mind will going to catch'O~.. , Ichoose for Falland Win t e r Some of Eve~ythlng

wearing. As far With it all only time will telias the coat situation is concerned but from every indication fromthe,re will be no question in their the trade papers' and the Newminds~ Below -knee lengths will, York ads the wise buyer wiiInot only 'be accepted but wel- ,probably purchase at least somecorned by thE! vast buying public, minis" some midis' and a, fewespecially those women who face maxis, especially in areas th~t

the..cold New England' Winters., are away from the fashion ceo-A handsome midi coat with ters and especially.in the field of

smart .lQoking boots can't be evening wear: i'beat for a smashing, Winter out-. The daytime clothes appear t9fit. After-five outfits are also be still holding out 'for the lengthenough of popular item in the that at least either grazes th~new longer lengths to be classi- knee or covers the kneecapfied as a safe bet to move off slightly. Now this is a length onethe racks in the Autumn be- could live with for daytime. : Icause the longer lengtl) really" Another way that buyers coul~looks quite 'romantic and fragile beat the skirt dilemma is' toin a floaty fabric with shoes and . ~ake sure they purchase a goodstockings of the same hue. line of skirts and dresses that

, split on the sdies~ front or back'Big Quelltion so that on.e's legs.are,still in view'

HoweVer it's' the everyday yet fa~hio~ is bei.ng served. Iclothes that will pose a' question WhIle I m q~Ite 'aware !hatto those responsible for buying !here are more Important thmgsfor the stores Are the women m the world to worry about thanwho spend so '~any hours of the the len~h skirt we're. going ~~,day hopping in and out of cars be wearIng I must admIt that thISon and off subways and around at th.e moment is th~ topic o~and about the million and one the hps of eyery fashlOn-conscl,other places that are visited by o~s woma~.. ,And these womer!the modern woman going to be WIll be ~altmg, ~agerly to hearcontent with clothes that hamper from the~r faVOrIte buyer wha~this, active way of life? This is ~er reactIon was to the. clothesthe big question and it's certain- m the New York showmgs. IIy going to be the one uppermost I

in the minds of retailers as theyarrive in New York for the Fallshowings.

If they, do. get so' perplexedthat they can't come to any deci­sion on the dress lengths theycan play it completely safe bybuying only pant outfits. Theseare still rising in popularity andit looks as if they will continueto be a much sought after itemespecially if. the battle of the

'hemlines really becomes fierce.Here is an item that a woman

can buy without worrying aboutit being .outdated by next Spring,also it's attractive and comfort­able. Of course pant outfits arestill not suitable for every occa- .

Page 9: 05.07.70

Cut and Wat,er Lawn Often,F,ertilize Fr,equently, Lightly

. ,

Plaza HyannisOsterville

Montie Plumbing &Heating Co.Over '35 Years

of Satisfied ServiceReg. Moster Plumber 7023

JOSEPH RAPOSA, JR.806 NO. MAIN STREET

Fall River 675-7497

Catholic BroadcastersTo Present Awards'

NEW ORLEANS (NC) - TheCatholic Broadcasters Associa­tion at its convention openinghere today will present its an­nual Gabriel Awards to 15 sta­tions, networks and individualsfor outstanding achievement inradio and television broadcast­ing.

The CBA said KFWB, Los An·geles, will receive the radio sta­tion award; WMAQ-TV,. Chicago,the television 'station award, andDr. Everett C. Parker, director,communications office, UnitedChurch of Christ, the award forpersonal achievement.

The 22-year-old CBA is a pro­fessional society of priests, Reli­gious and laity dedicated to ser­vice of the broadcasting commu­nity on local and national levels.

THE, ANCHOR-;- 9Thurs., May 7, 1970

Protest Divorce,'0 Abortion BHls

SAN JUAN (NC)-The Cath­olic archbishop of San Juan is­sued an islandwide call to Cath­olics for a protest to the gov­ernor and the Senate against twobills liberalizing divorce andabortion.

Archbishop Luis Aponte askedCatholics to send telegrams andletters to Gov. Luis A. Ferreand to members of the Senate.

The bills have cleared theHouse of Representatives andnow are pending in the Senate.The divorce bill would permitcharacter incompatibility as acause for divorce while the abor­tion measure would permit abor­tion in cases of "extreme dang­er" to the expectant mother andalso in cases where pregnancyresulted, from rape and incest.

"In a country where in 1968there were 11,RlO marriages,11,902 divorce suits and 9,506divorces granted, we feel thereis no need to open more doorswith new casuals which wouldfacilitate divorces," the arch­bishop said.

The divorce bill is bad enough,but the abortion measure "iseven worse," Archbishop Apontedeclared.

"Here there is a play withhuman life. Here there is an at­tempt to forget about the FifthCommandment, 'Thou shalt notkill.' For a mother not to sufferthe consequences of an unwant­.ed birth, it becomes necessaryto kill an innocent fetus-thisessentially is what the abortionbill means," the archbishop said.

Oak Bluffs

NEW HIGHER RATES! *7~% Term Deposit Certificates-$IOO,OOO or more6% Term Deposit Certificates - Two years5% % Term Deposit Certificates - One year5~%- 90-Day Notice5~% -.Systematic Savings5~% - Regular Savings5% - Daily Interest

.:0 Dividends payable quarterly

BASS RIVER- SAVINGS BANK'BANK BY MAIL

we pay the postageYarmouth Yarmouth Shopping

Dennis PortSouth

A Friend

SACRED HEAR1l'

$125Mr. & Mrs. Henry Corey

$100Rev. Francis M. CoadyA Friend '

$50Holy Name SocietySacred Heart GuildSt. Vincent de Paul SocietyA Friend

$40Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Metell

$35

$25John Camacho, Mrs. Albert

Sequeira, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas De­Mont, Mr. & Mrs. Edmund Ber­nard, Anonymous (2) .

Mr. & Mrs. Peter Regan

Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Constant,Mr. & Mrs: N. Karukas, Mr. &Mrs. George Soutiere, Mr. &Mrs. Donald H. Chase, HarrietButler

Mrs. Gregory Cureghian, Mr.& Mrs. Thomas Kenneally, Mr.& Mrs. William Fratus, RobertJameson, Mr. & Mrs. John Forte

Mr. & Mrs. John McKeon,Paul Corazzari, Mr. & Mrs.Adolphe ,0. Richards, Mrs.Charles Swift, Mrs. KatherineLycett

Mr. & Mrs. Cliffford White,Mr. & Mrs. Frank Marshall, Dr.& Mrs. James Dunne, Mr. &Mrs. Gerald J. Hayes" Mr. &Mrs. Gerard Robichaud

Mrs. John Campion, Mr. &Mrs. John Mitchell

Now Many Wear

FALSETEETH'With More Comfort

To help relieve discomfort whendentures slip down and come loose,just sprinkle FASTEETH on yourplates, FASTEETH holds denturesfirmer longer. You can bite harder,eat faster, feel more comfortable.FASTEETH Is alkaline-won't sour.Dentures that fit are essential tohealth. See your dentist regularly.Get FASTEETH at all drui cpunters,

TAUNTONIAI'I~SAT CONCLAVE: Five members of the TauntonDistrict of the Council of Catholic Women pause as they areabout to attend one of the convention workshops. Mrs. JohnBrody, Taunton; Mrs. James E. Williams, No. Dighton; Miss.Adrienne lemieux, Taunton; Mrs. Aristides Andrade, Taunton;Mrs. Richard Poulson, Taunton.

HyannisST. FRANCIS XAVIER

$400Rev. Msgr. William D. Thom­

son$100

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph MartinMary R. FarrellDr. & Mrs. Francis O'Neil

$50Edward L. BennettJohn R. ReyburnEdward DeveneyMr. & Mrs. Harry VarnunMr. & Mrs. Earl FratusThomas M. GoldenCharles RiordonBishop William Tyler, Knights

of Columbus, Fourth Degree$40

Eleanore Resmini$35

Mr. & Mrs. Daniel FranciscoMr. '& Mrs. Paul BresnahanMr. & Mrs. Irving Morrissey

$30Mr. & Mrs. Joseph L. Cairns

Jr.J. R. QueeneyMr. & Mrs. Robert Flinn

$26Mary A. McGarry

$25Mrs. William Connolly, Mr. &

Mrs. Edward Kelly, Mr. & Mrs.Thomas C. McGarry, Mr. & Mrs.Marshall Field, Mr. & Mrs. Al­bert Trocchi

Marian Bennett, Mr. & Mrs.Thomas Loughlin, Mr. & Mrs.Alfred McKenna, Michael Caf­frey, Mrs. Alfred Junior

Mr. & Mrs. John Sheehan,Mrs. George T. Conn~1I & AliceConnell, Mrs. Wayland P. Mors,Mr. & Mrs. Robert Ryan, Mr. &Mrs. Emerson Snow

Mr. & Mrs. Charles Flynn,Mrs. Cecelia Haskins, Mr. &Mrs. Louis Frangione, Mrs.Anna F. Vetorino, Mrs. DorothyM. Boons.

Not Much Choice

Chocolate Pudding with OwnSauce

1,4 cup butter or margarineY2 teaspoon salt1 teaspoon cinnamon% cup sugar3 ounces of semi-sweet choco-

late (three squares) .1 cup sifted flour2 teaspoons baking powderY2 teaspoon soda2/3 cup milkY2 cup' nuts, chopped

, 2/3 cup sugar2 cups waterVB teaspoon salt.1) Combine the butter,. salt,

cinnamon and % cup of sugar....and cream well. Meanwhile meltin the top of the double boilerover hot -water the semi-sweetchocolate. When mixture iscreamed add about 2/3 of themelted chocolate and blend thisinto' the creamed mixture.

2) Sift together the flour, bak­ing powder. and soda and addalternately to the creamed mix­ture with the milk. Stirring wellafter each addition. When well­mixed add the nuts.

3) In a saucepan mix the re­maining melted chocolate, the2/3 cup of sugar, the two cupsof water and the salt. Bring toa boil, stirring constantly.

4) Pour this liquid mixture in­to a greased baking dish (I useda bowl, into the liquid. At thispoint you'll be ready to throwyour hands up in disgust it lookslike such a mess but time. andbaking will cure all.. 5) Bake in a 3500 oven for 45minutes. Serve with whippedcream or vanilla ice cream.

By weekend the rhubarb willhave come through enough to

'cut the tenderest shoots andmake a rhubarb pie, the peartree will be in bloom outsideour living room window and thewonders of Spring will confrontus more and more each day.

There certainly doesn't' seemto be much choice between dis­posable towels and the beautyof nature but if this trash-canoriented world doesn't wake upthis may be just the type ofchoice that we are forced tomake, idiotic as it may seem atthis writing. And while I am aslazy as the next woma'n, thethought of living without thewonders of nature could easilywake me out of my lethargy andinto action.

If chocolate pudding (or any­thing chocolate, for that matter)is your weakness, then you'lllove this very unusual chocolatedessert.

Maternal VirtuesSome mothers need happy

children; others need unhappyones - otherwise they cannotprove their maternal virtues.

-Nietzsche

I)mall Stages

Another trick that I havefound useful is to fertilize insmall amounts once a monththroughout the season. ,Thiskeeps the lawn green and yetdoes not result in over-feeding.I usually cut the suggestedamOunt on the fertilizer bag bya quarter so that the sameamount of fertilizer is spread onthe lawn for the whole Summerin small stages rather than inone spreading.. ,h

The last ingredient in myrecipe for a healthy and care­free lawn is the application ofsufficient water each week be­ginning in the Spring and car­ried through the Summer months.Every lawn book' suggests aninch of water per week and thisis just about what I stick to.This does keep the lawn greenmost of the Summer.

I usually give the grass onegood watering per week or twoat the most. I have found thatlight sprinklings are useless andalthough they serve to cool thegardener, they serve very littlepurpose otherwise. Two heavysprinklings will allow the waterto seep down into the soil andkeep the roots of the plantsmoist and cool.

As the Summer and hotweather approach I usually raisethe cutters on the mower so thatthe length of the grass increases,thereby keeping its roots frombeing desiccated by the hot sun.

The rules in a nutshell: cutoften, water heavily, fertilize fre­quently but lightly and growweary with satisfaction.

In the Kitchen

1\ political cartoon in thismorning's paper showed atroubled couple asking one an·other whether they would bewilling to give up such creaturecomforts as disposable bottles,towels and containers in orderto save our environment,

What the cartoonist evidentlymeant to convey was that mod­ern man and woman are moreconcerned with convenience thanwith preserving the world for

By Joseph and Marilyn Roderick

The new gardening season has begun; ,I cut the frontlawn this week. Out came the lawn mower, it was givenits semi-annual oiling, plugged into its socket, and awaywe went. This starts a cycle which continues until late inOctober and which becomes \a greater and greater chore future generations. While a cal-

lous attitude toward all the talkwith each passing week until on environment may be evidentwe look forWard to putting oh the part of some I'm surethe machnie away for the Win- once most people realize theter. seriousness of the situation and

I still believe there is only once they are told specific thingsone way to beat the weary job they themselves can do to helpof mowing the lawn and that keep earth a decent place tois to cut it every five days dur- live that they, will cooperate.ing the Spring and early Sum- No time of the year conveysmer, thus avoiding the chore of to us the beauty of nature bet­having to rake. ter than Spring and perhaps we

Raking is one job I abhor. should give a bit of thoughtIt is time-consuming and far to what Spring would be likemore energy-consuming than without fresh, invigorating airmowing. By cutting often one to breathe, bright green shootsnegates the need to rake since growing out of the fertile earththe close-cropped grass acts as and the miracle of the return­a beneficial mulch and actually ing birds.serves to fertilize and enrich thelawn. Long clippings, on the oth­er hand, must be raked out sincethey smother the lawn and intheir decomposition steal itsvital nitrogen.

Page 10: 05.07.70

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., May 7, 1~70, I

Left, Anita Ferreira and Janice Wilbur, seated, cho~se books, aided by Rev.Thomas Mayhew, curate, and Miss Helen Donnelly, librarian.

$30

Mr. & Mrs. Edward Guillette,A Friend

Mr. & Mrs. Clifford TitusMr. & Mrs. Charles BellavanceMr. & Mrs. Giles Dognazzi

$25

Mrs. A. Roach, Mr. & Mrs. Ed­ward 'Kane, Mr. & Mrs. WilliamMurray, Mr. &Mr~. William Sul­livan, Mr. & Mrs. Lee Kingsbury

A Friend, Joseph Hinchey, Mr.& Mrs. Kenneth Kingsbury, AFriend, l\1i1dred Hanl)on

Mr. &"1Mrs Mathew PiccoliminiMr. & Mrs. Malcolm Fales, Mr.& Mrs. Joseph Murphy, Mr. &Mrs. Arthur Babine, Mr. & Mrs.Ellwyn Atwell

Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Kuplast,A Friend (2), Mr. & Mrs. James

. Bachman, Mr. & Mrs. John Kin­sley, Mrs. Emma Pascucci

Mr. & Mrs. Roland Clement,Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Corliss, Mr. &Mrs. Clarence Leonard

aHappyMother's'

•• UII1-m ••'n

Day!"

M'ansfieldST. MARY'S

$508Eugene R.' Farrell

$150Atty. ~ Mrs. Robert Currivan

$100The Darmedy Family

$50Mr. & Mrs. Orlando D. SouzaMr. & Mrs. William Morton .Mr. & Mrs. Karl ClemmeyDr. & Mrs. ,Raymond OckertDr. & Mrs. Philip SibiliaA Friend

Bouchard, Mr. & Mrs. ArthurGlode

Mrs. Manlio Frova, Mr. & Mrs.Orner Martel, Mr. & Mrs. GerardVachon, Mr. & Mrs. John Keane,Mr. ,& Mrs.' Robert Biziak

Mr. & Mrs. Roger Bussiere,Mr. & Mrs. Harvey Rousseau,Mr. & Mrs. Clifford Wallace, Mr.& Mrs, Joseph Lamoureux

$30'Mr. & Mrs. Louis LacivitaMr. & Mrs. Gerard Lefrancois'Mr. & Mrs. Anthony MoskalskiMr. & Mrs. Walter Delude

$25Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Cotter, Mr.

& Mrs. William Sharples, Mr. &Mrs. Joseph Hebert, Mr. & Mrs.Louis Desmarais, Mr. & Mrs.William Lynch .

Mr. & Mrs. Horace Courcy,Mrs. Irene Pitas, Mr. & Mrs.James Mann, Mr. & Mrs. EderitoFachada, Mr. & Mrs. Oscar Bour·gette

Mr. & Mrs. Elmer Butler, Mr.& Mrs. Robert Cournoyer, Mr. &'Mrs. Edward Duclos, Mr. & Mrs.Leonel Mandeville, Mrs. PaulBeausoleil

Mr. ,& Mrs. Norman St. Ger-:main, Mr. & Mrs Richard MurrayMr. & Mrs. John Kenny, Francois

AttleboroST. THERESA

$400Rev. Msgr. Gerard J. Chabot

$100Mr. &' Mrs. Leo Lachance IMr. & Mrs. Raymond Grav~1

$65 f·Mr. & Mrs. Vincent AndreWS

" $60' I,Mr. ,& Mrs. Richard Collett~ -

$50 'Mrs. Phillip Morris &

I'Ileave yo~Mom

, i

'.

Mr. &Family

Mrs. Mary GradyMr. & Mrs. Domenic BerardIMrs. Paul Bradley iMr. & Mrs. Gerald KeaneMrs. Joseph Lunderville

$125

ST. LAWRENCE

$175A Friend

I'

NORTH DIGHTON LIBRARY: Among parishes boasting d flourishing libraryis St. Joseph's, North Dighton. Msgr. Bernard J. Fenton, pastor, ,welcomes Mr.and Mrs. Berna'rd Hyland to reading area, right. Center, general vi,ew of facilities.

, r, 'New Bedford 'George ?liv.er, Mr. & Mrs.' $40

George 0 NeIll Mr. & Mrs. John PlathMr. & 'Mrs. Francis Smith, Mr. & Mrs. Norman Carrier

Margaret E. Sullivan, Mr. & 1\1rs. Mr. & Mrs. Joseph IwucJohn F. Treadup, Mr. & Mrs.Edward Tynan, :

A FriendMr. & Mrs. Maurice DowneyMr. & Mrs. John Dunn

$100 •Rev. William F. O'ConnellRev. Justin J. QuinnMr. & Mrs. James McHugh

$75- In Memory of Walter Collopy

Dr. & Mrs. Robert DurantMr. & Mrs. John D. Kenney

$53The Jos. A. Burke Family

$50 \Mr. & Mrs. Alan J. CampbellMarie T. MahoneyDr. & Mrs. John McGonigleMr. James J. O'Brien Jr.

$45Monica & Constance Zygiel

$40Anna Driscoll

$35Mr. & Mrs. Patrick DavisMr. & Mrs. Charles PhelanMr. & Mrs. Robert Tweedie 'Mrs. Mary C. Winterson

. $30Mr. & Mrs. Joseph HasseyMr. & Mrs. James 'KearneyMr. & Mrs. Edward McIntyreMr. & Mrs. Alexander Phillips

$28Mr. & Mrs. Charles Burke

$27Mrs. Florence Brower

$25Mr. & Mrs. David Bancroft,

Mrs. George Breen, Almyra &Dorothea Brennan, Frances A.

. Burke, Mr. & Mrs. Harold. Car­penter

Mary F. Carroll, A Friend, Dr.& Mrs. A. B. Crowe, Laura Cul­hane, Mrs. Mathew Curran '

Helen Driscoll, Mr. & Mrs. Ed-'ward, J. Duffy, James Durant,Mrs. John Finni, Mrs. ThomasFoye

Edward H. Gagnon, Mrs.James A. Galligan, Mr. & Mrs.Owen Hackett, Mr. & Mrs. Ed­mund Harrington, Mrs. Cather­hie Hayes

Mr. & Mrs. Jack Hendricks,Mr. & Mrs. William Kasper, Mrs.Anthony S. King, Mr. & Mrs.Arthur Kirkwood, A Friend

In Memory of Francis C. Ma­honey, Mr. & Mrs. Paul Malone,Mrs. Bernard Murphy, James F.Murray, Mary McCusker

Mr. & Mrs. Paul McGowan,Veronica O'Brien, Mr. & Mrs.Clarence Oliver, Mr. & Mrs.

Page 11: 05.07.70

§!IIIIIII11111111111111 III III 111111 III IIII III 11111111111 III 11111111111 111111111111111 111111111 1111111 111111 111111 III 1111 III 1111111 III 1111 III~

= =E E§ Color Process Year Books §

= =

I :::rican Pres;:oc~:e~. II 0 F F SET - PRINTERS - LETTERPRESS !== 1-17 COFFIN AVENUE Phone 997-9421 §

1""""'"""""""'""111"111111""1111:::111::::::::111:::::""""111""111"111""""111111111111111

PRIEST IN !LAOS: Father Matt J. Menger talks with a lao soldier wounded in battle of SamThong. The soldier is explaining to Father Menger how the Communists captured a vital outpost.

...

11

BLUE RIBBONLAUNDRY

273 CENTRAL AVE.

992-6216

NEW BEDFORD

Honor Dr. PealeNEW YORK (NC)-More than

1,500 persons here honored Dr.Norman Vincent Peale's contri­butions to the fields of religionand mental health. Pastor ofNew York's Marble CollegiateChurch and founder of the Amer­ican Foundation of Religion andPsychiatry, Dr. Peale has beenclosely linked with PresidentNixon and the first family.

ST. KILIAN$225

St. Vincent de 'Paul of St. Kil­ian's Parish\

New BedfordSACRED HEART

$100Anonymous

$45Mr. & Mrs. Omer Tardi

$30Mr. & Mrs. Arthur DechenesMr. & Mrs. Paul LariviereMr. & Mrs. Paul Letourneau

$25Mrs. Herve Bedard, Mr. &

Mrs. John Bellefeuille, Mr. &Mrs. Roger Menard

$75Rev. John J. Steakem

$50In Memory of Milton T. ,Weav-

erCatherine FinnellLouise FinnellHervey Caron

$30Mary AugeriSt. Kililan's Couples ClubGeorge Ferreira

$26Albert Leeming

$25Theodore Galipeau, Patricia

'Mello, Alfred Languirand, JosephMasse, Joseph Bernier, ArthurLemos..

$300Rev. William E. Collard

$75Rev. Ernest E. Blais

$105Louis Fleury

$50Anonymous

.$35Albert Caron

$27.25Laurier R. Dumas

$25Ronald Silveria, Laurent Par­

ent, Theodore Frechette, RolandDumas, Adrien Angers.

Antonio Lemieux, LaurierMarcoux

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., May 7, 1970

back". and an American rabbistating that many Jews "willwelcome the general atmosphereof liberalization."

The Rev. Dr. Eugene CarsonBlake, general secretary of theWorld Council of Churches, saidin Geneva:

"This new statement 'is to bewelcomed, although it does notgo as far as many had hoped.Fundamental issues remain un­solved.

"For this reason, the problemsof mixed marriages and espec­cially of the nature of Christianeducation will remain on theagenda of .the ecumenical-debate.Perhaps this discussion will makepossible further progress beforeany final regulation will be in­cluded in the new canon law."

'Small Step'The Rev. Dr. -Fredrik A. Schiotz

of Minneapolis, president of the2.6 million member AmericanLutheran Church, called thedocument "a small step on theway to the Christian freedomwhich allows the individual be­liever to exercise this veryimportant and personal decisionof faith."

Archbishop lakovos, GreekOrthodox archbishop of Northand South America, said: "I ex­press my gratification over thetrue Christian liberal statementon mixed marriages. I hope thatall Christian churches adjusttheir thinking on mixed mar­riages in the same spirit. Iconsider the document an invita­tion to all of us clergymen tothink of ways of contributing tothe solution of the perplexedproblem we face in the matter ofmixed marriages."

M,arriage NormsL·eaders See Progress

Eva MorawskiMarjorie SheaMr. & Mrs. Edward McCroryMrs. Maude McCabe .John Bevilaqua Jr.Mrs. Gertrude M. CassidyMr. & Mrs. John Stapleton

$40Marie Scanlon

$35Mr. &, Mrs. Fred Thorpe

$30Joseph PetroneMr. & Mrs. Clement SharonMr. & Mrs. John BolingenMr. & Mrs. William Woloshyn

$25Mrs. Joseph Sheals, Mr. &

Mrs. Emil Plante, Mr. & Mrs.Willis Gunning, Mrs. EdmundWelch, Mr. & Mrs. John Collins

Mr. & Mrs. William Corrigan,Mary Kennedy, Mr. & Mrs.Michael O'Rourke, Mr. & Mrs.James Diamond, Mr. & Mrs'.Harry McCarthy

Mr. & Mrs. Francis Considine,Mrs. -Anne Feeney, Mr. & Mrs.Albert Rose Jr~, Mr. & Mrs.Stanley McMahon, Mrs. DavidRobinson

Mr. & Mrs. Roland Chabot,Mr. & Mrs. James Philiriger, Mr.& Mrs. Thomas Brennan, Alice& Gertrude Littlefield, Mr. &Mrs. Francis X. Reilly

Mr. & Mrs. Paul Hinski, Mr.& Mrs. John Magnani, Mr. &Mrs. James McCarthy, A Friend, .Mr. & 'Mrs. James Cullen

Mr. & Mrs. John Ahearn, Mr.& Mrs. Richard Forbes, A Friend,Mr. & Mrs. Robert Gilmore, AFriend

Mr. & Mrs. Gerard Michaud,Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Buckley, Mr.& Mrs. Walter Earchol, Mr. &Mrs. James Murray, James Mul­lin

Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Donley,Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Blanchard

uniformity in a particular areaor region. This is especially im~

portant in regards to the pos­sible arrangements for the pre­siding priest or minister whois to officially witness the ad­ministration of the Sacramentof Marriage.

'Going Back'Comments ranged from a Meth­

odist bishop's rejoicing that theCatholic Church is "moving inthe right direction" to an Ortho­dox leader in India saying thedocument was "a definite going

React to New MixedMost Non-Catholic

North AttleboroST. MARY

$1000Mr. & Mrs. J.ohn Smith

$125Margaret & Mary Kinton

$100Mrs. James P. ReynoldsMr. & Mrs. Henry Beach Jr.

$60Mr. & Mrs. Edward CooganMr. & Mrs. Francis Murphy

$50Mr. & Mrs. John Donley

\.

Schedules ProgramOf Clinical Training

MILWAUKEE (NC) - Third­year seminarians at Milwaukee'sSt. Francis Seminary will begina program of clinical training forthe apostolate next year.

Seminary rector Msgr. Wil­liam N. Schuit said that 15 sem­inarians would study in hospitalsand other· institutions across thecountry where they will learnpastoral skills under the super­vision of experts.

Explaining the new program,Msgr. Schuit commented "To­day's unique challenges in pas­toral ministry require an inte­grated theological educationwhich somehow bridges the gapbetween the practical and theacademic, the technical and thescholarly."

Continued from Page Oneproprio, or apostolic letter issuedon his own initiative, contained17 norms which give diocesa,nbishops much of the power theVatican used to have in decidingpossible options on where andhow a marriage ceremony be­tween a Catholic and a non­Catholic can take place. Thenorms go into effect Oct. 1.

Among other things, they putthe entire burden for the raisingof Catholic children upon theCatholic partner and no longerinsist on a promise from the non­Catholic. Marriage 'is also madepossible before a non-Catholicminister in a non-Catholic churchand, in some cases, in a publicplace other than a house ofworship.

The papal norms ask thatConferences of Bishops meet anddiscuss these new proposals.There should be some kind of

Number of Sistell'sDeclines in France

PARIS (NC)-Shortage of vo­cations and attrition by agingare shrinking the number of Sis­ters in France.

•The country now has 111,960Sisters in about 11,000 housesconducted. by 400 congregations.In 1945 France had 117,300 Sis­ters.

According to a survey by theUnion of Major Superiors in co­operation with the French bish­ops, the number will drop fur­ther, to about 90,900' in 1975and 83,100 in 1980. The voca­tion decline began as far backas 1935, and now shows up ina disproportionate number ofSisters in the over-50 agebracket.

About three-quarters of FrenchSisters are engaged in profes­sional duties. There are 370 con­vents of contemplative nuns inFrance at this time.,

DIrectly to ParentsThe Cahill administration has

not yet submitted enabling legis­lation spelling out school aidprograms. Clouding the situationis the Catholic agitatioh for tliepassage of the so-called VanderPlaat bill, a measure whose con­cept the governor backed duringhis November election campaign;introduction of other school-aidlegislation in the state Senate,and a recent Superior Court de­cision upsetting the state's 1968fair busing law.

The Vander Plaat measurewould distribute aid directly toparents on the same basis thatper-pupil assistance is now pro­vided to public school districts.Its estimated cost is $90 million.

New legislation introduced bySen. William V. Musto of Hud­son County calls for payment toparents of $50 for each child en­rolled in a nonpublic school, theamount rising to $100 after thefirst year. Its estimated first­year cost is $15 million, and $30million annually thereafter.

Bishops AssertSchool Aid PlanToo Small

TRENTON (NC) - TheNew Jersey Conference ofCatholic Bishops, in a state­ment issued here, describedGov. William T. Cahill's propos­als for aiding nonpublic schools"distressingly small in view ofthe overwhelming needs."

Gov. Cahill, in a mid-Aprilspecial message to the legisla­ture, proposed a $9.5 million ex­penditure to help ease finanCialproblems facing private schools.He warned that closing' of pri­vate schools would have seriousconsequences for the state's pub­lic school system.

That warning was repeated inthe bishops' statement. Afternoting that parochial schoolsnow educate one of every fivestudents in the state, the bish­ops said: "Each of us faces ag­onizing decisions, within themonths ahead, as to the alloca­tion .of funds, assets and per­sonnel to meet the needs of ourschool systems."

If assistance is not forthcom­ing, they indicated, it is possiblethat the. percentage of childreneducated in parochial schoolsmight drop to one in six, seven,or even less.

"Those who oppose aid to non­public schools on fiscal groundsmust explain the obviously great­er burdens the taxpayer must as­sume if such schools have toclose, or even if their atte~dancehas to be curtailed," the bishopssaid.

Page 12: 05.07.70

c,o,

$25

Mr. & Mrs. Martin P. Barry,Mrs. Catherine Carney, Mr. &Mrs. Richard, Cole, Mr. & Mrs.Richard Cole, Mr. & Mrs. ReneCote, Mr. & Mrs. William Dem­sky.

Mr. & MrS'. Eric Erickson, Mr.& Mrs.' Charles Farrell, Mr. &Mrs. James Flanagan, JosephFoley & Julia Foley,. Mr. & Mrs;Peter Giammalvo.

Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence HarneySr., Mr. & Mrs. James Harring­ton, Mr. & Mrs: Paul Johnson,Mr. & Mrs. James Leith, Mr. &Mrs. Edwin Livingstone Sr.

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas McEntee,Mr. & Mrs. Paul McManus, Mr.& Mrs. Thomas Poulos, Mr. &Mrs. Mark Sevigney Mr. & Mrs.Edward L. Smith Jr., Mr. & Mrs.Francis Sullivan

FEELGODD'TDDAY

NEAR EASTMISSIONSTERENCE CARDINAL COOKE, PresidentMSGR. JOHN G. NOLAN, National SecretaryWrite: CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE Assoc.330 Madison Avenue' New York, N.Y. 10017Telephone: 212/YUkon 6·5840

'0 Your stringless gifts in any amount ($5,000,$1,000, $500, $100, $50, $25, $10, $5, $2)will help, t~e neediest wherever th!!y are - inIndia and the Holy Land, for instance.

o Only you can make your will-and do it thisweek to be sure the poor will have your helpeven after you're gone: Our legal title: CATHOLICNEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION. Also, our priestswill offer promptly the Masses you provide for.

===:,='55

~o _

BABIESNEED

YOU

o Only $8.50 gives our priests and Sisters inLEPERS Shertallay, south Indi,a, enough Dapsone 'mir­

acle' tabiets for 43 lepers for a year!

o F~r only $2.50 a week ($10 a month, $120 ayear) you can make sure that an abandonedbaby has food, clothing, a blanket and love.We'll send you a photo of the baby you 'adopt',tell you something about him (or her), and askthe Sister-in-charge to keep you informed.

THINKOF

YOURSELF,TOO

MEETMISSiON

EMERGENCIES

E»Dear ENCLOSED, PLEASE FIND $ _

Monsignor ~olan: FORi _

Please NAME: _return coupon

with your' STREET _offering

THE CATHOLIC NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSOCIATION

CITY__..,...- STATE__ZIP CODE _

..., ....

This column's happiest readers are the men,women and children who know they're needed.The days we're busiest helping others are thehappiest days of our lives. '... Who needs you'most? Surprisingly, God needs you - for iri·stance, to help an abandoned orphan become

- a ·God.loving, res'ponsible adult. Lepers needyou (there are still 15·million lepers in theworld), blind children need you, and so do we"•.•-Here in New York we are your agent~, telling

SOMETi'lI: you wh.ere the Holy Father says your help isneeded, and channeling your help promptly and

MEANINGFUL safely to the people in need.•.. Want to' feelWHILE good. right now? Do without something you want

... - ,Y9U'~E but 'do not need,' ahdsend ',the money instead" STILL for one of the needs below. You'll feal good,

ALIVE especially if your gift is big enough to mean, a' sacrifice to you. This is your chance to do

something meaningful for the world - it's God'sworld - while you're still alive.

THE HOLY FATHER'S MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL CHURCH

,-HOLY NAME

$275Mayor George Rogers

$125Rev. Lucio B. Phillipino

$100Lillian ColeMary Cole.

$50Mr. & Mrs. Joseph MarshallJoan Sheehan

'$37.52In memory of Clarence L. Mar­

shall$35

Annie Adams in memory ofMary, Lillian and Ali~e Adams

Mrs. John V.' O'Neil,$30

Mr. & Mrs. Charles BramwellMr. & Mrs. Joseph FinnertyHelen McIntyre

New Bedford,

WEARShoes That Fit

"THE FAMILY SHOE STORE"

John'sShoe, Store43 'FOURTH STREET

Fall River OS 8-5811

Profit & LossWhere profit is, loss is, hidden

near by. --Fagan

New Bedford ''''ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST

$150Rev. Manuel P. Ferreira

, $80Rev. John J. OliveiraRev. Joachim F. DaSilva, C.M.

$55 'Mr. &' Mrs. Joseph S. Vera

$50Rev. Msgr. John A. SilviaFriends (2)

$37 "Mrs. Manuel Almeida & Son'

$35 ', A 'Frienq,

Mr. & Mrs: Arthur Fre,dette,$30 ,

Mr. & Mrs. Frank E. ParsonsMr. '& Mrs. Thomas P; BarryMr. & Mrs. Joseph Ferreira Jr.Mr. & Mrs. Fern'ando Tavares

. $25Mr. & Mrs. George Alexander,

Mr. & Mrs. Harold' Carpenter,Mr. & Mrs. Frank Edwards, Mr.& Mrs. Joseph Ferreira, Mr. &Mrs. James Gaffn,ey ,

Mr. & Mrs. Jerome Grota, Mr.& Mrs, Roger' Lanteigne, Mr. &Mrs. 'Frank M. Martin, Mr. &Mrs. Joseph C. Motta,' Mr. &Mrs. Manuel Neves

A Friend, Schmi<it Mfg. Co.,Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Souza, Mrs.Eva L. Sylvia

i

'. ' ITHE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., ''/lay 7, 197

1

°12

Closes OffiCeWASHINGTON (NC) - The

Vietnam Moratorium Committee,sponsor of the last Novemberpeace demonstration, announcedit -is closing down its nationaloffice here to try out new anti­war activities on the 10ci:11 level.

,Members of the committee'sleadership said lack of funds, thepollution issue and peace activ­ists' ,renewed involvement inlocal political campaigns' hasmade, the national organizationposse.

Says International GroupslShould Channel 'World Aid :

By Barbara Ward I

The two recent reports on development assistance+the Pearson Report drafted by an international commis­sion, the Peterson Report by a Presidential task force+both share one very strong conviction. This it that moreof the funds and the techni- " I

. 'd' f of a frontier of virtue and thencal assIstance set aSI e or defining "goodies" and "baddie~"

'world development should according to, a U. N. vote or :abe channelled through inter- treaty or a concession: '. :.national agencies. The Pearson The concept ofspeclal fnends

, Report suggests that 20 per cent and special relationships is gi~-of all aid should ing ground to som~thing ~lse-:-should be inter- the realization that in a singlenationalized.The " planetary system which. ~~-Peterson Report braces .everyo~e ,- caplta~ls~,is less specific commumst,. whlte, ,black,. nCR,but argues that poor-there are pr?found' ~mba!-Ameriea should ances and obstructlOns whlch, ~f

very drastically uncorrec~ed, . could preci.p~ta:~ereduce Its direct planet-wlde v1.01ence and dlsmtEf-

, . "bilateral" aid . gration. !. ~nd' give most Slowly there is, growing :a, of its assistance l1~ore general acceptance of t~e'either' through Vlew put forward so strongly b,y ,i n t ern a _ Pope Paul in Populorum Progres-tional bodies or in accordance sio-that "the social i,ssue is b~-with their guide lines. ' coming in,ternational.'" . i

We have therefore to ask why, In other', words, the pr.obl~~safter nearly 20 years of aid pro- 'o.f world poverty, of the dlstnbl;'­grams largely organized. on a tl.On of ~orld w~alt~ and w.orl,dstrictly national basis, the pres- opportumty, pop~latl.On, ~gncu~­sure today is increasingly for a tural modermzatIOn, growmg uf~

new international emphasis. ban un~mployment cannot .~e,. Ch f Thought solved plecemeal, by the chanty

ange ,,0 , d d '11 f' d"d I d . .Perhaps the first reason is an an goo Wl 0 m lVI ua 01]"

underlying change in the way ors. ' ' . ; ~nations think about themselves All these problems ar~, as }tand the planet they have to were, part ofa worldWIde s~s-

h W . nly 20 years tern of under-development Wlt:l1- 'WEAPON AIND, P.RAYER: As are. e are 0 II' d . .', Idaway from 'an almost complete- a _ItS. eepenmg mIsery ani United States soldier with aly colonial world in which the frustratl.On. They~.ust be c0l;ll}-, rosary around his 'ne~k cleans

\ wealth, white mainly Atla,ntic tered by wo~ld me<lsur~s,whlc:h his weapon in South Vietnam.states exercised direct colonial take th~ ,1?terconnexl.Ons of NC Photo.control over large parts 'of what world actl~n mto account. . lwe now cal(the developing c0t.!- Exampl~ ~i::illina.ica,· " "'1tinents. ','

. . Let us look at a concrete ex-!n th~ lmmedlate ~ftermath of. ample. For the last decade, t~e

thl.s . dlrect colomaI syste~, small island of Jamaica has ha'dBntam . and other ex-colon~al an economic growth rate of ovJrpo.wers m Western E~rope'm.am- seven per cent a year - wellta.med m~ny of the!r old hn~s above the present average. OrWlth thelr ex-colon~e.s and fl- the 19th Century, under muchnanced a lot of transltIOnal prob- more favorable conditions Ulelems almost from sentiment-al- Atlantic average was' only 'thrciethough one could arg~e th~t per cent.) But at the end Jfthere were al.so, ~speclal~y 10. this period of: exception~llarge e~-col~me~ hk~ Indla. or growth, unemployment, 'especial­ex-colomes r~ch l? 'mmerals hke ly among the young, is as high,N.0rthern Rh~desla (?o~ Zam- as ever-over 20 per cent. WIlybla),. s~bstantlal, contmumg eco- is this? ' Inomlc mterests to defend. F' t f II bl' h' Ith : Ilrs 0 a pu le ea lm-

During the~e years, America's provement coming before mod­attitude ,to the Philippines had ernization creates a "populati6nthe same post-COlonial character. explosion." Then, chances JfIn addition, as the only Western large-scale migration are'limited."super-power," it felt obliged, to There is nothing like the, massiveuse its economic resources to trans-Atlantic movement whichcounter any Russian tendency to took 40 millions out of Europeextend its influence, via Commu- to the empty' fertile Ameridsnism, into the once-colonal •between 1830 and 1914. Nor islands. This was the' classie there' an expanding market' fdr"cold-war" era when bulying up Jamaica's most competitive prod­small natitms' ~~pport seemed uct, sugat:. The United State~,part of the tradltl.Onal games of Britain and Western Europe allworld balance of, power: protect high-cost, lower quali,ty

But, both post-colonial senti- !Jeet sugar. If Jama~ca turns,_~sments and cold war fixations are It must, to manul'actured ex­

'fading. The planet is seton to be' ports, high tariffs and quot~sa much more complex place than 'keep ~he goods out of manrwas suggested by the old idea of Atlantlc markets. Ilining up the nations on,each side Local poverty and unempl0Yr-

ment thus reflect, in real mea­sure, the fact that Atlantic p~d­pies, with 80 per cent of theworld's resources against 20pcir·cent of the population, -protedttheir wealth by' keeping oth~rpeople out of both their landsand their markets. We cannot e:li:­plain local misery without th1ewider context.- ~

Nor can we cure" it. This iswhy more and more experts ar~moving towards the idea thitonly international policies andinternational, action can lessehthe dreadful load of. world mis­ery.;,

I

,10

Page 13: 05.07.70

Lauds Harvard Professors'Study of Labor Movement

By Msgr. George G. HigginsDir2dor, Division of Urban Life, U.S.C.C.

ELECTRICALContradors

944 County St.New Bedford

Federal GrantWASHINGTON (NC)-A plan

to increase enrollment of theGeorgetown University School ofMedicine in Washington by 75per cent in less than five yearshas been made possible by an$8.5 million grant from the U.S.Department of Health, Educationand Welfare, to help relieve thecritical health mapower shortage.

$31Mr. & 'Mrs. Manuel Oliveira

. $3(1)

Mr. & -Mrs. Joseph BorgesMr. & Mrs. John F. DwyerMr. & Mrs. Charles JosephThe Kenney FamilyMr. & Mrs. Joseph SaladinoJeremiah RozaMr. & Mrs. Walter SilveiraEdwin StilesGertrude StilesMr. & Mrs. Alfred VincentMr. & Mrs. John WalshMr. & Mrs. John GolenskiMr. & Mrs. Antone PerryMr. & Mrs. Jean BourbeauMr. & Mrs. Henry FortinMr. & Mrs. Ernest BouleyMr. & Mrs. Armand Marien

$26Mr. & Mrs. Raymond BartonMr. & Mrs. Albert Benac

$25Mr. & Mrs. Edwin Allard, Mr.

& Mrs. Ralph Antonsen, Mr. &Mrs. Everett J. Barrow, Mr. &Mrs. Anthony Blanchard, JulesBlouin

Mrs. Marjorie Carey, Mr. &Mrs. Earl Chandler, Mr. & Mrs.Teotonio Corvelo, Mr. & Mrs.Roland J. Despres, Mr. & Mrs.Lionel J. Dulude

Mr. & Mrs. John Gorman, Mr.& Mrs. Ant.hony Fernandez, Mr.& Mrs. Frank Folger, Mr. & Mrs.Edward W. Kalisz, Mr. & Mrs.Paul Lopes

Mr. & Mrs. Paul Murray, Mr.& Mrs. Richard Nerbonne, Pat·rick Nicolaci, Mr. & Mrs. FrankNunes, Mr. & Mrs. EdwardO'Gara

Alexander Perry, Mr. & Mrs.Andrew D. Pifko, Mr. & Mrs.Charles Pittle, Mr. & Mrs.Thomas Rielly, Mr. & Mrs. Nor­man Robinson_

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Robin­son, Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Saulnier,Mrs. Edward Silva, Mr. & Mrs.Ernest Pare, Mr. & Mrs. WilliamMachado

Mr. & Mrs. Anson Paine, Mr.& Mrs. Matthew O'Malley, Jo­seph Collins, Mr. & Mrs. VincentKeighley, Mr. & Mrs. MauriceBurke .

Mr. & Mrs. Donald Spooner,Mr. & Mrs. Victor Brunette, Mr.& Mrs. Patrick Doyle, Mr. &Mrs. Armand AHain

FairhavenST. JOSEPH

$150Atto~'l1ey & Mrs. William H.

Carey$100

Mr. & Mrs. James BuckleyMr. & Mrs. James Walker

$60Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth J. Noyer

$50Mrs. Eli BraleyMr. & Mrs. Earl DiasMr. & Mrs. Pasquale NicolaciCharles StilesDr. & Mrs. Edward L: SoaresMr. & Mrs. Earle LarkinMr. & Mrs. Lester EdwardsRobert PaineMr. & lV!rs. Clyde Voter

$40Mr. & Mrs. Donald SullivanMr. & Mrs. James Lanagan

$35Victor L. BrunetteMr. & Mrs. Dennis HoganMr. & Mrs. Joseph McKenzieMr. & Mrs. Albert MoquinMrs. Helen SullivanMr. & Mrs. Stanley Walsh

$35James Hauck Sr.

$30Dorothy M. McMackin

$25Felix P. Kaladin Jr., Richard

Paine, George Boucher, Louis A.Secatore, Edward Hyland

Louis R. Cabana, Gerard Bo­nenfant, John Wholey,' WilliamJudge, Kathleen Comiskey

Manuel DeMello, Edward J.Murby, Robert L. Smith, Paul J.Fountain, Edward G. Maloof

Joseph E. Keough, Albert Rib­eiro, John Welch, ArmindoLourenco, Joseph Bettencourt,Bernice Fountain

gilIII III III 11111111 11111111111111111 1111 III.!!III III 1111 111111 111111 AIIIII 1111111 III III 1111 1111111 1111 111111 1111 !!JJ1!Il1IIillllllllllllll~

I fiRST I REGULAR SAVINGS 5% II FEDERAL I gO DAY NOTICE ACCOUNTS 5~%IISAVINGS .1 1

VE~5~0~~~:~in~)ERTIFICATE 5%%I~ ~ 2 VEAR SAVINGS CERTIFICATE 6% ~

I A~~gC~;~N 11 VE~:O~::~~O:S M:;~ITlFICATE C I~ Of AnLEBORO ~ ($100,000.00) . 7~%~~III11I11II11I11II11I11I1I1I11I1I11I1lIlHllmIlIllJII;m:lll1l1l1l1l1l11l1l1l1mllllllllllllllllmlllllillllllllllll1I11111111111111111~

RaynhamST. ANN'S

$200Rev. William E:- Farland

$100Mr. & Mrs. Domiriic Cirino

$60 .Mr. & Mrs. M. Tarpinian

. . $50Almon TurnerMr. & Mrs. Richard SouzaEdward Rogal1

$40Edward R. Barry.

AMONG OFFICERS PRESENT AT CONVENTON: Miss Jacque­line Mathieu, Fall River; Mrs. Vincent A. Coady of Somerset, aud­itor of Diocesan Council; Mrs. Raymond Poisson of Fall River,District No. 1 president; Miss .Clorinda Ventura of Somerset,Diocesan Vice-President

THE ANCHOR- 13Thurs., May 7, 1970

issues outside the range of itsown immediate interests.

Today more manpower is be­inging used to lobby for thesecauses, more space is devoted tothem in union periodicals, andmore money is being spent tosupport candidates who favorsocial reform than ever was truein the thirties."

Secondly, Dunlop and Bokwarn that "there are great dan­gers in assuming too quickly thatthe faults of unions lie mainlywith their I~aders. If the assump­tion proves inadequate or incor­rect, not only will a great diJiser­vice be done to many union offi­cials but society may also gobadly astray in trying to con­struct a viable labor policy."

Respect Facts·

The scholarly manner in whichDunlop and Bok proceed to de­velop these two points in sev­eral different contexts will prob­ably riot appeal to many of la­bor's more impatient critics, butI dare say that their impressivestudy of the American labormovement, "Labor and theAmerican Community," willstand the test of time far betterthan almost any other book ofits kind published in this gener­ation. It's in a class all by itself.

This is not to say th!lt· D'J;nlopand Bok are unmindful of labor'smany - faults and imperfections.To the ·contrary, when the factsseem to warrant it, they can beextrem~ly critical of the labormovement.

The point is, however, thatthey have approached their studyof the movement with a profoundrespect for facts and have scru­pulously avoided the use of theslogans and shibboleths whichare the trademark of so manyof labor's disillusioned critics.

In contrast to much of what isbeing written these days by somany of labor's liberal critics,it shows a decent respect forfaces-as opposed to ideologicalslogans and cliches - and goesout of its way to take accountof the political, economic andother tangled complexities oflarbor relations in the UnitedStates.

Dunlop and Bok, after citing arepresentative sampling of liberalstatements on the decline andfall of the American labor move­ment, point out that "one mustbe cautious in evaluating these·opinions."

More specifically, they con­tend that "in retrospect the com­parison with the thirties seemsseriously distorted. Much of theradical ethos surrounding theunions in the Depression wassupplied by outsiders who joinedthe movement temporarily, eith­ert to help ,the underdog or. toengineer a social revolution.

Incorrect Assumption

"The mainstream of the move­ment did not depart fundamen­tally from its ·traditional goalsof winning new members andbargaining for better wages andworking conditions. If anything,it was less concerned than it is-all of them saying, in effect,now over social and economic

ment is completely washed upand that the lion's share of theblame for its tragic demise as aforce for constructive socialchange in the Unjted States mustbe borne .by the opulent, soft­headed leaders of the movement.

It would appear, however, thatthe' intellectual tide is beginningto turn. Within the same six­week period in which the abovementioned articles and reviewsmade their appearance, th'reehighly qualified observers of thelabor scene have taken a goodhard look at the very same labor

.movement and have found some­thing good to say about it.

Biggest Force

The first of the three, MurraySeeger-writing in a magazinewhich is read mainly by liberalintellectuals-says that, in spiteof its obvious faults, "the recordof the modern labor movement-and its most conspicuous sin­gle force, the AFL-CIQ-will bal­ance out on the positive side ofany objective scale >I< >I< *

"Although in the postwaryears labor has been able to getonly a few laws passed for itsspecific benefit, it has been thebiggest single force in supportinga broad spectrum of liberal so­cial legislation." (The Washing­ton Monthly, April 1970)

It would be hard to match thequalifications of the other twowriters referred to· above-JohnT. Dunlop, distinguished arbitra­tor and long-time Professor ofEconomics at Harvard Univer­sity, and Derek C. Bok, Dean ofHarvard Law School.

Their new book, "Labor andthe American Community," (Si­mon and Schuster, New York,$12.50), is a minor classic andby all odds one of the most im­portant studies of the Americanlabor movement published dur­ing the past decade or two.

Tangled Complexities

Tide Turns

-"The history of Americanlabor, like that of our whole so­ciety, has been double threaded;Gompers, Meany, pork chops­one strand-intertwined with. thechallenge to the workingman todiscover not only his contradic­tory history but his possibilities."(Studs Terkel, The Nation, April13)

If space permitted, I couldquote a dozen similar passagesfrom recent liberal publicationsthat the American labor move-

Of the making of speeches, articles, and books byliberal intellectuals on the decline and fall of the Americanlabor movement, there is seemingly no end. For some yearsnow I have been collecting them as a hobby. It's a harm­less avocation-and ratherinexpensive as hobbies gothese days-but I must ad­mit that it is beginning topall on me for the simple reasonthat there is such a dreary same­ness about somany of the en­tries which Ihave clipped forfiling in recentmonths. Wit hrare exceptions,their diagnosisof what's wrongwith the labormovement tendsto be extreme­ly simplistic. Asa general rule,they make two points in partic­ular' and hardly ever bother tocome up with any supporting ev­idence for either one:

1) American unions, back in.the '30s and early '40s, exercisedmilitant leadership in the field ofsocial justice, but they have sincebecome ultra-conservative, not tosay reactionary.

2) Rank-and-file union mem­bers are still potentially a con­structive force, but they are be­ing sold down the river by unionleaders, who, as a group, aresaid to be living too high off thehog and to have gone the wayof all flesh.

Let's look at a random sam­pling of quotations on both ofthese points from some typical'articles and. reviews publishedwithin the past six weeks:

'Sense of Despair'

-"A widespread lassitudeseems to have replaced the cru­sading spirit of the 1930s and1940s that so significantly helpedto bring about bitterly re­sisted social and economic re­forms which today are takenfor granted by one and all Q Q ¢

(We deplore) the loss of theproselytizing spirit in the tradeunion movement in the past twodecades-the~pirit that has cre­ated the basic labor organiza­tions in the late 19th and 20thcenturies and continued until theindustrial unions became power­ful realities in the I930s." ("TheLabor Movement in Crisis," TheCriterion, Indianapolis, May 10)

-"There was a time whenbooks glorified the Americanway; now it seems that almostall good books add to the per­vaisive sense of despair ¢ ,) ~, Ithad once been possible to hopethat unionized workers * ¢ .,

would have intuitive sympathywith others of the oppressed. Itis a cause for sadness that thissimply is not so. With few ex­ceptions, unions and union mem~

bers stand to the right of Amer­ican society." (Richard J. Wal­ton, the Nation, April 13)

Page 14: 05.07.70

Home"Africa

ZIP

•InRhodesia, South Africa and NewGuinea.

The new provincial said Am­erican students for the Mariann­hill priesthood still are concern­ed about mission work in Africa,but are more greatly concernedabout helping to solve some ofthe pressing social problems inthis country.

Father Thomas Heier said thechief objective of any good for­eign missioner is to work him­self out of a job. He explained

'in t~at way the missioner isaware his work has been satis­'factory and the' local religiouscommunity has been strengthen­ed to a point of operating onits own. •

WorkProblems at

ADDRESS

Grace monastery'in nearby Dear­born Heights. Father Andrew W.Heier, C.M.M., is stationed 'inRhodesia and Father Philip V.Heier, C.M.M., is serving in NewGuinea.

OriginalIy the Congregation ofMariannhill Missionaries wereTrappist ,priests, who conductedthe Marianrihill monastery in

,South Africa. '

Nearly a century ago,' thoseengaged in mission work wereordered either to remain at the

. monastery in traditional Trappist'austerity or leave. Those wholeft became the Mariannhill mis-- 'sioilers.

The Mariannhill Fathers con­duct three dioceses in southern

SEND YOUR GIFT TO '.

The,Right Re~'erend Edward T.,O'Meara The Right Reverend Raymond T. Considinetvational Director OR Diocesan Director366 Filth Avenue 368 North Main Street

New York, New York 10001" Fall River, Massachusetts 027io

I I ~.

/Mi)siC)~'ers Stress;f 'I .f '

Mariann'hHI- Fathers ContinueDETROIT (NC)-Father Thom­

as Heier, C.M.M., newly appoint­ed provincial of the MariannhillFathers. in North America, whohave worked in Africa for near­ly a century, said the emphasisamong missioners today is help­ing solve some of 'the problemsat home.

Serving in the mission' com­munity is something of a Heierfamily tradition. The new provin­cial has. three brother.s servingas Marianrihill priests, while an­other Mariannhill priest-brQther,Father Lawrence Heier, died' in1960. .

The new provincial resides withone brother, Father Vergil J.Heier, C.M.M.. provincial voca..tions director, at Our La?y of

5-9-70 '"HAME'

Ii

Powers

TauntonST. JOSEPH

$3!)o - .Rev. JohnJ. Murphy

$200In Memory of Rev. Msgr. Pat-

rick H. Hurley I

$125Rev. Bento R Fraga

$75Catherille R Kervick

$50Osborn McClellanMr. & Mrs. Walter G.

$30The Garvin Family ,Mr. & Mrs. John E. Kellt "Mr. & Mrs. Roger C. K!ings-

ley Jr. " : I' $2:5

Doris Baran, .Katherine 'Cam- .bell, Mr. & Mrs. John F. ClearyJr., Mr. & Mrs. Edward Ferreira,Mr. & Mrs-; Raymond Harno'is

Mr. & Mrs. Edward Hoye,Esther Johnson, Louise L~ffan,Estella Margarido, Mary Max-well ' i

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph McKenna,Francis A. McManus, ,Grace E.McManus, Mary MeNearney,Robert T. Murphy ,

Peter Shea, Mr. & Mrs. Gilcbert Simmons, K. Helen Slnith,Mr. & Mrs. Leonard M. ~alsh,

. Mary E. ~renn " .1,

Lar.gest Countr~es,UNITED NATIONS (NC>+The

10 largest countries in the world,according to the United NationsDemographic yearbook, are (withpopulation in millions): <!:hina

. (730), India (524), Soviet Union.(238), United States (201), Indo­nesia (113), Pakistan (110),Japan (101), Brazil (88), Nigeria'(63), West Germany.(58) .. i :

Somerseti'

,THE ANCHOR-Diocese ot Fall Rive,·~,Thurs., May' ?;.l?~O,

Ii' '.' 1/'Swansea" ' Ij ,

OUR LADY OF fATIMA,

$125Mrs. Joseph F. Foley Sr.

ST. THOMAS MORE

$150Mrs. John E. Connolly

$100Mr. & Mrs. William J. GibneyMr. & Mrs. Charles W. LathamKathleen M. Dean, RN.A Friend

ST. JOHN OF GOD

$250Rev. Luiz G. Mendonca

14

$720Mr. & Mrs; Wilson W. Curtis

, $225Rev. John P. Driscoll

$150 I

Mr. & Mrs. Leo J. F. Donovan$1011)1

Mr. & Mrs. J. David Connell,$75

Mrs. Ernest L. Wood$75 $65 i

Dolores Burns Mr. & Mrs. Bernard, Swales$50 $50 'I

'Mr. & Mrs. Edward,J. McCann" ' 'Mr.' & ',Mrs. Russell B.' Coch-~[t &:~Ja~~shF.~N~OI~tti rane '. " f

y. rs., Ie ar . a· !VIr. & Mrs. Louis F. FaylinSalle Mr.. & Mrs. Robert" Po !La-

Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Santoro fIamme ,Atty & Mrs, James W. Killor- Mr. & Mr!"J. Edward L~joie

an, Mr. & Mrs. John A. SullivanMr. & Mrs. Joseph F. Foley Jr. I

Mr. & MrS. Vincent A. Coady $3fi,Dr. ,Bernard Mangione Charles· ChorltclO IM & M A b M b k Mr. & Mrs. Henry A. Hartison '

r. rs. I ert E, 0 ouc 'Mr. &, Mrs; James J.', Johilson'Frederick J. 'Wilding . ~ . Dr. & Mrs. EucJide" -~H. Ver- " ~

. $40 mette' , " .', .:Edwin Doolan , ' $30, I '

George W. Hopkins,' Mr. & Mrs. Edward J: Btyda. '. Mona', :C. Kennedy , i

$35 Mrs. Donald 1.. MacDon!aldMr. & Mrs. Paul' Daley • $25, 'I

Mrs. Daniel F. Shalloo ,Mr. & Mrs. 'Leonard E. Board-$32 man, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph F. Bran-

Mr. & Mrs. H. Earl Heron co, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph DeNardo,Anne V. Fayan, Grace P. Holden.

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph M. ,Mc­Donald, Mrs. Joseph E. McGuig­an, Mr. & Mrs. Arthur J. !Mc­Lear, Mr. & Mrs. Edward S.IMc­Nerney, Mr. & Mrs. Andre G~

Michaud ' I, Mr. & Mrs. John W. Moran,Mr. & Mrs. Leonard J. O'Neil.Mr..& Mrs. Paul J. V. Parente,Mr. & Mrs. George C. Pent-ose,Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Swales Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. John F. Swe~ney,Mr. & Mrs. ,&aymond F. S~ee'­ney, Mr. & Mrs. Edmour IThi­bault, Mr. & Mrs. Clarence R.Wamboldt. I

$100Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence BorgeMr. & Mrs. Milton R. SilvaRosary Society

$75,Mr. & Mrs. Frank R Borges,

Jr.

$50Mr. & Mrs. Antone S. FenoMr. & Mrs. James RebelloMrs. Eulalia Soares ' .Mr. & Mrs. John Velozo, Jr.

$30Mr. & Mrs. Jay O'Neil

$25Mr. & Mrs. Antonio, Benevides

Jr., Mr. & Mrs., Joseph H. Ca­mara, Mr. & Mrs. Manuel Fur­tado, Mr., & Mrs. Joseph O. Gag­non, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Cray. ,

Mr. & Mrs. Leonel Medeiros,Mr. & Mrs., JYlanuel Michael, M~.& Mrs. Joseph Morro, Mr. &Mrs. Francis Mullaly, Mr. & Mrs.Arthur Provost Jr.

Catherine Quental, Mr:& Mrs.Alfred J. Souza, Mr. & Mrs.Manuel Sousa, Mrs. Mary Thom­as, Mr. & Mrs. Zygmunt Ziobro.

$30Helen & Bernadette MahoneyMcClellan. Fuel Co., Inc.

$25Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Griffin,

'Mr. & Mrs. John O'Brien, Mr. &Mrs. Donald Hussey, Mr. & Mrs.John Flanagan, Mrs. Robert E.Lord "

Mrs. Henry T. Munroe, Mr.& Mrs. Gerard A. LaLiberte, Mr.

'& Mrs. Frederick Badwey, Con­nors' Family, Mr. & Mrs. WilliamF. Croke

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph .W. Duffy,Mr. & Mrs. John R. Fennessey,Mr. & Mrs. James Hadad, Atty.& Mrs. Charles J. Hague, DanielJ. Hatton

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph D. HOp­kins, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Lang­field, Mr, & Mrs. Henry J. Mc­Gowan, Mr. & Mrs. Hugh J.Maguire, Mr. & Mrs. Robert D.McMillan

Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert J. Nadeau,Mr. & Mrs. Thomas F. O'Con­nell, Dr. & Mrs. Donald Peters,

" Atty. & Mrs. Frank A. Rodrigues,Mr., & Mrs. Paul B. Sul1ivan, Ed­ward F. Welch

Page 15: 05.07.70

SIX CONVEN!ENT OFfiCES TO SERVE YOY

ONE~STOP BANKING

FIRST. MACH I'N ISTSNATIONAL BANK

OF TAUNTONNorth Dightorn II North Easton • Norton

Raynham _ Taunton

Member Federal Deposit Insurance CQ~poratiolJ1

, STANG HIGH CONTESTANT: Diane Bock, senior from lake­ville, right, receives a going-away present from Dorothy ~unt,

Stang senior, as Miss Bock, recently named as Massachu~etts

Miss, departs for the finals in the national contest for AmericanJunior Miss scheduled for Mobile, Ala.

....

15

Lay Teachers Beg.inDrive to Unionize

PHILADELPHIA (NC) - Acampaign now is underway hereto organize the 2,000 lay teach­ers in the 295 Catholic gradeschools of the Philadelphia arch­diocese under the banner of theAssociation of Catholic Teachers,AFL-CIO (ACT).

The union currently representssome 800 lay teachers in Catholicsecondary schools of the arch­diocese.

mond Chamberland, Mrs. Alb&tClement, James Cole, John Con­nors

Peter Corr, J. C. Delang, In'Memory of Rita Donovan, E.Duffy, Fred Fitzsimmons

Thomas Grandfield, FrancisFlynn, Mr. & Mrs. T. Hoye. JohnP. Kenyon, WnIliam Hansen

Robert J Hill, Gertrude & RuthLawlor, In Memory of Nellie M.Leary, Winifred Laughlin, MaryMaloney

Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Mosley,C. J. Murphy, Mrs. F. P. McCabe,Alice McCusker, Mr. & Mrs.Michael McCusker

Ruth McKenna, Alice McKen­na, Susan McKenna, Mae Mc­Lear, Clotilde Nason .

John O'Donnell, Anna O'­Keefe, J. Padula, J. Reid, MissJ. Russell

J. Quinn, L. Sousa, Mr. & Mrs.Frederic Tripp

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., May 7, 1970

1st FEDERAL SAVINGSOF FAll RIVER

highest rate en

savings insured by a

U.S. Government Agenli:Y

6%(i) lTerms 2 to 10 Voars(il Min. Bal. $5@U1J

5% Ql 'li"orms 1 to 2 Years4.% <J)' Min. Bal. $2560

III SO iJay Natlco Aecount5~ liI WitlJ Canvellhmt NO2% OOO~'CE Wit~!Jrmvalo lJenods ,

o [\1;0. Bal. $!i!lti5 ' ca 'ferms ~ ~o lJ Months~%m [r.lmediato t\vailabili~~ .

. 0 () Min. lal. $UJItD

5%l!) t'JEGMUlfl PASSBOll~

SlA\1INSlS

([) ·foll ~IOlll~m~17

o in~ilfQst Qan;J~ tfaml ~a17 of ~ODoslt

o Compoundol1 @ul::~oflll

War liiformmlfoli CIlIi @174-4Q3i

first Federal S21vingsOF lf6%l1.l1. liU\i'1.l:1%

1 Nil. t'fJalrl St fall Hivor

14g BAtt DlWll. me. G Somorset

TauntonST. M~RY

$1025Rev. Msgr. James J. Dolan

$100Dr. J. NatesDr. C. Hoye

$75. Rev. Geprge E. Harrison

$60Mr. & Mrs. R. Smerdon

$50Chaisty FamilyMr. & Mrs. Edward J. GalvinDr. G. HarringtonMiss M. HoyeHelen & Catherine McCarthyMiss M. C. Sheerin

$40John B. Grant

$35Miss L. DuffyC. Caron

$30Dorothy & Marguerite Mc­

ManusDonahue FamilyJohn Keating

$25Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Conniff,

Mrs. Richard Leite, W. Grant,Miss C. Murphy, James McGov­ern

R. Sullivan, Mr. & Mrs. R.Parkinson, E. Tonry, Mrs. C. R.Auger, Ralph Buckley 0

Esther & Ethel Buckley, Ray-

$25Anonymous, Anonymous, Mr.

& Mrs. Louis J. Bevilacqua, Mr.& Mrs. John L. Brown, McHaleFamily.,

, Mr., & Mrs. Marianno Rezen­des Jr., Joseph Simmons Jr.

Mr. &land

Mr. & Mrs. Richard Houghton

§1I'. $lERNA~

.$225Anonymous

$n75Rev. John P. Cronin

$n2ilI1Mr. & Mrs. Roderick Ferullo

. $n~ilII

AnonymousMr. & Mrs. Marianno Rezen-

des, Sr., .Mr. & Mrs. 'Francis E. Sullivan

$75Mr. & Mrs. Robert BarbozaMr. & Mrs. Anthony Terpak

$50AnonymousMr. & Mrs. Robert BlakeMr. & Mrs. Fred E. Kelley, Sr.

$45Mr. & Mrs. Henry Nadeau

$30Mrs. Benoit H. Char-

SS. PETER & PAUL

$300Rev. David A. O'Brien

100In Memory of Manuel R. CoutoIn Memory of Patrick J. MooreIn Memory of Rev. Msgr. Fran-

cis P. Connelly, P.A. by Mr. &Mrs. George Morgan

$50Mrs. Thomas H. Cahill Sr. &

Thomas H. Cahill Jr.John Tyrrell

$35Helen M. Lowney & William

J. Lowney, Mr. & Mrs. EdwardTyrrell

$30Mr. & Mrs. Stanley JanickAnne & Marion O'Hearn

$25Janet A. Dupont, Mr. & Mrs.

Michael Dupont, The FarrenFamily, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas ~ar­

ren, Mr. & Mrs. ShaunFltz­patrick

Peter Garity, Mrs. Ernest A.Hasprey In Memory of JosephHurley, Mr. & Mrs. John McGiI­lick, Mr. & Mrs. George A. Mor­gan

Mrs. Margaret Rodriguez, Mr.& Mrs. Norman Rousseau, Mr. &Mrs. Thomas Sla'ler;Mrs. FrancisC. Taylor, Louise Tyrrell

Mary Tyrell, Mr. & Mrs. Nich­olas Tyrrell

$iOOMrs. John A. Coady & Family

$75Geraldine Harrington

$50Mr. & Mrs. Walter Burns Jr.Sarah SpellmanJames CleggMary NoonMr. & Mrs. Manuel J. MedeirosMr. & Mrs. Edward HaponikMr. & Mrs. Edward DeCiccio

$35Mary Sweeney

$25Mr. & Mrs. Henry Urban, Mr.

& Mrs. Ronald Cabucio, Mr. &Mrs. Edmund Cahill, Mr. & Mrs.John Morgan Jr., Mr. & Mrs. R.Rego .

Mr. & Mrs. Ra¥mond Barrette,Mr. & Mrs. Leo Callahan, InMemory of Elizabeth McCann,Rico Denadal, Mr. & Mrs. AlbertArsenault, Mr. & Mrs. TheodoreBlouin

Elizabeth & Catherine Carroll,In Memory of Timothy & AnnieHolland, Mrs. Ann Thraves, qr.& Mrs. Hilary White, Mr. & MrsPatrick Leary

John E. O'Brien, Mr. & Mrs.William Donnelly, Mr. & Mrs.Eugene Connors, Mr. & Mrs.Vincent Marmion, Mr. &' Mrs.Joseph Biszko

Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Fletcher,Mildred and Helen Sullivan, Mr.& Mrs. Stanley Sincoski, Mr. &Mrs. Edward Sweeney, Mr. &Mrs. Joseph Murray

In Memory of Elizabeth Bolger

Lonely FellowWho will adhere to him that

abandons himself? -Sidney

ST. MICHAEL'S

$500Rev. Joseph Oliveira

$250Evelyn Almeida

$125Dr. & Mrs. Gilbert Vincent

$60Beatrice Capeto

$50Dr.. &. Mrs. Joseph CarvalhoRev. Jose A.F. dos Santos, CMMr. & Mrs. Gerald SilviaAtty. & Mrs. Manuel M. Re­

zendesCecelia Oliveira

$40Mr. & Mrs. Antone Souza

. $35Mary T. Carvalho

. $30Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Rego Sr.Mr. & Mrs. Joao Aguiar

$25 'Mr. & Mrs. Manuel M. Medei­

ros, Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert Mello,Mr. & Mrs. Alvin S. Rego, Au­gust Pereira Jr., Mr. & Mrs.Arthur Machado

Atty. & Mrs. Gilbert Coroa,Belmira Tavares. Mr. & Mrs.Manuel Ferreira, Mr. & Mrs.Francis I. Lennon, Mr. & Mrs.John Chaves

Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Torres,John Castanho & Family, Leo­nardo Cabeceiras, Mr. & Mrs.Henry J. PIeiss, Alfred Rocha &Famiiy .

Angelo Stavros, Mr. & Mrs.Arnold Martin, Leo Schenck, Mr.& Mrs. Antone Mello, A Friend,Isabel Capeto

ST. lPATllUCK'S

ST. LOIUIS

$125St. Louis Conference, St. Vin­

cent de Paul Society$75 .

St. Louis Women's GuildIn Memory of Mr. & Mrs.

Thomas J. Conroy$50

Mr. & Mrs. William P. Lynch$30

Mr. & Mrs. Dennis BernardMr. & Mrs. Thomas BritIand

$25Thomas Conroy, Edward Mc­

Andrew, John H. McAndrew,Susan McMahon, Gertrude O'Neil

Irene Reynolds, In Memory ofMr. & Mrs. Michael Tobin

H~rd to FigureThe hardest thing in the world

to understand is the income tax.-Einstein

Fall RiverNOTRE DAME

$15GORev Msgr Reginald M Barrette

. $150Rev. Bernard Lavoie

$100A Parishioner

$50Armand DallaireFerdinand Francoeur

$40Raymond Gibeau

$35Robert Phenix

$32Eugene Heon

$31Roland DesmaraisFamily of C. E. Chretien

$30Family of Thomas MellenAlbert ParentMisses M. & J. Dupuis

$25Normand Clement, Alma &

Alice Masse, Omer Harrison,Gerard Berger, Bertrand Plante. Roger Labonte, Family ofMathilda Lussier, A Parishioner,Romeo Levesque, A Parishioner

Robert Levesque, Laetitia PetitConrad Desmarais, Omer Leves­que, Family of Diana Marchand

Paul Courchaine, Milton D.Fuller, Bertrand Boulay, A Par­ishioner, Helena Chace

Raymond Morrissette, RonaldRoy

OUR LADY OF THE ANGELS

$1500Rev. Msgr. Anthony M. Gomes

$1000Qr. -& Mrs. Henry C. Lincoln

$200St. Vincent De Paul

$150Holy Name Society

$125Council of Catholic Women

$120Rev. George J. Sousa

$100George Tonelli

$60Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Rego

$50Mrs. Maria Mello & FamilyCatholic Youth OrganizationHoly Rosary SodalityMary & Pat CabralManuel CorreiraChildren of Mary SodalityRobert Correira

$40Manuel Laureano & Son

$35Manuel RaymondMr. & Mrs. Alfred M. Mello

$32Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Souza

$3q)Julius RodriquesJoseph M. TheodoreMello FamilyMrs Mary Teixeira & DaughterHenry Camara

~25

Mr.. & Mrs. Tobias Monte,Arthur Silva, James Arruda, MrsMary Goulet, Manuel Magano

John Branco, Carlos Dionizio,Caetano Furtado, Gerald J. Car­delli, John M. Arrud.a

Almeida Funeral Home, ManuelVelho, Manuel Freitas, WilliamRego, Carl Frederick

Manuel Silva Jr., John Correia,Joseph Silva, Manuel Aguiar,Manuel Souza

Manuel Correira, Mary RaposaDavid Rogers, Antone Michaels,Norman Frenette .

Raymond Hryciw, Leonel Rod­riques, John J. Sousa, Philip Cos­ta, Mary & Mercis Laureanno

Daniel C. Medeiros, ManuelLinhares Jr., Richard PavaoRichard Coute, Francisco Maur­isso

George Silva, Christiano Pa­checo, Mrs. Mary Ferreira, Man­uel Faria, Jose Lindo

Page 16: 05.07.70

1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll11/11111111

ATTlEBORO FALLS

90-DAY NOTICETiMEOPEN

ACCOUNTInterest Compounded

Quarterly

DONAT BOISVERTINSURANCE AGEN,CY, INC.

96 WILLIAM STREETNEW BEDFORD, MASS.

998-5153 997-9167PERSONAL SERVICE

OUR LADY OF THEHOLY ROSARY

$275Rev. Msgr. Joseph R. Pannoni

$200 .Mrs. A~gelo Ricci

$125Rev. Vincent F. Diaferio

$50Mr. & Mrs. Frank Mazzoni

$26Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Marcucci

$25Holy Rosary CYOMr. & Mrs. Ernest DiGiammo

In Memory of Thomas FlanaganMr. & Mrs. Anthony PannoniMrs. James Patricelli & 'FamilyMr. & Mrs. Frank. StetkiewiczMrs. Pileria Ventura

Diocesan PapersContinued from Page One

Word, the sharing of an idea,have been central to Christianityfor 20 centuries.

. "Today there 'is a wider circu­lation of knowledge, a broadersharing of information than everbefore in the history of theworld.

"It follows that not all of to­day's wave of information is ofequal value to the spirit of man.

"The cause of 'human dignitythe freedom of man to continuehis forward movement, meritstronger support than they ordi­narily receive in the commercial iand governmental media of to­day's world.

Priority Reading"As bishops of Christ's Church,

charged with the continuing dis­semination of Christ's essentialmessage to the world, we relystrongly upon the Catholic press.

"We are especially encouragedby the positive contribiution tohuman understanding and to theknowledge of the Church pro­vided by the diocesan newspa­pers published under our gener­al jurisdiction and at the sametime conscious of their journal­istic responsibilities to all whoread them..

"We affirm our support of theChristian principles that guidethese publications, and we stressthe urgency of their mission.

"It is our earnest qope that thediocesan newspapers of thiscountry wiIl be welcomed intoevery Catholic home, and thatthey will constitute priority read­ing for every member of thefamily. <)

"Today, when the printingpresses flood the nation with ma­terial of every description-someof it valuable and some of novalue.:-we reaffirm our confi­dence in invaluable support givenby the diocesan newspaper toChristian action and growth."

MANSFIELD

Offices in:

~ John

•••

NORTH ATILEBORO

NOWPAYS

$30Mrs. Madeline LallyHelen BurnsHelen J,oy

A' Friend

ST. MARY'S CATHEDRALI

$425Rev. Msgr., Robert L. Stanton

$125

~MANUF~CTURERS\ . . NATIONAL BANK~ ~ of BRISTOL I:OIJNT"

1111/111-1111/11111/1111111111111111111111/11/11111111111111111111111111111/11/11111/111111/111111111111/11/11111/111/1111/1111111111111111111111

$50Frank DuffyRuth HurleyMary T. Hurley ,Janice Hurley :'Mr. &' Mrs. Laurence A. CoyleMr. & Mrs. Edward Betty &

Family

$100St. Mary's Cathedral GuildIn Memory of James F. Diskin

$65' ,In Memory of Francis A. Mc­

Carthy ,

$26Mr & Mrs Charles E, Cavanagh

$25Corky Row Club Inc., ,Mary

Maleady, Michaeline Russell, Mr.& Mrs. WiIliam Blythe" KathrynDaily

Mr & Mrs James Coyne, 'SarahBooth, Mr. &' Mrs. Wilfred Cal­laghan, Gertrude Sullivan, EileenA. Sullivan

Richard SuIlivan, Rose Riley,Margaret Riley, Walter Torphy,Mr. & Mrs. Joseph O'Connell

Margaret G. Diskin, Mr. &Mrs. John Mulrooney,' LiIlian &

. NeIlie O'Hearn, WiIliam P.O'Brien; Mrs. Charles M. Con­nors

Mr. & Mrs. James A. O'Brien,Jr., Eleanor Shea, Daniel Shea,Jerome Foley,-Jr., Mr. &, ,Mrs.Edward Zygiel

Claire O'Toole, Mrs. StephenO'Toole, A Friend

Fall RiverESPIRITO SANTO

$325 .Rev. Joao V. Resendes

$75Rev..Louis A.' Cardoso

$30,Mr. & Mrs. Roger roni

HOLY CROSS'

, ,$200,Conventual Franciscan Fathers

$50 'Holy Rosary Sodety ;,

$25Mr. & Mrs. 'Ben Beben, Mr. &

Mrs~ Robert Ciosek, Holy CrossChoir, Mr. & Mrs. Stanley W.Nowak, Mr. & Mrs. John Piet~

ruszka & Family ,Celia & Helen Plichta, Mr. &

Mrs. Joseph Rebello, In Memoryof Mr. & Mrs Joseph PYlmiowski,Mr. & Mrs. Walter Witengier '

LUke A GardenA man capable' of loving him­

self will be like a well~kept

flower garden-productive andin~piring to others. -Gilmore

I1IIIIIIIttllllllllllllll.lllll""I'III"""""""'I'"".111"'111111111111111111111111111"'1111""""""~"~I

Przewonzik, Carol Vasconcellosand Celeste Vezina. Speaker forthe induction ceremony wasSister Carol Mary.

Also in the scholastic line isthe announcement of Mt.' St.Mary's honor' roll, listing 45 stu­dents with averages of 85 orbetter. '

Seniors are Suzanne Goulet,Catherine McMullen, PoldiTschirch, ,Betty,' Anne ,Beam,'Sharon Borges, Cynthia Galvin,Dawn. Hann,afin, Cheryl Rous­seau, Laurie Sampson, ConstanceBeban, Diane Couture, JuliaWhite. '

'Juniors: Cheryl Dean, NancyLawlor, Madeline Lemaire, SusanPitera, Jo Ann Przewoznik,.CarolSilva, Celeste Vezina, Jan~ Ar­senault, Theresa Morin,CarolVasconcellos. '

Sophomores: 'Carolyn Arruda,Roberta King, Gloria Nadeau,Nancy' Romanowicz, CherylSouza:; Karen Gagnon, KarenHochu, Nancy O'Connell, Mil­dred Sullivan.

Freshmen: Shelly Dufresne,Linda Furtado, JoAnn Hannafin,Susan McDonald, Jo Ann Mello,Susan Naftygiel, Sharon Nasci­mento, Rachel Paradis, TheresaPa,tten, Joy Pidhorodscki, ReginaRheault, Debra Stevens" Sher­rill Vanesse, Joan Witkowski.

LIBRARY TECHNIQUES: Learning use of card catalog atBishop Cassidy High School library, Taunton, are, from left,

. Sue Peterson, 'Ellen Davis, Maureen Burns.

of St.IiI

Vice-President IStang junior Anne Smith: has

been named v:lCe-president of the "Southeastern,;;'Mas,s. ' District' ofStudent Councils. Also at Stang,tonight's the night for the se,nior'prom, to be held at Venus deMilo restaurant, Swansea, withthe theme "A Time for Us."Areception line at the high schoolwill precede dinner and dan~ing

at the restaurant. Music will beby the Downliner Show Bana.

At Holy Family High in NewBedford; Tennis Club officershave been elected. \They',re :JimHayden, presidellt~ Mary LouLeBaeuf, vice-president; and Mau­reen Hart, secretary-treasurer.'The club. includes boy and ,girlteams, each active in ,.leaguecompetition. ,'I'

Two Air Force representativesaddressed an assembly atMt; St.Mary Academy,' Fall River, 'lastweek on "career, opportunities

i1.01'"

women in that bnmch of the ser-• IVIce." ,

. And junior religion students ofSister Carol Ma,ry at Mt: St..·Mary recently heard a discussionon prayer by Miss Mary Penper­gast, folowed up by an invitationto a prayer meeting at 'thespeaker's home: The class hasinvited Rev. Kevin Tripp to ,cel-ebrate a Spring Mass. :

Student PoetsSeven Holy Family students

will have, poems in a new editionof "Young America Sings,'~ asemi-annual anthology of highschool poetry. The poets lareCarol Jeglinski, Peggy Kramer,Jane Martin, Paul McKenna,Betty Hart, Tim Donohue andJane O'Brien. I

Termed a social and financialsuccess was, the HF jurtiordance, held recent:ly at Kennedy'Center with an Alice in Wonder-land theme. :

Seven juniors at Mt. St. Maryhave been inducted into ,:,theschool chapter of the NationalHonor Society. They are NancyLawlor, Madeline Lemaire, The­resa Morin ,Susan Pitera, Joanne,

Test. She' is a graduateMatthew parish school.

First HonorsSenior first honors at Bishop

Connolly High in Fall ~iver

have gone to Stephen, P. I' An­drade, David R.. Charest, WaulR. Desmarais, Michael B. Man­ning, Thomas A. Medeiros,; Da­vid A. Rochefort, John J. Sul­livan and John M. Sullivan.-

Second honors went to 12seniors and third honors to ;five.

Junior first honors wereawarded to Fr'lincis E. Nasser,with 18 students meriting secondhonors and 12 third honors. i

, Sophomore first honors werereceived by Thomas R. Btirke,while 18 boys merited secondhonors and 11 third honors.

Freshmen receiving first /1on­ors were John Albernaz, Gilbert

'Boissoneault, Stephen E. Cad­ieux, James H. Collins, Pa~l J.Costa, Barry A. Figueiredo, Tim­othy P. McDonald, Timothy P.Mahoney, Maurice E. Methot,James F. Nicoletti,' Brian, M.O'Neil, Bertrand M. Patenaude"Louis Pavao, Louis A. Fieri,James R. Ponte.

Also Theodore W.. p'ytel,Christopher M. von Trapp, War­ren M. .Wood. Five freshmenmerited third honors.

,THE ANCHOR-Diocese ofFal! Riyer-T'h~r:i.; Mqy~Z,J970, ' " I

SacredMerit

Hearts Academy StudentsTuition Scholarships"

C;ollege Honors' AwardsFive members of the graduating, class of 1970 at' the

Academy of the Sacred Hearts, Fall River, have won ~ub­

stantial tuition scholarships and honors awards. Missl Jo­Anne Conlon has been awarded scholarship grants to Trin­ity College, Washington, D.c., and to Rosary College,River Forest, Illinois. Shewas accepted also at Em­manuel College. JoAnne is Cap­tain of St.' Agnes Team, is amember of the Math and DramaClubs, a National Honor So­ciety Member and' ranks in thetop ten of the graduating class.She is the daughter of Mr. andMrs. Thomas D. Conlon, 260Rathgar Street, and is a gradu­ate of Holy Name parish school.

Miss Ann Cullen has won thedistinction of being awarded theHonorary Presidential Scholar­ship to Boston' College whichgrants the privilege of admis-

. sion 'to advanced placementand accelerated honors pro­grams. She has been acceptedalso at Jackson' College, and atthe Univesrity of Massachusetts.Ann is President of the DramaClub, a member of the, NationalHonor Society, the French Hon­or Society and the Math Club.

She ranks second in herclass of 86, and recei~ed a let­tel', of Commendation as a highscorer in the National MeritScholarship, Qualifying' Test, aswell as being top scorer in theclass for the Betty CrockerHomemaker Contest.

She is the daughter of Mr.and Mrs. Thomas P. Cullen, 724New Boston Road, and is a grad­uate of Holy Name 'school.

In Top TenMiss Louise Doucette, daugh­

ter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis E.Doucette, 49 Harbor Road,Swansea, has received tuition

. grants to Emmanuel College andthe University of MassacJlUsetts.She has been accepted also atBoston University and North­eastern University. Louise ranksamong the top ten of the class,is a member of the NationalHonor Society ,and received aLetter of Commendation ashigh' scorer in the Nation MeritTest. Sh!! has been the organizerand leader of a special Gym­nasti~s and Dancing. Club at,SHA, as well as being active inthe Drama CluD. She is a grad­uate of Sacred Hearts AcademyElementary School.

Miss E. Lennon has won schol­arships to Northeastern Univer­sity and to the .University ofRhode Island. She has I,been ac­cepted also at Massachusetts.College of Pharmacy. Elizabethis a member of the NationalHonor Society, ranks among the,top ten of the class" and re­ceived a Letter of Commenda­tion in the National Merit Test.She is the daughter of Mr. andMrs. Francis 1. Lennon, 11~eonard Street, and is 'a gradu­ate of St. Michael parish school.

Miss Michele Paquet, daugh­ter of Mr, and Mrs. :Aime, C.Paquet, 281 North Main Street,has' won a tuition scholarshipto Pembroke College. She has

. been, accepted also at JacksonCollege, University of Massa­chusetts, and Radcliffe College.Michele ranks first in the gra~­

uating class, is a member ofthe National Honor Society, me,French Honor Society, the MathClub, is active in the DramaClub, and received a Letter ofCommendation in the NationalMerit Scholarship Qualifying

16

..'

,..

Page 17: 05.07.70

Youth Workers Receive AwardsAt 11 th Annual Recognition Mass

...........................

INCORPORATED 1937

An ecumenical day with thetheme "Come Alive" wiII besponsored by the CCD from9:30 to 5 Saturday, May 16 atSomerset Junior High School.AlI members of the FalI RiverDiocese are invited to attend.

FAIRHAVENILUMBER CO.

Complete LineBuilding Materials

HS ALDEN RD. FAIRHAVEN993-2611

TheParish Parade

Publicity chairmen of parish or·ganizations are asked to submitnews items for this column to TheAnchor, P. O. Box 7, Fall River02722.

ST. STANISLAUS,FALL RIVER

Members of the Men's Clubwill visit New Bedford House ofCorrection Wednesday, May 13.Reservations should be made bySunday, May 10 with ThomasPietrazek.

The Men's Club and Women'sGuild will hold joint instalIationceremonies and sponsor a SpringFrolic Saturday night, May 23in the school halI. Tickets areavailable from members of bothunits. '

Starting this Sunday membersof the Parish Youth Council willprovide babysitting service in thepre-primary classroom duringthe 11 :15 Mass.

HOLY NAME,FALL RIVER

The CYO will sponsor a dancefrom 8 to 11 tomorrow night atthe school halI. Music will beby the Wampanoag Flea Market.

ST. JOSEPH.FALL RIVER

A dinner-dance, honoring thefaculty of the parish school willtake place Sunday, May 17 atWhite's restaurant. under the di­rection of the Women's Guild.Tickets' are available from com·mittee memoers, at Bernie'sCleaners or at the rectory.

The parish council wiII meetat 7:30 tonight.

The CYO will sponsor a splashparty from 7 to 8:30 Saturdaynight, May 9 aa the Boys' tlub.

First Communion will be re­ceived at 8:15 IyIass Sundaymorning, May 31.

ST. JOHN OF GOD,SOMERSET

THE .ANCHOR-- 17Thurs.. May 7, 1970

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

F.' L. COLLINS & SONS

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

Member National Society Professional Engineers

FRANC~S IL COLLINS, JR., Treas.THOMAS K. COLLINS, Secy.

ACADEMY BUilDING FALL RIVER, MASS.

GENERAL CONTRACTORSand ENGINEERS

••

ST. MARY,NEW BEDFORD

Mrs. Raymond Gamache. pro­grain chairman" has announcedthat members are urged to in­vite their husbands to the "AuldLang Syne" evening planned forMonday night, May 11.

Guild members will visit theSacred Heart Home 0::1 Wed­nesday, May 13 and presentMay baskets to the guests.

OUR LADY OF HEAlLTIHI

$175Rev. Manuel M. Resendes

$50Holy Name SocietyIn Memory of Rose FreitasMr. & Mrs. Manuel Mello

$30

TheParish Parade

A Friend$25

Mary Jane FrancoMrs. Gilbert VasconcelosMr. & Mrs. Joseph AlmeidaMr. & Mrs. Francisco SilviaMrs..Mary Ferreira

ST. CASIMIR,NEW BEDFORD

The 'following officers of theCouples Club have been installedfor the coming year: Mr. andMrs. Michael Fastoso, presi~

dents; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pel­czarski, vice-presidents; Mr.and Mrs. Frank Josefe£<. trea­surers; Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ros­zkiewicz, secretaries.

$25Mr. & Mrs. Franklin Raposa,

Mrs. John Potts, Rose Lopes,James Doucet, Mr. & Mrs. Mat­thew Burke.

Mr. & Mrs. Fred Chlebek,Christopher Lake Jr., Mr. & Mrs.William J. Sewell, William Brad­bury Sr., Mr. & Mrs. Paul, Gar­della.

Mary Simons, Mr. & Mrs.John Donald, Alice F. Crowley,William D. Crowley, Mae Riley.

Henry Raposa, William Brad­bury Jr., Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Tal­bot, Mr. & Mrs. Alcide Talbot,Mr. & Mrs. Robert Sullivan.

The Rounds Family, GraceWalmsley, Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B.Belanger, Mr. & Mrs. Louis Vi­veiros, Genevieve Connelly.

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Tavares,John A. Diskin, Mr. & Mrs. JohnKane.

ST. WILLIAM

$150James E. Fitzgerald Family

$100Gertrude V. Kennedy

$75'Margaret Constantine

$50Harry WoodBoodry Family_Mary M.& Helen L. DonovanMr. & Mrs. Raymond Dooley

$40In Memory of Arthur P. Cor­

reira$35

Mr. & Mrs. Daniel AraujoMargaret O'GradyMr. & Mrs. Francis GauthierMr. & Mrs. John Maitoza

$30Thomas EcclesIn Memory of Arthur P. Cor­

reira

FALL RIVER AWARDS: The Catholic Woman's Club of FallRiver awarded two scholarships to daughters of members attheir annual banquet on SUriday night. Mrs. James A. O'Brien, Jr.,newly named president, Catherine McMullen of Mt. St. Mary'sAcademy and Elizabeth Demetrius of Sacred Hearts Academy,recipients of the scholarships and Mrs. Raymond V. Barrette,outgoing president.

Gertrude L. Mercier, Mr. & MrsHenry Dussault, Mr. & Mrs. Ray­mond Danis, Mr. & Mrs. EdmundGeary, Mr. & Mrs. Francis Carey

Mr. & Mrs. Timothy J. ,MurphyMr. & Mrs. Robert F. ·Smith. Mr.& Mrs. Edward Nicoletti, Mr. &Mrs. Fernand Bonnoyer, Mr. &Mrs. James Pedder

Mr. & Mrs. William Renaud,Mr. & Mrs. John J. Sullivan, MrsJames E. Mullins, Claire Mullins,Mrs. Edmund Sunderland & Fam­ily

Mrs. David Bishop, Mr. & Mrs.William Cleare, Mr. & Mrs. JohnAzavedo, Mr. & Mrs. Rene Beau­lieu, Mr. & Mrs. Robert Lapre

of France, Swansea; Manuel J.Soares, St. Roch, Fall River; Mrs.Rene J. Tremblay Jr., St. Anne,Fall River.

Our Lady of Good - CounselMedals were presented to Mrs.Stanley Bielusiak, St. Jean Bap­tist, Fall River; Mrs. KennethLeger, Sacred Heart, Fall River;Mrs. Paul Melancon, St. Anne,Fall River; Mrs. Beattrice Arruda,St. John Baptist, New Bedford;.Mrs. Ann Reed, St. Patrick,Wareham; Mrs. Harvey Alden,St. Ann, Raynham; Mrs. JohnKeene, St. Jacques, Taunton;Mrs. Frank Ferreira, St. Joseph,North Dighton.

Chaplains, ChairmenDiocesan Youth Chaplain is

Rev. Walter A. Sullivan, aidedby Joseph F. Murphy, DiocesanLay Chairman; and Walter P.Wilcox Jr., Executive Secretary.

Area chaplains are Rev. RogerJ. Levesque and Rev. WilliamF. O'Connell, New Bedford; Rev.John F. Andrews and Rev. Ar­thur T. de Mello, Fall River; Rev.Martin L. Buote and Rev. BarryW. Wall, Taunton - Attleboro;and Rev. Bernard R. Kelley, CapeCod. .

$35Mr. & Mrs. James k. MarumElizabeth & Emma ConnorsMary HartLillian HartMr. & Mrs. Edward J. Harring-

ton -

$30Mr. & Mrs. Joseph KeefeJohn W. CummingsMr. & Mrs. Joseph DionMr. & Mrs. Charles LeonardClarence BonnerMr. & Mrs. Anthony GearyLawrence Henry

$28Mr. &. Mrs. Rene Garant

$25 _ " ,. James Higgins, Mr. & Mrs.

Fred Demetrius, Mr. & Mrs. Ken­neth Reinerio, Mr. & Mrs. PierreBrouns, Mr. & Mrs. LawrenceGraffam

Mr. & Mrs. Roland Gagnon,Mary Lysaght, Catherine Ly­saght, Julia T. Harrington, Gen­evieve A. Harrington

Catherine P. Rarrington, Mr.& Mrs. John Donnelly Jr., Cath­erine C. Shea & Anna L. SullivanMr. & Mrs. John White, HelenaKelley

Mr.- & Mrs. John J. Gallagher,Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Ryan, Mr.& Mrs. Frank Plichta, Mrs. Hon­ora Sullivan, The Nash Family

Mr. 8i Mrs. Thomas J. Carey,Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Phelan, Mr.& Mrs. Thomas Hammond, Mrs.G. Richard Duffy, Mr. & Mrs.Hugh F. Reilly

Mr. & Mrs. John Leonard, Mr.& Mrs. Joseph Canniff, Mrs JohnHiggins, Margaret Lahey, Mr. &Mrs. Joseph Delaney

Ursula Riley, Anne E. Devine,Thomas Sullivan, Mrs. WalkerWarrener -& Family, Marion G.& Daniel T. Foley

Mary C Casey, Madeline CaseyMrs. John Partridge, Mr. & Mrs.David T. Sullivan, MargueriteBonner

Mr. & Mrs. William Moran &Family, In Memory of KathleenGillespie, Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A.O'Donnell, Mr. & Mrs. JohnKeating, Mr. & Mrs. Alfred A.Dube

Mr. & Mrs. Antonio Luongo,Elinor Kennedy, l'y1r & Mrs HenryJ. Lemerise, Mr. & Mrs. JosephMcGuill, Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Mes­sier

Mr. & Mrs. P. Henry Desmond,Grace Cuttle, Florence Sherry,Raymond Beausoleil, Mr. & Mrs.Fred Czerwonka

Mr. & Mrs. Antone Almeida,Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Cummings,Mr. & Mrs. Elmer Stafford, Mr.Mrs. James R. Medeiros, Mr. &

Mrs. Raymond C. Gaudreau

Fall RiverHOLY NAME

$250Dr. & Mrs. Gerald Phaneuf

$200 .Dr. & Mrs. Harry T. PowersMr. & Mrs. Harold E. ClarkinJoseph F. PhelanPatrick Phelan

$150Dr. & Mrs. Paul Dunn

$125Mr. & Mrs. John BurkeMay Leary

$100Dr. Anne Marie HigginsMrs. William ConnellyMrs. John CorriganDr. & Mrs. James SullivanMarion L. TorphyRose E. McDonaldMr. & Mrs. William Hargraves

$75Mr. & Mrs. Gustave MattosMrs. W. Arthur Leary

$60Mrs. John Hogan & Katherine

M. Cecilia Sheahan & MargaretP. Kelliher

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas F. Burke$50

Dr. & Mrs. Owen O'RiordanMr. & Mrs. Joseph PaquetEileen HigginsJoseph' PhelanMildred V. CarrollMona M. SheaMrs. William A. TorphyAtty. Fred Torphy Jr.The KennysMr. & Mrs. John MitchellFrancis Devine 'Dr. & Mrs. Alfred RoyMr. & Mrs. Everett G. CrowleyMr. & Mrs. Henry F. Shea .Mr. & Mrs. James DavittMr. & Mrs. James Pimental

$40The Neilan FamilyIn Memory of the Hussey Fam­

ily & Ann A. O'NeillGertrude A. & Alice LynchMr. & Mrs. James H. Hudner

Twenty-four men and womenactive with Boy Scouts, GirlScouts, Camp Fire Girls andJunior Daughters of Isabella inthe Fall River Diocese were hon­ored at the 11 th annual Recogni­tion Mass and buffet sponsoredby the Catholic Committee onScouting and the Marian Com·mittee.

St. Anne, Pelican, St. Georgeand Our Lady of Good Counselmedals were awared by BishopConnolly and area ScoutingChaplains at the close of a con­celebrated Eucharist at St. Jac­ques Church, Taunton. A buffetfollowed in St. Jacques schoolhall.

St. Anne MedalRecipients of the St. Anne

Medal were Mrs. Armand T.Cousineau, Immaculate Concep­tion parish, Fall River; Mrs. Ed­ward Antaya, New Bedford; andMrs. Norman Sprague, St. Jac­ques, Taunton.

The St. George Award wasconferred on John Keary, St.Joseph's, Fairhaven; Frank V.Medeiros Jr., St. John of God,Somerset and Walter Linnell,Bethany Congregational Church,Attleboro, the first non-Catholicin the Diocese to receive theaward. For 12 years Linnell hasbeen Scoutmaster for St. There·sa's Church troop, South Attle­boro.

Pelican medals went to 'Bea­trice Pond, St. Joseph, Fair­haven; Maurice Lavallee, St. Jo­seph, New Bedford; Antone Rose,St. John Baptist, New Bedford;Maurice Kellt, St. Joseph, NorthDighton; Francis Guilmette, Im­maculate Conception, Taunton;

Also John Dunne, St. Mary;Norton; Armand T. Cousineau,Immaculate Conception, Fall Riv-

o er; Robert Le Comte. St. Louis

Page 18: 05.07.70

Too ProudThe prouder a man is, the

more he thinks he deserves, andthe more he thinks he deserves,the less he really does deserve.

-BE;!echer

ST. ANNECREDIT UNION

43 RODNEY FRENCH BLVD.NEAR COVE RD. NEW BEDFORDAll Your Mone, Insured Aplnst LOllAll Peraona. Loanl Life InluredHome Mortlalel on ElIIJ TermlSpecial Depolltl Doaille at DutilBanll In Peraon or II, MallWelcome Into Our Credit Union Famll,

Open Dally 9 am·2 pm Frl. 6-8 pm-Parlling-

, CLOSED SATURDAYS

ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST$250

Rev. Daniel A. Gamache$62

A Friend$50

Robert F. Messier$31

Albert Ouellette'f ' " $30

Mr. & Mrs. 'George GagnonLeo & Cecile Ducharme

$27Mr. & Mrs. John Farrell

$25Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Berube, Mr.

& Mrs. Louis R. Bouchard. AFriend, Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Gag­non & Family, Aime H. Goyette

Mr: & Mrs. Philias Ouellette,St. Jean Baptiste Women's Coun­cil of Catholic Women, Mr. &Mrs John Perry, Norman Perry,Alphonse S. Pierre

Drop TogetherMy pride fell with my for-

tunes. -Shakespeare

WEBB OIL COMPANY·TEXACO FUEL OILS

DOMESTIC & HEAVY DUTY OIL BURNERSSales - Service - Installation

MAIN OFFiCE - 10 DURFEE STREET, FALL RIVER

Phone '675-7484

The Misses Donovan, WilliamBlack, Edward J. Delaney, Han­nah G. Connors, Leo P. Smith

William Fitzler, Mr.- & Mrs.:lames Mitchell, David Creamer,Mary A. Gingras, Mr. & Mrs.William Mercier

Thomas F. Connors, In Mem­ory of Herman Springer, Mr. &Mrs. John H. Springer & Mrs.Mary E. Larrabee, Kathryn V.& Margaret M. Whalen

Mr. & Mrs. Abel Marceline,Mrs. John P.' Fleming, RobertMorris, Mr. & Mrs. ThomasO'Brien, William F. White Jr.

~T. STANISLAUS

$100Holy Rosary Sodality

$50St. Stanislaus Men's Club

$40In Memory of Paul & Frances

Drzal$35

Mr. & Mrs. Walter Deda$30

Anonymous$26

Mr. & Mrs. Walter Czapiga$25

Mr. & Mrs. Staniey' Wojnar,Mr. & ~rs. 'Dennis Cunnning­ham, Mary Makuch, Confirma­tion Class of 1970, Felician Sis­ters.

Mrs. Walter Wojcik, Mr. &Mrs. Richard Ernst, Mr. &" Mrs.James Pollard, Mr. & Mrs. Wil­liap} Wolowiec, Henry J. Paruch.

Mr. &, Mrs. John Dopart, Mr.& Mrs. Leo Lavoie.

NOT IEXACTLY ST. FRANCIS: But in this prizewinning photo, a professional referee showedenough concern for this pup to carry him off the field away from danger during a Philadelphia'Eagles-Baltimore Colts night game last October. This photograph was th,e top winner in the blackand white Feature category, Professional Football Hall of Fame contest. The shot was taken byWashington Evening Star photographer Randolph Routt. It is the second year in a row thatRoutt has won in this category. NC Photo. Courtesy, The Washi!'1gton ~vening Star.

$30Charles -A. DuffyFrances M. CummingsMary C.' CummingsGerald 1. & Mildred G. Hal'­

ingtonMr. & Mrs. James H. SullivanMr. & Mrs. Raymond C. Gal­

lagherMr. & Mrs. Francis J. Warin~

In Memory of Mary, Anna &William F. Lyons

$25E. Louise Beattie, Helen P.

Leary, Kathryn ~ & ,Lillian Mad­den, Margaret Desmond, JosephM. Reilly

Regina M. Higgins, MargaretM. Dunn, Mr. & Mrs. GeorgeMcCoomb, Mrs. Monica M.Walmsley, Sarah C. Halligan

Fall RiverSACRED HEART.

$250Rev. Msgr. Lester L. Hull

$150Dr. John E. Manning

$110Quinlan F. Leary

$100H. Frank Reilly

- -Helen L. SullivanMary V. & Alice C. HarringtonMrs. Charles E. Sevigny •Mr. & Mrs. John J. HarringtonDr. Daniel MooneyIn Memory of. May HealeyKatherine D. AdamsThe Grace Family

$50Margaret MorrisJames L. ConnorGrace L. MartinHorace HallMargaret R. SullivanMary E. QuirkJane G. BroderickThomas D. TolanMr. & Mrs. Dennis C. HurleyLaura M. SullivanWalter H. WhiteLeonard J. Hughes

$45George Sullivan'

$40The Daley FamilyManuel J. Soares

$35Mr. & Mrs. Daniel F. DuffyJames KennedyMr. & Mrs. John DeanIn Memory of Maurice F. By­

,ington

Ass~rts Leg'islatur~Violated Divine Law

IBROOKLYN (NC)-Brooklyn's

Bishop Francis J. Mugayerocharged here that the New Yjorkstate legislature violated divinelaw bY.. passing the state's newabortion law. " ' I

Writing in a pastoral letterlad­dressed to the Catholics of Kingsand Queens counties, BishopMugavero commeJrlted: I

"It is indeed r,egrettable thatwe must caution against actswhich government permis~ion

encourages. Our New York statelegislative majority has seenl fitto allow the destruction of inno­cent unborn human life. How­ever, the new law on abor­tion does not have divine lap­proval."

The bishop praised legislatorswho fought the new abortion

. proposal, and urged those c'on­templating abortion to "seek :thereasoned counsel of our priests."

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall Riyer-Thurs., May 7, )970!18

Guiding Principles

There are two principles ofIC!stablished acceptance in morals;first, that self'interest is themainspring of all our actions,and secondly, that utility is thetest of their value. -Colton

Anyone who takes up The Se­cret Archives of the Vatican(Little, Brown, 34 Beacon St.,Bostori, Mass. 02106. $10),' writ­ten by Luisa Ambrosini with theassistance of Mary Willis, ma~

i

Translation of Testame.,tsSuccessful Undertaking

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. KennedyI

Almost 25 years in the making, The New EnglishBible (Oxford University Press, Cambridge University Press.$9.95) is now complete. The New Testament section: hasQeen available to readers for some years, and has 'fomwell." The Old Testament has " I ."

. b bl' h d I suppose that a treasury of, dIS-']U~t . een pU IS e a ong creditable secrets is going ro beWIth It, and the whole under- laid open to him" The title seemstaking can be pronounced a to promise an expose. Isignal success. It meets the There are indeed secre~ ar­standards set when the work was chives of the Vatican, but therefirst proposed. is nothing sinister about them.The translation They are, in the author's j*dge-is a completely ment, "perhaps the most impor-fresh one from tant archives of the" wdrld,"the original lari- containing some 25 miles of ....guages, not' a bookshelves laden with p~rch-revision or up- ment and paper manuscripts ofdating, of any great historical value. :previous English Mrs. Ambrosini concludes thatversion. The aim the real value of the archives "iswas to put the not in intellectual discoveI1! but

_ original in con- in the sense of the past! thatte~porary . ~n- they give us, the rich regretfulghsh, avo~dmg wisdom of our long human ex-both ar.chalsms. and .present-day perience." I"expressions which might soon be She asks; "What could, weobsolete.. ,hope to find if (they) were tom-

The t~anslatlOn of each book pletely catalogued? Surprises forof the Blb.le went thro~gh sever~1 historians, single'documentsjthats~ages. First, a speclal~y quah- upset old assumptions, I let­fled person was appomted to tel'S that" throw new Iigh~ onperform the task. Then, what he great and puzzling personalitiesproduced was carefully reviewed ** *" I'

by a panel of scholarly experts.When after detailed discus- Lacks SpiritulIl Dimension, , '

sion, ~hey reached an agreement James DiCkey, a widely! ac-to which the translator assented, claimed poet produces his 'firstthe revised ma~uscript we~t to novel in Deliverance (HoUg~tona ~anel of hterar.y adVisers. Mifflin, 2 Park St., Boston, Mass.Their amended verslO~ was re- 02107. $5.95), lind already itturne? to the translatl?g panel., has won him lustrous fresh jlau­The fmal form v:a~ deCided upon rels. Although acknowledging theby both panels Jomtly., excellEmce of the writing, Ithis

Many people have labored on department is not joining 'I thethis project, but the result is dancing in the streets. What Mr. 'anything but labored: The trans- Dickey gives us' here is an ad­lation reads well. It proceeds venture story. Four men, vergingeasily, as for example, in those on middle age, residents Of averses in Proverbs which de- city in Northern Georgia, takescribe a c'apable wife. a canoe trip down a wild ~iver

A count of Annunciation ,through a section of .ru~gedc country about to be obhterated

The tasks of today's housewife under the waters of an artificialare considerably different from lake.those of her counterpart in an- While ready to grant I Mr.cient Palestine. And the render- Dickey high marks for the isus­ings of this passage with which pense he achieves and for rivet­we are familiar are likely to be ing the reader's attention thr6ugheither incomprehensible in some page after hammering page, ionerespects or grotesque in" the finds tlie story lacking in spiri-translator's striving for a mod, tual dimension. Iern equivalent. These men go through ani ex-

But here there is no attempt perience calclulated to plumbto modernize the housewife; and scour their inner being, 'I yet

'rather, the concern is to make there is no evidence that any ,what is said of her intelligible. change is wrought in them, ~hat

In the account of the Annun- they derive any wisdom from it.ciation, ,Mary' asks, "How canthis be? I am still a virgin." And.when the explanation is given,she says, "Here I am. I am theLord's servant; as you havespoken, so be it."

Everyone will have to try outthis translation for himself. Wepredict that most will approveit. and that it will serve withdistinction its purpose of layingopen the Scripture to the manof our day.

Secret Archives

',.

Page 19: 05.07.70

Best Tutelage for Young Linksmen

...

"You were a big part of mak·ing this a very rewarding andhappy year for me. We are allgoing to miss you next year."

Coach Gibney, in reviewingthe team accomplishments of thepast Winter, said today:

"Our two biggest wins wereagainst Lowell Tech (which wasundefeated before our match)and Boston College. I look for·ward to an even better seasonnext year. One of the principalproblems will be to fill the voidwlhich will be caused by JackSpringer's graduation."

FeU RiverIMMACULATE CONCEPTION

$250Rev. Msgr. Arthur W. Tansey

$150Rev. Francis L. Mahoney

$127William J. Dugan

$100Thomas J. Fleming

$50In Memory of James W. Hen­

nessyMr. & Mrs. Everett LafleurMr. & Mrs. Joseph Roderick

$35Henry J. KitchenMrs. Mary A. Lennon & Mary

L. Lennon

SAVE MONEY ONYOUROILHEATI

eatt WYman• 3·6592

CHARLES F. VARGAS254 ROCKDALE AVENUENEW BEDFORD, MASS.

$30Alice SullivanClare Sullivan

$28Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Talbot

$27.77Mr. & Mrs. Frank J. Mellen

$25John Albernaz, Atomic Fence

Corporation, James Bentley. Mrs.Catherine Brahy, In Memory ofAdam Brooks.

William Guilmette, ThomasKing. Raymond Lafleur, LomerLapointe, Mr. & Mrs. John T.McDonald.

James McManus, Eileen Mc­Nally, Fred J. McNally. Mr. &Mrs. William Mitchell, In Mem­ory of Daniel & Manuel R. Pi­

,mental.Mrs. Clarence P. Sullivan, Mrs.

Wright Turner. Mrs. Peter Yea­man.

Name

capuchIn ~RlaRB1~othe~ O~ pRftest

~Let us tell you howyou can serve. Writefor free literature atno obligation.

Vocation DirectorST. LAWRENCE FRIARY

175 Milton St•• Milton. Maco. 0218!l

Address

JACK SPRINGER

UP,DATED EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMTIMELY RELIGIOUS FORMATION

I

Brother 0 Priest 0 Age__

special kind of persoll to comeback, day after day, with aninjury hanging over you. I giveyou a great deal of credit for it."

Continuing the Terrier coachadded:

North WestportOUR LADY OF GRACE

$250Rev. Maurice H. Lamontagne

$100Mr. & Mrs. Adrien D. Picard

$75 .Mr. & Mrs. William Wilson

$35Lena St. Pierre

$25Mr. & Mrs. Ranald Arntz, Mr.

& Mrs. James Barboza, Mr. &Mrs. Stanley Chrupcala, Mr. &Mrs. Maurice Dumont, Mr. &Mrs. Manuel Faria

Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Lavoie,Marjorie Morin, Mr. & Mrs. Vin­cent Nanni, Mr. & Mrs. JosephPlamondon, Mr. & Mrs. Nor­mand Sasseville

Fall RiverSANTO CHRISTO

$35John N. Brilhante

$25Alfred, Carreiro, Joseph Souza.

Antone Souza, Edward Lopes.

ST. MICHAEL$250/

A Friend,

THE ~NCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Ma,y 7, 1970 19

WestportST. GEORGE

$325Rev. Lorenzo H. Morais

$150Rev. Edmond R. Levesque

$60Mr. & Mrs. John Francis Ward

$25Anonymous, Mr. & Mrs. Stan­

ley Moore. Mr. & Mrs. FrankCardoza. Mr. '& Mrs. John Fer­nandes, Mrs. Ronald Perrier

Mr. & Mrs. Alexander Steven­son. Mr. & Mrs. Peter Vieira

Ocean 'Grove

Jack Springer of Fall River

Outstanding With BU Wrestling TeamFormer Stang Gridder to Seek Master's Degre.e

$150Rev. Joseph A. Martineau

, $40Mr. & Mi's~ Joseph Ripanti

$35Mr. & Mrs. Donald F. McCaf­

frey$30

Mr. & Mrs. Caesar Paiva$25

Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Brophy.Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Cahill, Mr. &Mrs. Joseph Rodth. Mr. & Mrs.John Seguin

By Luke Sims

Completing its first varsitywrestling in 13 years with a7-2-2 record, Boston Univer­sity can thank in part, atleast. a former Bishop StangHigh School football player forhis accomplishments in revivinga dormant Terrier sport.

The former diocesan gridder is158-pound class matman, JackSpringer, son of Mr. and Mrs.John H. Springer of 109 HomeStreet. Fall River.

Jack went to BU as a top­rated football player. But, hesuffered a concussion during thefirst few weeks of practice. end­ing his days on the gridiron.

Most young men would havecalled it "quits" right then andthere. but, not the Fall Riverite.

Though Jack had never wit·nessed a wrestling match. hewent out for the university matteam one year after his footballaccident. Springer, who will begraduated this month, not onlymade the team but also went onto achieve a personal 6-2 mark.Coach Dick Gibney hailed thetremendous accomplishment byone' who had never seen thesport before his own participa-tion. '

Then, this past season, anotherinjury befell Springer who is amember of the Sacred Heartparish in the See City. A severeknee injury hampered him. drop·ping his record to 2-1. but. never­theless another individual win­ning season.

Springer. who will further hiseducation when he entersSpringfield College, next Fall toaspire for a master's degree inphysical education. is wellknown for several heroic effortsduring the four Summers heserved as a lifeguard at Horse­neck Beach.

One of Jack's most cherishedpossessions .as he prepares toleave Boston University is aletter just received from CoachGibney who thanked him (or his"dedication and loyalty thAt youdisplayed all season. It takes a

FavoredLeague

IN THE DIOCESE

The circuit schedule calls fortwo matches against each divi­sional opponent.

Bishop Feehan High of Attle­boro and Bishop Connolly Highof Fall River, strong contendersin Division II. could improveenough to overtake favored At­tleboro, but, this seems unlikely.The other division members areMsgr. Coyle High of' Taunton,Dighton-Rehoboth and Taunton.

Division I teams are New Bed·ford, Durfee, New Bedford Vo­cational, Somerset, Old Roches­ter and' Bishop Stang High ofDartmouth.

The best way to 'learn thegame of golf it to play, and. playaccording to the rules. This isprecisely what the schoolboygolfers are doing and. in laterlife. they will have a sport toturn to that will give them en­joyment and physical exercise.Even though golf does not enjoythe same scholastic notoriety asbaseball and track it is an inte­gral part of the Spring sportsprogram and its importance isunquestionable.

The schoolboys are playing onthe finest courses in the areaand under some of the best ama­teur golfers in SoutheasternMassachusetts.

tham varsity golf team. And,according to Coach O'Connell,he has been the number onescorer in many matches.

Replacing a player of his cali­ber would seemingly be an im­possible task. However, such hasnot been the case at AttlebOro.

Waiting -in the wings ready totake over the number one spoton the team was junior GaryCarlson. The youngster, who hascompeted on the varsity club fortwo seasons, has yet to lose asingle match. Last week in amatch with Dighton-RehobothRegional, Carlson shot an evenpar on a tough / CrestwoodCountry Club course.

, The Jewelers first six men in­clude Carlson, Steve Nelson"Fred O'Connell (no, relation to'Coach O·Connell). Dale Rushlow,Alan Ashley and Jim Martin. The

, latter three alternate in the fiveand six positions.

Discussing Attleboro's depth,Coach O'Connell opined: "If wehad Vic Auclair we would prob­ably win the State title. Do youthink I can make some kind ofdeal with Coach Nugent?"

Attleboro's forte is Durfee'sweakness. The Hilltoppers havebeen getting excellent perform­ances from Auclair but the. FallRiver contingent has been hav­ing its difficulty picking uppoints from their number twothrough six men. And, as a re­sult, Durfee is not expected tochallenge for Division I honors.

GolfersCounty

By pmR 1. BARTEKNorton Hllh Coach

SCHOOLBOY SPORTS

AttleboroIn Bristol

Largest CityUNITED NATIONS (NC)­

Tokyo and New York are stillcompeting for the title of world'slargest city. According to figuresfor 1967, Tokyo had the largest"city proper" figure (8.960,000to New York's 8.022.500) butNew York's "urban agglomera­tion" figure (city proper andsuburbs) was 11.555.900 to To·kyo's 11.172.000.

The strongest club in thesouthern bracket appears to beNew Bedford which is in theprocess of building for the fu­ture and winning at the sametime. The Crimson and Whiteplays its home matches at theWhaling City Country Club, adifficult course for the average"duffer." However. youngWayne Hichman is right at homewhile touring the course. Thesophomore has led the Whalersto the top of their bracket and.in the process. is tabbed "thebest prospect in the league."

Although Attleboro and NewBedford have established them­selves as the teams to beat, theseason is still young. and,anything can happen in school­boy sports.

Coach O'Connell rates Carlsonas the finest young area golfer."He's a student of the game andhe doesn't let the pressure get tohim. I have to say he is the bestaround. However, there are quitea few good golfers in the leagueand, on a given day. someonelike Vic Auclair of Durfee orJohn Nixon of Taunton could beright there with Carlson."

All league contests consist ofsix individual matches and threebest-ball matches. Thus. a totalof nine points can be accumu·lated with one point' beingawarded to the winner. a half fora tie match and one point to thebest-ball victory. ,

It is essential that a club de­velop depth if it is to be a con­tender. And. depth is Attleboro'sstrongest point.

Auclair and Nixon Rate Among Best

Defending champion Attleboro is the odds-on choiceto repeat as Bristol Scholastic Golf League titlist. The FrankO'Connell coached Jewelers, who presently own a 6-0 over­all record, are undefeated in two league outings. Consensusis that the Blue and Whiteshould have little troublecapturing the Divi'sion IIcrown and, in the circuit'stitle match, the North and Southpairing. Attleboro will emergevictorious.

The O·Connellmen. with' theirslght~ set on the hmgue tiUe, arehoping for another shot at theState championship. A year ago,behind the area's premiereschoolboy gOlfer. Marc Forbes,Attleboro finished fourth in theState match only three strokesoff the pace.

Forbes is attending BrandeisUniversity on a combinationgolf·basketball scholarship. He isnumber three man on the Wal-

Page 20: 05.07.70

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., May 7, 1970 .II•..I

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for Baptisme

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Infants'

The tnree pictures illustrate certain aspects ofthe New Order of Baptism. This new rite for the firsttime has been prepared for the Baptism of infants.Until now an abbreviated form of the Baptism ofadults was in use. The new rite is addressed to the.infants personalIy. Also, the' roles of parents receivegreater emphasis. 'It is the parents who present theirchild at the Baptismal font. They make the sign ofthe cross on the infant's forehead after the celebrant,as welI as pronounce the "renunciation," make theprofession of faith, receive the infant from the fontand hold the candle. Sponsors remain and have theirown part in the signing, renunciations, profession offaith, and the lighting of the candle.'

QUESTIONS PARENTS, SPONSORS: After blessing Baptismalwater, the celebrant questions the parents and sponsors on theirwillingness to renounce Satan. NC Photo.

WIT~ GREAT JOY: The parents, after the celebrant, sign the infant with the cross, saying,in part * * * * "the Christian community welcomes you with great joy. NC Photo.

ANOINTING: The prayer of exorcism is followed by an nointing of t,he 'infant on the breastwith the oil of the catecumens. NC Photo.

Supremeabortion, even if legally permit­ted, is still the taking of a hu­man life.

Avoid "Vagueness'"No one will be legalIy com­

pelIed to submit to an abortion,"he emphasized, although experi­ence teaches that extreme pres­sures will be imposed by others.The problem wiU always be es­sentialIy one of educating soci­etyconcerning the real meaningof an abortion-the real nature'of the life which is the inevitablevictim of every abortion." .

Professor Robert M. gyrn ofFordham University School ofLaw, who discussed similar New

. York cases 'of abortion litigation,noted that in a homicide case,"there is no 'presumption'against a claim of self-defense.Rather, it is the defendant's bur­den to raise and prove the de­fense. The state should not berequired to prove that an abor:

Problems of AbortionForseesContinued from Page One

Brandlin was a member of athree-man panel on "AbortionLitigation-Status and Implica­tions."

The two-day meeting of 120 di­ocesan attorneys, sponsored by'the USCC office of general coun­sel, also explored "ConstitutionalIssues re Federal and State Aidto Private Schools," "ChurchProperty Issues" and "The LayAttorney in the Diocesan Court."

Non-lawyer Father James Mc­Hugh, US Catholic ConferenceFamily Life Division director, re­jected the suggestion of with­drawing all criminal sanctionsfrom abortions as practicalIy un­workable and inconsistent withthe past history of Americanlaw, refuting the position recent­ly expressed by Father RopertDrinan, S.J., now on leave ofabsence from Boston College lawschool, and who is a candidate

i

Cour~ Decidung. for the U.S" House of Rebre­sentatives from Massachusetts.

Tnking fllwnan LifeDiscussing two California

ab,ortion cases, including: theBelous case which was deniedreview by the U. S. Supr,~meCourt, and the Robb case heardby the municipal court of Or~ngeCounty, Calif., Brandlin saidl.

The Orange County Cpurtwould not recognize iegislationwhich decrees that life begins atconception, because, in i thecourt's opinion, to do so "wouldbe to blandly support the philos­ophy of one of the country's

.major religions, an act whichclearly would be in violation ofthe First Amendment to thethe U. S. Constitution."

Brandlin concluded: "If the le­gal battle is ultimately los~, itwill become a matter of educa­tion; a matter ot convincing asmany persons 'as possible that an

Legaltion was not therapeutic."

He echoed Brandlin's hope thatthe Supreme Court will avoidthe ."vagueness" issue and di­rectly confront tIie right to lifeissue, after disregarding attemptsto isolate the Catholic Churchas the only opposition to abor­tion."

Scolds Fr. DrinanBlrn feels the issues can be re­

solved into the single question:"Does every innocent human

being possess a basic right tolive or are such rights meted outselectively according to situa­tional quality, utility and conven­ience?"

Courts have rea,ched differentconclusions, he poirited out.

Caustically, he emphasized:"There is a good deal of prec­

edent to the right to life. whichoverrides the right for a moth­er's desire to kill the child whichis euphemisticalIy calIed the right

to privacy."Applauded for his remark

about Father Drinan's politicalambitions and stand on abortion.Byrn asserted:

"I don't think I would wantto be represented in Congress bysomeone so naive and uninformedabout abortion as to think that

. because some unborn lives arenot protected this cancels outthe law."

Facilities for UnwantedThird Panelist, E.. Michael Mc­

Cann, district attorney for Mil­waukee County, noted the Wis­consin Supreme Court did notfolIow a previous ruling by thelocal federal district court. Hecommented:

''I'm a liberal, but.. yet I feelthere is a great danger in per­mitting anyone to interfere withhuman life. We should see thatthere are facilities to care forunwanted children after birth." '