20
Appeal Total Passes $710,000 and Rising The 1968 Diocesan, CatihoUc Oharities Appeal today climbed ro $710,344.19. There are still many parishes with inoomplete returns. Tomorrow at 12 noon the official closing of the books 9hould see more parishes exceeding their 1967 final totals. The final! total of the Appeal will be published fum oox't week's Anchor. Lay Chairman Roland' A. Lafrance said, "We' hope lIlll parishes will be over the top by Blessed Sacrament, Holy Cross, ster; St. John the Baptist, Cen- tomorr<>w evening." Holy Name, Notre Dame, Our tral Village, Holy Redeemer, Lady of Health, Holy Rosary, St- Chatham; St. Anthony, East Fal- The 15 leading p21'ishes are: Anne, st. Anthony of Padua. mouth; St. J<>seph, St. Mary, Sa- H:<>ly Nallle, Fall River $25,409.00 Hearts, Fairhaven. St. Elizabeth, St. John the 'an Rive;, MOS5., ThursdolV, May,23, 1968 st. Lawrence, II New Bedford Baptist, St Joseph, St. Mathieu, St: Patrick, Falmouth; Immac- St. Michael, SS. Peter & Paul, ulate C<>nception, North 'I1ri.. 12, No. 21 @ 1968 Anchor 15,624.00 St. William, Santo Christo, Fall Sacred Heart, Oak Bluffs, SL Mt. Carmel, River. Michael, Ocean Grove; St. Joan New Bedford 15,476.55 Holy Name, Mt,. Carmel, Our of Are, Orleans; St. Ann, Rayn- r- st.' John, Attleboro 15,263.00 Lady of Fatima, Sacred Heart, ham. I ',- st. Joseph, Fairhavell1 12,567.80 St. Boniface, St. Casimir, St. Mt. Carmel, Seekonk; St. Pius . St. Mary, I 101,426.00 James, New Bedford. , X, Sa. Yarmouth; Our Lady of I st. J<>seph, Our Lady of . Lourdes, St. Fatima, St. Dominic, st. Louis of New Bedford 10,776.50 .. James, Taunton; Holy Ghost, St. 'France, Swansea; 51. Patrick, St. Mal'y, Mary, Attleboro. Wareham; Our L.ady of Lourdel3, North Attleboro 10,736.00 Our Lady of the Cape,· Brew- Wellfleet. ' st. Patl'ick, Falm<>uth' 10,732.00 St. Mary, Fall River 10,660.00 i l ., , St. Pius X, I South Yarmouth 10,339.0,0 St. Francis Xavier, Gives Review t Hyannis 10,106.00 St. Mary, South Dartmouth 9,725.50 Holy Name, New Bedford 9,675.00 . In a report of activities of the Senate of Priests of the Sixty-eight parishes have ex- Diocese of Fall River, Rev. John P. Driscoll, assistant at ceeded their 1967 final totals SS. Peter and Paul Ohurch in Fall River and President of and are enrolled in the Honor the Senate, the accomplishments of that body Roll of parishes. The new mem- since its election and begin- bers added since the last publi- 1. Expansion of the Senate ning in September of 1966. cation are: St. Mary's Cathedral, 00- include members of the The ANCHOR .- " / ,. c .;' C " , .. D New elections are scheduled younger clergy: Bishop ap- this Fall with the new Senate proved. membership sitting the· second 2. Full-time chaplains in hos- Friday of October. pitals. Bishop did not approve. Father DriscQll p<>inted out 51. Anne's· Hospital in Fall how this Senate was one of the River-the only Catholic hos- first in the country and the pital in the Diocese-is covered world. The Decree implement- . by full-time chaplains. The ing the Vatican Council direc':' other hospitals in the Diocese tive that such an adV'is<>ry body have priests assigned to them be established' in every Diocese wh<> also work in parishes. was issued on Aug. 6, 1966, and These visit the hospitals on III CHAPEL OF ASCENSION: 1'Jradition has it that here the Fall River Senate was es- regular. basis, s<>me daily. In tablished on Sept. 27, 1966. addition, parish priests visit ..the site of the Lord's Ascension on lVJount 00: Olives, a place Open House. The following are proposals their hospitalized parishioners. tJMl8d by Moslems, visited by Christians, and now 00 made by the Senate to the Bish- The Bishop felt that pers<>nnel lBmeli soil. Feast of the Ascension is today. . .DIOCESAN CENTER shol'tages would not allow chap- op and the Bishop's response to them: ' Turn to Page Fiifteen of Clergy Appointm'ents Christian Doctrine· 446 Highland Avenue Fr.· Con'sidine Leaves Fall River Affect 16' Priests and Sunday Latin' America'Post The Chancery Office announced the transfer WASHINGTON (NC)-Father John J. Considine, M.M., , May· 25 .and 26 ffIi. eight assistant pastors and ,the first appointments of founding director of the Latin America Bureau (LAB) of ,-ht newly ordained priests. Transferred are: Rev. Edward . t}1e U.S. Catholic Conference, has retired, Bishop Bernardin, 2 to 5 P.M. io Mitchell, S.T.L.,J.C.D., from Holy Name Church, Fall usee General Secretary, has anounced here. The resigna- Birver, to St. Mary's Cathe- ' tion of Father Considine is effeCtive on Saturday. Fath- er Louis M. Colonnese,' ad- 0' .... to thO e Diaconate Fall RIver, to St. /I I f" ministrative director of the Latin America Bureau, has been named the' new director, Bishop E 1.nhaS'I·ZeS SerVI·Ce Bernardin said. :. . . m.fl. , ' .' Father Considine is a native fiiebor<>. . of New Bedf<>rd and has two brothers serving as priests in Rev. Thomas C. Lopes, from Since it is the first time in the diocese of Fall River that we will wi,tness an ordina- the Fall River Diocese-Rt. Rev. f5t. Elizabeth Church, Fall River, tion to the diaconate on June 1, we thought it would be fitting to discuss the office of Raym<>nd T. Considine;Diocesan (;0 St. Anthony Church, East the diaconate. With the 'happening' of Vatican II we have seen many a change in our Propagation of the Faith direc- l13Imouth. , Rev. Joao C. Martins, from St. Church. The restoration of the office of' the diaconate has been a very significant one. tor and pastor of St. William's :tknbhony, East Falmouth, to St. In the past lay people hardly Churth in Fall River, and Rev. Actually the offIce of the di- "full of fJhe Spirit and of' wis- ArthurG. Considine, pastor of li§li'llabeth Church, Fall River. ever heard of who and what aconate is nothing new in the dom." The disciples were notic- st. Mary's Church in So. Dart- Rev. Joaquim F. Fernandes a deaCO)I was (it was sort of Church's life. All we need do is ing that the Word <>f God' and mouth. His three other brothers cia Silva, C.M., from Our Lady kept secret to the seminarian turn to the Acts of the Apostles the service at tables (at the are Pr<>bate C<>urt Justice of Mt. Carmel Church, New and his family). Today, how- 6: 1-7 where we read of the Eucharistic table's) were being Walter Considine, George and 1Bedf<>I'd, to St. John the Baptist ever, deacons are ministering to Ap<>stles electing seven men neglected: These seven men, the Frank, all of New Bedford. ChurCh, New Bedford. God's people in many parishes. first deacons, received the 'lay- Father Considine has served Bev. Ernest E. Bla1s, from St. Who are they? What can they •• ing on of hands by which they as LAB director since it· W811 ll.ouis de France Church, Swan- do? Where do they come ftom? Eight semina.rians wiD be· were ordained (ordered) to founded in January, 1960, at oea, to St. Theresa Church, New The deacon is not a 'half- ordained to· the 'diacoJll8te make' up for the neglect in the the request· of the Pontifical 1Jedfurd. priest'. He's not just' a regular 'at a public ceremony in st. ministry of the Word and in the Commission for Latin America. Rev. Bernard A. Lavoit', from seminarian either, who just Ma.ry's Cathedral. Fall Riv- distributi<>n of the Eucbarist. In He had been lent to the Latin lWotre Dame de Lourdes Church, happens to be closer to Ordina- ell'. on Saturday morning at time the extent of their ministry America Bureau by Maryknoll lFal1ll River, to St. Louis de tion to priesthood. He's not :D.O, June 1, by Most Rev. grew;' besides preaching the at the request of Richard Cal'> Church, Swansea. "fathel'>' yet; but in a true sense James L. ConnolBy, D.D. Word and distributing the Ell- dinal Cushing of Boston, chair- Tum to Page Seven 1lle is a minister. , Turn to Page Six Tum to Page Seventeen

05.23.68

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~hedral, Fall RIver, to St. Rev. Joaquim F. Fernandes a deaCO)I was (it was sort of Church's life. All we need do is ing that the Word f God' and mouth. His three other brothers shol'tages would not allow chap­opandtheBishop'sresponse to them: ' Turn to Page Fiifteen 101,426.00 James, New Bedford. , X, Sa. Yarmouth; Our Lady of r- lBmeli soil. Feast of the Ascension is today. . St. Mary, South Dartmouth WASHINGTON (NC)-Father John J. Considine, M.M., , Holy Name, New Bedford Hyannis "

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Page 1: 05.23.68

Appeal Total Passes $710000 and Rising

The 1968 Diocesan CatihoUc Oharities Appeal today climbed ro $71034419 There are still many parishes with inoomplete returns Tomorrow at 12 noon the official closing of the books 9hould see more parishes exceeding their 1967 final totals The final total of the Appeal will be published fum ooxt weeks Anchor Lay Chairman Roland A Lafrance said We hope lIlll parishes will be over the top by Blessed Sacrament Holy Cross ster St John the Baptist Censhytomorrltgtw evening Holy Name Notre Dame Our tral Village Holy Redeemer

Lady of Health Holy Rosary Stshy Chatham St Anthony East FalshyThe 15 leading p21ishes are Anne st Anthony of Padua mouth St Jltgtseph St Mary SashyHltgtly Nallle Fall River $2540900

~red Hearts FairhavenSt Elizabeth St John thean Rive MOS5 ThursdolV May23 1968 st Lawrence II New Bedford ~iIHOO Baptist St Joseph St Mathieu St Patrick Falmouth Immacshy

St Michael SS Peter amp Paul ulate Cltgtnception North Eas~onI1ri 12 No 21 1968 l~3 Anchor $400P~~EV StN~~~dford 1562400 St William Santo Christo Fall Sacred Heart Oak Bluffs SL Mt Carmel River Michael Ocean Grove St Joan

New Bedford 1547655 Holy Name Mt Carmel Our of Are Orleans St Ann Raynshyr- st John Attleboro 1526300 Lady of Fatima Sacred Heart ham I - st Joseph Fairhavell1 1256780 St Boniface St Casimir St Mt Carmel Seekonk St Pius

St Mary T~lUntltgtnI 10142600 James New Bedford X Sa Yarmouth Our Lady ofI st Jltgtseph Our Lady of Lourdes St Fatima St Dominic st Louis of

New Bedford 1077650 James Taunton Holy Ghost St France Swansea 51 PatrickSt Maly Mary Attleboro Wareham Our Lady of Lourdel3 North Attleboro 1073600 Our Lady of the Capemiddot Brew- Wellfleet st Patlick Falmltgtuth 1073200 St Mary Fall River 1066000il -~y

St Pius X

I South Yarmouth 1033900 St Francis Xavier ~~nc1te Gives Review

t Hyannis 1010600 St Mary

South Dartmouth 972550 O~ AccQ)mp~ishments Holy Name

New Bedford 967500 In a report of activities of the Senate of Priests of the Sixty-eight parishes have exshy Diocese of Fall River Rev John P Driscoll assistant at

ceeded their 1967 final totals SS Peter and Paul Ohurch in Fall River and President of and are enrolled in the Honor the Senate revi~wed the accomplishments of that bodyRoll of parishes The new memshy since its election and beginshybers added since the last publi shy 1 Expansion of the Senatening in September of 1966cation are St Marys Cathedral 00- include members of the

The ANCHOR

shy

c amps~

C

D

New elections are scheduled younger clergy Bishop apshythis Fall with the new Senate proved membership sitting themiddot second 2 Full-time chaplains in hosshyFriday of October pitals Bishop did not approve

Father DriscQll pltgtinted out 51 Annesmiddot Hospital in Fall how this Senate was one of the River-the only Catholic hosshyfirst in the country and the pital in the Diocese-is covered world The Decree implementshy by full-time chaplains The ing the Vatican Council direc other hospitals in the Diocese tive that such an adVisltgtry body have priests assigned to them be established in every Diocese whltgt also work in parishes was issued on Aug 6 1966 and These visit the hospitals on III

CHAPEL OF ASCENSION 1Jradition has it that here the Fall River Senate was esshy regular basis sltgtme daily In tablished on Sept 27 1966 addition parish priests visitthe site of the Lords Ascension on lVJount 00 Olives a place Open House

The following are proposals their hospitalized parishionerstJMl8d by Moslems visited by Christians and now 00 made by the Senate to the Bishshy The Bishop felt that persltgtnnellBmeli soil Feast of the Ascension is today DIOCESAN CENTER sholtages would not allow chapshyop and the Bishops response to them Turn to Page Fiifteen

~nfraternity ofClergy Appointments Christian Doctrinemiddot

446 Highland Avenue Frmiddot Considine Leaves Fall River Affect 16 Priests Saturd~y and Sunday Latin AmericaPost

The Chancery Office ~ay announced the transfer WASHINGTON (NC)-Father John J Considine MM Maymiddot 25 and 26ffIi eight assistant pastors and the first appointments of founding director of the Latin America Bureau (LAB) of -ht newly ordained priests Transferred are Rev Edward t1e US Catholic Conference has retired Bishop Bernardin2 to 5 PM io Mitchell STLJCD from Holy Name Church Fall usee General Secretary has anounced here The resignashyBirver to St Marys Cathe- tion of Father Considine is

effeCtive on Saturday Fathshyer Louis M Colonnese adshy~M~~~R~~~~~~ 0 dlmiddot~atlmiddotOn to thOe Diaconate

~hedral Fall RIver to St I I ~ f ministrative director of the Latin America Bureau has been named thenew director Bishop ~ ~~~s ~~wo~o~m E 1nhaSImiddotZeS SerVImiddotCe Bernardin said

~~h~h~hE~~~e~~~f~t mfl Father Considine is a native fiieborltgt of New Bedfltgtrd and has two

brothers serving as priests inRev Thomas C Lopes from Since it is the first time in the diocese of Fall River that we will witness an ordinashythe Fall River Diocese-Rt Revf5t Elizabeth Church Fall River tion to the diaconate on June 1 we thought it would be fitting to discuss the office of Raymltgtnd T ConsidineDiocesan

(0 St Anthony Church East the diaconate With the happening of Vatican II we have seen many a change in our Propagation of the Faith direcshyl13Imouth Rev Joao C Martins from St Church The restoration of the office of the diaconate has been a very significant one tor and pastor of St Williams

tknbhony East Falmouth to St In the past lay people hardly Churth in Fall River and Rev Actually the offIce of the dishy full of fJhe Spirit and of wisshy ArthurG Considine pastor oflisectlillabeth Church Fall River ever heard of who and what

aconate is nothing new in the dom The disciples were noticshy st Marys Church in So DartshyRev Joaquim F Fernandes a deaCO)I was (it was sort of Churchs life All we need do is ing that the Word ltgtf God and mouth His three other brothers cia Silva CM from Our Lady kept secret to the seminarian turn to the Acts of the Apostles the service at tables (at the are Prltgtbate Cltgturt Justiceof Mt Carmel Church New and his family) Today howshy 6 1-7 where we read of the Eucharistic tables) were being Walter Considine George and 1BedfltgtId to St John the Baptist ever deacons are ministering to Apltgtstles electing seven men neglected These seven men the Frank all of New Bedford ChurCh New Bedford Gods people in many parishes first deacons received the layshy Father Considine has served

Bev Ernest E Bla1s from St Who are they What can they rHN~bullbull~ ing on of hands by which they as LAB director since itmiddot W811 llouis de France Church Swan- do Where do they come ftom Eight seminarians wiD bemiddot were ordained (ordered) to founded in January 1960 at oea to St Theresa Church New The deacon is not a half- ordained tomiddot the diacoJll8te make up for the neglect in the the requestmiddot of the Pontifical 1Jedfurd priest Hes not just a regular at a public ceremony in st ministry of the Word and in the Commission for Latin America

Rev Bernard A Lavoit from seminarian either who just Marys Cathedral Fall Riv- distributiltgtn of the Eucbarist In He had been lent to the Latin lWotre Dame de Lourdes Church happens to be closer to Ordina- ell on Saturday morning at time the extent of their ministry America Bureau by Maryknoll lFal1ll River to St Louis de tion to priesthood Hes not DO June 1 by Most Rev grew besides preaching the at the request of Richard Calgt llrlln~e Church Swansea fathelgt yet but in a true sense James L ConnolBy DD Word and distributing the Ell- dinal Cushing of Boston chair-

Tum to Page Seven 1lle is a minister Turn to Page Six Tum to Page Seventeen

-

THEANCHORDiocese ofFal River--Thurs May 23 1968~ ~ t P t Io~ - ~~

r t

Diocese of Fan River

OFFiCIAL

ASSIGNMENTS

Rev Edward 3 Mitchell STLJCD asSistant~ )Ioly Jliame Church Fall River ~ pur Ladycent tbe Assumption

Cathedral Fall- River as assistant 1 t bull

Rev James H M~rse assistant at Our Dady of the ASsumpshy1k)n Cat~edral FallIDver f4I StJames Clurch New Beiford as ~8ssistant h J lImiddot

Rev Thomas E 0Dea QSSistan~ middotat St James Church New Bedford to st John the Evangelist Church Attleboro as assistant

Rev Thomas C LOpes 118sistant at St Elizabeth Church Fall River to St Anthony Church East Falmouth as assistant

Rev Joao C Martinsassistant at St Anthony Church East Falmouth to SLEiizabeth Clurc~Fall River as assi_s~ant

Rev Joaquim F Fernandezmiddotda Silva middotCM assistant at Our Lady of Mt Carmel Church New Bedford to StJohn the Baptist Church New Bedford as assistant

bull bull ) 8

The above appointmentsare -eective Wednesday May 29 r

Rev Ernest E Blais assistant at St Louis de France Church Swansea to S1 Theresa Church New Bedford as assistant

0 Rev Betnard A Lavoie assistant lilt Notre Dame de

Lourdes Church Fall River to St Louis de France Church Swansea as allsistant

The abo~e appointments are effective Wednesday June 12

First Assignments

Rev Edward E Correia to Our Lady of Victory Church Centerville as assistant

Rev Edmund J Fitzgerald to Holy Name Church FaD River as assistant

Rev George E Harrison to St Joseph Church Taunton as assistant

Rev William J Hurley to middotmiddotSt StaniSlaus Ch~lrchaD River as assistant

Rev Cornelius F Kiley toSt Joseph Church Fall RiYell as assistant

Rev Robert A McGowan to Corpus Christi Church Sandshy wich as bullassistant

Rev Donald EbullMessier 110 st John the Baptist Church Fall River as assistant

Rev Kevin F Tripp to Notre Dame University NOVe Dame Indiana for summer school

The above appointments are effective Wednesday M~ 29

~~4~_ Bishop of Fall River

FORTY HOURS DEVOTION

May 23--Sacred Hearts Conshyvent Fall River

Convents of the Sacred Hearts Fairhaven

Mt St Mary Convent Fall River

May 26---St Joseph Taunshyton

St Theresa Convent FaD River

filE ANCHOR

second Class Postage Paid at Fall River Mass Published every Thursday at 410 Highland Avenue Fall River Mass 02722 oy the catholic ress of the Diocese of Fall RIver Subscription price by mall postpaid$400 per year

Necrology MAY 30

Rev Jordan Harpin OP 1929 Dominican Priory FaD River

RElvEdmond J Potvin 1937 Pastor St John Baptist FaD River -Rev James M Quinn 1950 Pastor St John the Evangelist Attleboro

MAY 31 Rev Vincent A Wolski OFM

Conv 1964 Pastor Holy CrosS Fall River

JUNE 4 Rev Jose P dAlnaral 1949 Pastor Santo Christo FaU River

Rev Louis J Terrien OP 1920 DoJninican Priory FaD River -

MONSliGNOR ]I)~ER

~[7i)liDfDlaquorn Mass [f~ M~tgj [joftraquowyer

A solemn pOntifical requiem Mass was celebrated Tlesday morning in Sf Joseph CQurch Fall River for Rt Rev Msgr Daniel A middotDwyer 85 pastor emeritus of StBartholome~s Church -Elmhurs~Long Island

A frequent Visitor to Fall River Msgr Dwyer recently

Son of the late R

celebrated his 60th anniversary as priest

lchard and

thelate Mary (Kelly) Dwyer he studied for the priesthood in the Brooklyn diocese after graduating from B M C Durfee High School Fall River Two other brothers Rev Wilshyliam KDwyer and Rev Robert V Dwyer were also priests in New York State

Most Rev James L Connolly

Bishop of Fall River was the celebrant of the -final funeral Mass He was assisted by R1 Rev Msgr Raymond T Consishydine arch-priest Rev Edward C Duffy deacon Rev Edmund J Fitzgerald subdeacon Bishop James J Gerrard together with with monsignors and priests ofthe Fall River andmiddot Brooklyn dioceses also attendecL

Mass Ordo FRIDAY - Mass of Ascens~OIl st Mark ~28450middot

Thursday IV Class White ~t Mary i 889900 jMass Proper Glory Preface st Stephen 4r57400

of Ascension st Theresa 142738

SATURDAY-8t~ Gregory VII NORTH ATTLBBORO Pope and CoDfessdr ill Class Sacred Heart 607790 White St Mary 073600

OR OWNS

St Urban I Pope arid Martyr Acushnet-Red Glory PrefaCe of Ascen- S1 Francis Xavie 396500sion Assonet-St Bemard~03100

SUNDAY-8unday after the Brewster- Ascemtion II Class White Ou~ Lady of the Cape 250700 Mass Proper Glory creed Buzzards Bay-Preface of Ascension _ St Margaret 669900 -- centerville--

MONDAY-=--8t Bede ~e Vener- Our Lady of VIctOry ~41345 able Confessor and Doctor Of~ntralVillag~

Church III Class White Or

St John I Pope and Martyr Red Glory Preface of Ascenshy

sion

TUESDAY-St Augustine of Canterbury Bishop Confesshy

-sor III Class White MasS Proper - Glory Preface of Ascension

WEDNESDAY-8t Mary Magshydalen De Pazzi Virgin m Class White Mass Proper Glory Preface of- Ascension

THURSDAY-Mass of Ascenshysion Thursday IV Class White

OR St Felix I Pope Martyr Red Glory Preface of Ascensio~

st John the BaPti8t 286300 Chatham-- - Holy Redeemer 468650

Dighton-81 Peter 171650 EaSt Falmout~

St Anthony 135300 Fairhavenshy

St Joseph 1256180 St Mary 237850 sacred Hearts 909~50

LARIVIERES Pharrma~y

Prescriptions called for and delivered

LOFT CHOCOLATES

600 Cottage St 994-7439 New Bedford

laquo~(~ J~ish tro~~i~- - FALL mvnR middot~fuamp~ek10732 shy

$ 0 660 6i aannilf-r shyBStlessMeadrySacr~-- I 19640lll 1St Frapcls Xavier Iljl0060

Mansfield-st Mary 957111$Espirito Santo 216300middot Mattapoisett-- - H9ly GIOSS 133200 Holy Name 2540950 N()tre Dame 673850 Our Lady of the AngeJs 811125 Our Lady ofHealtb 298740 Holy Rosary 343300 Immaculate Co~ 570577 Sacred Heart 939500 St Anne 588100 St Anthony of the Desert 9i900 st Anthony of PadUa 260000 St Elizabeth 129000 St John the Baptist 371100 St Joseph 625000

StLouis middotmiddot351200H

St lfatthew 245000 st JOaD of Aft 270451 St Matth~W 2450~84lt OstenriIe--AsSumptloil 529600 ~tMichael j j J 645783 Provinceto~ lSkPatrick bull i 722950 st Pe~er I 277850

SS Pete~ and ~ul 664600 Raynhain2-st Ami 468850 St Roch 348200 Saiidwic~

- St Stapislausmiddot - lt 3363~00gtCorPus CiiriSti _ 851550 ~t William bull 512500 ampeekonk~Mtc8rmeI Santo Christo 419605 Somerset-

NEW llJEDJ10IW St J()~ of God St Patnck

Holy Na~e 961500 st Thomas More Assumption 130000 South Dartmouth-Immaculate Conceptlon 618540 St Mary M~Carmel 1547655

Our Lady of Fatima 308900 Our Lady of - perpetual Help 230600shy

Our Lady of Purgatory 94400 S~cred Heart 444930 St Anne 274600 St Anthony of Paduamiddot 503800 S1 Boniface middot38400 st Casimir 133740 St FranCIS of As9iampI 232425 St Hedwig 50400

middotSt Hyacinth 148450 st J~mes 1562400 St John the BaptiElt 677535 St J~s~ph 1077650 St Kilian 405900 St Lawrence 2319130 middotStJoseph 2362St Mary 714800 st Theresa 535800

TAUNTON

Holy Family 548900 Holy Rosary 253000 Immaculate ConceptIoo 569500 Our Lady of Lourdes 414375 Sacred Heart 727000 St Anthony 463850 St~ James 463700 st Joseph 130900 st Mary 1142600 St Paul 565200

ATlLEBOaGmiddot Holy GhOst ( 110000 st John 1526300 St Joseph 502400

78lmouth $120

A Friend in honor of St PeIieIr $100

Blessing of the Fleet FundshyProvincetown

Sts Margaret amp Mary GuildshyBuzzards Bay

St Margaret Conference st ~nt de Paul-Buzzards Baw

Tum to Page Four

Michael C Austin Inc

FUNERAL SERVICE

NEW BEDfORD MASS

bull 549 COUNTY STREET

DOLAN-SAXON

Funerra~ Home 123 ~floadway

TA(JJ)~TON VA 4-5000

st Anthony 4378-Nantucket-

Our Lady- cd the Isle 3493 North Dighton-

St Joseph 466391Jiorth Easton--

Immaculate Ccmeeptlon 883500 ltorth Westport-

Our Lady Gf Grace 396858 Rorton-8t Mary 6051 Oak Bluffsshy

Sacred Heart 329881OceanGrov~

St Michael )711 shyorleans-

South Easton Holy Cross

SOuth Yarmouthshy- st Pius X Swansea-

Our Lady of hUma St Dominic St Louis of France

Vineyard Haven-St Augu~Une 182000

Wareham-8t Patrick 961615Wellfleet-

Our Lady of Lourdes 2291 West Harwich-

Holy Trinity 5199 shyWestport-S1 George 888050 Woods Holeshy

Spec~1 Gifts N~Oion~1

$5000 A Friend

$500 Taunton Greyhound Assn IDe

$300 Our Ladys Chapel

$125 Rev Walter A Sullivan

$100 LaSalette Seminary Attleb-

$75 Rev Clarence J dEritremont

$25 bull Mr amp Mrs James F Kerr

Cape Cod $300

Atty amp Mrs James H SmiGil

7752bull

49894G 649180 8779bull

972550

268550

lQ33S00 6 ~d ~3 4698 shy

48gtti33

3 THE ANCHORshyBro Zaccoreni Thurs May 23 1968No Easton Brother Plans to Establish First Religious

New Jersey CutsCouncil Head Latin America Food Training Centers

Social GainsBrother Herman ZaccareDt ~SC a top promoter of If YOU CMlcimagme a man dying of thirst because he doesnt know enough to put water TRENTON (NC)-New Jefoo

BeYs first Republican-controllecllfood-for-thought-about-food 10 his Hps you can imagine how the same kind of ignorance keeps the major population legislature in recent years conshy

lImlong religious educational of nine South American countries at the edge of starvation What most North Americans tinues to hack away at social mstitutions is the new presishy dont know is that south of the border most Americans are caught in the vicious circle of legislation enacted in previoWldent of the Institution Food Edshy sessionsignorance and starvationlIJorial Council-first Religious America with separate new The latest retrenchment camesays Brother Herman E Zacshyto hold the No 1 post in the 13shy projeCts and idea~istic aims when the State Senate denieOl earelliCSC International Brother Herman liaid TheselJle8r-old council the protection of the minimum

iIIle IFECcomposed of insti shy Director of the Food Reshy types of programs do not work wage law to migrant workersWe are going to add our proshytutional food and equipment searoh Center for ReligioWl Inshy The bill was sent to the Assemshy

([raquoOduct manufactures editors stitutions in North Easton grams to current education proshy bly by a 21-15 margingrams now in progress underand publishers channels the Brother Herman who just reshy

Current law which is a littienative supervisionflow of product information to turned from visitsmiddotto Guatemala more than a year old calls forThe organization which willIIepresentatives of the trade and Mexico Panama Costa Rica Brashya minimum wage of $140 aahandle the pilot training proshyiIhe general press More tmiddothan 80 zil Chile Peru Bolivia and hour But one proponent of thegram is called FE Y ALEGRIAPublications are represented in Venezuela plans middotto establish bill-which puts migrants back(Faith and Happiness) It is ane council ftlning centers for teachingmiddotthe on a piece-work basis-said mieciuca-tlonal organization staffedThe Holy Cross Brother dishy native populations methods of grants are sitting on theirand operated by Latin Amerishyeeets the Food Research Center processing and preservatWn of hands and collecting the minishycans in Venezuela PanamaIltr Catholic Institutions which tbek local foods mumEcuador Peru and Bolivia

~l1ege here The center con- -OVer 50 per cent of the nashy~ founded in 1956 at Stonehill COIPOratlons Cooperate

According to Brother Herman The bill is opposed by the adshy Clucts courses and workshops on tWe foods rot on and in the the success of the program wIll ministration of Gov Richard J tood purchasing preparation and ground emphasized Brother be based on the ability of the Hughes organized labor the rage menu planning diets Herman because the people local population to put the Consumer League of New Jersey IDUtritioil and kindred subjects lack elementary food knowlshy knowledge they can acquire at and the National Association for tIDr persons in charge of food edge He noted in some Central the training centers to producshy the Advancement of Colored tIe1vice in seminaries colleges and South America countries tive use He stressed that the People The New Jersey Farm and similar institutions vegetables like asparagus and Food Reearch Center for Reli shy Bureau favors it

Highly QuaUfied beets grow wild yet almost gious Institutions is not a charshy So far this year the legislature lln re~nt years representashy none are harvested nor eaten BRO 1II lEo ZACCARElLlLI CoSCbull ity organization but acts as the has pared unemployment beneshy

lives of non-Catholic institutions locally The Bay state Holy source from which participants fitsmiddot and school bus transportashyhave joined Catholics from vashy Cross Brother added that in the in Caracus Venezuela and in Ms education programs can tion oosts MeanWhile it has dous sections of the U S and birthplace of the potato most will begin operation next Sepshy take knowledge and build betshy failed to enact any of the meashyCanada as students at the censhy people do not know how to use tember Training centers willl ter futures for themselves sures suggested by the Govershytier Brother Zaccarelli also conshy it bow to cultivate or how to open in tlte eight remaining Self-Help Plan nors Commission on Civic Disshyducts seminars throughout the harvest and store it pointing countries during the next five In the past decade the Food order which recommended l eountry out that the primitive knowlshy years based on the success of Research Center has trained variety of laws designed to alleshy

As a high school teenager in edge of foods and their uses the pilot program over 5000 persons in insti-tushy viate conditions which spawned II1s native New Castle Pa oospite an abundance of variety Better Future tiona food service skills in the widespread rioting in the State Brother Zaccarelli began his haa limited the dietary staple of Several North American food United States Canada Europe eareer of quieting beefs about much of Latin America to corn and food equipment companies Puerto Rico Australia and food He got an after-school and rice have already contributed equipshy Hong Kong Student Federation iJob as bul boy in a restaurant Pegged at a cost of $10 milshy ment and personnel for vocashy With the inception of this ond quickly advanced to salad lion over the next half dozen tional schools where the local South American Self-Help plan In Financial Trouble ~ef years the immediate objective population can learn basic canshy the Center undertakes its first WASHINGTON (NC)- Afteli

Deciding on a Religious life 9pound Brother Zaccarellls visits ning and food preservation step in helping the poor of unshy 31 years of operations the Nashyeareer he joined the Holy was to middotfind a location for the methods der-developed nations to create tional Federation of Catholie Cross Brothers in the late 1940s pilOt training center It will be We are not going to LatilIl better lives for themselves College Students now is in dire attended Cornell Universitya financial difficulties and mayIhotel and restaurant adminisshy disband ibation school then took adshy Study Responsible Eucharistic Sharing MsgrThomas J Leonard di shyvanced courses at George Washshy

rectQr Youth Department USbullIngton University Washington Catholic Conference confirmedD C and founded the food Churchmen Exp~ore Circumstances Procedurereshythe dismal NFCCS situation bmerearch center at the college conshysaid it is too early now to stateducted by the Holy Cross comshy in LOUIS (NC)-Participants tian community and the power We have found sufficient theshywhether the organization willmunity heremiddot in the third consultation be- of Christian life are centered ological justification in prinshybe disbanded He said a definitetween the US Bishops laquoommit- upon the Eucharistic celebration ciple for some Eucharistic sharshydecision will be made beforeI Sled e tee for Ecumenical and Inter- For both of us the nature of the ing Furthermore we detect thatDe August ISP oy 0 I arlt religious Affairs and the Council Church is discernible principally urgent middottheological ecumenical

Once active in more than 100In Interracial Wa~k of Christian Unity of the Chris- in the fellowship of the Lords and especially pastoral reasons I Catholic colleges and universi shytian Churches-also known as Supper exist in our cOWltry to make

ELIZABETH (NC) - Some the Disciples of Christ _ have some Eucharistic sharing desirshy ties the NFCCS fostered Cathshy~OOO whites and blacks lwalked urged their respective commushy able olic action work among students hand in hand through the streets institute Releases We urge our communions to Since the early 1960s interestof this New Jersey citys decay- nions to explore as rapidly as in NFCCS has waned as studentsexplore as rapidly as possible theling Elizabethport area in a dis- poSsible the circumstances and first Publication chose to identify themselves withcircumstances and proceduresplay of solidarity co-sponsored procedures for responsible Eushy HOLLISTON (NC)-rhe first other stduent government organshyfOl responsible Eucharistic sharshyby the citys clergy and other charistic sharing publication of the Marsalin Press izationsing

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groups Unhappy DIlisioDS was launched by the Marsalin The walk was patterned after Representatives of the two Institute of Religion and the

II similar walk held previously ehurches discussed Responsible Psychological Sciences at the in nearby Newark and was de- Theology for Eucharistic Intershy first quarterly meeting of its signed to acquaint people with com m u n ion in n Divided board of directors here Qrea conditions and involve Church After hl~aring papers The initial work Psychiat17 them in Summer and year- from members of both churches and Religion-A Historial PershylIIOund programs there and discussions they agreed on spective was written by Father

An interfaith prayer service six points James J Hayden OSB the inshywith Negro and white Protest- The act given to the Church stitutes founder and president ibmt Jewish and Catholic cler- by Our Lord Jesus Christ and Il Ben~ictine monk physician aYmen taking part preceded variously known as the EUcharshy and psychiatrist the demonstration Father Ro- ist Communion and the Lords hod W Muenzen administrator Supper is the highest expression Qf St Patricks Catholic parish of unity within the church oold the participants the one Since all have been baptized I6hing we dont want is toler- fmto the community which God rance which implies inequality pledges to mankind we have m ~at we want for all is equal- given unity in the Lord JesWl tty in love understanding anell Christ which our unhappy mshyknOWledge visions have not bee1ll able tCgt

destroy Even when we celebrate theAids Ex-Convicts Eucharist separately we are

NEWARK (NC) - The Mt aware that we are in communiOlli amprmel Guild special welfare with the same Lord and thereshyEtgency of the Newark archdioshy 1iore in union with one another lOOse helped find gainful emshy We have discovered that ourployment for 57 convicts last understandings of too Lords(fear Guild officials made the Supper are more similar than weltdisclosure at a seminar which had expected lit sponsored for parole officero bullSharilmg J])esirmbllGl IfIrom throughout the state Coshyoperating in the program were Both churches gather around ilihe Farm Labor Bureau and fhe TlIJble of our Loid nt least lUte New Jersey Employment eacll Sunday and we mutuallv ~vice EaCognize that the bond cJf Chrtlshy

middotOh a SYSTEMATIC5 5O 10 year SAVINGS MONTHLY DEPOSITS

5 00 01 a INVESTMENT 10 year SAVINGS

~OTlCE ACCOUNTS II REGULAR450 year_ SAVINGS

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 23 19~8

M~~Go [P)Greg~~U [f[]o[k) _~~[k)copy~ $)frMcdlltelroli CINCINNATI (NC)-A mon~

long program in the Arts laquoflNrrtiuregltdl $UUreg ~~~regUreg U ~reg~~ Liturgical Leadership will ~ b--J

Mreg~~olJi)~ ~ $~Mcampreg[ji)U ~lW[ji)~O~$ ~ l Congratulations to David Poisson of Prevost High in

Fall River whos been named national delegate from Massshyachusetts to the national convention of Student Councils to be held in Texas at the end of Jlne Hes also been asked to attend a Little White House conference in Hawaii during the Summer and to become an executive board member of the state association

of student councils and be presshyent at its Summer workshop

Sounds like a busy vacation At Mt St Mary Academy

Fall River the first annual scholarship in honor of Sister

Mary Carmela the schools first principal has beeil awarded to an eighth grader at Dominican Academy Shes Nancy Romanshyowicz The award carries full

1U[ji)~O$laquo[li)M[jamp~

IF0~U17 Ifreg li$

Siste M-ry Furse)T Sanshy tosof themiddot Franciscan Misshy sionaries of Mary ha~ just celebrated her Golden Jubilee

of service to God and mankind in her vocation Daughter of the late John F and Maria Medeiros Santos of 235middot Tremont Street in

Fall River Sister is pFesently stationed in St Francis Hospital in -Roslyn Long Island butobshyserved the occasion with her family in Fall- River-Theresa Joseph Antone and Qenis Sanshytos and Mrs Evangeline Plunkett and Mrs Hilda Barbosa

Sister has been no stranger to various parts of the world in her missionary career She took her novitiate in Quebec proshynounced her final vows in Moshyzambique and spent six years in this mission Then on to Enshygland for thirty-one years enshygaging in various social service

Q activities The war ~yearsin- Lonshydon saw the convent to which she was assigned completely destroyed by bombs-all exshycept the chapel

Sister returned to the United States to see her family after a forty-year Japse in 1958 and has been in hospital ~ork on Long Island ever since

And she is looking forWard eagerly to the wmk that she will continue to do in the fushyture--calm serene interested in God and His people

tuition for the four high school years

Sister Carmela who was Mountmiddots principal fOl 15 years is now English department chairman at St Xavier Acadshyemy Providence

At Jesus-Mary Academy Fall River sophomores and basketshyball-tearn members joined forces to spoilsor a Surfers Happenshying dance featuring the south

of Boston musiCal group Hiking Nun

Weve had fiYi~g nims and singing nuns now its a hiking nun Sister Albina Marie of Sacred Hearts Academy Fall

SISTER MARY ~URSEY

_ gers involved in the use of al shycohol and drugs Speakers group discilssions and reports have been scheduled and the program ended Tu~sdaywith a Day-O-Rama conducted by Rev Arthur Bourgeois MS of La Salette Center of Christian Livshying

Also on the junior-senior calendar-a Washington weekshyend with Sister Ann Dolores as one of the adults accompanying the group

Parents Night Holy Family High in New

Bedford held its senior prom last night and upcoming is a parents night for senior moms and dads oil MondayJune 3 Class day is set for TuesdayJune 4 -

At Prevost High theyve anshynounced that electiqn of the school president will take place in June Why Because ~ays the Maple Leaf in its usual forth- right manner this intere~iii1g

River organized 18 sophomores for a seven mile stroll to Lin colri Park Next on the agenda a trip by foot to a popul~i ice cream spot in Assonet

Mt St Marys junior lkomis slared for tomorrow night with Elizabeth Perry in general charge of arrangemerits while parents of SHA Fall River girls had their own prom with the Sucordium and Fathers Clubs

joining for a semi-formalaffair Jesus-Mary girls have been

piaying host to Mdther Del Rosario RJM pi-esid~i1t ofthe iilternatiqnal unfoi of Major

Superiors and counselor to the Sacred Congregation of Reli shygious Orders A special assemshybly was held in her honor

And last night at JMA the Parent-Teachers and Alumnae Association held its last meeting for the year Officers for next year were seated and seniors received into the group Freshshymen entertained with a drama and there was also time on the agenda for parents to confer with teachers

Not slowed up by year-end activities are The Parables

SHAs folk-singing and guitarshyplaying group Members are at

-Holy Name Church in Fall River each Sunday and other appearances will be for the St Marys Womenlts Guild and for a youth group in Bristol Other SHA folk groups are the Conshystellations and a junior highshyfreshman unit Both of the lat shyter units played at the Sucorshyoium Club installation banquet this month

Also upcoming at SHA pershyformances ihis weekend ei The Boy Friend presented by the schools new dramatic group Prospect Place Players

And seniors and dgniors at the Fall River school have just coinpleted a project on the daQshy

COYLE OFFICERS SeIiior class officers at Coyle High SchoolTaunton are seated Mjch~el Mal~)Ile t~as~i~r St Marys parish Taunton Alec Rich vice~president St -Marys Norton standing James Reid nresident St Marys Taunton Steven Strojnysecretary Holy Rosary Tau~~n

evenl will easemiddot the sUaiJi of talk by M~ Violet L~nard boredom on the closing days teacher at Bridgewater State of school Candidates for relievshy Prison on the need for work ing boredom and performing with young inmates at the insti shyother usefill chores are David tution Poisson Earle Flynn and Alan White

This is Arts Festival Month renin ton shyin Fall River and Mt St Mary $550 Academy contributed thereto Reed amp Barton Foundation Jnc with a Spring Concert presented $250 jointly with the 75 piece LaSalle Taunton Daily Gazette band of Providence $100

Also in Spring a young mans ~Thornas-E Donelan fancy lightly turns to thoughts $50 of love So does a young womshy Tlunton Printing Co anS so to be practical l)bout - $35 the matter Cassidy seniors William HurleyJrheard a discussion by Taunton $25 surgeon Dr David Gouveia on

Trocchi Discount Food StoreaThe Biological Aspect of Love Eagans Package Store CatholicHe presented an informal illus- Association of Foresters 1 Mtrated lecture and answered all Wells Louison _amp LOlisonstudent questions

And Cassidy juniors joined Mrs Joseph McCormick Parashythe seniors recently to hear a gon Gear Works William E

Barnes MD St Germaine amp Son Ed~ard F St Pierre SheridanSpecial Gifts Silver Co Taunton Co-Operashy

tive Bank A Friend Continued from Page Two

~ to Page Nine $50

Hunt Club Falmouth ~ Tommys Oil-Buzzards Bay A Friend DEBROSS Oll~Dr amp Mrs Thonrtls Perryshy

Provincetown co $30

Ferreiras Shoe Store-Provshy Heating Oilsincetown

$25 lOind BurnersAlf~ed Hall Edgartown

CYO Sacred Heart Oak Bluffs 365 NORTH FRONT STREElJ Falmouth Coopepative Bank Paul Peters Insurance Agency NEW BEDFORD

FalmQuth Dr amp Mrs George DeMello 992-5534

Falmouth Falniouth ~ackage Store A Friend

I oonducted jor seminarians abovo the high school level by the Na- shytional Institute of Ritual 131111

Drama beginning July 1 ~ GmilviUe national headqU8iD ters of the Grail movement ~

Loveland Ohio The course will be conducW

by Father Clarence J Ri~ priest~mposer of the CiQciDshy

nati archdiocese who laun~ the institute this year

Father Rivers said instructoftj) will be drawn from professional

artists and from seminary mlf1I ~university faculties They willi provide training in the arts ~

reading speaking acting mngshy~ing gesturing and moving -atl these things apply to leading dlshy namic celebrations of the JD rirgy Father Rivers middotstated ~ The priest described the

SUDimer program as a pil~

project through which we hop(l to demonstrate iii concrete termo what we mean by adopting ~

skills of the performing arts ~

the need of the liturgy and ~

take the first steps in establishshyjng a 0 0 0 tradition of effeetivG performance via TV we will ~

Jess and less able to hold thew attention with second rate pel shy

formances in church FathGli Rivers stated

$ltoiUrillil$ ~U5(e1mreg~atJn ~ A$ ~v F lfelmli WASHINGTON (NC) - WDshy]iam Beigl 17 student at SLshyBenedict High School ChicagCll has been saluted here by Presishydent Johnson as the nations q example of juvenile decenCJ7

selected as Boy of the Year from among 750000 Boys Club of America members he was reshywarded with a- trip to the IIampshytions capitllt

Beigl selected for superlashytive service to his home Cbureil school community and boys

bull ~lub presented the Presidem With a scroll pledging theBo)1ll Clubs of America to a long

Cool Summer-plus an -eerQr bird honorary life BCA memshybership for Patrick Lyndon Nushygent the Presidents grandSOllshy

ltgt Complete

BANKING SERVICE

for Bristol County

Bri$to~ Countymiddot Trugtt Company

l AUNlION~ MASS

THIl RANK ON TAUNTON GREEN

Member 01 Federal Deposit

iDsurance CorporaUo6

Noel Shop-Provincetown Buzzards Bay Garage Wareham Lodge of Elks No

1548

Endorse March WASHINGTON (NC)-Direcshy

tors of Catholic charities organshy izations thrQughout the country

haveendorsedthe Poor Peoples Campaign as a citizens effort to end the degradation suffered by millions of Americans as a result of poverty and racism

ON CAPE COD

JOHN HINCKLEY amp SON CO I bull

BUILDING MATERIALS SPring 5-0700

49 YARMOUJH ROAD HYANNIS

AMPLE PARK~NG

5 Neames Book on Lourdes Differs From AII~ Ofthef~

By ~~ Rev MSgTbull John S Kennedy

Alan Neames The Happenings at Lourdes (Simon and chuster 630 Fiftili Ave New York NY 10020 $695) roncludes with an apocryphal story about Pope John XXm RiG Holiness according to the story had as luncheon guests during the oouneil two 00Jrshy

dinals desirous of a new docshytrinal definition of the PllVshyOegeg of our Lady and a theshyologian To all three he put the llIuestion middotCan you tell me why the Church in ~ liturgy so oflen prays the IIIrords Pray for llIG 0 holy Mother of God One carshydinal answered Because Boli shyliIleIS Mary is IIU - powertul IIrith God The eco n d said Because your IBlGlinesa illustrious predecesshy110m have decreed so

The theologians reply was So that we may be made worthy of the promlsea of ltChrist The Pope declared the llbeoIOgians anSW0l1 tn be the dGht one _

Mr Neame is ll Catholic He lIIdi ted the Old Testament secshylion of The Jerusalem Bible Svidently he has long been fasshyaoated by Lourdes has visited laquobe shrine often He has gone ~ly into the backgiound of lb9t region of France and of Bernadettes town in particular

Now he has written a b90k ltifferent from any other of the ~ns or scores which have ~It with Lourdes

Homely Trutll llt is a critical work but not

I1IlnIercritkal It attempts to illOnsider th~ phenomenon of Itourdes objectively It rejects lientimentality and superstition Aithougb it is idiosyncratic its ~l effect is to suggest the reality of supernatural intervenshyUOn both in the apparitions and ~ the cures

Much familiar ground lB oovshyltaed by Mr Neame He goes antltraquo the history ~ Bernashydettes family and summarizes ~[ own brief history before the ltPParitions (she was then 14) An trace of pietistic glamor is Illemoved The homely trinth is rkly set oul

Whell it comes to the apparishyns Mr Neame givCfl us a dear account of the location of 8he grotto its appearance its connection with the town In treating the apparitions themshylves he is succinct sticlting _ essentials avoiding exelamashyQIon

He cooly states and analyzes nat happened at the grotto What happened to the town eg ebe interrogations to which mernadette was subjected

The effect far from being III

clebunking is conviction that oomething humanly unaccountshyole did occur -

Acote lJgtuflfellences Mr Nearne is well aware that

IDtlny alleged Marian apparishytions have occurred Indeed the oountrr roundabout Loui-des was dotted with the scenes of tAch before Bernadettes time aut he well brings out the acute amd deeply significsnt differshy~ which mam off the Lwrdes story from all others

The words attri-bUted to Mary ~ Bernadette ate extremely 1iNI as against elaborate messhyooges said to have been delivshytUed elsewhere They are neither prophetic (in the sense of foreshyWling dire happenings) nor political

She makes DO two-edged fllDbiguous promises ampbe ~

no oontingent perspectives of IA golden age to corne She is anshyeKistentialist a Madonna for a

demythologized world propos- ing nothing but repentance and blind faith

Appeal to individual Or as he puts it in another

place No word Qf the temporal power from her of the sover- eigty of the Pope of the righw ol the Holy See or even of the rights of the Church itself No word of condemnation for the modern world or the secu1aJr state

Only the appeal to the indishyvidual Go and kiss the ground in penance for sinners $ ~) $ drink at the spring and wash in It shyactions symbolizing two fundashymental obligations to love onea neighbor and to sanctify one- self

Obviously Mr Neame seen Lourdes as very pertinent to the contempor~ry Church and the contemporary world Its meaning he finds expounded and concretely applied by Vatshyioan n This interpretation is 1I think unprecedented and should make us see Lourdes in a new way not eclipsed but Ilhiningmiddot out with fresh force

MatWr of ~

That it should have swviVed unimpaired he believes to be astounding He details the conshytroversies and themiddot vicissitudeu which have beset it There waS a kind of feud between the local clergy and the religious es~

cially assigned to the shrin~ llsect

this ~eveloped Also there Wwl

ID()re than one effort to involve Lourdes in politics

Mr Neame goes into the matshy~r of cures thlHr number tM standards (progressively toughshyer) ror judging their authenshyticity Curiously middothe regrets the exclusion of neurotics from conshy8ide~ation as genuinely curedl

The crYing need of our day be says is middotthe miracle that heals the disordered mind the unreconciled personality the ~otionally disturbed the tem- pennentally unstable These are the very cures to claim not the ones to set aside

Help sought GivcllIl This jolting book contains a

plethora of incidental infonnashytion about Lourdes the local peoples attitude toward the grotto (they are aware of it all Parisians are of the Eiffel Towshyer) the origins of the dialect which Bernadette spoke the number of visitors (about three

million a year) and the numshyber of postcards sent by them (about ~ven and a half million a year) the peculiar story of the Cagot people throug~ whose segregated quarter Bel1shynadette ran on one occasion even Bemadettes diet This Qften astonishing miscellany iD well woven into the text

The story with which thill not-ice began and the boOKcloses makes the point that Maryg help is sought and given whether ordinarily or as lilt Lourdes extraordinarily that middotwe may so live as to be worthmiddot of the promises of Christ A critical point

Accepts Invitaftion YJ[ENljA (NC) - FranziskUllJ

Cardinal Koenig of Vienna hlllSl accepted an invitation by Pampshytriarch Vasgen I of the Armenishyan-Gregorian Church in the So-shyviet Union to visJlt tIlat Church oocters ther~

FAnIER JOYCE 8 3

Name Fr JoyceBe President

BOSTON (NC) -Father W Seavey Joyce SJ 54 has been named president of Boston College to succeed Father Michshyael P Walsh SJ

Father Joyce has served atil chairman 00 the colleges deshypartment of economics dean of the college of businesS adminisshytration and since 1966 as viceshypresident of community affairs Acti ve in Boston civic affairs

Father Joyce began in 1953 the Booton Citizens Seminars at the college served from 1963 to 1968 as president of the Boston MetroshyJiolitan Area Planning Council and from 1963 to 1967 as chairshyman of the Boston Citizens Adshyvisory Committee on Community Development

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 231968

Praises Dedication of COB1vention To Memory of Martin Luther King

BALTIMORE (NC) - Lawshyrence Cardinal Shehan hailed the decision of the Baltimore Archdiocesan Holy Name Union to dedicate its 57th annual conshyvention to the memory of Dr Martin Luther King and stressed the obligation of Chrisshytians to work for better relashytions between the races Th~ oommunity can be made

worthwhile only if it is united Cardinal Shehan told several hundred delegates here H~ said that insofar as the community is divided by prejudice disshycrimination and hatred itmiddot ill impossible- for the Church to fulfill its mission

The cardinal said Catholics have an obligation to tgke the spirit of Christ into the com- munity

The obligations of Christians as individuals in this respect are inescapable he said

The cardinal observed that the Church is INlSsing through difficult times

We need a laity that is well-middot informed well-educated and completely dedicated to Christ and to Christs Church

He added that the mission of yenCnewal within the Church can be accomplished only if there is renewal within individuals Cardinal Shehan said this must be accompanied by a strengthshyening of love for Christ and Christs Church

Reject Resolution Nothing oan be accomshy

plished he slllid unless we

Now available 10 members of

have complete confidence that God is within the Church

The delegates rejected a resshyolution that would have called for a change in the name of the Holy Name Society

During a banquet in Balti shymores Civic Center the deleshygates heard a leading Canadian Catholic layman call for greater service to the poor

Rom Maione executive direcshytor of the Canadian Catholic Organization for Development and Peace said that Christians are not allowed to live any longer in solitude but must inshystead pour ourselves out into the world

He said that we are either going to grow in love for one another or were going to grow in hate

New York Teachers To Study Judaism

NEW YORK (NC)-Teachem in the New York Arahdiocesaan schools will take 11 five-pan course on Judaism and Jews mI literature next Fall

The course will consist of five one-hour programs for closed circuit television prepared by Jewish scholars and theologituW and taped by the television stushydios of the New York Archdioshycese The course is sponsored by the New York archdiocese and the Anti-Defamation League ltri BNai Brith

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~ River-TJiurs May 23 196amp Oversleeping

Riglkll Traditional spiritual writers advise those who are strivshy

llng for perfection to make an e~amina~ion of conscience ~ch day to check their spiritual condition of soul to measure themselves and their actions against th~ comm~nd-

ments and counsels Some wag called this period-You cant be right

A~hbishop Cooke of New York must feel that way He sent a letter to all priests of that archdiocese aking their lIreCOmmendations for diocesan offices And immediately one reaction from the New York Senate of Priests was that he had gone outside the established advisory groups namely apparently the Senate

And if the Archbishop h~d asked the Senate for JeC0Inshy

mendations some individuals would have stood up and proclaimed loudly that this was an example of referring a matter to an organization and bypassing the individual

The ans~er of course in this post-conciliar age is to consult all to broaden the base of consultation ~ widely as possible And then the Archbishop must fulfill his responshy8ibiJity and make decisions and choose men who will earry on the work of God in an effective and pastoral way

Even then there will be criticism But the riame of the ame~does seem to be-You oant be right

Here is another i~stance af where there must always be a posi-tive attitude toward what is being done Critieism

surely has its place--but only in the context of praise for what is being done and as a further proposal to bolster the forward thrust that is taking place Then it is positive and

~ ueative - euro th Church is to assist the Bish~ and the other clergy in servicemiddotm00QInG to GOds holy people The deashyWider Vision con is a man of prayer since he

A significant meeting -took place in Chi~ago the fi18t Revbull John Ff Moore St Josephs Taunton of this week representatives from priestsmiddot groups and

middot tf II th t to form a natIon~1 fed- lA MA MEdSena es rom a over e counry bull ltU poundQ

tion Of priestiS organization TheDi0ce8eOfall~RiVerwas C rime and the Indiyiilutrlepresented ~

It i~ unfortunate however that in middotsOme Publie]ty Alarmed Cmiddotmiddottmiddot emiddotmiddotnrymiddot aS FearfiI eomingout of Chicago one speaker in Particular uSed the tired old pre-eouncil language of pOUties instead of the bull Cmiddot 5 pastoral language Of this modem middotageHe spoke of the At Home cis on ty tret

clearly the office of the diao federation as a manifestation ofmiddotuderi1ltgtcraeymiddot entering into During the pas-tfour months over 2000 more citi~ns~onate It is tbe duty of fie the life of the church - -6 ~h Co alth l~ ht from ther 1 1 nn ndeacon to the extent that he h8lll

91 Ii IS mmonwe u~ve 80u~ ~ JVCoiW -bullbull been authotized by eompeteDi

If there is anything that the Couneflpointed out it is permission to carry small arms-such as pIstols ~authorityto administer baptisii that the Church is not a politicai grouping and 8hould~ volvers Thousands more have made the sale of riflefl a~ 8Olemnly to be custodian and be seen in the forms and language ()f poliiics To d9thiB is very profitalble business The ~ dispenser of the -Eucharist

to take a narrow nationalisti~viewpointand to inssentirely the fact that the Church is eatholi~madelip oot only of fifty million Americans but some several hundredmiUiorts of other nationalities

What this national organization will do is to bring about among priests more of a sense of national and indeed world-wie awareness and responsibility toward the Church whose servants they are toward all peoples all over the world whose salvation they are pledged to seek

Their cooperation and advice will certainly be sought and accepted by the National Conference of Bishops who are pledged with if anything even more pointedness and responsibility to the saJ11e high~urPoses

But the national federation willbe ill-served if Speakers talk about it it) the language of a Political party or aPolit shyicalsystem The vision must be a wider- arid ~adeeper One than this

rheANCIIOR lIlC1~L NEWSPAPEROF THE DIOCESE OF FALL piVER Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Dioces~ of Fall Ri~er bull 410 Highland Avenu~

Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connoy~ DDPhDbull

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER ~

It Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev johnmiddot P Driscollmiddot MANAGING EDITOR

H~gh J Goldenmiddot

for the loss of private prOperty bring Viaticwn to the dying bull questionoow must be asked ValUed atmore than two binioD read thesacred~rpture touMi

Why are private citizens seeking to protect them- aelves in such a manner

Why musthomes ~ protected by priwte weapons The answer of Course is fear

Private citizens of this and every state in the Union certainshyly are well aware of the rising tide of crime In the last two yearsin this country there were two victims of serious crime per 100 Persons an -increase of more than 12 per cent over 1965 and a 50 per cent increase over 1960 And during the same period over 80000 armed robberies were reported

Robberies burglaries larshycenies and auto thefts accounted

fied person now is no longer interested in police work

This rapfd iricrease in crime together with the corresponding factor of ineffectual public ac tion has now underminded the trust and confidence of the pri shyvate individual I

He now fears that the state can no longer give him the pro- teetion he needs as a citizerr The results can be seen in the

increased sale of weapons to privatemiddotpersons The citizen can nolonger walk after dark in man) sectors of OW IIIbancomshy

dollars faithful to inlfiruct and exhod With this rapid increase m

the crime rate there has also been aTapid decrease in effec-

tivemiddot public oontrol of crime This is due 10 many factors Perhaps the most insidious fact

rests in the extreme liberalizashytion of the law

It seems under present jurisshyprudence the law favors the criminal factor and fails to proshyteet the true innocent

Hand-in-hand with this great tr~nd to protect the so-called rights of the criminal goes the rather ineffective police methshyods that have been imWsed upon our local protectors of the

public

Imbalance of Scales of Justice

The modem policeman soon munities his home is nOW-tIM becoJl1ell discouraged and irus- target of financial Security bat Uate9 by the intrigues and the dope addictmustJ)OSSeSlj subtle maneuvers of the law his very lifemiddot now dePends 011shyHe ends -up by Saying ~wbats his own skill and abilities

the use As a result the quali- Indeed this is a tragic utua- tion

The formation of a private vigilante ariny in thiseOUDtry

defeats the total concept of thisshyunion In a way it is more iJeshystrpctive than any force of criminal element to the Amershy

ican ideal If we are to have anymiddot solution to this problem the re- sponsible forces of law and order must begin to completely reevaluate their role in CIW society

The cancer of crim~ together

Ordination Continued from Page One

eharist they were alSo ordereal to evangelize and baptize ~ this sense they were minist~

who shared intimately in f3nj priesthood of the Bishop

The word diaconate comEQ from the greek word diaxonilllJl which etymologically meaoo SERVICE The deacons office means service to the Church 4) ministerial service to Go~ people The deacon was ordered to minister to the sick the pooa and the afflicted Since by ordishynation he is fUled with ~ Spirithe is ordered to baptiza (introduce the Spirit into tOO lives of new Christians) By ()Iloo

bull dination he is a dispenser of tb6 Holy Eucharist and a ministell of the Word of God He shares embryonically maybe but stR9 he really shares in the sacraa mental powers of Holy Orders (the power to baptize to preaCll and to handle the Eucharist)

Minister Since Vatican II the impoJlioo bull

tance of the diaconate has beeli restored We hear even of tbe

possible restoration of a pe manent married diaconate FOI a long time the diaconate W81

just another step a vital OM yes but merely another step 1101 ordination to priesthood TOO diaconate was always considered to be a major order howev~ history made it to be sort ad unimportant and unhea~d of blv Gods people

The deacon Is a minister eI the Church His role in the local

has already received (in the ord~r of subdiaconate) thO Churchs delegation to pray the daily the Divine Office to be

ai PrayeJ The d~acon is ~

just a glorified Mass server iii the tniest sense of this expree sion he is a minister of Jesu Christ theSpeonlelemiddotdlliough rrlest

t The - ConstUidfon on --

Church has spelled out veq

the people to preside at ~ woShip and prayer Of ~ faithful to administer sacrampshymental and to officiate atf n~rals and burial services (art 29) In the ordination rite one III made a deacon by the Bishop laying on ot hands through thJ8 imposition of hands the deacoA receives a share in the Bishopll mission which is this ministrp to Gods people The deacoa takes on the duty of the minisshytry which was described a~ove

because he is co-missioned the Bishop to do so On June first Bishop Conn

ly will ordain eight men o the diocese to this office MCy remember these deacons in_ prayers that they might beshycame men full of faith filledwi~ th~breath of Gods spi generoUs servants Qf tbii Church and faithfu(witIi~

of gods beat Love for lIisholy peOple iIi the loCal ChurcD Fall~River 0 bull

unless society as a whole begu to wake up and act as a colleoo tive unit Liberty is nOt license mil justice is not self righteousneMo

middotAs this criminal elEfment beshycomes organized so too theeIshyfective control of crime

becoine a community effort JIIi single person can effect tile changes that must be undse taken but each man bound gether in a common effort

with the disease of individuality yet save tbiI 8hip ol natkmll will destroimiddot our Dational b0d7 p~

Clergy Ap~ntments AHect 16 eontinued from Page One Aft$ Portugal on Jan 29 1933 ~e newly ordained prie3b the son of Julio F llJld Blandina

tfust assigned are (Ferreira) da Sllvnmiddot -Rev Edwlllrd Eo Correia ~ After preliminary studies at

ur Lady of Vic1lol)7 Church the Seminario de S Jose FelshyCenterville 1Ueiras Portugal Father da

Rev Edmund JJ mtzgerald b Silva entered the CongregatioQ lJoly Name Church Fall River c2 the Missions (Vincentians)

Rev George E Harrison to 81 Imd studied at the Seminario de ~seph Church Taunton _ S V~cento de Paulo Limpiaf

Rev William J Hurley w ~( sanmiddottander and the Seminario Stanislaus Church Fall Rive1 ~ 818 Teresinha Felgueiras

Rev Comelius l Kiley ta Si JPIortugal seph Church JiaU River Ordained a priest OD July 19

Rev Robert A McGowan w Jl959 he returned to the semlshyCnrpus Christl Church sand-ll1ary to serve as instructor and

middot~ch m 1964 as seminary rector On Rev Donald 11 Messier to St Nov 1 1966 he was appointed

8hn the Baptist Church Fall sssistant at Mt Cannel Church niver New Bedf~rd

Rev Kevin F Tripp to Nqtro Jliltllneli lllitellneTIll Dame University fur Swprner Rev Edward Joseph Mitchell

middot c1Iudieampmiddot ronmiddot of William and Anne 17on~1i lLo~eg (Grace) Mitchell was born iml

One of six children Rev Wall Rivermiddot Jan 21 1932 EdushyIDhomas C Lopes assistant Bit ~ated in Fall River publie St Elizabeth Church Fall River schools Father Mitchell attendshynras born at Oak Bluffs on Aug ed Prevost High SChool Fall 14 1938 the son of Constantine River before stu~Ying at St ood Viola (Authier) Lopes Charles Se~inary- CatonsYille

After elementary and second- Md StMary ~eminary Baltishycry schooling on Marthas Vine- more Md and NOiIth Americali JBITSlHIO]S CONGlRAT1UlLAIlE U1UJBilLARJrAN Prior to the Mass of Thanksgiving Ofd yoard he studied ampt St~ ThoIIias College Rome fered by Bishop Connolly in the Sacred Heart Ohurch in honor of the priestly golden jUJ ampminary Bloomfield Conn Ordained a priest (lID Decla bilee of Rt Rev Felix S Cltildspastoremeritus three Bishops congratulate the jubil2lacrnd 51t Tohn Seminary Blrighton lQ5~ the Fall River priest rian Bishop Gerrard Bishop Gorman of DaU8I8 Te~as preacher Msgr Childs Bishop Ordained ) priem on FebmiddotlS served as assistant pastor aJt

Connolly who celebra-ted th~ lVlase1965 Father middotLopes has_ served Sacred Heart Church Taunton Gl assistant EitI Stmiddot EHzahetb and Sacred Heart Church Fall

Ohurch Fall middotRivermiddot since ord- lRiver before returning to

rultion l7atbeli mB~ ~ tou~~for~ S~~di~a Atm~OU~~~ ~ ~terf(llmthmiddotThe~gy ~ rnJS~0t((l[jj~h~ mev Ernest E Blais assistant Law

crt st Louis de France SWan- Since his return from Rome ~ rL l1f IJ ~ J1I 0 JI II fC A-- c2a was born May 26 1918 Am lTllIther Mitchell has served as ~~lfl]lli tr[(8 1m(Qj ~QW Ii lteS5 lJ sectl1ro1f ~Dlflm

middot Pawtucket R r the SOllll of assistant at Holy Name Churclilp BALTIMORE (NC) _ 1middotLa-__ is1 n Hi ~ rl L Doll of Maryland have aspects as well as their theologa ~ry (Bouchard) Bla anellthe Q ver rence Cardinal Shehanmiddotmiddot0f-i3i1lti- Jointly announced the openlng I ddtmiddot I d I ~e Edgar Blais i lFatllner Moll~ lea an oc nna eve opment

After schooling in Pawtucket I Ordained May 20 1i6f Rev more ati~ Epis~opalBis~o~Har- of an Ecumenical Evening lyenJIe~t Great NeOO middotn 1 Father B8ls prepared fur lJ~mes Harold Morse son of School of Theology for all qual- The institute represents a new

ifiedifhe priesthood at the seminarieo George and Grace (Prendergast) Arthur Flerrimingto mention candiates of any faith in idea in theological education ~ the Oblates 0 Mary Immmiddotacu- orse ~as bom - Rumford the Baltimore area M t h bUl -- ~ only a few of the Coalitions Th tt t h h os senunanes ave eeiilAn

~e Ordained to flhe priesth-- m I on April ~ 1939 After bull e IDS I U e w IC opens ill planning moves to secular unishyuvu founding fathers-strikes me asmiddot S t b U be ted t

on June 25 194A he servedmiddotM studving at St Mary School ep em er Wl AOca a t d 11 t th missionary in __ Cayes Hal 1t1f1rside R I ~d St Ra~ael being rather sophomoric and St Marys Roman Catholic verSI les an 00 eges momiddot e

Ugt JltWv~ strangely ou~ of character for a Semi h d 11 t seminary environment bull lIDtil appointed 00 middotSt Lou- ~- Pawtucket R I he oontmued nary ere an WI gran Jiather John Thlrkell iS shy paper which professes and gen- t _ d doc gtUmasFrance Swansea on Sept lllt Stbull Thomas SeminaryBloom_ er 0 11 an or 0 dean of the institute and shytgt erally lldheres to reasonably hil h d E lIm t ~ 52middot bull ed Conn and St ohn Semi- p osop y egrees nro en R d C S h M

poundJ JU A ampI high standards of editorial fair- 1 Iso be everen tep an ann anPIlther _ Brighton He has served Wlu a open to students not An r t f E 1 ~

llDvuoe - Lad th neas anq courtesy ireeKinga degreemiddot g Ican pnes rom ng an bull Rev Dm-a A Lamiddot-middotie - as asSistantmiddotat OW y of e 0 f associate dean

tuU v C on use Issu~ The facwtyof 18 is compOsed IS

Ief Herineneoil6e and Dena Assumption atbedral Fan Tlrdly whether Wlttingly or ofprofessors from St Marys In announcing the institutes ~ (Ouelette) Lavoiewas hom mgtmiddotv~rsince otdiXlati9J1 1 oot NCR was playmg games Johns Hopkins Un i v e r lJ i t y opening Cardinal Shehall middotmiddotmiddotmiddotftIl River OnmiddotJjm 1 i930 ~liumiddot4Fa~~~ wthilyDbers when forth~ Goucher College Baltimore He- pOnted out that up to nowthere A gradua~ of~t Ma~ea llev ~~~as Ill4W~ O~~ I~1ltwe~k in arqwi~susPi-brew College Loyola College has been no institution in the middot r8choo1 Fall Diver Flltber La- lllS~t ~ ~ James Church eiously contrasted the interim MountmiddotSt A Con d Baltimore arcbdiocese equipped middot vole studied at ~~PttOIllmiddot middotN~wBeiifordmiddotwasbomOctmiddot30middot sumof$25 thousand granted to1

the unlversii pe~r~aa to give special courses in the Prep Ilrtd COllege WoIeeSter 1934 in Taunton Ute son ofmiddotmiddotmiddot themiddotmiddot SoCialmiddot Action middotDepartmentmiddot field of religious education

middot where he obtained a BA Siun_Mlilirice OJeii ~ the 1a~ of the USCatholicmiddotConferencemiddot ~~y will teachco~ses in the He said -that he thought the middot mi cum 13ude Afterattetidfni1Marguerite (Dineen)OJ)ea for a~istra~ionexp~nses with ~aJor ~ofld ~~lglOns fro~ ~v- institute would meet a very

Ifhe Grand SeriUnaire hi Mon- His elementary and secondary the sum ofmiddot$22 million allocated era pomts of VIew and will an- great need in preparing college ibeaI Oanadahe was ordatned education was pUrSuedat Im-by tbeblshops oil an emergencymiddot aIyze ~he beliefs of the R~)Jnan gr-aduates to work in various Ia priest at the Cathedral ~Fan D8culate ConceptionSChoollmd basis to the Catholic University ~llliCI fhUrch ~eProtestant types ~ religious educationand

bull B1ver oil April 25 1959 Magr Coyle High School Taun- of America 1 81 s am Jud8lsm snd the in other apostolic work

I

iather Lavoie haa served as middotton His seminary fonnation was These two figures are com-middot ~~ons o~ the Far East middot IlSlfistant at st Miehael Church obtained at Our Lady of Provi- p1etely unrelated to one another and ~~studY the onglns

OCean Grove st fosepb dence Seminary Warwick Neck The editors of NCR must know rl ~eyelopment Cf Church Attleboro and sinee R][ Stonehill College North -and in fact explicitlystated themiddot ~arl~i reli~on8 and win hn 1962 at Notre Dame de Easton and st John Seminary in the course of their May 8 ed- examme e r SOCial and ethical lLourdes Fall River Brighton itorial-thlilt the tolal amount of

Father Martins Ordained III prie~ by Bishop Church money which will be Irotestant Chaplain Son of Joao and Rita CandIlda eonnollyon Jan 30 1960 Father allocated to inner city projects DETROIT (NC)-Dr Gene B

EFerreira) Martins Rev Jooo ODea has served as assistant at throughout the United states Montague an Episcopalian clershylOiprilKlo Martins was bom ~ st James Church New Bedford will undltlubtedly far exceed the gyman has been named first S Sebastiao Tenelra Azores since ordination figure of $22 million Protestant chaplain of the on Aug 11 1991 lf they wanted to argue that Jesuit~perated University of

Edltcmteltl in public schoohl b t PI even at l1hat the Church win Detroit Father Malcolm Carron ehe~ he entered the Seminario

p

middotres Y erOGJnS an notmiddot be meetings its obligatIons SJ president bas announced ltIe Angnn lierceita Azores R Cmiddotmiddot~ A middottmiddot they were perfectly free to de I

middot where he was ordained a Priest ace lrISOil cion liO but in my opinion they elIlIWIlIilIIllIlIlIlHIIIIIIWlllIlJlmnllllillllllll~ on April 10 1955 CINCINNATI (NC) -Presby shouldnt have confused the is- El DRY CLEANING El

i on Dec 13 1955 Father Mal1- - terians of this area p~dged~ SUe by dragging Catholic Uni- sect d sect Ilhs came to serve as assistant_m~t the racial risis with mversitys stepped-up budget into El an -El

at St Antbony Of Padua Churcln rllrograrrt of education and action the discussion as ~ rect herring sect fUR STORAGE sect m Fall River I1n~ ten years nclld~ng the est~li~~en~f1f fa Touch of ~greement sect DERMODY sectI

Qilter at St Anthony ChUrch n~w k1[~~ of congr~ga~lpn focus- ][n conclusion I must lillY that -El - El lElast Falmouth eli SPfCif~lIl~Yon ~acIa~ ~cltm- Xfull~ agree with the final par- sectCLEANERS sect

Father da Silva lt~iat~on agraph in NCR~s criticism Qf the El El ~ Vincentian Priest Rev Joa- Leaders of the Unimiddot~ed PJe~by- bishop~ progrm The trouble sect 34-441 CohannetStreet sect

CjU1m Ferreira Fernandes ella ~rians of the Cincm~~ti area with attackin~ racism is that sect TaUfl~on 822-616n sectm

Silva was bom in Vila dft9 said the new coDgmiddotrega~lonwould all the attackers themselvoes == - == ~X~ for perhaps three Qr four ~ffer from a touch of the dis- iiIIllIIllIIlIlIlIIllIIllIllIlIIllIIlIlIllHlIIlIIllIllllllllllllilii

~ellrs and WOUld CkawUgeth- ease and that alltheirpro-middotmiddotmiddot--__---11

Want Sta~p~ ltin ~ nucllS of comernedper-graIIlli could be better middot B1EFORE YOU Ffhe Siste~ of St Francis of ~Qs ~romexistiDg ~on~re~qyen()ns ~9W true-not 0nlY of ptpm- BUY -1ll

~egany jl Y express thankD I ~embers of the new CODgr~ga- inent ecclesiastics but presumshytn Ancho readers for sending ti~ wJUch will hlven~ build- ably of lllthe rest ofus as well PARK

them ca~celled ~lffiPS f9r for- mgQt its own will te ~~~ to inclJdiog I must lssme- the MOT0 IS eign missiol$ an4 ask th~t sup ~~ a ~covenant inQicaPng editors of even our most lib-I middot~ft continu~ dlUing tqe ~tmi- ther fuU com~itmel)ttoracial eral Citholic p~riodicals

Der months T~ei~ add~ss is St reconciliation and pledging We arelll in thisthjng to- OLDSMOBilE )ilichael~Stamp ~ureat st~~lf t4me and ~urcesf()r onegether and wea11 ~aveoUii OlUsmobile-Peugot-RenCiuit

bull ~~I~~be~hsiMo~pfh9~4llc- fJijyeir odQ(r the ex9centc~we ~rlt cut QUt ~ llil That13 fo 67 Middle Street Falrhavenmiddotmiddot PRY N1l ~ h~ ~ co~r~gati(lo t j ~ _

CENTER Paint and Wallpaper

Dupont Paint cor Middlo Stiiii 422 Acush Ave

Campampt New Bedford PARKING ~ Rear of Store

Tbe Best

~orrw~Ho Tr~pp SHEET METAl

Jl 1lESER Prop fftESIDENTIAl

iNDUSTRIAl COMME~pAU

253 e~all St New iampldf1d 993-3222

- ~ANCHORl)ioceseofFa RiYer-JIlh~Moy 23 l9cS8

---------------------------shy

~~Says Therre -Arr~ N~ lomnits b T ChrrD~llDcopyHru ~reg~~ITi)~D~D~DifY

~ lffiiY JBa]baJla Ward

l ihe amptarting point Pol judging our-role in the world Us ro lrnow where we are-Ohristians living in the wealthy West a white minority making up about 20 per cent of the worlds peoples and enjoying 80 per cent of the worlds ~me But this is only a ~nning a raw statement If fact And as we know Ilhwts rarely present themshyrelves without a oontext They (ilODle to us in a dense package IOf assumptions ond e~periences

1lake such a ~t as that Mr Brown worth a IlDillion dollars gives nothing to iltirs Smith This Is a fact JIlul- iliPlied a thoushysand times over by all the BroWns who do IiWthing for all ~ Smiths But suppose Mrs Smith is his widowed older sisshyter Iho rovingly brought himmiddot 1ilP as a boy Then the fact of ibis indifference becomes a comshypletely different fact because ~ eoJ1text has changed

Sense e(1 ltDomtext Most of the facts of our oonshy

temporary scene require this oonse of context They do not eome to us neat and bare And ~e first thing that has to be lJ8id about us as Christians is presumably that our context of presuppositions and oommitshyment is somewhat different ilrom that of anyone else

The Gospels are full of the lldea that the Christian angle of

o vision cannot be simply intershyehangeable with the secular or

worldly point of view Leaven makes bread rise because it is differenj Salt gives a taste beshyeause it is not identical with the 2ood Light shines in darkness because light and dark a~e disshyiWlguishable

All these images of the Chrisshy(gan community imply being other different set apart but at the same time guiding inshyGPiring changing ald entering into the whole sum of human ~xistence We are different but our aim is communion We are lteall~ to a vocation but the vocation is unity How is this fundameintal context of Chrisshyiian living to be interpreted in rtbe modern age

Personal Fortune Let us look at two widely

occepted reactions to modern facts and see how they square with the Christian vision The first concerns personal fortune On balance in the landli where the bulk of Christians live the White wealthy post-Christian oocieties of the North AtIantic~ North America Bribin Westshyern Europe - the basic notion about income is to increase it iIIJld about wealth to accumulate to

In general a familys standshyIIllds of living its ciaims on reshylIOurces and its expectations of ilun an~ comfort gO up in step

Institute Participant yeniss Marjorie A MorinNortb

Westport a faculty member at ~cred Hearts Academy Fan Ri~er bas been named as one cent 44 ~igh ~ool bi~19gy teachshy~rs frorn18 states to participate iln a Summer institute on recent bigh school biology curriculum ~evelopments at Wells College Aurora N Y The institute will be in session from June 30 through Julyen S

with bigher earnings One can find it hard to make both ends meet and be resentful of taxes at $6000 a year $12000 a year $24000 a year $48000 0 year ~d so on up - in fact since

taxes rise with income COlIlshy

plairits can be higher as wealth increases even though expendishytures now oover two houses and three cars

Christian teaching in stark contrast reminds us that the higher the income the greater the responsibility The final counsel of perfection was given to the dcb young man sell

all you have and give to the poor- Short of this evengelical extreme the wealthy must not satisfy their oWllJlising supershyfluities at the expense of the basic needs of others 11 they dothey will enter eternity as easshyily as a ca~el through the eye of a needle-not a wholly reasshysuring analogy for our Western societies who bave never had it so good

NQ lLfimfits A secHid pre-suppositionmiddot~

eontempolary society is that chapel z Mount St Mary Con- f te li d d or en rmg re glon an was n obligatIOns an responsibilities vent and a dInner f~r Csters t fr ti A ~ 031 teacher and principal at manyop a on ers man ofdifshyt ferent national I y or citizenship f al 18 no arm ooncern of ours The Gospel approach IS whollydifferent All must)be fed even-shythe least of the little ones All must be clothed and sheltered Even if th th dtch is

e ~an In e 1 a Jew and his rescuer a Samarshyillan their traditional enmity must make no diHerence~ The centurions son is cured even if he is in modern terms a hated

SJl8TER MJIJRlAM RSM o

former DiocesoD1l Supervisor Completes 50 Years As ~eiigiolUJs Sis~er of Mercy

Fifty years in religious life Katherine -ONeil retired prinshycipal of the Aldrich School inwill be marked Sunday by SisshyFall River Both are memberster Miriam RSM former eleshyof Holy Name parish Fall Rivermentary school supervisor in

the Fall River Diocesan systemON II St Louis JgtarishRev Pa trick el supennshy

tendent of schools will cele- Sister Miriam is a native of brate a Mass of Thanksgiving St Louis parish Fall River She at 1045 Sunday morning in the was a public school teacher beshy

and the JubIlanans ~~edIate~m Diocesan schools before beingfaml 11 f II I Y WI () ow appointed a supervisor in 1941

A reception will be held after together with Sister FeIicitadi f t S

e nner or V1S~ mg Isers RSM The two Mercy Sisters ~d a seoond recepti~n fr served as supervisors under

fnends and former p~pl1s WIll the late Rev Edward J Gorman take place from 2 to 5 m Mt Sl ana under Father ONeill pres-Mary Academy library ent superintendent of schools Bec~~vingguests wit~ the until their retirement in 1966

jubllanan WIll be her Sls~ers Since that time they have M~ James Conlin retIred tutored and aided students with prmcIpal of the Mason Barney reading problems at Mt Sl

imperialist There is neither School Swansea and lIfiss Mary COnvent Jew nor Gentile bond nor free ~ bullr

in the a)l-enoompassing gener~ J ~

=~~k~~ ~P-9morL13~J of our prayer Thy Kingdom

40~s eolumn will therefOe try over the coming months to give not only the facts about our strange new world round which the astronaut strolls in 90 minutes It will try tosug gest the oontext without which Christian judgment and re- sponse are hardly possible For if we judge only as secular cit shyizens will the salt keep its taste May it not be fit only to be thrown down the drain

~ L ~ IIrencn lIovor Priests Holding O~her Jobs

PARIS (NC)-A recent surshyvey indicates that Frenchmen are in favor of priests working at n~n-priestly jobs and being marned _

The editor-in-chief will 1roW~D1DXNG GOWNS rm afraid Im overworking the

word romantic in describing the fashions this season but with such-anabundance of frills and tiny waists it seems the only fitting adjective Nowhere does the word crop up with shym 0 r e meaning than when one is trying to convey the imshypression given by the fashions iQr the 68 bride Bridal gownsfor late Sumshymer and early Fall weddings are now being shown and snapped up dewy-eyed brides-to-be

by

~ a survey ~nducted by the Gone are the outlandish 1ent SocIety FrancaJse dEnquetes eire th par ~ndage (SOFRES) 00 Per sses e weIrd IDllll des~gns centCIf those questioned both ~ tte h~v~~ ~ere dSlgnS Catholics and non-Catholics re- Ig wIg ts e Pia~ f~W garded it as normal for a priest ~aso~s als are as n l~

1Q praclice a lleCUiar profession wedding g~wns ~ tor so many and 51 per cent said that work degthther fUlootfitBkmiddot ~lS slelas0ben but by priests in a f~ri or 011amp ey 1ftgt especlay auti shyconstruction JOb is ood ~ in thlS dre~ of dresses One

very g lovely princess design by Ven because that ereates an exchange b - rio1-1- ~ ~ be tb Ch as nerrow s pear

bullween e Ulch and the dli -- fimiddotmiddot 10 workers 0 nIng gure- rIDIng seven out~ 10 persons 81lIr- Bi~h~uette ~Cthe~ by Frmk

veyed favored -marriage for ~zzo for Pandora ~as an Ehzashypriests ~because that would per- bethan aJr to it WIth its lov~ly mit them to better understand 1Jff of OhantIllr lace ~ndmg family problems and difficul- bI~h around the neckline and ties And 25 per cent of those _spIlling d~wn the sleeves surveyed are convinced that Fur-Trimmecll GoWlm

soon~r or l~ter women will be If youre planning an elegant ordaIned prleStamp wedding m the late Fall ~

Alois Schardt a Bavarian tele- early Winter and money is no vision n~ws editor Dr HeE-oobject Mirra has designed a mann Abs of the Deutsche Bank gown with a bodice and sleeores of broadtail cuffed around the wrist and neckline with white mink The price-a mere $800 the price of a good living room oouch but then you could al shyways sit on old orange crates and admire your stunning wed ding pictures

Even the bridal hairdo is as hearts and flowers as Elizabeth Barrett Browiling Curls fall over shoulders peek out from under mantillas and veils and are even caught back in kershychief headpieces If your own

hair refuses to wave never mind curl order some stick-on curls ahead oftime to keep the romantic air

By BOme unexplained miracle all brides are b~autiful but this year the designers are giving the miracle workers a boost in JOWDS that spell romance

New Bedfordilea Elect Officers

The slate of officers el~ to serve for the 1968-69 year d the Catholic Womans Club clil New Bedford are Mn Thomas P Barry president Miss Jean

A McGinnis first vice-p~ dent Mrs Raymond M Atw~ second vice-presisient Mrs ViiDo cent L Hughes recording s~

retary Mrs Maurice A Hurl~ corresponding secretary lViM Charles D Phelan treasureJl Registrars named for ~ coming year are Mrs Ricbam A Parsons Mrs Norman amp Sylvia Mrs Albert J LamolZgt reux Mrs William A Horai Mrs Robert A Vermette lIhe Henry J Fanning Jr Mrs Joseph N Joseph Mlamp3 Dorothy A Curry and lIlra Roland F Mathieu will $erve mJ mrectors

Nome Laymon Official Of Catholic Schoois

MEMPHIS (NC)-Bishop JO seph A Durick apostolic adJ ministrator of the NashVille dl ocese has confirmed the apshypointment of William G Ho~

as administrative assistant tIlll Msgr John A Elliott dioce~ superintendent of schools

In his new Post Hoyt wild serve as coordinator for prCF grams that receive local and federal aid to private schoolBp in addition to general assistance in the overall responsibilities 001 the school board and supeJlgto visors

There are 18 Catholic blgili schools with 5892 students ancll 53 elementary schools with 15

405 students in the Nashvl1lG diocese which comprises the

entire state of Tennessee

Pro~estants to SerVe 0111 Catholic Paperr

BONN (NC)-Protestanf jOllDD nalists will serve on the editoshyrial staff of a new German nashytional Catholic weekly aimed at readers on a high intellectual level which will begin publbshy

-ction in September - Most of the 20 editors wh

will be selected fqr the weeklys staff will be drawn from the ranks of the secular daily press

has been elected director of the papers board of trustees

A total of $4000000 has been raised from among the Well0 Ge~an dioceses to finance the establishment of the paper Wgt be named Publik Stockwill ~ issued

~fiDDY Dining IN YHE

JOILRY WHAlLER -ANID--

SPOUTER INN RESTAURANTS

Always Free Parking

New Bedford Hotel

NASON Oil COMPANY

Our Heating 7 Perry Avenue

Oils Malee Taunton Mass Warm FrienJs 822-2282

Dailymiddot Aittention Necessary To ~[f~Dceate We~~~

1B1y 1J~JlDill alii wnJillYJil ~~

The ~ are on their way and 11 lreems that half r our time i1l spent digging them out ~ the garden No matter haw much time we Gpomd on them they have a way of reappearing within Q few days ad 1l1Inless we really live them OUattention they ean take over a garden middotin lW time Beginning gardenem

bull WOO approaeh gardemng casshyaally or em weekends are often ~helmed by these unwel-CIOme pests ond soon give up the Ilbip Our suggestion is that M)

minutes II day B sufficient to keep even big gardens weeded fithe gardener will get out into Illie garden every day This maw mean nomiddot mOIre than a short trip BIound the garden to look mt Ole plants and to pull out a few ~ds encountered on the weJr

Few llilmtJtes Dadlly

We usually keep a small wamshyms hoeohandy by the back door and as we PlVPare to go to worlx take a short walk in the garden hoe in hand to see what is new The result is that we spend flw minutes or so in the garden beshytore setting out for work in the morning 10 minutes at lunch and ap~roximately 10 minutea before dinner after the working day is over which incidentally il a good time to ioosen up ~

t1ore tearing the kids heads oIif llDr all the misdeeds of the day

The point is that weeding u

attitudes t2lat vtll shape their future are beginning now and IllS theU friends and relatives wish them well they pray that each couple will enjoy the graces and happiness that come from a good Christian marriage with Christ in the home

Ad~ Atmosphere Often a wedding gift can add

to the atmosphere of a Christian home One such gift is a plaque that hangs in our den On it are these words

Sacrifice s usually difficult and irksome only

Love can make ~ easy and perfect love can make it a

Joy I couldnt think of a better

motto with which to begin 0 marriage or one that becomes

more significant through sleepshyless nights with sick babies frustrating job problems or the everpresent money worries Qlat asually plague young couples

A handsome cross a richlY llIustrated b~ble a handsome religious Gtatue or plaque are eccellent gifts to begin a Chrisshy

11 th h t Uan couple on the road to Il we as many 0 er cores mus ~ done on n day-today buis cmd cannot be left for weekendll because there are so many other tmportant things that have to be ltilone then

The grass has to be cut a new lInge put on a door there is a ball game to watch a ride 00 take a tree to be pruned etc Cll of which ore time-eonsuming _ lIIllU necessary With the weather we have been exPeriencing al -te th d~n~ e ~ weedmg gives ll3 middot Iln oPprtunity to g~t a hWe ~h lUI 11 commodity whiclill middot D3ems t0 be gettmg scarcer fa 001 industrial live~ and ehance to commune With Nature een at the wrong end of n

lim tle Kltcbellllmiddot

Did you know that during a wedding ceremony the groom places the ring on the finger of Ule bride because the circlemiddot of gold symbolizes the love and devotion that from this moment on will have no end This is but lti)ne of the many traditions that lJlave come down through the years and now are an accepted ~rt of the Cana celebration

Another must for a wedding dJ the wedding cake that fur eenturies has signified breakshymg of bread in kinship as it Is ll1anded out to friends and relashyves Even the veil that graces tlle l)ead of the beautiful bride b a custom that has come into llUes~nt time from the days when the brides stood under eanopies to show that they were IIDlder the protection of the glOOrp

All these ancientgt traditions give a Uttle added meaning to lYle Cana feast and the sacred acrainent of matrimony but ltWen more significant are the rostoms and traditions that the 1l1Jride and groom will carry into rife as a f~ly Many of the

polsh Mmiddotsommiddot

n ill ~ilI CHiCAGO (NC)-First copies

of the Polish vernacular altar

gful C th li lif Let meanm a 0 c e someone else buy the sheets a~d and ~asters ma~e your pft one Wlt~ eve~las~lDg mea~ll~g

If ou re 1hinking of givmg ~ bridal shower in the n~ar future perbaP you w0llld hke to serve a Bndal Puddmg

Bridal Pudding 2 envelopes unflavored gelatiJm

cup cold water b ili t

llff If cup deghte wa er egg W I StI- ~_

74 aspoon - cup suglllr

q h cups eavy cream (ilDrgetth diet)

1 teapoon vamplilla 1 flaked tcup coconu 1) Soften the gelatin in the k

cup cold watermiddot and then pour the 1fJ cup ofboiling water over the gelatin mixture and stir unntil dissolved Cool

2) Beat the egg whites until foam slowly add the salt and sugar and continue beating unshytil stiff peaks are formed

3) Fold the gelatin into the stiff whites

4) Beat the heavy cream until stiff and add the vanilla Fold the cream into the whites and gelatin mixture

5) Rub the bottom and sides cf an eight-inch spring form pan with butter and sprinkle the bottom with lh cup of the coconut Pour in the cream mixshyture Sprinkle with the remainshying coconut -ltld chill at least four hours or overnight Upshymold and serve with s1rawshyberries and the following rum sauce

lltum Sauce 6 egg yolks (see we didnt

want them to go to waste) 1 cup sugarmiddot

04 cup dark 111m cognac or kirsch

1) Beat the yolks until lemon colored and slightly thickened

2) Gradually beat in the Dugar

Stir in half the rum and cook in tOp of a double boiler over boiling water stirring constantshy131 until the sauce coats a woodshy

THE ANCHORshy

lHIONOR MOTHER lPlilElRRE Mother Pierre Marie of St Annes Hospital Fan River left meets Mrs Joseph Giblin Mrs Richard Donovan and Mrs Eugene Dionne all members of The Friends of St Annes on bhe occasion of the groups honoring the sister in reCognition of her reshyception of the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice Medal from Pope Paul

Aim Is Unity INIUlDil leads New )errsey Periodic White Walkerrs

Se~king to Ascertain Needs of Negroes ENGLEWOOD (NC)-Led by We are trying to find out

a Sister from St Cecilias High what the needs are she said School a group of white resi- We realized that we would dents have been making peri- look liketourists going through odic informal walking toWfl but you have to begin someshythrough the predominantly Ne- where gro Fourth Ward to meet the One result of the middotwalks was people living there

The walks inaugurated by Sister Robert Jean are made in mn effort to break down barriere fllll an area where rioting took place last Summer

Gif~~ Contfnued from Page Four

lNJlf~ihlmiddotAuBehCJH) $750

Jeweled Cross Co Inc $225

Attleboro Particular Council St Vincent de Paul

$200 Society of St Vincent de PaW

St Mary Conference $150

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J Wright bull $75 No Attleboro Catholic Womshy

0ns Club $50

Dr Eugene Leco St Anne Sodality Sacred

Heart Church $40

Edward N Cook Plate Co Inc $35middot

Albert Morawski $30

CYD-Sacred Heart Church $25

Frank M Miller amp Son Inc No Attleboromiddot Coal Co y H Blackington amp Co Inc

II neighborhood meeting at which white and black people discussed the visits and the posshysibility of further involvement in the needs of the Fourth Ward community------------

Universal Roofing amp Sheet Metal Co

Alden Corrugated Container Corp

Mass Trucking Corp New Bedford Hotel Macedo Pharmacy

$51 Building Materials Inc

$5 Sacred Heart Home

Daughters of Isabella Hyacinth Circle No 71

A Friend Damien Council K of C Harbor Beach Club amp Lounge Laurans-Standard Grocery Co

Inc $35

Glemi-on Roofing Co $30

Browne Pharmacy Inc $25

Browne Pharmacy A Friend Local No 168 UAW AFL-CIO Cape Cod Fabrics Philip J

Kane Inc Lions Club of New Bedford

Duplicating Equipment amp Supshyply Atty Jack London New Bedford Catholic Guild for the Blind Sharkeys Tire amp Rubber Comiddot

Tum oto Page Ten

Thurs May 23 1968

AJumna Rece~ves

Tdn~ty Award WASHINGTON (NC)-Doroshy

thea F Sullivan social worker and alumna of Trinity College here was presented the 1968 Julie Billiart medal at the schools Spring honors convocashytion

The annual award established in 1961 in honor of the foundress of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur who conduct the colshylege honors an alumna whose life exemplifies Blessed Julie Billiarts educational objectives -the formation of strong womshyen of faith devoted to God and neighbor living dedicated and fruitful lives

Miss Sullivan a member of the Trinity class of 1926 had been an associate professor at the Catholic University of Americas School of Social Sershyvice since 1941 She has been project director of the South Florida Neighborhood Youth Corps in Miami since 1966

She has been active in a numshyber of youth and welfare organshyizations has contributed articles to numerous periodicals and edited several books

Form Sisterrs 0 Coull1ld~

~Dil HawOJii Diocese HONOLULU (NC)-A Sisshy

ters council ill being formed here with the approval of Bishshyou John J Scanlan of Honoshylulu The council is composed of any Sisters in the diocese who desire to affiliate herself with the organizations objecshytives

The projected aims of the council are to serve as a chanshynei of communication among Religious communities and to the bishop the priests senate shylay senate other religious groups to serve as a source of unity and strength among Reshyligious to foster a closer c0shy

operation among clergy Reshyligious and laity and to be [1

means of coordinating the works of the apostolate after studying the religious educational socishyal economic and ecumenical needs of the diocese

Mfiltie P~Mmbnrwg amp HealltDOI~ (Oe Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Master Plumber 702i1

JOSEPH RAPOSA JR $06 ~O MAUIN $1ltlEfEii

lraaD rlovell 675a74~

SCHOOl MaonteilCllnCe SIlJlPPUO~

$WIEIE~IERS - $OA~$

IOlISUINJIr~CijANIIsect IrU~1E E)IliINGUUSIHIEIl$

DAHill COo nS86 IPUlRCHIASE SIlRIEIETI

NEW I8lEll)fO~1Ol

~9lJ-lJ7~6

~IIII11IJ1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I11I1I11I1I11I11II11I1I1I1I1I1I1I1IJ1I1I1I1I11I11I11I1I1I11I11UIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIII1111I11I

1 ~ESADAV~ lIIli~ls for use at Mass in Polish Coo en spoQn Do not boil Remove ltihurches and institutions in this from the heat and stir in the country have been received ~y remaining rum John Cardinal Cody of Ohicago In answer to - a letter from II member of the Consilium far Mrs Mogardo of Falmouth the Cbe implementation of the Con- amount of all-purpose cream 10 IJtitution Oll the Sacred Liturgy the Creme de Menthe Squares IUN~~A~m M ~58 icIIf the Second Vatican COIDlcil is one pint iillllllJllIlIIlIlIIlIIlIlIlIlIIlIIlIlIlIlIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIlJlIlIlIIlIIllUlIIlIIlIlIlIlIlIIlIIUIIUlIIlIlIlIlIlIUlIlIUIIUIIIIII~I~

I

THE ANCHORTDi~c~se of Foil River-Thurs May 23 1968 indiana Prelate ~ i l bull - 10 Heads NCEACrawford Electrical Co DrSpecial Gifts Morris Feresten Dr Frank L mAiN FRANCISCO r(NC) shy

Collins Mr amp Mrsmiddot John P Bish()p Raymorid J GellagMrContinued from Page Nine Dwyer of Lafayette Ind was ~le~ted

Attleboromiddot Hub Clothing Bristol ~it- president general Of the Nashyting Mills Inc Dixon Burial tionlll1 Catholic Educational Asshy$150

sociation at the final meeting ofVauit Shelburne Shirt Co IncBarry J Boardman Ins Agency $125 the asSoclation~8 6Mb Mnuat

Almeida Electric Co August Elmer C Slater

convention hereraquoIlr amp Mrs James G Heagney He succeeds Bishop ErnestBadwey amp Sons Joseph A Parks$100 Primeau of Manchester N HMrs Mar-y Courtis Dr amp MrsL G Balfour Co

who rervOO as president general Norman pSadler Brothers Inc for three yearsBedford House ConvalescentShields Inc A native of Cleveland BishopHomeInc Dr Sanford I Udis$60 Gallagher was ordained in 1939llI Joseph Madowsky HarveyAtherton Furniture Co~ and served as a Navy chaplainProbber Inc $50 during World War n He w~s

Demers Brothers narned bishop of Lafayette inM S Company 1965 following service as secreshy[P[(D$Iroreg$ $40

tary of the National ConferenceAttleboro Printing amp Embosshy of Catholic Charities

olng Co Inc ~WltWI7il$~ltW Speaker at the election sesshy$35 sion was U S Commissioner ofIOUlIt lLADY IOlF lFAllDMIAReynolds amp Markman In~ $25 Education Harold Howe who

$27 said that Catholic schools willMr amp Mrs Ralph A GuerrieroLeedham Hardware be especially guilty if they doMr amp Mrs Peter J Hoss lFlIt ADlIt][AN OJFM lFlIt lFAJlUAN OJFM $25 not act to solve the crisis of

Attleboro Sun Publishing Co ST IDOMIllN][C ghetto educationmiddotlnc Connelly Gold Stamping $25 Christianity is supposed toCo MacDonald Moving amp Storshy ~[j1Jil~O$ltC[(il$ t[ Our tLC1~ls ~hauraquocetiMr amp Mrs Thomas Paiva offer something more the age Co Marathon Company Mr amp Mrs Thomas C Murphy commissioner told the 6000

Plastic Craft Novelty Co Ob$erve $iver Priestiy Jubilees delegates at the final sessionSTLOUIS OF FRANCE On May 26th the 9 AM Retreat House Pittsfield N 11 ~Let us be fools for Christs

Fall Ri~er $50 MlIss will be conceleprated where _ he served as Retreat sake said St Paul middotWe Ladies of St Ailne raquoy the Franciscan Friars at Our Director and Master~ badly need highminded visionshy

$1200 Holy Name Society Ladys Chapel New Bedford Four years later _1964 Fr aries who can help the poorestFan River Electric Light Co st Vincent de Paul Sooi~ eonmiemoratingthe Silver Ju Fabian was transfe~red to Our of our children see a new dream $1000 $26 bilee of the ordination of) Fr Ladys Ohapel New ~d~()rd and faShion a better reality FOO

FirestoneRubbe~ amp Latex ~ Mr amp Mrs Herman Lamppoin4e Fabian F Joyce OFM and Fr where he has served to the pres- ournations sake Catholic edushy $600 I~ k Adrian F Donachie OFM ent time He is ViCar of the cationmust jointhe rest of edshy

~all R~~er GasCQllpanYj Fr Fabian is a native of Franciscan CommuIlity Father ucation to give them a neW $500 Vineyard iavenc Watertown He is an alumll~sof is well known thr~ughout the botizon

lVlr amp Mrs Henry ~ Feitelberl Boston College High SChool and area as a preacher for the St Mooney amp Co Inc middotUT AUGUSTINE

0Boston College He entered the Jude Novena devotions on$300 FIRST COMMUNION- $46L50 Franciscans of Holy - Nilme Thursdayat the chapel andtbeRev JosephF ODonnell ResidentSofCatholic MemoJillJ Province with headquarters in radio Apostolate

~o~e I $50 ~ PORTRAITSNew Yo~k City in 1937~ - Fr Addlln F Donachie Of~ $300 Mrs James Boyle He was ordained at the Na- is a native of Glasgow Scotland IN LIVING COLOUR

St Augustines GuildCitizens Savings Bank iional Shrine of the Immaculate and was brought up in NewSt Augustines Holy NameFR Five Cent Savings Bank Conception Washington D C York Oity H~ entered ~t $200 St Augustines St Vincent de May 29 1943 His first assign- Joseph s SeraphIcSeminary Jtl Anderson-Little Co inc lPaul Society ment was to St EIizabeths 1932 in preparatIon for the A -Friend $30 - T)enver middotColo from Franciscan Priesthood

$150 Mr amp Mrs William Figueiredo 1944 to Hi58 He was received into the

PR Peoples Cooperative Bank Mr amp Mrs Francis Metell _ Pastor and Supe- Order in 1937 and was ordained $135 $25 rior of the Church and Monas- six years later on May 29 1943

Herve Lagasse Cmdr amp Mrs Daniel Burgo tery in Denver in 1951 and at the National Shrine of the $125 Frank Coutinho Mr amp Mrs served in this capacity for Immaculate Conception Washshy

Cliff Nursing Homes Michael Fonte) Mr- amp Mr~ Eushy seven years ington D C His priestly Hfe$120 gene Frieh Mrs John Hughes In 1958 he was stationed at has been in New York Coloshy

J O Neill Supply Co Marthas Vineyard National St Bonaventure Retreat House rado Connecticut NewHampshy $101 Bank Rep amp Mrs Benjamin C Paterson N J for a period of shire and finally- stationed in ~ Fall River Shopping Ce~nter Mayhew Jr Mr amp Mrs Boleslaw two years giving laymens re- Our Ladys Chapel since 1956Associates Nickowal Mrs Dean Swift 11 treats and days of recollection Fr Adrian came with the origishy $100 Mr amp Mrs Frederick Thifault to the clergy He was then nal group of Franciscans ~o staff

Norbut Mfg Co Inc transferred to St Anthonys- Our Ladys Chapel THE FINEST QU~LITYSullivans of Fall River dk Wareham Hyannis IS WORTH THE PLEASANT

H P Hood amp Sons Inc ST PATRICK Famed Church -Gift SHORT DRIVE TO THE I bull Borden amp Remington Co $50

AREAS LEADING STUDIOr Louis Hand Inc middotMr amp Mrs Thomas Choate To Mission SocietY William T Manning Colnt Mr amp Mrs middotWilliam McLaugbshy BOSJO~ (NC) B~stons

j OPEN SUNDAYS Radio Station WALE I lin famed St Stephens church hasbull Dring Communion Seasonbeen - turned over by Richard

Dr amp Mrs Americo Almeida ~ W Hurley Co Cardinal Cushing to the Misshy $75 $30

Walter A Fur-man Co $45

8io~ary society ot St James ~ BRIDAL PORTRAITS Beetlemiddot Plastics Albert- Guerzoni the Apostle 311d Deluxe Quality Candicts Fall River Lodge No 118 BPO $21 famous for RESERVE YOUR DATE EARLY - The edifice _a short distance E~~ Mrs Am~lia JJaptiste _ from the home of Paul Revere

St- vincent de Paul Salvage - $25 and other Revolutionary War ~rve as QUALITyand EvANS STUDIOS

JBureau Nlr amp I([rs Franci~Murp~y shrines will head- St Patricks Wofuens Guild Miamp Mrs Julius ]~abbitt -I quarters for the society which 18 MAIN STTAUNTON middotCall Rivermiddot Mr amp ~rs JsephNorris the ~ardinal founded to do mis- SERVI(E Tet 822-1181

sect(6nwork in Latin AmericaProvidence Pile Fabric Corp $50 St Stephens church was deshy

Robert L Germaine Inc o o

Atty amp Mrs JohriJ Harringshy OUR LADY OF LOURDF8 whose works also include tne ton $5 Massachusettsmiddot State House It

Simons Supply Co Inc Massasoit Hills Trailer Iark was first used as a CongregashyThe J L amp R Cohen Foundashy Inc

siglled by Charles BlJlfltJch

tienal church but with the influx ~ion of Catholics during the inlmishy

Nira WarehOUse Mart Inc West Harwich gration of the early 1800s it was $45 purchased by the Boston arch-

Drobyski Wallpaper Co HOLY TRINITY diocese $60 In 1964 Cardinal Cushing$40

Dr Harry Cooperstein Mr amp Mrs Theodore F Berg spent more than $1000000 W haus restore the building$30

Ashton Funeral Home $50 Magonis Ferry Landing Mr amp Mrs Manley E Boyce Priests COll1ference

$25 $26 STEUBENVILLE (NC) ~ A Atty Kenneth Sullivan Mr Captain William House group of priests here has fOJmed

- Mrs Lewis Morley Hathaway - $25 -- a CQnference of Steubenville ~nelal Service Cook Bord(l1 ~oha Gillahan Mr amp Mrs Priests to create a general

Co Dr Harry Levine Joseph lttiltpetteMr ampMrsJohn ~pirii of priestly fraterJ~iiy and l)rDa~id P~Iill Tyrells Mar- E Ke~ly ~r Mrs yen~j~ Cor- - professionalism Msgr 0

t Cascaltle Drug CoProfes- ra~o HarQJd~RmiddotMcK~nna ~Tolin A Cymbor pastor ()fStgt Qff~rincllid~SPeciaIILinlie9n~n~ $3 w~rf~ 0( ~ I~al ph~i-rnacy hr havills Mrs R R~ SmalI AnthonYThete~esect Church Piney F6rk

-- middote~rHolvitZampHorvitz Ryan MrampMr~_-JQnljMul- wasnamedtempotary chairman Ride TicketsFor additional details or reservatic5nsmiddot call Mrmiddot Conrad Feriamiddot at (4Ql) RE 14kgtOO collectl lC

High Point Fording Box Corp llnsMr-ampmiddotMrsAllgterf Daven- and chosen to repiesimt the _ ~ ~

A RossEvetett Motors port Mramp Mrs Frank Ball group at the initialmiddot meeting in

-uline Te~tile Co Eagle Mr amp Mrs John W- Anderson Chicago May 21 of the National ine Co Mr amp Mrs Paul Carney Federation of Priests coun(iMI

bull

~~ 1

Q I gt~ j

1tj _-_000 e

Comiddot

~ ~-

JUST OfF ROUTE 117

POINTmiddotRO~-_

SpecialSchool Outinils GjoupOffer $3 per Stuitentmiddot

father OWcopy) Sons Are OEd~glfDregd

BELMONT (NC) - Three members of the Habiger family -two sons and their fathershyare completing studies for the priesthood and will be ordained as Benedictine priests on June M

The lllabigers have prepared Jlor ~e priesthood at Belmont Abbey here They will be Qrshydained by Abbot Thomas Halmiddott shyman at St Benedicts Abbey in Atchinson Kans

John Habiger joined his two sons at Belmont Abbey after the death of his wife Mildred in December 1963 He said he did this because my wife and I just had an understanding that the survivor would give his or her life to the Lord

Before deciding to enter the priesthood Habiger had worked as a sales manager fOl a deep freeze home locker distlibutor

lHE ANCHORshy~urs May 23 1968

_ bull

II

Britista Cot1toIicI Suppolt New Bilt To Ovtlow Bios~

LONDON (NO) ~ 0aitJh0 ~ BeneFally appearr to be ~Ving strong BUPPOOt to the govemme~ controvemial new biJl 110 outlaw racial dls- crimination in Britain

Tile Catholie press glQ~~e bin Its blessing with some quBll shy iDeations Several Catholic anti shyaovermnent politicKms howshyweI have voiced oppositionshynot em principle they eblim but oocause they fear some sections of the bHl eould IIIggravate rather ampan mollify existing racism here by producing II privileged black and colored minority

The Race Relations Biil Which Is backed by the present Labor government and can reashysunably be expected to become law this Summer fs intended to i

strengthen existing legislation in this matter in view of the big rise in the number of Negro and colored (Indian Pakistani and as a labor pool manager for and West Indian) immigrants in the United States Air ForceFATHER AND SONS TO BE ORDAINED A father and his two sons will bethe past few years

Fellls Takeover m-d~ined June 14 to the priesthood at St Benedicts Abbey Church Artchi8on Kansas Nearly 2000 dock workers FoUo~ing the death of his wife five years ago John Paul Habiger (center) entereq the MethodlidsAdopt

quit work to delllonstrate BenedIctines joining his sons in the seminary Their nam~8 im religion are Father J~hJ) Project E~uaiityWJainst the bill and to sboW Igrlatius Habiger OSB (center) Father MatthewH~riy Habiger~ OSB (left) andsupport for the view o~ bullCon~ DALLAS (NC)-The ll-milshy2ervative party me~ber Eno~b F~thet Benedict John HabigeJrp OSW NC Photo li~)Il-member United Methodist ~

PPwell that Britain has too Church-formed by a merger l(Ilany elgtlQred immigranUi $50 $50 of the Methodist Church and

Powell had called for 8 vir WestpolIt Almon L Turner Holy Name Society the Evangelical United Brethshy tual halt to the entry of dependshy Thomas M Ross ren-has ill effect adoptedST GEORGE ST PATRICK~nts of colored immigrants and $45 Project Equality throughoutmiddot ~he$25 $250i for measures to encourage the United States Mr amp Mrsmiddotmiddot Leonard Langlois RobertE Eastman Re~ Tames F McDermottliepatriation of the immigrants The 1400 delegates to WleEveline Magnant Claire Magshy $25 $200 bull OtherWise he said black people QUldrennial General Confershynjllt Mr amp Mrs Roland McGee Dr Frederick G Doran ~ lDr amp Mrs Roger E Cadieuxwill take over whole areas ence adopted a resolution inMr amp Mrs Arthur Perry Landgraf Felix P Kaladin $125 Dnd I3cial violence will follow which the new church endorsesMr amp Mrs Donald Pittman Thomas W Whalen Thepnaa Mrs David M KilroyPowell was later ousted from Project Equality and recomshyMr amp Mrs Jacob Strunk Calisto Raymond P Paine $40his position in the shadow cab- mends cooperation both throup

Richard J McNally inet---the leadership that would participation and financial su~SandwichWoods Hole $30assume power if the Conservashy pori on the part of all United Fernand C E AuclairtiVe6 won control of the governshy CORPUS CHRISTI Methodist Ann u a 1 (regional)llT JOSI~IH Dr Thomas Clarkment - by Conservative party Conferences local churches 10shy$300 $350 John T ~mith

0leader Edward Heath who eal or national institutiomlPaul McCusker Rev William F Morristermed Powells speech racist $26 agencies or organizations$150 $100 William MoranAbstain From Voting Friends of Megansett Mr amp Mrs William Carr The resolution presen ted to

The House of Commons apshy $100 $50 $25 the Conference by the Methodshy

Leo A Bond Mrs Leonard Nproved the bill in principal ist ~neral Board of Christian lOr amp Mrs George Christman Mr amp Mrs Lawrence Perrault313-209 and sent it to commitshy Bilooeau Mr amp Mrs Francis Jr Social Concerns called Project$75 Dr amp Mrs J Minihan lKilgrew Mrs James E Sullivantee for additional study before Equality a responsible consist shyMrs Claudia Pendergast Mr amp Mrs Peter Becker Jrit is presented for fi nal passage Mrs Frank Souza Joseph Tin- ent ethical practical effective$50 Mi amp Mrs Robert KennedyTwenty-five Consenatives abshy Mr amp Mrs Cornelius Hickey Mother Cabrini Circle D of j

sley and positive means whereby the stained from the voting rather Sll ll~OMAS MORE United Methodist Church andMr amp Mrs John McCue Norman McEnaneythan fullow the palty line and $50 other churches can SUppOImiddott fail1Mr amp Mrs Emil Tietje $40vote against the bill Atty amp Mrs Richard N LaSalle employment practices intbe$35 Mr amp Mrs Francis CarpengerAlthough the British in the $2~ United StatesSt Josephs Womens Guild $35past two centuries have govshy In memory of Mr Y J Archshy $30 bull Mr amp Mrs Raymond Doucetteerned a large proportion of the 11mbeaultMr ampmiddotmiddotMrs ElmeiHallett $26 Oppose Cuts worlds black and colored $25 Mrs Charles Russell peoples it is a new thing for ~25 Mrs Margaretmiddot Harris Mr ampbull this country to have such peopie

Mrs Paul La Prade Thomas middotC H Berube MD Mr amp Mrsequal in law moving in by the Rooney Mr amp Mrs Charles Sefshy Joseph Silvia William J Dalton thousands and competing com

mereially and socially with ton Mr amp Mrs JG$eph Sylvia James W Blunt John Hart whites G Stanley Johnson Mr amp Mrs

Fred Comings Mrs Helen ClarkeThe new bill is aimed at outshy Oak Bluffs Mr amp Mrs George PereiraMYIllawing racial discrimination in

SACRraquo IIEAlltT Harry Walkerjobs housing hotels insurance and similar fields The most $125 The Percy Family Mrs Kay

Mr amp Mrs H~l1ry ~orey radical anti - discriminatioJ1 ~iggins ~ yenrsRalph Emerson measure ever Ploposed for Brit shy $100 yenrll Edith chamberlin Mr I

aIn it was introduced by the Reliable Market-In memory Mrs MIchael Cornick Mr amp yenrs of deceased loved ones govelllment of Prime Miliister Ernest Forni Jr

Harold Wilson not so much to $50 MI amp Mrs Shurtleff Mry deal with present circuinstances Mrs Corinne Fournier Ralph Jameson Mr amp Mrs Clemshyas with the future when the $30 mey Mr amp Mrs James Hamlen

A Friendproblem could become more Mr amp lVIIs Charles McHugh acute $25 Mr amp Mrs William Ward Mr

A Friend In memory of Mr amp amp Mrs Charles Pizzottimiddot Mr amp

Diocese Convenes Mrs Antone G Camacho Mr amp Mrs Charles Parks Frances Silva Mrs Thomas DeMont Mrs Rose

First Lay Congress M Peardon A Friend Seekonk BATON ROUGE (NC)The A Friend

first lay congress of the Baton Mr amp Mrs James L Kenney MT CARMELmiddot Rouge diocese convened at the $100 Catholic Lifc Center herc Ostellville St Vincent de Paul Society

More than 600 lay people repshy $50 OUR LADY 0 THEresellting the 12 civil paJishes Knights of Columbus

(~ounties) comprising the Loushy ASSUMPTION Mr amp Mrs Edwnrd McCrystal isiana diocese had the opportu- $50middot $25

nity middotto participate in matters The McKeon Family ToI11enS Guild Mr amp Mrs affecting diocesan finances the $25 Wilfred Blanchette middotMrbullamp Mrs

feasibility of continuingmiddotCath_ Mr ~ Mrs WiUiamHerron Edward Chal)~ler Mr amp Mrs Ciq education apart from the Manu~IJlendricks Jr HOlyName pu~gtlicschool systein the Ray ham ~9ci~ty Mr amp MrsE McPhillips Churchs il)VOlvcmcnt in social SJmiddotANNmiddot action admiriistrative middotstrllemiddot $90 Somerset

tures of themiddot Church and the Rev Thomas F Neilan ST JOHN OF GOD nymans place in diocesan 00shy $75 $150 ministratioa Cirino Dominic P amp Family Dr Americo B AlUehbl

SACRAMENTO (NC) ~ TheJSouth Dart~outh beads of Catholic charitable ST MARY agencies throughout CaliforniD

$125 have joined in opposing 00- Dr amp Mrs Paul E Corley 1~mptsof government to reduce

$50 public spending at the expense Dr ampmiddotMrs Victor Almeida of ihe needy and poor

$30 Mr 1 MrsWilliam Hines

]25 Mi amp Mrs Armand Borgesmiddot Mr amp Mrs Charles Nunes

Mr amp Mrs joseph MOlliz Jr The Johnson Family Dr amp Mr~ Archibald Senesac

Nantucket Sll MARY

OUR LADY OF THE ISLE $36

James E Worth $15

Grace Henry

9ffering You ~ SavingsPIQnsmiddot

lHlome Financingmiddot

WARFJI~~ (O-OP~RATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mass

Telephone 0 295-2400 flllnb-llv-Mall Servlu AYllIIIllII

Q

Check These Banking Services

bull Savings Bank life Insurance lleaDhtate Loans bull Chri~tmas and Vacation Clube

bull Savings Accoumiddotmiddot -

bull 5 CO~Yl1lient Locaiios bull - - middott

middotNEW BEDFORD INSTITUTImiddotONmiddot tor SAVINGSmiddot

12 -tAE ANCHOR-Diocesa ofFoti Rive~Thurs May 23 1968 l

$copylDfrTht ~$frml 1NJcopy1iU0il Wreg$U9gt[J1 JIl[OlLY CROSS OUIlt LADY OlF GIltACIE

$101 $50 Mr amp Mrs Donald L BergerOlll Rev Rene R Levesque

$100 $25Joseph P Kairys

Mr amp Mrs Orner Duqu~tte$50 Jennie E Overton Mr amp Mrs James R Jones SOWltrlm YIiUililOuii1mDr amp Mrs Thomas Berry Jr Mr amp Mrs John Pilz middotST pros X Mr amp Mrs Robert J Dray $150 John J Smith John F Martin Dr amp Mrs R Earl McLoud $100

$40 Anonymous 1IL F Bergeron $54l

$35 Philip J Hart Frank Ready Ano~ymous (2)

$30 $25 Dr amp Mrs Herbert L Evereti Edward P Hayes John J CarshyLouis Lyne amp Theodore Larishy roll Thomas P McDonough

mere Dorothy Schoonmaker Denis d Brophy Mary Geist Douglas Eo ~

$25 VampJl John Crawford Mr amp Mrs David Gomes M

ampMrs Leo R Schleicher Mr amp Mrs M J Hegarty Thomas F 1fltID01iJil~~ Gentile Mr amp Mrs EdwardlllL Slr JJOSEIPIHILoveday

Mr amp Mrs Robert E Coffey ~150

li$r Francis Welch Mr amp Mrs A Friend Leo F Sullivan Mr amp Mrs Robshy $40

Mr amp Mrs John Aiello I3ehleicher ltUt Downey Mr amp Mrs John E

Mr amp Mrs Gerald Tache $35

Mr amp M~ Arthur LeclairEast FaBmoutlh $30

ST ANTHONY VictormiddotL Brunette $275 Mrs Simonne Fisher

St Vincelllt de Paul Confer- Mr amp Mrs Edwin J Marmk ace Mr amp Mrs William A Olishy

voeira Mr amp Mrs Enos Days $21)

William Bartlett Mr amp Mrs Gerard Benoit Mr amp Mrs Nicholas F Tangshy

~y $25

Mrs Margaret Virgin Alice Bourassa Alexander Perri llIIllll lllli Braley Jr Dr amp Mrs Jell shyorne Brault

Cecile A Daley Mr amp Mra John I)ias Jr Mrs Mary P Gage Mr amp Mrs Ernest RLashysectesse Edward McGrath

Mr amp Mrs Leonard deMeshydeiros Mr amp Mrs Roland L Despres Mrs Irene FitzGeralcll Mr amp Mrs Edward Fitzsimshymons Mary Gogghi

Edmond Goulet Margaret Manghan Joseph C Mello Mrs Carmen Muldoon Mr amp Mrs Paul Murray

Margaret Nickerson Mra Edythe Rankin Mr amp_Mra Frank J Rezendes George Vishyveiros Mr amp Mrs JosephSevigny

Sli MAIlty

$81 St Vincent de Paul Society

$25 Sacred Hearts Association Raymond Dlugosinski Mr amp Mrs Manuel Allua amp

Nancy Mr amp Mrs Antone Costa J1l Mr amp Mrs John A Wojcik

SACRED IHIEARlr $25

St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ST IPATRRCK $iOO

Mr amp Mrs William BrennlUll $75

Anonymous $50

Mr amp Mrs Francis J Flynn Atty amp Mrs Edward Farrell

$30 Mr amp Mrs Albert W Lawrence

bull Major ampMrs Lawrence Uch-shymanowicz

$25 Mrmiddot amp Mrs Edward C Wen Jr John Keohane

Mr~ amp MrS JosephCardeIre Mr amp Mrs Melvin Dolan

Mrmiddotamp Mrs Walter Buguey Mr amp Mrs Robert Costa Mr amp Mrs John Kelliher John Lynch

Mr amp Mrs Thomas Magwre Mr amp Mrs Kenneth Paige

$30 lt $leo~ IJ=1J yltID Uilliil 0$ lllr amp MrsEdward McCarthJ7 lievbull~ 17 ~

Slr FRANCIS XAVlrEllt $2S st ~o Womeno CI~

Holy Name Society COO $450 Mramp RlIra Lee Kingsb~St Vincent de Paul Society $25 Mr amp lVlro Leo Parente

$300 Capitell Mr amp Mrs Richard Dr amp Mrs ~p Sibilll

Charles H McGrath Joan

Mr amp Mrs Larry Newman Sproul lllr amp Mrs Thomas ~$100 Loughlin Mr amp Mrs William Mr amp Mm GeorgeM~Doane Beale amp Ames E Donovan Mr amp lVlm Joseph FalDtoo

$50 Mr amp Mrs Harry SylvesterMr amp Mrs Frank J Dolan Mr amp Mrs Charles Flynn lltlr $25

A Friend Mrs Rockina CaftDoMr amp Mrs Irving Morrissey amp Mrs~ Marshall Field Mr amp amp Family Mr amp Mrs JOQD KmampJ R ~eyburn Mrs Robertmiddot Ryan Vetorlno Mr amp MrS Victor Narciso Mr IIMr amp Mrs John Hart Bros Ipc Fruitland

Scudder amp Taylor Oil Inc CarreiM Florist Mrs John Kinsley Dr amp Mrs Francis ONeil Ilflr amp Moo Wllliam ~

Captains Table Mr lie Mrs John Currivan Mr Bishop Tyler General Assem- McznsfieRdl Mrs Alfred Kuplast Mrs ~

My garet Jordan Mrs Grace Duma Charles J Ardito 8l MARY Mr amp Mrs Fred Taylor Josepla

$ltamp0 $150 E Donovan Jmiddotr Mr amp Mramp W tel Alfieri Catholic Youth Organization st VinceJntt de Paul Society

shy-

SENDYOUR GnJFT TO bull i l j middotcrmiddotmiddot

The Rig Rever~ Edward TO~MeiJramiddot The IUght Reverehd RiJYlIWnd T CQnsidiRf lVallonarpfreclor Olt Diocesiul Di~ecto i

366 Fifth Avenue 368 North MalnSteet f(eWYork New Yo~k ioooi Fall River Massachuseits027l0 -

1iWJlE ADDRESS

THE sectOClllETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH ~ shy

I

~~ IiUrge Negro La Guidonce Boord ~n K~s~ Cety

KANSAS CJIIIY (NC~-A five-paltish cooperative illl

ner city ministry guided by a Negro lay board has been proposed os a way o~ bridging the gap betWeen the white Catholic CI1urch and the Negro community here in Misouri

A six-person committee headshyed by MrsThelma Work will identify the nee~ of the lComshymunity-Catholic or not-and to propose a structure fur meetshying those needs I

The action came as the result

of a meeting of the Catholie

V ~

Clergy Conference on Inner Oity bullneeds

Father James Lock chairman cited charges of the Black Cathshyolic ClergyCaucus in Detroit in conjunction with the IImnual meeting of the Catholic Clergy Conference on the Interracial Apostolate The Black Caucus statement said the Catholic Church in the United States 1s gtrimarily a white racist insti shytution which is rapidly dying in the black community and to which the black community no longer looks to with hope

On~ Out f li5 The Caucus recommended fha~ Harrison the Bishop Rev William J Hurley Rev DonaiiIll

white priests become supportshy E Messier Rear Rev Cornelu8 F Kiley Rey Robert A ers and learners listening tc McGowan Rev Edmund J Fitzgerald Rev Kevin F TrippNegroes to find out what tbeir lheir assignment~ are Olll page twoneeds are

The Kansas City-St Joseph diocese bas no Negro diocesan priests Ttrore~ DS~th~ Aoee Sl1m~PO rfif~ifflg tedera~ Jb ~~~

We are trying to start the wheels rolling for some kind of

~umlp~JrlMeFrot Nleereg~~rJ fr CmbCBi OW~iff1ychurch structure through which the black people of our diocese can voice opinions and partici shy WASHINGTON (lTC)-SPokesshy ment of public policy ~t Jlorth oommunity-based Social services esnie cultural values of ~hliv

pate in decision making said men for Protestant Catholic and in the Full Employment Act (l(f to meet Human and community country they said are sucll Father Lock Jewish organizations h a V e 1946 which provides for useshy needs Recipients of rondo that work becomes the basis by

backed federal legislation which ful employment opportunities should not conduct sectarian which a persons worth tnFather Dan Howe declared~

We have set up programB would provide one million jobs for all those able willing and programs judged A job not only tends ie i10r the nations unemployed seeking to work n determine an individuals acshygeared to Catholics in our parshy While they acknowledged that

ceptance by society but it alsish whom we have formed rn Their support was given in The Acts emphasis on education passage of this legislation would affects ones attitude abolll~the white mentality Since cl testimony before the House Seshy and training Training s1Mgtuld be no wre-all for the ills ci oneselfbest we are having contact lect Subcommittee on Iabor be open-ended so that the posshy poverty in America the spokesshy

with only about 2000 people out Studies have shown that unshywhi~ is holding hearings on sibility of permanent full-time men said that any attempt to of the 50000 in our area we the Guaranteed Employment employment beyond fIDe presshy combat poverty must provide employed persons have a ve~

can presume that the activities Act of 1968 ent situation is a reality Trainshy meaningful jobs low level of self-esteem anell we have structed as being our that this attitude tends to pro-ing programs of this ~Testifying were Father JohnChristian program of service do vide a self-fulfilling prophesrshould include basic educationMcCarthy assistant director ofnot reflect or reach black thinkshy MO~~U[ij] ~lW] ~O~S since it then becomes more dif~counseling and opportunities tothe Social Action Departmenting ficult to find or hold a joblearn about appearance manshy

E~GJHlll O]RDAllNJEID FOR IllmCJESJE Bishop Qgtnnolly m-dained eight deacons ro the priesthood for service in the Diocese 21t ceremonies oonducted at St Marys Cathedral Fall River Front Rev Edward E Correia Rev George Eo

We need a board of black of the U S Catholic Confershy OrJi1 AA~jjo Foreg[uGagement of income health IImdence Dr Grover Bagby of thelaymen to tell us what the pe0shy NEW YORK (NC)-Answershyother factors affecting personalDepartment of Social Justice ofple want to help change the well-being and development fog an appeal from the Ceylonthe National Council oftone to establish priorities government now fighting a mashyChurches and Rabbi Richard GFather Howe noted there are lWven fl Sellf-lEs~(()nim laria epidemic threatening 16Hirsch director of the Religiousapproximately 9000 Negro million persons the catholicAction Center of the Union of Involvement of private nonshyCatholics on the books but Medical Mission Board nere sentAmencan Hebrew Congrega- profit organizations Such Oll shynot necessarily active in Kansas by air Ifreight 364000 anti-mashytions - ganizations they said will c0shyCity out of a total Negro popu- laria tablets to Colombo Ceyshyoperate with the development ~lation of about 130000 They specifically suppoit4d lons seaport-capital The shipshyHe said that although the three provisions in the bill ment valued at $10746 conshy

structure of the lay board is yet Creation of an Office of Guarshy (cll)f AdldJrell$$ sisted of tablets for both ooults ro be determined it is the conshy anteed Employnient Opportushy and ~hildren sensus of 20 priests and laity at 1r~~regy Meefrolilregnity l8 a eontinued develop Earlier the CMMB respondingthe meeting that at least half

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-Theshythe lay members would be un- oro a plea for help from Indoneshyology must revolutionize it shyder 25 since the young people ~1JJlhJreg~ WODil$ [Q)~f sian authorities shipped 220shyself John Cogley former reshyare the thought-leaders in the 520 anti-malaria tablets ~aluedligion editor of the New Yorkblack community ~ial ~fit1hvllsW Times told the national convenshy at $7306

NeCeSS31lY ApPll03Cln SCOTCH PLAINS (NC) shytion of the College Theology so-A Negro lawyer Leonara BrotherHarold Woods a teacher The Catholic Medical Mission ciety IN the University m- SainHughes told the meeting at Union Catholic High School Board for 40 years has beenmiddot IfmiddotranciscoOne thlng is clear The clos- here in New Jersey has won a oonducting a worldwide mercy

Ing of any Catholic institution months delay to contest lim Cogley DOW a staff member cl program shipping medicines or cut-back in the inner-city order to report to his New York the Center for the Study m Deshy drugs bandages and various says one thing to Negroes We draft board for induction into mocratic Institutions Santa Barshy other hospital supplies and dont want you to be CathoUcs ~e Airmed Fo~ equipment to some 1000 misshybara Cal and editor of the Censhy

Father Vince~t Lovett dir~ BrOther B8rold la member of ter magazine tlgtld delegates that sion hospitals 4000 dispensaries tor of the new Diocesan Social theology must lead- rather than and clinics in developingAction office saidmiddot middotthe Marist BrotheJS had been eoUJlltriesfollow usemiddotits treasureS ratheT It seems to me we a- 4o_1krecJassified ll-A and Cllldered to than hoard them Liberatemiddot it shying about setting up something after rewmfug biB draft eard 011 self from its own prison ~ c0nshylike II couotywith II state goy- April 19 as a protem agaiDst the formity fear imd be dead Dbshyernment - a regional ministry U4o- actionism of th~ pastwithin tile diocese Be said the war VBallam

S~aking on The image off

WI report for Induction em April M

approach seems not so much lim The 22-year-old teachers ease ideal as lh necessitymiddot bas been taken up by the Amer-o Man as Citizenmiddot Cogley said

iean CDvil Uberties Union that the change in the religlO1Ul Which ealled middottbeboardll action mans self-image and the change

Silent Meditation in reclassifying him ~ new in the image of politleal man are TRENJON ~NC)-A bID pr0shy height of wegality Tbe ACLU not unrealated The image of a

viding for a period of silent said Brother Harolds religious free man redeemed from every meditation each day by students status had not collmged since he form of spiritual servitude and attending public schools was WIlI3 originally classified ~D subjugation he said b triumphshyintroduced in the New Jersey and that he hGd DOt ilrlterfered ing over the old image of eccleshyState Legislature by Assembly with the ndministratlon of the sia9Ucal man-a passive creature Speaker Albert B Smitlll 3eleet1ve ~ BWolltem eOOject ~ the Will ca ~thero

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THE At~~C~_ 15 Th M 231968 urs ~y World Communication Day CtmMG(f~ A~V[JK~$ObsecteWGR1CCe on S~ndl~w O[fi) ~copy~o~ A~fDcopy[jf)

WASHINGION (NC)-In response to an appeal by NEW ORLEANS (NC)-ArchshyPope Paul VI to the universal Ohurch the Church in the bishop PhHip M Hannan asshyUnited States will observe the second World Communicashy serted here As far as I am tions Day on Sunday May 26 The National Conference of concerned segregation in the

Church is dead We are past the Catholic Bishops awroved time for statements Now is thefor Motion Pictures and Bishoplast November the observshy time for actionClarence J Issenmann of Cleveshynnc of World Communicashy Tile archQishop of New Orshy

tions Day in this country on USCC Press Department land episcopal chairman of the

leans told delegates at an diocesan and parish levels ampnd archdiocesan conference on st) shy

members of the U S Bishops cial action I assure you we are going forwardCommittee for Social Commu- Senate Rev1ltews

nications have sent to individ- He outlined programs fe ual Ordinaries throughout the Continued from Page One beMer education for adequate country a cOpy of the Prayer lains to be assigned on a funmiddot housing and for recognition of of the Faithful for that Sunday time basis and that the needs the inherent digni ty of all men and a ooP1 of the Holy ~athers of the sick were being adequateshy The Church is exerting itll message issued earlier this ly met under the present arshy influence in every way to assistmonth ran~ement the poorest he said If we

It is recommended that the 3 Recommendations on salshy follow Christ we must begillilobservance in this country ary adjustments Taken into aeshy with the pOor even if thishave both religious and non- count _by Bishop in his direcshy means asking others to wait 0religious aspects The former tives for Aug I 1967 little longerwould highlight a Mass with 4 Meetings open to all clergy Anyone can live poor the

appropriate sermon in the 00- Bishop approved archbishop said The key thingthedral or some convenient 5 Extension of Synod prepshy is dignity This does not mean church to which executives aration time Bishop approved that this dignity is recognized Wld employes of communica- 6 Secretary to be Treasurer by a dole or a handout or eveD tions media would be specially and Senate budget Bishop apshy preferential treatment We are invited proved confusing issues when we talk

The non-religious asp e c t 7 ChOice of other Prayers of of dignity as if it can be bought would feature news conferences the Faithful Bishop approved or paid for he said articles in the press and radio 8 Referral of matters to Passhy - I am totally for equal oppollaand TV interviews and proshy tunity in jobs and for adequate

housing not just open housincgrams toral Council Bishop approved

In his message to the Church 9 Creation of Clergy Person-In human dignity everyone hasPope Paul invited Catholics to Del Board Bishop approved an equal right to education anell

consider the significance of 1() Clergy retirement policy to culture he declaredthe changes that are taking with Bishop accepting ormiddot not

AWARDS CEREMONIES At the annual Awards Day for hospital personnel at St Annes Hospital Fall River Manuel Benevides 38 years of service receives his award while Bertha Janson 42 years of service awaits her presshyentation from trustees Harold K Hudner left and Arthui Guimond right

place in this field (communica- according to diocesan ll1eed tions) under our very eyes and Bishop approved to ponder the serious responsi- 11 In-service training tor bJlities that theSe imply for one newly-ordained priests Bishop and all approved

Clamor forAttentlo~ 12 Various diocesan diredors Until recently the Holy to recommend men for middotpart shy

Father pointed out many did time or full-time further study not have anything more to Btim- Bishojgtmiddot approved 1IIate their inflection than vague 13 Full participation by memories of what they learned Catholics in middotYMCAyWCA ot school or in the family and programs Bishop aPlgtrov~ What they beard in their envi- 14 Rotation among religious ronment eomniunities of their represen-

Now however with the echo Uitives on Senate Bishop ap- r the press motion pictures proved radio and television clamoring 15 Clergy to recommend men lor attention new h~riZons oPenJor episcopacy Bishop applloved wide before them llIndmiddot they are 16 Lay Personnel pension ttuned to the throbbing life of plan study Bishop approved the ~niverse

Who will not rejoice at this 17 Adjustmentin diocesan progress Do we not 1111 see in assessments Bishop approved It a roadmiddotdestined by Providence 18 Clergy retirement study for the advance of themiddot whole Bishop approved of mankind There is room for 19 Bishop announced through all hopes if man learns to mas- Senate exchange of facultieS ter these techniques but every- between Diocese of Fall River thing can be lost if he shirks his and Providence responsibilities Various commfttees have made

Members of the bishops com- studies to implement some of mittee signing the letter to the these considerations Ordinaries included Auxiliarymiddot Senate representatives have Bishop Gerald V McDevitt of participated on a regional and Philadelphia episcopal moder- national basis regarding a nashyator of the United States Catb- tional organization of priests olic Conference Bureau of In- and its constitution and activity formation Bishop John A Donshyovan of Toledo episcopal chairshyman of the National Catholic Cursillo for Men Office for Radio and Television Bishop Christopher J Weldon Starts Tonightshyof Springfield episcopai chairshy

A mens ~ursillo win ~ginman of the Bishops qo~ttee tonight at La Salette C~nter of Christian Livingmiddot At~leboro Dishy

Delegate Recives rectors will be William Barnes of Marion and Rev GilesHonorary Degree Genest middotMS of the center

HONOLULU (NC) ~ Archshy Allmiddot eursillistas are invited to bishop Luigi RaimondiApostolicmiddotmiddot the firstmiddot anniversary of ultleya Delegate in the Unikld States middotmeetingsmiddotin the Fall River area baS received an honorary deshy at 745 Wednesday night May laquoree froIn Charninade College 29 at Sacred Hearts Academy here the only Catholic eollege Prospect Street Fall River A lID the state of Hawaii concelebrated Mass will be folshy In an Dterview with the Hashy lowed by a song session social

waUmiddotCatholic Herald ArehlSishop bour and refreshments Baimondi ~pressed tolerance Ul1reya meetings are schedshylor student activism in the Unishy uled in Attleboro oat Jettes ted States middotIltating Students Funeral Home Friday May 11 8ft adive everywhere Youth Monday May 27 Monday June ill UyiDg find its WBY aoc1 2 Friday June 14 and FridayecJar patterns of tbougbt IlBd June 21 eetioD e DOt lIS set asin pre A eursillo for W4)men is scbedshy paerationfl Cbolees were 1IIed for August and further inshy

-e fiSHthen tbin ~ tit formation is obtainable inla ~ -e LeSalleUe Centerbull --

You Live Better Electrically

trlc range bullbullbull with Iln ingenious oven that cleans Itself Make 8 clean break with the past bullbullbull and graduate to another appliance

that adds to the Joy of Total Electric Uvlng

Graduate to a ~fiameless electric range thatmiddotcleansits own ovenmiddot

Make 8 clean break~ with the past4

Why spend ~ours stooping scrubbing and scouring to clean your oven Why not grad- uate to a modern flarve1ess range bullbull with anoven that cleans itself electrically Its so

easy to use Set the controls and-zingo The oven cleans Itself (And drip pans) All you dois whisk awaya IIttie pOwder

- YOUll notice toothat a flamelessmiddot range keeps your kitchen clean cool a~d ~omshyfortable And because electric cookmg IS so automatic YOUll cook with pleasure So see

yOur appliance dealer about aflameless elecshy

See Yo~r Appliance Dealer or

FAll RIVER ~l~CTRIC LIGHT COMPANY

o

mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 23 196816 I

Mafttl[p)Dsellt $50 Raymond L W Benoit

$5BTANJrlllONY Jos~ph A Tully William J

$300 OLearY Mr ampMrs Alfred Baty ltlJbades McGowan Mr amp Mrs Fred Harney

$100 Mr amp Mrs Michael C ODonshyaarence G Verdi nell Mr amp Mrs ThomaS P Per~ lIugene F Phelan kins Mr amp Mrs John Kozlowski

$15 mosampry Altar Society

$66 Buzzard$ B~y I

iusan A McGowan ST MAJuiAR]ampTWilliam Keane

$SOshy$55 A Friendllohn P Delaney

$6$40 lIlr amp Mrs Thomas Pina

~h G Perry $25$35

Mr amp Mrs Edwin PaytonlInmothy Manning )l amp Mrs John KarlJfudge E C Horrocks J~

$30 Mr amp Mrs Edwin N Rose Wareham Lodge of Elks 15044bullbull Clayton King

Mr amp Mrs David Fannon$~

Mr amp Mrs John OCOnnellJames Downey Romeo Bedarql William Delaneyhnes H Gifford Mary M Chad Mr amp Mrs James Lopes

Wick George Smith Jr Antone Mr amp Mrs Louis Fougereshy-es Edmund Perry $25 Mr amp Mrs Armand Bedard

Mr amp Mrs Michael DelIsMark H McIntyre Teree JeminaBlossom Joseph Farley Robert Mr amp Mrs William BennettGIngras Real Breton Mr amp MrsLouis Eacobaoct

Jobn Tarvis Francis ODri9shyu Holy Nam~ Society Paull Glennon Joseph Zychowicz Central -VUlageIIaomas Renahan Richard SmiUll

ST JOHN THE BAPTIBJl

~50 bullNorth Dighton Mr amp Mrs John DeNadal

ST JOSEPH nolt Rev John P Hogan$156

IlR Vincent de Paul $75 Dr Peter F Piccinini$50

$25amp11 Name Society Florence I Bessette MrSt Josephs Womens Guild

$35 Mrs John J Ardagh Jr llim Raymond Williamsbull amp Mrs Joseph MWTaJ

Me amp Mrs Daniel TebreiN$30 J Jl)r amp Mrs William AcIamI Mr amp Mrs Robert Albanese

o Iohn W Perreira$5 Ch(ltham

Mr amp Mrs Joseph C Amarat 1lIJr amp Mrs Edward M Berobe HOLY ~EJI)EIEMEamp

bullbull amp Mrs Arthur A Ennes Mr $101 A Mm William Johnson Rose Pi Assqc of the SacredHea~ Mello $lOet

Mr amp Mrs Harold Mendoza Mr amp Mrs Robert Han lIffr amp Mrs Bruce Murph) Mr Col amp Mrs John McCa~ bull Mrs Robert Secatore $50

Mrs James Bell Jr St Vincent de Paul Sodeq Mr amp Mrs John J Cavanaup

IIMMACULATE CONCBPJIl[ON $30 $DOO A- Friend

Ambonymous $2-5 $a Chatham Trust Co Mr af

Anonymous MrS E Joseph Geller Dr~ amp MIlII Robert Harned A Friend (~)

Anonymous $75

Mr amp Mrs William Kent Mr amp Mrs Paul reF~vre Mr lIi$it

- Mrs~ Richard Sylva Mr amp MmHelen P Derby Patrick SullivanMr amp Mn Aibert Giordano

A Friend Mr amp Mrs Frank Dresseli Mr amp Mrs Philip S1iel]oA Friend Mr amp Mrs James Griffin shyAnonymous Mr amp Mrs Frank Wing _ImmaCU1ate Conception MenliI

Club $4G North Attleboro

Mr amp Mrs Raymond ~rgerotl SACRED HEART$35

Mr amp Mrs William Condoo $200 $5 Rev JOuter Lussier

Mr amp Mrs William Buchtman $30 Caesar Cardoza Mr amp Mrs RoT Mr amp MrsJeorge Merewe Howard Immaculate Conception $~ Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Joseph A Jette

Mr amp Mrs Co George Knapp $25 McCarthy Coal Co Mrs Fredshy Mr amp Mrs Paul Dion Mrbull elick H Murphy A Friend Mrs Frederick Fortin LionelL

Martineau Mr amp Mrs~ Philippe Rainville amp Florence

Mr amp Mrs George Beaulieu Sl lWAllUf A Friend

STMA-ElY$50 $150Mr amp Mrs Michael Murphy

Nelson GulskiMr amp Mrs Jose FernandesSIl $75$30 Rev Armando A- AnnunziabMr amp Mrs Thomas J Bryanamp

$50 Eva Morowski

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John HaugMr amp Mrs Roland Roberge Mr amp Mrs John StanfordDavid amp Martha Rocha M Veronica Reilly

Mary Cronin George Yefh Mildred Leary A ~riend

BreWSlfreli $4G Dr amp Mrs Domenie BalJiIe

OUR LADY OF TlIIE CAn $35 o $100 Dr amp Mrs Kenneth AtwiIl lllisBionaries of La saleUe jnr amp Mm JosepiL Dona

MONSIGNOR VI[lELSB

Heads Bishop$ Task force

WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr Aloysius J Welsh of Newark N J a recognized authority in race relations and social aclion work has been named to head the Urban Task Force estabshylished by the U S bishops

Bishop Joseph L Bernardin general secretary of the U S Catholic Conference who anshynounced the monsignors apshypointment said the task force was calhd for by the U S blsbshy

ops at theirmiddot April meeting in SL Louis in their statement on the mational racial crisis The bishshy

ops directed the task foree be established by the USCC Social[ Action Department

In this work he will cooperaW with MsgI George G Higgins director and Father John MeshyCartty assistallt director of the Social Action Department the bishop said

$30 Mr amp Mrs Frederick ThOIpG middotMr amp Mrs Clement Sbarolll

$26 Mr amp Mrs Andtew Boisvert Gertrude Cassi~y

Elizabeth Sheals $25

Mr amp Mrs Daniel J Cava- naugh Mr amp Mrs Raymond Bl~hard Mr~ amp Mrs Robert Brunelli A Friend

Mr amp Mrs Robert Gilmore Mrs James P Reynolds Mr amp Mrs John Donleymiddot Mr amp Mm James Battersby Mr Mn Jlohn bullCollins

Virginia G Robinson

AttRehoro BOLY GHOST

$150 Dr amp Mm LoneJglUl

~110 Mr amp Mm John CapoWglo

$50 Holy Ghost St Vineellllt cle Pail

$35 Mr amp Mra Joseph BJOdeur

$25 Mr amp Mrs Malcolm ~

Mr~ amp Mrs Harry Dowdall Mr amp Mrs RObert Geddes Mr~ I Mrs Frank Pistolese

ST JOlIN $200

In memory of Dn7 hwlbaDcI JIoseph F ODonn~

$100 Mr amp Mrs Raym9nd ENmlIlilll Anonymous Donor Inmemory of GabriGll lYaBltllloshy

alone bull $75 -

Rev Edwarcl A Ra~

Mr amp Mrs John P I4e $50

MaryL Wilhelm Mr amp Mrs J G WaJEll Jlr Mr amp Mrs Franclll Bo Mr Joseph ODonnell1 ~ amp Mrs Ernest ~

$30 m=teanor Robinqmiddot Alice~

ST JOSEPH $25

Counseil Jeanne DAre No 263

ST MARK $50 ~

Edward J Connors Jr $25

William J Roche Jr Joseph Dias Mrs Michael J Croke

ST MARY $50

Holy Name Society of St Mary Knights of Columbus Seekonk

Council Mrs Leland B Smith

$35 Mr amp Mrs Donald Blake

$~O ~r amp Mrs Henry E Woodcome st Marys Womeno Guild

$25 Mr amp Mrs Frank Padykula

Mr amp Mrs Russell J Sumner ST THERESA

$50 Mr amp Mrs Donald Boardman Mr amp Mrs George LeBeau

$30 William Cauley amp Family Mr amp Mrs George Boyd

0 $25 Mr amp Mrs RobeIt Generenl Mr amp MrsRobert St mlaiN

Taunton -HOLY ROSAILY

$30 Mr amp Mrs Russen Woodward stanley Radwansld

$25 Children of Mary Sodality Richard Januse

SACRED HEARi

$50 Mr amp Mrs Joseph S llosamp Mr amp Mrs Vincent BrimleF

$35 Mr amp MnJ Robert MeClellaml

_ S2i Walter Waltman Mr amp Mm

atephen Crosby The ~ Mr amp MrtI William Vaillan-

OOurt Mr amp Mrs Michael Barber

Mrs Margaret Rose llrtr~ bull II Frederick Reams

o

81 JAMES

$U Armand Desautels Tremblay Moving Iii 8tonlge

00mpany

STMABY $100

Dr~ Charles HoYt $60

GeOrge Dion Jr $51

Mr~ amp Mrs Kenneth $50

Mm A Hoffman Dr Normand ~ Mr amp M1lil J McNilmaN ar Dr John Fenton Mr amp Mrs Kicban sm

$36 ~ B Grant

~O Dr EdmWlld Fitzgerald D4niel A J Doyle

$U

Richard Barrington BIizabeCIa dIt Margaret Brady Mr - Mm kmea Bumtl Dr CarsiDbre e-- IlUOCi -Robert J mn JamesD hcige

Mr amp Mra Llocel IaImDee ftlomas Hoye Merrill lliaynard Jmelen amp Catherine McCariIll7

Alice McKenna Ruth MeshyJUona Susan McKenna II

Plan To B~ild

- See Us About ~

lotyCost Financing

WAuREHAM SAVltfGS BANK

WorehaftI falmouth cr J-3800 II 1-3000

Mrs James McMorrow Franeb Mulholland

Mary Mulholland Ma~ Neenan Joseph ODonnell Eveshylyn Rice Agnes amp Joseph Rose

Mrs Joseph Rowley Robert Sullivan J Roger Torme1 Charles H fripp Rita Baker

Mrs James Bennett William Carney John Gonzals James Holmes Mary E McNamara

Dr Thomas~OBrien Cbarleo OConnell Mr amp Mrs Edwarcll OGara Mr amp Mrs John 00 _ Ilfearne MlJI amp Mrs Edward OKeefe

1he Ralph Reckard Famil1 Cecelia F lfi Mary C Sheerin

ST PAUL $150

St Vincent de Paul st Pauh Taunton 0

$100 Rev Cornelius~ltYNem

$50 Mr amp Mrs Edward Roster

$24 Mr amp Mrs John Medas Jr

$25 Mrs Catherine Campbell Mr

amp Mrs Chester Jackman Mr c1i Mrs Richard Silva Mr amp Mrs Leo Leroux Mr Mrs John Steen

Mr amp Mrs Donald Emond Mr Be Mrs Gordon Seekel Mr amp Mrs Charles Welch Mr MllIl Paul Silva

New Bedford HOLY NAME

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John Hallonm Mr amp Mrs Jacob Teser

ST CASIMIR $150

Beltr cutnir Kwiatkowski $109

Atto~ Ferdinand Sowa $25

Mr amp Mrs Joseph FoUrnier The Poczatek Family Mramp M Antbony Rijo Jr Mr Mrs Stanle Scbkk Eve White

I

ST BYACINTB $100 -

Mr Mrs George Vigeallltl $50

st Vincent de Paul ConferenCe Gf Hyacinth Parisb

Tum to Page Seventeen

CONRAD SEGUIN BODY COMPANY

Aluminum or Steel 944 County Seet

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2-6618

w H RILEY amp SON Inc

CITIES SERVICE IDISTRIBUTORS-

0 Gasoline Fuel and Ra~ge

OILS OIL BURNERS

for Prompt Delivery amp hoy amp Night ~ice

8 IE BOIlER BURNER UNITS

80tItecI G48 Service

61 OOItANNET Sf TAUNTON

AJdeb DfO - No- Attleboro

TountoIamp

(l

SUMY pons Nuns (l)ffi) AifrMdl~$o

Re$M~~e~o trMture D~[freg~UDrru~ WASHINGTON (NC)-Resulto

of a survey of all United States nuns reveals a high ooceptance of post-Vatican II changes anell an eagerness robecome morrc involved in the inner city and poverty apostolates

The B1UVey conducted bythe Conference of Major Superiors of Women dlJring 1966 was the first extensive attempt to assess resources and attitudes of reli shygious communicenties c1 women and their memberll in the United States

The JPecific coal of the surshyvey was to assess the resources and determine 1ampIe responses that Religious are making and ean make to the invitation 13shysued in Vatican Us Decree on the Renewal of Religious ~e

More than 135000 Sisters parshyticipated in the survey respondshying to 649 questionnaire items covering religious beliefs atti shytudes toward change edu~shy

tional background present ocshycupation and future plans comshymunity life and proposals for future ohange

Results were processed by 00 Sister-sociologists across the country with the use of comshyputers

llleason for lIAlavnng The survey showed 1827 oil

the 175000 U S Sisters-107 per cent-left religious life durshying 1966 Of those Sisters only 869 had taken final vows In an interview with the NC News Servicemiddota spokesman for the Conference of Major Superiors of Women (CMSW) said most Sisters who have remained feel that a major reason for the inshy

ltereased number of Sisters leavshymg religious life is an increased ~penness to the idea within the lfcligious community

She said that the increased fucus on personal development has caused many Sisters to see that they are not suited to the religious life and that they will find areater personal fulfillment elsewhere

Statistics on be division of labor among U S Sisters show 72 per cent are teachers eight per cent are involved in health work five per cent in catechetshyill~ and missionary work lmd tbr~ per cenmiddott in welfare work

Seventy per cent of the teachshyem ore in elementary school work 195 per cent in high school education and 68 per

eent teach at the college level Of those involved in health care 18 per cent in health administration and 62 per cent in direct care jobs

lEnter New lFienlll1s The survey showed Sisters

have a strong desire to become involved in adult education inshyner city work pre-school teachshying and other s~ial work and to have greater contact with their local community Nuns expressed eagnerness to enter fieldc where few Sisters are now working In 1966 13 per cent ot U S Sisters were engaged in adult education 82 pel cent in speshycial education 31 per cent in poverty work and 06 per cent in migrant education The surshyvey indicafes that there will be a dramatic change in these figures in the next few years

Father Considine Leaves PC$tr Continued fC0m Page One

man of the U S Bishops Comshymittee for Latin America

Bishop Bernardin prai~ed the work of Father Considine in the Latin America Bureau noting

iota progress under his direction since its inauguration in 1960

It has been a labor of love for Father Considine he saici whose long standing interest in the people of Latin America and of other developing areaa is well known

Maryknon Father Considine will return

to his writing and teaching asshymgnments at Maryknoll Ossinshy

lng N Y where he had served as publications director before becoming director of the IAiltin

America Bureau He holds editorial and advishy

lOry posts with several internashytional organizations and servell DS a member of the Council OIl

Foreign Relations He was amp

member of the National Advishysory Council of the Peace Corps from 1961 to 1966 He also founded and directed Fides Inshyternational Service in Rome an Information and research unit of

the Holy See He was born Oct 9 1897 C1shy

1-

~ATIlGR CONSIDINE

da1ned in 1923 and received II

licentiate in sacred theology from the Catholic University of America in 1924 He has reshyceived honorary degrees from Fordham University Manhatshytsnville St John University St Benedicts Atchison and is the author of 10 books on Latin America Asia and Africa and hall edited several others

L9ng-Range

Father Considine Sllid that he IlIaW the Latin America Bureau as set for the proseution ~ tl

vigorous nation-wide program 10 serve our Latin American eonfreres for the next- generashytion through the year 2000 -and into ~ 21st century He felt lIlllch 11 long-range view was necessarJ because at stake are important socio-religious adshyVDnces among hundreds of milshyHons cd people Latin Americas leaders need time for these advances

Be pointed out thatsome of the best Church leadership tbroughout the Catholic world today is found in Latin AmershyICD In turn he noted our U S bi~hops are quietly acceptshying international responsibiliti~s

as never before Father Considine said that the

program of the U S Bishops Committee for Latin Americn ~ablishes the heavy day-to-day work of the Latin America Bureau

Jgtersonnel Father Considine said that

llIODle 60 per cent of all U S apOstolic personnel overseas throughout the world works in Latin America with more Ulan 600 Latin American parishes served by U S priests Major Superiors of women ha~e 2500 Sisters in Latin America PAVLA has put more than 800 laymen there for three-year terms and U S bishops hnv~

more than 300 priests working in Latin America Annual fundshying for Latin Amerietl by U S Catholics ~~ $1f) millioll

SJJREET SCENE This was a busy street scene in the nations capital at the encampment of the Poor Peoples Campaign near the Washington monument More than 100~OOO- protestors are expected to be in Washington for Memorial Day NC Photo

OUlll lLAIDY OlF ll1HI1amp

ASS1lJMJgtJlJlON $26

Clara Rose amp Family $25

Mr amp-Mrs Jose F Cruz St Martin de Porres G~

Mi CARMEL $100

In memory of Mr amp Mrs J~ ilino Simoes

Rev Antonio P Pinto middotCM $75

Rev Azitonio P Pinto em $60

Mary i Ltuiz $50

Mr amp lVIrs Albino daSilv8 1IIt Carmel Womans Club

$30 Manuel Bettencourt Mr amp Mrs Kenneth lltinu

John Rodrigues $26

Olivia M Luiz $25

Cecelia Bettencourt CbildYeli of Mary Mt Carmel ~ouft

Units James Perry Mr amp lnl Manuel G Souza Jr

Mr amp Mrs Arthur Caetano Mr amp Mrs Charles Frate Mramp Mrs Lauran Silva

OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HE]P

~26

Mrs Amelia E Bariteau $25

Dr amp Mrs Francis Green

OURLADY OFPU~GATOB~ l)1I00

In memory of Alex J Ka1He from Cltpe Coo Sportswear ~

lnc Fairhaven Lumber Co

$30 Atty George R Morad euroJ

Atty ~e E Morad $25

Josephine David 1bl mlE1lllllOllY of George A EI-Hillow Mr ampgt Mra ~rge JThomas Mr amp IIIlm Hykel G Simon

ST KIlldAN nSO

Rev WilMeT J Boekley

U~~ amp Wmeentde PaW ~

~ iWa1 1kntley

$2S AlmgeAo OH1feira

SAClllIampDlHlJEAlltT $25

Alexander Caruso

c S11 JAMES

$55 rulllbull amp lVIrs Francis O Quinn

$50 lilred Kelley

$40 William OMalley

~1 A Friend

$3~

Mr amp Mrs Jr Hugh Barry $25

Mr amp Mrs Andrew ONeil Mr 8 Mrs Robert Arnett

ST JOSEPH

$450 sa Josephs Church Societies

$70 Mr amp Mrs Maurice Dansereau

1130 II Mr amp Mrs Luigi Fiano lk Fmniy

125 Mr amp Mrs Thomas Weaver MI amp Mm Maurice Lamonshy

tagne Mrbull Mrs Raymond Rondel1

ST TBERIESA $100

Eugene Lemieux

Sturtevant 6 Hook lEst 1897

Bude~s Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New ~dforcJ

996-5661

THE ANCHOR- ~ 7 lfhuvs May 23 1968

~regreg [copy~G~ ~O~

Oa1l ~MOO~ []M~Orru NEWARK (NC)-A charge (l(

apparent ~racial discriminatiom in the assignment of tenants 00 public housing here is Oontainoo in s report issued by the New Jersey Advisory Committee 00 the U S Commission em CiWl Rights

It said the Newark Housing Authority follows a policy ef permitting people applying fOlr placement in public housin~ projects to choose the project tm whieh they want to live

lit said this policy has ~

llributed to the segregation Cl1I public housing and recomshymended that t1he policy 00 abandoned in favor of first-come first-serVed basis

The report noted that Q01l1li vast housing projects nre locatell in Newarks Central Ward-tho scene of widespread noting D year ago and of two massiv~ firo disasters this spring-and tll~

they are more thanSO Negf~ ~ccupied

It further charged that them Js U a disparity in maintenanceo between the predominantly N~

gro and the rgtredominantly whi~

projects a complaint lIiTegNgt leadership has frequently medea

It termed living conditiom b the Central Ward projects opshypressive and that the proj~cto

are JIOor)y designed llt recomshymeld~d that additionaI ~ev areas for young children ~Gl

meeting places for odww ~ teenagers be provided

Higher ~arnings

ON YOUR SAVINGS Per Annum

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Assets over $41ooo0llC

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of F~L~ RIVER shy~---__-------------~~~~ First Federal saYIngs bull Loan At ~

1 Borth Main St Fall llliTe1 Ibu ~ ~ Ii 02722 P1Imle 674-4001 ~ ~ ~ke llpplicatlOll oJ phone t1 fOOl wldl ~ o ~ o 0 IlllIivithllll Aceoullt 0 Jont Ac4cwot f)

PIlllse Cl3len II SllVings llCCOUCt blcelaquol

o eAomelamp) = ~ 0 ~ Address 0 ~ l 0 clleck In the amount of e--- ~ ~ 0 ~ _~___~~~_~uuJ

SPECIAL RATES FOR Schoo~ Outings and Picnics

amfACi MANAGERI - UNCOLN PARK 999-6984 636-2744

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs May 23196~

The Parish Parade OUR LADY OF ANGELS SACRED HEART WALL RIVER NORTH ATTLEBORO

Altar bOys willsponsor a cake The CCD program will be lJ81e Sunday May 26 following canonically established Friday Iill1 Masses June 21 the feast of the Sacred

Masses today the feast of the Heart The program will include Ascerision will be at 7 and 9 a 730 evening Mass followed AM and -1215 4 5 and 7 PM by proclamation and reception Confessions will be heard be- of CCD members and a social ~re each Mass hour

The Summer Mass schedule CCD students in grades 6 to will begin Sunday June 2 with 12 will attend a folk Mass and Masses from 6 to noon on the sing-out at La Salefte Shrine hour Monday night May 27 Tnose

Monday May 27 through Fri- participating will leave the ooy May 31 there will be church school yard at 645 and will be services at 7 each evening The returned at 930 living rosary will be sponsored Confirmation ceremonies will by the Holy Rosary Sodality be ~ld at 730 Sunday night Monday night the Council of May 26 Catholic Women on Tuesday ther societies on Wednesday and Thlusday and the Children New Bedford ~ M~~ on lfrIday

ST MARY HOLY NAME $25iALL RIVER Mr amp Mrs Roger Goyette

Contemporary music will acshy The Shea Family company the 1115 Mass Sunday Mrs Vivian Wegrzyniakmorning May 26

New CYO officers are Robert ST LAWRENCE amplois president Paul Durin $200 rice-president Polly Rockett Dr amp Mrs Stanley Koczera eecretary-treasurer A Friend

$125 OUR LADY OF FATIMA Dr amp Mrs Robert Srnan sWANSEA $106

The Womens Guild will hold William E King Its annual penny sale at 730 $100

Monday night May 27 in the Dr amp Mrs William Walsh ehurch hall on Gardners Neck $75 lRoad Rev William F OConnell

A Penny Sale will be held Dr amp Mrs James Bolton MondaYMay 27 at 730 in the $60 dlurch hall A Friend

$50 IMMACULATE CONClEPlIION Teremiddotsa Ruth amp John HarneyNEW BEDFORD Victor T Kondi

Parisnioners will celebrate John L Powell rthe feast of Santo Ohristo this Loretta Lamarre Sunday with a roast beef dinner $45 served from noon to 2 with Mrs Mary B Wheatoil

tickets available at the door $40 lRefreshments and entertainment Mr amp Mrs John Connor will be on the afternoon and Mr amp Mrs Thomas J Longevening program $35

A procession and auction will Mr amp Mrs James M Kearneyfollow the dinner with various Mrmiddot amp Mrs Leo St Aubin Holy Name Society units parti shy $30 cipating in the procession Mr amp Mrs Albert Anderson

Mr amp Mrs Joseph Griffin OUR LADY OF V()T(RY Mr amp Mrs Walter L9veridgeeENTERVILLE Mr camp Mrs Myron Tripp

New officers of the Womens $28amptiild are Mrs John J Pendershy Patricia Connor ~st pre~ident MrS James Murshy $26 phy and Mrs John McBarron Mr amp Mrs Thomas SullivanVoice-president Mrs George Mr amp Mrs Charles BerryReale recording secretary Mrs $25 Richard Griffith treasurer Mr amp Mrs Robert Bedard

A Communion dinner at Mr amp Mrs Albert McMulleneummaquid Inn will follow Mr amp Mrs Theodore J CalnanlB30 Mass Monday night June Mr amp Mrs Alfred Couto Mr amproo Mrs Gilbert Noonan of Falshy Mrs Manuel Guerreira Josephmouth will speak Reservations P Mullen should be made with Mrs Edshy Agnes Proctor Mr amp Misward Welch or Mrs- Stephen Joseph Porter Mr amp MrsOBrien Jr by Thursday June 6 James Ryan Mr amp Mrs Paul

saunders ST THERESA Mr amp Mrs Merton WalkerSOUTH ATTLEBORO Mr amp Mrs John F SullivanMiss Patricia Makin of the

Diocesan CCD Board spoke at the annual Communion breakshy Fall River fast of the Confraternity of

ST MARYS CATHEDRALChristian Mothers Fourteen $50 new members were received at

Gertrude OLoughlinthe monthly meeting arid new officers were installed by Rev $26

In memory of Caroline CasellaGerard J Chabot moderator $25They include Mrs Patricia Helen Burns Mr amp MrsBiziak president Mrs Georshy

George Johnston Corky Rowgette Vachon vice-president Club Rits OLaughlin FrancisMrs Kathy Lamarre treasurer amp Lena MoranMrs Dolores Leedham and Mrs

Mr amp Mrs Carlton GastallBeverly Sousa secretaries Mrs Raymond Reynolds

~CULATE CONC~ON BLESSED SACRAMENTlAUNTON $200A Spring Social and D~nce Rev Herve Jalbert

for the benefit of the church $50sponsored by the Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Michael Felixand the St Vincent de Paul Soshy $36ciety will be held Friday May Mr amp Mrs Richard Hamel24 from 8 to 12 at Lewis Lodge $30Winthrop Street Route 44 A W Root Beer StandTaunton Refreshments will be served Tickets are $200 per lIIIOLY CROSS person and wiU be available at $50 the door Holy Rosary Sodality

lt

PATRIARCH His Holishyness Vazken I of the Armeshynian (Monophysite) Chu~h which comprises five-milli~n communicants in the Soviet Union Near and Far East and the Americas is visiting in the US He paid a visit to the National Shrine of the

Immaculate Conception whilein the nations capital NC Photo

NOTRE DAME $40

The Anne-Marie MasSe fami17 $35

Conrad N Desmarais $25

Norman J A Belanger Rose D Perron

HOLY ROSARY $30

The DePaola Family $25

Mrs Philomena Germane

~CULATE CONCEPTION $50

A Frie~d $40

Mrs Diolinda Wilson $26

In memory of Charlotte DJicholson

$25 Holy Name Society Knights

of the Altar A Friend MlU7 Whitehead John R Burgess In memory of Daniel R Be

Manuel R Pimental Joseph Francoeur

SACRED HEART $l)O ()

~ Katherine D Adams $75

Mr amp Mrs William J Sullivan $5~

Margaret Morriss M~ry V amp Alice C HarrlngtoD Frederick B McD9nald

$31 Frances Mmiddot Cummings Mary C Cummings

$30 Mr amp Mrs John J HarrlngtOil

$28 Florence M Sullivan

$25 Vincent DAndrea Edward

Leary Mr ~ MrsN J Meyer Mary Louise OSullivan John J Sullivan middotMargaret F Lowney

ST MICHAEL $25

Manuel Rogers amp Sons At~

Manuel M Rezendes Henry Leshytendre ~eonardo Cabeceiras

Gerald Mulrooney A Friend edf Catholic Charities

ST ANNE ft JI08ZIII $30

Mrs Rhea Saurette 101at Vincent de Paul ConferenceIrene Theroux leapt amp Mrs Joseph J OCoDshy$26 nellThe Gauthier Family $25

Mr amp Mrs Reginald lerive

A Friend

Belshy $50

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J OCo nell k

$30 St rosephs Mens Club

ST ANTH()NY $25 OF THE DESERT Mr amp Mrs John L Mercer

$100 Mr amp Mrs Daniel W OCoDoshyChor Bishop Joseph Eid nell Dr amp Mrs James J Sabra

$25 SANTO CHRiSTO Rev Kenneth A Michael Mrs August Badway $50

ST ANTHONY OF PADUA $125

Rev Josephmiddot M Ferreira $100

Atty amp Mrs Milton R Silva

StVincent de Paul Society $30

Rev Ernesto R Borges $26

Mr amp Mrs Alfred 1 Cam~ $25

$50 Franco Family Singersmiddot

$25 Mrs Sofia Pacheco Antonio T Cabral

Mary amp Beatrice Costa~ SilD

CnristO Credit Union Manuel Medeiros Laureano Silva

AFriendFrank B Olivei

YDUR SONTHE PRIEST

HI HOLY PATHERS MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL DMURDH

A FUTURE

PRIEST NEEDS

bull SOMEONES HELP

TRAiN ASfSTER

Tau

HUNGER CANT

WAIT

Deai MonBr~orNolam

Please

return couponwith your

offering

Have you ever wished you had a son a priest Now you can hlilve a priest of your own-and ahare forever In all the good he does _ _ Throughout the Near East this month grateful bishops ara ordainlng new priests trained by people like youbullbullbullbull Their own families are toe poor to support them In training but good catholics In America adopted these semIshynarians encouraged them all the way to ordinashytionbullbullbullbull Insome Inspiring cases this support was given at personal sacrifice How can youbegln7 Write to us now Well ~end you the name of ~ young seminarian who needs you and he will write to you Make the payments for his training to suit your convenlence ($850 a month or $100 a year or the total $600 all at once) Join your sacrifices to his and at every Sacrifice of the Mass he will always remember who made It possible

4

Native Sisters In our 18 developingcountries are teaching children of the poor preparing them for First Communion giving medical care to leplrs cal)cer sufferers the aging A SisterS training Ialts two years costs $1250 a month $150 a year or $300 altogetherbullbullbullbull Well send you the name of a Sister you can train as soon as we receive your first payment She will pray for you and write toyou

n An9 day now you may receive a letter contalnn the Holy Fathers appeal for the forgotten Arab refugees-l4 million people without a country bullbullbull most of them destitute bullbullbull more thari half of them childrenbullbullbullbull By trelnlng these children foi middotfuture selfsufflcel]cy we can help brln peace and new selfmiddothelp to the Holy Land atlll divided by warbullbullbullbull But why walt for your mal Hunger cant walt Neither can peace Send your amplIft now in any amount ($500 $200 $100 $75 $50 $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 $2 $1) and the Holy Fathercan put It to work right away Qril1 $10 wlllleed family for a monthl -----~-~---~~---~-IlNCL08ID PLllAIl PIND $_ c_O~__ rFOR _

NAMI ___~

8TRIU ~~=

OlTt ~_eTATIl_lrIp OODII-

NIAll lAST WIILFAAI ASSaDIATtOrlaquo

NEAR EAST MISSIONS J

MSGR JOHN ClI NOLAN Natlonal5ecretary Write CATHOLIO NIlAR EAST WeLFARE Assoo ~30 Madson Avenue New York NY OOU telephonel 212vtJkon 6middot5840

CATHaLiD

19 DiJoridrrien Ere State r ourlitei

SChoelbOY leag~~Wmrn~regr~ Stii~Pretty Mu~h sampu [j)(Q)Mbt

By PETIm BARJrEK Nmon BitIh ~h

The gehooboy ba8ebaD mmpaignis cllNimatieaDy near- Inlaquo the climax of another spirited seasoo With approxishymately a week of competitioo Nllllaining oontlmdmg teams Me stmggling to keep their pennanf oopes alive while Wtling for the right to rep-JIe8eDt their ll e s pee t i v e leaguesin the nnand-eomin

-y- shy

Btate tournament The Eastshyem Massachusetts ehampionahip

baseball tournamen+ ClIffiMftl-~

tine of the wurney is tiPoDOOred bythe

II a II sac h u~_ lt Iietts Secondary

SChool Princishypals Association bull Par tie i p 8 t _ ing schools have bElen divided i IIl tot h r e e d3ses - A B and C---llccord- Peter iDg to leagues Blrtek r

and comparable independent teams Action tn all three clasampe3 starts Saturday June L

In addition to the three divishyidon3 the baseball tourney amp1shyem radically JIrom the popular

Two Spots for Both BCl (IDnd Marry Five Bristol County League Howard Ferguson which teams

teams Gre still in contention for will represent the circuit in the tourney play ebampionship event

At this writing Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Stang SpaltamJ of Qartmouth who hold a lllim ene-game edge over their rivals are a solid choice to annex one of the two berths to be filled bi BCL teams The second spot 18 un literally up for grabs

Bishop Feehan High of Attieshyboro which led the circuit untll last week Durfee High of Fan River Attleboro and Taunton lire in close pursuit middotof Stang hoping tomiddot overcome the Sparshytans or at least lInish in the league runner-up berth Both the first and second place finshyishers will8utomatically qualify

If either fim OX second place II decided by Monday May 21 league officials w~ have to DOUty the tournament Director

No~tons Lancers in Need cf Help I h e Narragansett league Class B - Southem

whkh got a head start on the its Iud Old Colony champ ft NaITlIlshyv er area Clrcu conc es gansett runner-upleague play today First place

middot Somerset travels to New Bed- Narragansett champ ~ Olcll ford to meet Holy Family High Colony runner-up Case High of Swansea entell-middotmiddot South Shore champ VB Hockshytains Dighton-Rehoboth West- omock runner-up port hoss Msgr Prevost High Hockomock cpamp vs South

middotof Fall River and Dima]l Voce- ShQre runner-up tional nlso of Fall River will 0I Am f N rth E stobe t Se k Iver es 0 0 a n a e o~k

Entering the final week of ac-middot middot tion Somerset and seekonk are in the top two spots in tbe 8tanding They loom the more likely to corral Class B tourney berths But DightOn-Rehoboth Case and Westwrt trail the sec ODd place club by oIl1yone game If the race ends in II tie ]league officials wlll have ample time to schedule play-off games before the tourney deadline

Pairings for Class Bare

Selecting Union PITTSBURGH (NC)-Twentyshy

five maintenance workers at Duquesne University here in Pennsylvania have left their jobs pending a detell1llnation as to which union will represent the workers The remaining 115 members of the maintenance erew lIlre not involved in the atrike which was called by the 2li who are represented by the tJmted Electrical WorkersUnion

Although it occurs infrequentshyly a team does not have to win Its league to represent its league in tourney eompetition

The Bristol County league champion is slated to play the

bull Bay State League runner-up in first round action with the Bay State champs taking on the County runner-up The winners would then meet in second round play

Pairings for Class A are Class A - Southem

Suburban champ w Middleshy8llX runnerup

Middlesex champ ft Suburshyban runner-up Bay state ehamp VB Bristol runner-up

Bristol champ V8 Bay sta~ runnerup

-Tech lxlsketban competition lllll order to qualifyfor the Tech a team mt1BSt win 70 per cent cd its games but onlythe leagu~ champions ond runner-ups M~ eligible ~r playmiddotiImiddotbasebalL

In both Class A andClass B iitOtalof i6 teams will qualify 1lt7middotmiddotmiddotJiY

for the diamond elimination event~ E~~ Will pai1i~ipate in

the nortlHln division and eight in the southern bracllet The winners in each bracket will meet in the Eastern- Massacilushy

llletts fi~ Preliminary games will be played on June 1 4 and 6 The finals are scheduloo June 8

Class C competition will coIi-BiEt of eight clubs in only one division Titlists in seven smallshyDChooI le1gues and one indeshypendent selected by the tournashy

ment coJiunittee Will comprise the field fur this tliil-d group

and Mansfield 1m the Hockoshymock circuit appear to be out of the running this season

Fo~ Class C schools Its Winmiddot or youre out Only the league champions will play in the championships The winner of the Capeway Conference will meet the Cape and Vineyard champ in opening round play Dennis-YarDlQuth and Sandshywich are the likely opponents

The only other school located within the confines of the diocshyesan territorial limits that has an outside ~hance of qualifying for the tournament is Norton of the Tri-Valley Conference The Lancers however will need some outside help if they are to overcome league leading Millis The Tri-Valley champs will take on the Dual County League champions Defending Class C champ Ashland again leading the Dual Co~nty is heavily favored to repeat both in league ond state competition

NOT A BALL-ITS GUM Yem might get the idea that a pitched ban is lodged in the mask of this young Vancouver BC catcher but it isnt a ball This young ma is trying to prove he is just as efficient behillld the plate as he is at blowing bubble gum NC ~middothoto

Stresses Inter~cicdmiddotmiddotPartnership As Solution to Racial Problem

CLEVELAND (NC) - A Nashy world would be better off lr tional ASsociation for Advanceshy iou hadnt gotten involved Jm

ment of Colored People official asserted here interracial part shynership is the key to oolution of the racial problem but it cannot be a partnership dom inated by either race

Dr John A Morrell NAACP assistant nat ion a 1 director speaking at the Cleveland Cathshyltnlic Interracial Councils annual Interracial Justice Awards banshyquet said the nation today is aj an unprecedented crossroads but the interracial way is the democratic part to justice

He spoke in place of Roy Wishydns NAACP national~ director who was with the U S delega- tion at the United Nations con vocation on human rights lin Tehran Iran -

Angry Voices There are angry Negro voiees

raised in protest because develshyopment of opportunity in recent years does not apply to twoshythirds of the Negro population he saidmiddot The kind of jobs they are capable of filling are vanshyishing from the economy he added

But if a fruitful partnership is to continue between the white and Negro the burden of know- ing the truth about Negro hisshytory must be borne by white as well as Negro Dr Morsell said

Vie are all fighting a bitter legacy of generations White people have to know where they stand and why Once you assume the burden of work toward interracial justice you assume the responsibilities be continued

If you are not going to ~

sume them then you and fhe

the first place Informed PariDership

Dr Morsell said a mere sPirit of commitment is not enough to

survive over the hard going Work must be based on a part shynership that is informed intelshyligent understanding and resil shyient he said

The interracial awards were presented to Father Edwan Camille assistant Catholic Charshyities director here and Thom811 C Westropp president of Womshyens Federal Savings and Loan Association

Westropp was cited for his efforts towards opening the

doors of banking and credit 1m the Cleveland area to all ciUshyzens regardless of race creed 011

color while Father CarniDe was cited for his leadership as director of Project Peace (~

irner-city diocesan organizati~ working with the poor mostly Negroes) and for his work as co-chairman of the first tri-faith Greater Cleveland Conference on Religion and Race

ELECTRICAl -Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

SS lPlE1rIEllt amp JgtAIDlj

$103 Womens Club Rose E Sullivan

$50 Joseph P Conaty

$35 Belen M amp William J

De7 $33

Mr amp Mrs James F McMahcm $25

Mrs Margaret Daly amp Mary John Dolan ~illiam Daley amp Mary Esther Mr amp Mrs Stanley M -laniek

~50 In memory of MrsMarga~

W Pow~rs RodneY S DeCecco

$26 Mr amp Mrs John Soula

$25 Edward Healey Mr amp Mrs Michael McCartbiY Mr amp Mrs James Crosson Mrs Gertrude Lomas Mr amp Mrs Norman GagnOOl

ST JOHN TEE BAPTlIS11

$30 St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ampt Jean Baptiste $25

Mr amp Mrs Ovila Caron Henri Demers

In memory of Mr amp lVlrm bullWilliam Sheehan

Open to An PORTLAND (NC)-The seeshy

ond annual Catholic youth conshyvention of the Portland Diocese has opened the convention to all Catholic students of the dioshycese in order to spread the agtOlgto tolate of youth to youth Thll

)faine convention has comprised only students who have takes themiddot youth leadership trainlJnl1 courses

Dont Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH

DO faJse teeth drop slip or wobblo when you talk eat laugh or sneeze Dont be annoyed and embarr1lEsetll lkllh hanl11caps FASTEETH Bamp

e (non-acid) powder to SPr1n~Ikle on your plates keeps false teetb more firmly set Gives confident feel~ Ing Of security and added comfort No gummy gooey taste or feellncr Dentures that 6t are essential to health see your dentist regulorly oet FASTEETH at alll1rug countemJ

o

WYman 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD MASS

IfIIfJltk del1WM

S H~~uO~ Oil

SAVE MONEY 0 OUROILHEATI bull eatt

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

Iritai~ If S)crap SuPPITreg~~5n Acts Of Re~(j[jmlt~oml

LONDON (NC)-It looks as if Britain is at long last glOing to stop suppressing the monasteries-officially that 0

Legal experts sifting through lenturies of forgotten laws clutshyooling the records have found (hat the Suppression of Reli shygious Houses Acts of 1535 and 0039 have never been repealed

They are among 155 statutes weeded out from the statute IJ)ooks between 1239 and 1705middot lmd now to be definitively leshy~aled by a special act of Par-Iliament

These two acts enforced the eosure and pillaging of Catholic monasteries friaries and other religious houses throughout the WINS nsc Chaplain

eountry following King Henry (Captain) Angelo J LitekyVIIIs break with Rome in 1534

assigned to the 199th InfanshyJhey brought vast fortunes On goods property and mog of try Brigade in Vietnam has ell land to the kings favorites been awarded the Distinshyoome of whose families have reshy guished Service Cross forWned their wealth to this day extraordinary heroism SevshyIgnored in Practice

Of course the laws against erely wounded when Viet me Roman Catholic Church Cong ambushed a US infanshyIhave long ago been shelved and try company Ohaplain Lit shyIgnored in practice The reli shy eky braved flying bullets toous houses are back probably

rescue and minister tomore numerous than before iIome have even reoccupied the WQunded and dying meR 0ld sites they hadmiddot before the lReformation

Another notable measure ~ewlfk ~[p)regID Gingled out for repeal is the 1loleration Act of 1688 This act W51f)$ ~WIfltdl although in itself it did not help

NEW YORK (NC)-The Adshy~he Catholics marked the end of

vocate weekly newspaper of1lhe Protestant Reformation and the Newark Archdiocese wont1he beginning of religious tolershythe first-place Silver Medalation in Britain Awarti for weekly newspapersIt allowed freedom of worship in the annual public serviceClgt Protestant Trinitarian Nonshycompetition sponsored by theoonformists provided theiT New York chapter of the Pubiicmeetings were opento the pubshy

Relations Society of AmericaIlk it did not relieve the existing The award was for a five-part

fenaWes of those days against analysis ttl the ills besetting the ~atholics other breakaway Newark public school system lhcnestants or Jews but it was )he analysis was written by a hisberic beginning It has been Advocate news editor Ed Grant ltJeseribed as the Great Oharter and was an examination into ~ religious freedom and the one of the areas of dissatisfacshy~umph ofc9mmon ~ense tion which led to widespread

rioting in Newark last Summer

The series ran lri the newsshylJays Help for Poor paper last september and Octoshy

lPeCice First ~eeds ber The Public Rellitlons SocishyMIAMI (NC)-The Catholic ety award - silver medals are (lihurch in this nation today awarded in each of five cateshy

gories-are given for the mostauast address itself to the presshynoteworthy contributions bullbull 0 toiloing needs of the poor and dis-

~vantaged as well as the better public ~derstanding of ltJnICial issue of peace says the _ community problems in the New

4Tchbishop of Miami York metropolitan area Archbishop Coleman F Calshy New s p a per 8 magazines 0011 following announcement of broadcasting an d television middotGte establishment of the ecclesshy media in the New York-New iastical province of Miami and Jersey-Connecti~ut metropolitan tMs appointment as its first area are eligible for the awards l)rehbishop stressed that the (fhurch must be concerned with ibe problems of the time in Retired ArttlhJboshop S)Vhich we exist Gets College lHlonorThe g~eatest problems at present are the problems of the DUBUQUE ( NC) - Retired disadvantaged the poor and Archbishop Edward D Howard Utase who are in need and of of Portland Ore has been named oourse peace he smiddotaid for Loras Colleges 1968 John

It is more difficult for us to Fitzgerald Kennedy Award The LiOlve in any real way the prob- prelate is a former president of iems that are our concern until the college we have a measure of peace The citation and gold medal And it is the prayer of all of us annual award honoring an out Chat peace will be established as standing Amercian will be preshyiluickly as possible on an honorshy sen ted to the archbishop at the able basis o college commencement cereshy

monies June 2 Camp Directory Archbishop Howard 90 a nashy

Nltlw available from the Nashy ti ve of Cresco Iowa and a Loras lItonal Catholic Camping Assn alumnus was ordained to the ~ 131~ Massachusetts Ave priesthood in 1906middot He became lM- W Washington D C 20005 president of the college in 1921 Is the 1968 Directory of Catholic In 1924 he was consecrated to ~mps which lists all known serve as auxiliary bishop of DavshyearriPs in the U S giving acshy enport He became archbishop of Civities charges dates open and Portland in 1926 and retired in lIbailing addresses 1966

National CYOPlans LeadershipTraining shyImpa~t to Aid Priests Adult Admiddotvisors

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tbe through the introduction of BaWmore June 23-28 ehicagoNational Catholic Youth Organshy leadership methodology which July 1-5 Boston July 14-19 ization Federation will launch a facilitates maximum involveshy Sen Antonio July 28-Aug 3 training program in June called ment 00 the local level and Denver Aug 11-16 and San Impaot be help priests and hence maximum commitment JFaoancisoo Aug 25-30 adults 00 work effectively with The National CYO Federation Dr Donald Ebalt a professhyteenagers in a leisure time proshy will sponsor six sessiOns this lIlional trainbig eonsul1lant of gram summer to train diocesan CYO Washington D c win diiecl

The program was designed in staffs m 1lhe use of the newmiddot ead11ab cooperation with Leadership program lhey win )e held m A pilot Jtudy of the effectiveshyResources Inc a firm _of beshy DeBS of Impact on a group of havior scientists -rolulbteers from the NewarlkAddress Graduates

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishy archdiocese was held at the SOUTH BEND (HC) -Mel-rector of the Youth Department Benedictine Retreat House ill

Jdte-rite Patriarcib Maximoo VUnited States Catholic Confershy jNewton N J ence in announcing ttie new Kakimof Antioch and Dr Ilhirtymiddot persons representashyprogram said tives of youth adult advisorsJames A Perkins of Cornell

The goal 01 Impact is 00 help and priest moderators met withUniversity will be speakers atthe priests who are moderators representattives of the CYO

the 123rd annual cOnW~ncementof CYO the ad~lt advisors and Federation staff and a member youth participating in CYO toshy exerci~ Sundly June 2 at Of Leadership rResources Inc ward maximumpersonal growth Notrlte Dame University 110 assess and to evaluate 1mpaltL

(Cathedral Camp-Resident and Day Camp for Boys

O~ Lady of the L_ke Day Camp fOr Girls

Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON LONG POND ROUTE 18 EAST FREETOWN MAS~

~ RESIDENT CAMP 49th Season June 30 thru August 24 - a Week Season

Diocesan seminar-ians - College Students amp Teachers Under direction StaH of a Diocesan Priest

Saili~g swimming water skiing horseback riding riflery archeryPrograni hiking overnight camping trips ~rts amp crafts Indian crafts camp crafts athletic (team amp individual) competition and inter-camp cOmpetition professional tutorial service available

Private beach large luxurious camphouse dining hall modernfacilities~ washrooms arts and crafts buildings camp store and office first aid and infirmary beautiful chapel overnight and weekend accomodashytions for parents

S WEEK PIERIOD $325 - 4 W~K PERIOD $165 - 2 weEK PERIOD $85

Cathedra~ Day Camp t=or Boys Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period

JULY W- AUGUST 23 Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period fEES INCLUDIE Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Horseback Riding Weekly Cook~Outs amp Milk Daily without Added Cost

--~----------------------------------------Our Lady of the Lake bay Camp For Girls

JULY l _ AUGUST 23 Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period

FEES INCLUD~Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Ilorseback Riding Weekly Cook-Outsmiddot Milk Daily without Added Cost

o

For further information write to

REV WALlER A 5ULLlVANDiredor PO Box 63 - East Freetown Mass 02717

Page 2: 05.23.68

-

THEANCHORDiocese ofFal River--Thurs May 23 1968~ ~ t P t Io~ - ~~

r t

Diocese of Fan River

OFFiCIAL

ASSIGNMENTS

Rev Edward 3 Mitchell STLJCD asSistant~ )Ioly Jliame Church Fall River ~ pur Ladycent tbe Assumption

Cathedral Fall- River as assistant 1 t bull

Rev James H M~rse assistant at Our Dady of the ASsumpshy1k)n Cat~edral FallIDver f4I StJames Clurch New Beiford as ~8ssistant h J lImiddot

Rev Thomas E 0Dea QSSistan~ middotat St James Church New Bedford to st John the Evangelist Church Attleboro as assistant

Rev Thomas C LOpes 118sistant at St Elizabeth Church Fall River to St Anthony Church East Falmouth as assistant

Rev Joao C Martinsassistant at St Anthony Church East Falmouth to SLEiizabeth Clurc~Fall River as assi_s~ant

Rev Joaquim F Fernandezmiddotda Silva middotCM assistant at Our Lady of Mt Carmel Church New Bedford to StJohn the Baptist Church New Bedford as assistant

bull bull ) 8

The above appointmentsare -eective Wednesday May 29 r

Rev Ernest E Blais assistant at St Louis de France Church Swansea to S1 Theresa Church New Bedford as assistant

0 Rev Betnard A Lavoie assistant lilt Notre Dame de

Lourdes Church Fall River to St Louis de France Church Swansea as allsistant

The abo~e appointments are effective Wednesday June 12

First Assignments

Rev Edward E Correia to Our Lady of Victory Church Centerville as assistant

Rev Edmund J Fitzgerald to Holy Name Church FaD River as assistant

Rev George E Harrison to St Joseph Church Taunton as assistant

Rev William J Hurley to middotmiddotSt StaniSlaus Ch~lrchaD River as assistant

Rev Cornelius F Kiley toSt Joseph Church Fall RiYell as assistant

Rev Robert A McGowan to Corpus Christi Church Sandshy wich as bullassistant

Rev Donald EbullMessier 110 st John the Baptist Church Fall River as assistant

Rev Kevin F Tripp to Notre Dame University NOVe Dame Indiana for summer school

The above appointments are effective Wednesday M~ 29

~~4~_ Bishop of Fall River

FORTY HOURS DEVOTION

May 23--Sacred Hearts Conshyvent Fall River

Convents of the Sacred Hearts Fairhaven

Mt St Mary Convent Fall River

May 26---St Joseph Taunshyton

St Theresa Convent FaD River

filE ANCHOR

second Class Postage Paid at Fall River Mass Published every Thursday at 410 Highland Avenue Fall River Mass 02722 oy the catholic ress of the Diocese of Fall RIver Subscription price by mall postpaid$400 per year

Necrology MAY 30

Rev Jordan Harpin OP 1929 Dominican Priory FaD River

RElvEdmond J Potvin 1937 Pastor St John Baptist FaD River -Rev James M Quinn 1950 Pastor St John the Evangelist Attleboro

MAY 31 Rev Vincent A Wolski OFM

Conv 1964 Pastor Holy CrosS Fall River

JUNE 4 Rev Jose P dAlnaral 1949 Pastor Santo Christo FaU River

Rev Louis J Terrien OP 1920 DoJninican Priory FaD River -

MONSliGNOR ]I)~ER

~[7i)liDfDlaquorn Mass [f~ M~tgj [joftraquowyer

A solemn pOntifical requiem Mass was celebrated Tlesday morning in Sf Joseph CQurch Fall River for Rt Rev Msgr Daniel A middotDwyer 85 pastor emeritus of StBartholome~s Church -Elmhurs~Long Island

A frequent Visitor to Fall River Msgr Dwyer recently

Son of the late R

celebrated his 60th anniversary as priest

lchard and

thelate Mary (Kelly) Dwyer he studied for the priesthood in the Brooklyn diocese after graduating from B M C Durfee High School Fall River Two other brothers Rev Wilshyliam KDwyer and Rev Robert V Dwyer were also priests in New York State

Most Rev James L Connolly

Bishop of Fall River was the celebrant of the -final funeral Mass He was assisted by R1 Rev Msgr Raymond T Consishydine arch-priest Rev Edward C Duffy deacon Rev Edmund J Fitzgerald subdeacon Bishop James J Gerrard together with with monsignors and priests ofthe Fall River andmiddot Brooklyn dioceses also attendecL

Mass Ordo FRIDAY - Mass of Ascens~OIl st Mark ~28450middot

Thursday IV Class White ~t Mary i 889900 jMass Proper Glory Preface st Stephen 4r57400

of Ascension st Theresa 142738

SATURDAY-8t~ Gregory VII NORTH ATTLBBORO Pope and CoDfessdr ill Class Sacred Heart 607790 White St Mary 073600

OR OWNS

St Urban I Pope arid Martyr Acushnet-Red Glory PrefaCe of Ascen- S1 Francis Xavie 396500sion Assonet-St Bemard~03100

SUNDAY-8unday after the Brewster- Ascemtion II Class White Ou~ Lady of the Cape 250700 Mass Proper Glory creed Buzzards Bay-Preface of Ascension _ St Margaret 669900 -- centerville--

MONDAY-=--8t Bede ~e Vener- Our Lady of VIctOry ~41345 able Confessor and Doctor Of~ntralVillag~

Church III Class White Or

St John I Pope and Martyr Red Glory Preface of Ascenshy

sion

TUESDAY-St Augustine of Canterbury Bishop Confesshy

-sor III Class White MasS Proper - Glory Preface of Ascension

WEDNESDAY-8t Mary Magshydalen De Pazzi Virgin m Class White Mass Proper Glory Preface of- Ascension

THURSDAY-Mass of Ascenshysion Thursday IV Class White

OR St Felix I Pope Martyr Red Glory Preface of Ascensio~

st John the BaPti8t 286300 Chatham-- - Holy Redeemer 468650

Dighton-81 Peter 171650 EaSt Falmout~

St Anthony 135300 Fairhavenshy

St Joseph 1256180 St Mary 237850 sacred Hearts 909~50

LARIVIERES Pharrma~y

Prescriptions called for and delivered

LOFT CHOCOLATES

600 Cottage St 994-7439 New Bedford

laquo~(~ J~ish tro~~i~- - FALL mvnR middot~fuamp~ek10732 shy

$ 0 660 6i aannilf-r shyBStlessMeadrySacr~-- I 19640lll 1St Frapcls Xavier Iljl0060

Mansfield-st Mary 957111$Espirito Santo 216300middot Mattapoisett-- - H9ly GIOSS 133200 Holy Name 2540950 N()tre Dame 673850 Our Lady of the AngeJs 811125 Our Lady ofHealtb 298740 Holy Rosary 343300 Immaculate Co~ 570577 Sacred Heart 939500 St Anne 588100 St Anthony of the Desert 9i900 st Anthony of PadUa 260000 St Elizabeth 129000 St John the Baptist 371100 St Joseph 625000

StLouis middotmiddot351200H

St lfatthew 245000 st JOaD of Aft 270451 St Matth~W 2450~84lt OstenriIe--AsSumptloil 529600 ~tMichael j j J 645783 Provinceto~ lSkPatrick bull i 722950 st Pe~er I 277850

SS Pete~ and ~ul 664600 Raynhain2-st Ami 468850 St Roch 348200 Saiidwic~

- St Stapislausmiddot - lt 3363~00gtCorPus CiiriSti _ 851550 ~t William bull 512500 ampeekonk~Mtc8rmeI Santo Christo 419605 Somerset-

NEW llJEDJ10IW St J()~ of God St Patnck

Holy Na~e 961500 st Thomas More Assumption 130000 South Dartmouth-Immaculate Conceptlon 618540 St Mary M~Carmel 1547655

Our Lady of Fatima 308900 Our Lady of - perpetual Help 230600shy

Our Lady of Purgatory 94400 S~cred Heart 444930 St Anne 274600 St Anthony of Paduamiddot 503800 S1 Boniface middot38400 st Casimir 133740 St FranCIS of As9iampI 232425 St Hedwig 50400

middotSt Hyacinth 148450 st J~mes 1562400 St John the BaptiElt 677535 St J~s~ph 1077650 St Kilian 405900 St Lawrence 2319130 middotStJoseph 2362St Mary 714800 st Theresa 535800

TAUNTON

Holy Family 548900 Holy Rosary 253000 Immaculate ConceptIoo 569500 Our Lady of Lourdes 414375 Sacred Heart 727000 St Anthony 463850 St~ James 463700 st Joseph 130900 st Mary 1142600 St Paul 565200

ATlLEBOaGmiddot Holy GhOst ( 110000 st John 1526300 St Joseph 502400

78lmouth $120

A Friend in honor of St PeIieIr $100

Blessing of the Fleet FundshyProvincetown

Sts Margaret amp Mary GuildshyBuzzards Bay

St Margaret Conference st ~nt de Paul-Buzzards Baw

Tum to Page Four

Michael C Austin Inc

FUNERAL SERVICE

NEW BEDfORD MASS

bull 549 COUNTY STREET

DOLAN-SAXON

Funerra~ Home 123 ~floadway

TA(JJ)~TON VA 4-5000

st Anthony 4378-Nantucket-

Our Lady- cd the Isle 3493 North Dighton-

St Joseph 466391Jiorth Easton--

Immaculate Ccmeeptlon 883500 ltorth Westport-

Our Lady Gf Grace 396858 Rorton-8t Mary 6051 Oak Bluffsshy

Sacred Heart 329881OceanGrov~

St Michael )711 shyorleans-

South Easton Holy Cross

SOuth Yarmouthshy- st Pius X Swansea-

Our Lady of hUma St Dominic St Louis of France

Vineyard Haven-St Augu~Une 182000

Wareham-8t Patrick 961615Wellfleet-

Our Lady of Lourdes 2291 West Harwich-

Holy Trinity 5199 shyWestport-S1 George 888050 Woods Holeshy

Spec~1 Gifts N~Oion~1

$5000 A Friend

$500 Taunton Greyhound Assn IDe

$300 Our Ladys Chapel

$125 Rev Walter A Sullivan

$100 LaSalette Seminary Attleb-

$75 Rev Clarence J dEritremont

$25 bull Mr amp Mrs James F Kerr

Cape Cod $300

Atty amp Mrs James H SmiGil

7752bull

49894G 649180 8779bull

972550

268550

lQ33S00 6 ~d ~3 4698 shy

48gtti33

3 THE ANCHORshyBro Zaccoreni Thurs May 23 1968No Easton Brother Plans to Establish First Religious

New Jersey CutsCouncil Head Latin America Food Training Centers

Social GainsBrother Herman ZaccareDt ~SC a top promoter of If YOU CMlcimagme a man dying of thirst because he doesnt know enough to put water TRENTON (NC)-New Jefoo

BeYs first Republican-controllecllfood-for-thought-about-food 10 his Hps you can imagine how the same kind of ignorance keeps the major population legislature in recent years conshy

lImlong religious educational of nine South American countries at the edge of starvation What most North Americans tinues to hack away at social mstitutions is the new presishy dont know is that south of the border most Americans are caught in the vicious circle of legislation enacted in previoWldent of the Institution Food Edshy sessionsignorance and starvationlIJorial Council-first Religious America with separate new The latest retrenchment camesays Brother Herman E Zacshyto hold the No 1 post in the 13shy projeCts and idea~istic aims when the State Senate denieOl earelliCSC International Brother Herman liaid TheselJle8r-old council the protection of the minimum

iIIle IFECcomposed of insti shy Director of the Food Reshy types of programs do not work wage law to migrant workersWe are going to add our proshytutional food and equipment searoh Center for ReligioWl Inshy The bill was sent to the Assemshy

([raquoOduct manufactures editors stitutions in North Easton grams to current education proshy bly by a 21-15 margingrams now in progress underand publishers channels the Brother Herman who just reshy

Current law which is a littienative supervisionflow of product information to turned from visitsmiddotto Guatemala more than a year old calls forThe organization which willIIepresentatives of the trade and Mexico Panama Costa Rica Brashya minimum wage of $140 aahandle the pilot training proshyiIhe general press More tmiddothan 80 zil Chile Peru Bolivia and hour But one proponent of thegram is called FE Y ALEGRIAPublications are represented in Venezuela plans middotto establish bill-which puts migrants back(Faith and Happiness) It is ane council ftlning centers for teachingmiddotthe on a piece-work basis-said mieciuca-tlonal organization staffedThe Holy Cross Brother dishy native populations methods of grants are sitting on theirand operated by Latin Amerishyeeets the Food Research Center processing and preservatWn of hands and collecting the minishycans in Venezuela PanamaIltr Catholic Institutions which tbek local foods mumEcuador Peru and Bolivia

~l1ege here The center con- -OVer 50 per cent of the nashy~ founded in 1956 at Stonehill COIPOratlons Cooperate

According to Brother Herman The bill is opposed by the adshy Clucts courses and workshops on tWe foods rot on and in the the success of the program wIll ministration of Gov Richard J tood purchasing preparation and ground emphasized Brother be based on the ability of the Hughes organized labor the rage menu planning diets Herman because the people local population to put the Consumer League of New Jersey IDUtritioil and kindred subjects lack elementary food knowlshy knowledge they can acquire at and the National Association for tIDr persons in charge of food edge He noted in some Central the training centers to producshy the Advancement of Colored tIe1vice in seminaries colleges and South America countries tive use He stressed that the People The New Jersey Farm and similar institutions vegetables like asparagus and Food Reearch Center for Reli shy Bureau favors it

Highly QuaUfied beets grow wild yet almost gious Institutions is not a charshy So far this year the legislature lln re~nt years representashy none are harvested nor eaten BRO 1II lEo ZACCARElLlLI CoSCbull ity organization but acts as the has pared unemployment beneshy

lives of non-Catholic institutions locally The Bay state Holy source from which participants fitsmiddot and school bus transportashyhave joined Catholics from vashy Cross Brother added that in the in Caracus Venezuela and in Ms education programs can tion oosts MeanWhile it has dous sections of the U S and birthplace of the potato most will begin operation next Sepshy take knowledge and build betshy failed to enact any of the meashyCanada as students at the censhy people do not know how to use tember Training centers willl ter futures for themselves sures suggested by the Govershytier Brother Zaccarelli also conshy it bow to cultivate or how to open in tlte eight remaining Self-Help Plan nors Commission on Civic Disshyducts seminars throughout the harvest and store it pointing countries during the next five In the past decade the Food order which recommended l eountry out that the primitive knowlshy years based on the success of Research Center has trained variety of laws designed to alleshy

As a high school teenager in edge of foods and their uses the pilot program over 5000 persons in insti-tushy viate conditions which spawned II1s native New Castle Pa oospite an abundance of variety Better Future tiona food service skills in the widespread rioting in the State Brother Zaccarelli began his haa limited the dietary staple of Several North American food United States Canada Europe eareer of quieting beefs about much of Latin America to corn and food equipment companies Puerto Rico Australia and food He got an after-school and rice have already contributed equipshy Hong Kong Student Federation iJob as bul boy in a restaurant Pegged at a cost of $10 milshy ment and personnel for vocashy With the inception of this ond quickly advanced to salad lion over the next half dozen tional schools where the local South American Self-Help plan In Financial Trouble ~ef years the immediate objective population can learn basic canshy the Center undertakes its first WASHINGTON (NC)- Afteli

Deciding on a Religious life 9pound Brother Zaccarellls visits ning and food preservation step in helping the poor of unshy 31 years of operations the Nashyeareer he joined the Holy was to middotfind a location for the methods der-developed nations to create tional Federation of Catholie Cross Brothers in the late 1940s pilOt training center It will be We are not going to LatilIl better lives for themselves College Students now is in dire attended Cornell Universitya financial difficulties and mayIhotel and restaurant adminisshy disband ibation school then took adshy Study Responsible Eucharistic Sharing MsgrThomas J Leonard di shyvanced courses at George Washshy

rectQr Youth Department USbullIngton University Washington Catholic Conference confirmedD C and founded the food Churchmen Exp~ore Circumstances Procedurereshythe dismal NFCCS situation bmerearch center at the college conshysaid it is too early now to stateducted by the Holy Cross comshy in LOUIS (NC)-Participants tian community and the power We have found sufficient theshywhether the organization willmunity heremiddot in the third consultation be- of Christian life are centered ological justification in prinshybe disbanded He said a definitetween the US Bishops laquoommit- upon the Eucharistic celebration ciple for some Eucharistic sharshydecision will be made beforeI Sled e tee for Ecumenical and Inter- For both of us the nature of the ing Furthermore we detect thatDe August ISP oy 0 I arlt religious Affairs and the Council Church is discernible principally urgent middottheological ecumenical

Once active in more than 100In Interracial Wa~k of Christian Unity of the Chris- in the fellowship of the Lords and especially pastoral reasons I Catholic colleges and universi shytian Churches-also known as Supper exist in our cOWltry to make

ELIZABETH (NC) - Some the Disciples of Christ _ have some Eucharistic sharing desirshy ties the NFCCS fostered Cathshy~OOO whites and blacks lwalked urged their respective commushy able olic action work among students hand in hand through the streets institute Releases We urge our communions to Since the early 1960s interestof this New Jersey citys decay- nions to explore as rapidly as in NFCCS has waned as studentsexplore as rapidly as possible theling Elizabethport area in a dis- poSsible the circumstances and first Publication chose to identify themselves withcircumstances and proceduresplay of solidarity co-sponsored procedures for responsible Eushy HOLLISTON (NC)-rhe first other stduent government organshyfOl responsible Eucharistic sharshyby the citys clergy and other charistic sharing publication of the Marsalin Press izationsing

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groups Unhappy DIlisioDS was launched by the Marsalin The walk was patterned after Representatives of the two Institute of Religion and the

II similar walk held previously ehurches discussed Responsible Psychological Sciences at the in nearby Newark and was de- Theology for Eucharistic Intershy first quarterly meeting of its signed to acquaint people with com m u n ion in n Divided board of directors here Qrea conditions and involve Church After hl~aring papers The initial work Psychiat17 them in Summer and year- from members of both churches and Religion-A Historial PershylIIOund programs there and discussions they agreed on spective was written by Father

An interfaith prayer service six points James J Hayden OSB the inshywith Negro and white Protest- The act given to the Church stitutes founder and president ibmt Jewish and Catholic cler- by Our Lord Jesus Christ and Il Ben~ictine monk physician aYmen taking part preceded variously known as the EUcharshy and psychiatrist the demonstration Father Ro- ist Communion and the Lords hod W Muenzen administrator Supper is the highest expression Qf St Patricks Catholic parish of unity within the church oold the participants the one Since all have been baptized I6hing we dont want is toler- fmto the community which God rance which implies inequality pledges to mankind we have m ~at we want for all is equal- given unity in the Lord JesWl tty in love understanding anell Christ which our unhappy mshyknOWledge visions have not bee1ll able tCgt

destroy Even when we celebrate theAids Ex-Convicts Eucharist separately we are

NEWARK (NC) - The Mt aware that we are in communiOlli amprmel Guild special welfare with the same Lord and thereshyEtgency of the Newark archdioshy 1iore in union with one another lOOse helped find gainful emshy We have discovered that ourployment for 57 convicts last understandings of too Lords(fear Guild officials made the Supper are more similar than weltdisclosure at a seminar which had expected lit sponsored for parole officero bullSharilmg J])esirmbllGl IfIrom throughout the state Coshyoperating in the program were Both churches gather around ilihe Farm Labor Bureau and fhe TlIJble of our Loid nt least lUte New Jersey Employment eacll Sunday and we mutuallv ~vice EaCognize that the bond cJf Chrtlshy

middotOh a SYSTEMATIC5 5O 10 year SAVINGS MONTHLY DEPOSITS

5 00 01 a INVESTMENT 10 year SAVINGS

~OTlCE ACCOUNTS II REGULAR450 year_ SAVINGS

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 23 19~8

M~~Go [P)Greg~~U [f[]o[k) _~~[k)copy~ $)frMcdlltelroli CINCINNATI (NC)-A mon~

long program in the Arts laquoflNrrtiuregltdl $UUreg ~~~regUreg U ~reg~~ Liturgical Leadership will ~ b--J

Mreg~~olJi)~ ~ $~Mcampreg[ji)U ~lW[ji)~O~$ ~ l Congratulations to David Poisson of Prevost High in

Fall River whos been named national delegate from Massshyachusetts to the national convention of Student Councils to be held in Texas at the end of Jlne Hes also been asked to attend a Little White House conference in Hawaii during the Summer and to become an executive board member of the state association

of student councils and be presshyent at its Summer workshop

Sounds like a busy vacation At Mt St Mary Academy

Fall River the first annual scholarship in honor of Sister

Mary Carmela the schools first principal has beeil awarded to an eighth grader at Dominican Academy Shes Nancy Romanshyowicz The award carries full

1U[ji)~O$laquo[li)M[jamp~

IF0~U17 Ifreg li$

Siste M-ry Furse)T Sanshy tosof themiddot Franciscan Misshy sionaries of Mary ha~ just celebrated her Golden Jubilee

of service to God and mankind in her vocation Daughter of the late John F and Maria Medeiros Santos of 235middot Tremont Street in

Fall River Sister is pFesently stationed in St Francis Hospital in -Roslyn Long Island butobshyserved the occasion with her family in Fall- River-Theresa Joseph Antone and Qenis Sanshytos and Mrs Evangeline Plunkett and Mrs Hilda Barbosa

Sister has been no stranger to various parts of the world in her missionary career She took her novitiate in Quebec proshynounced her final vows in Moshyzambique and spent six years in this mission Then on to Enshygland for thirty-one years enshygaging in various social service

Q activities The war ~yearsin- Lonshydon saw the convent to which she was assigned completely destroyed by bombs-all exshycept the chapel

Sister returned to the United States to see her family after a forty-year Japse in 1958 and has been in hospital ~ork on Long Island ever since

And she is looking forWard eagerly to the wmk that she will continue to do in the fushyture--calm serene interested in God and His people

tuition for the four high school years

Sister Carmela who was Mountmiddots principal fOl 15 years is now English department chairman at St Xavier Acadshyemy Providence

At Jesus-Mary Academy Fall River sophomores and basketshyball-tearn members joined forces to spoilsor a Surfers Happenshying dance featuring the south

of Boston musiCal group Hiking Nun

Weve had fiYi~g nims and singing nuns now its a hiking nun Sister Albina Marie of Sacred Hearts Academy Fall

SISTER MARY ~URSEY

_ gers involved in the use of al shycohol and drugs Speakers group discilssions and reports have been scheduled and the program ended Tu~sdaywith a Day-O-Rama conducted by Rev Arthur Bourgeois MS of La Salette Center of Christian Livshying

Also on the junior-senior calendar-a Washington weekshyend with Sister Ann Dolores as one of the adults accompanying the group

Parents Night Holy Family High in New

Bedford held its senior prom last night and upcoming is a parents night for senior moms and dads oil MondayJune 3 Class day is set for TuesdayJune 4 -

At Prevost High theyve anshynounced that electiqn of the school president will take place in June Why Because ~ays the Maple Leaf in its usual forth- right manner this intere~iii1g

River organized 18 sophomores for a seven mile stroll to Lin colri Park Next on the agenda a trip by foot to a popul~i ice cream spot in Assonet

Mt St Marys junior lkomis slared for tomorrow night with Elizabeth Perry in general charge of arrangemerits while parents of SHA Fall River girls had their own prom with the Sucordium and Fathers Clubs

joining for a semi-formalaffair Jesus-Mary girls have been

piaying host to Mdther Del Rosario RJM pi-esid~i1t ofthe iilternatiqnal unfoi of Major

Superiors and counselor to the Sacred Congregation of Reli shygious Orders A special assemshybly was held in her honor

And last night at JMA the Parent-Teachers and Alumnae Association held its last meeting for the year Officers for next year were seated and seniors received into the group Freshshymen entertained with a drama and there was also time on the agenda for parents to confer with teachers

Not slowed up by year-end activities are The Parables

SHAs folk-singing and guitarshyplaying group Members are at

-Holy Name Church in Fall River each Sunday and other appearances will be for the St Marys Womenlts Guild and for a youth group in Bristol Other SHA folk groups are the Conshystellations and a junior highshyfreshman unit Both of the lat shyter units played at the Sucorshyoium Club installation banquet this month

Also upcoming at SHA pershyformances ihis weekend ei The Boy Friend presented by the schools new dramatic group Prospect Place Players

And seniors and dgniors at the Fall River school have just coinpleted a project on the daQshy

COYLE OFFICERS SeIiior class officers at Coyle High SchoolTaunton are seated Mjch~el Mal~)Ile t~as~i~r St Marys parish Taunton Alec Rich vice~president St -Marys Norton standing James Reid nresident St Marys Taunton Steven Strojnysecretary Holy Rosary Tau~~n

evenl will easemiddot the sUaiJi of talk by M~ Violet L~nard boredom on the closing days teacher at Bridgewater State of school Candidates for relievshy Prison on the need for work ing boredom and performing with young inmates at the insti shyother usefill chores are David tution Poisson Earle Flynn and Alan White

This is Arts Festival Month renin ton shyin Fall River and Mt St Mary $550 Academy contributed thereto Reed amp Barton Foundation Jnc with a Spring Concert presented $250 jointly with the 75 piece LaSalle Taunton Daily Gazette band of Providence $100

Also in Spring a young mans ~Thornas-E Donelan fancy lightly turns to thoughts $50 of love So does a young womshy Tlunton Printing Co anS so to be practical l)bout - $35 the matter Cassidy seniors William HurleyJrheard a discussion by Taunton $25 surgeon Dr David Gouveia on

Trocchi Discount Food StoreaThe Biological Aspect of Love Eagans Package Store CatholicHe presented an informal illus- Association of Foresters 1 Mtrated lecture and answered all Wells Louison _amp LOlisonstudent questions

And Cassidy juniors joined Mrs Joseph McCormick Parashythe seniors recently to hear a gon Gear Works William E

Barnes MD St Germaine amp Son Ed~ard F St Pierre SheridanSpecial Gifts Silver Co Taunton Co-Operashy

tive Bank A Friend Continued from Page Two

~ to Page Nine $50

Hunt Club Falmouth ~ Tommys Oil-Buzzards Bay A Friend DEBROSS Oll~Dr amp Mrs Thonrtls Perryshy

Provincetown co $30

Ferreiras Shoe Store-Provshy Heating Oilsincetown

$25 lOind BurnersAlf~ed Hall Edgartown

CYO Sacred Heart Oak Bluffs 365 NORTH FRONT STREElJ Falmouth Coopepative Bank Paul Peters Insurance Agency NEW BEDFORD

FalmQuth Dr amp Mrs George DeMello 992-5534

Falmouth Falniouth ~ackage Store A Friend

I oonducted jor seminarians abovo the high school level by the Na- shytional Institute of Ritual 131111

Drama beginning July 1 ~ GmilviUe national headqU8iD ters of the Grail movement ~

Loveland Ohio The course will be conducW

by Father Clarence J Ri~ priest~mposer of the CiQciDshy

nati archdiocese who laun~ the institute this year

Father Rivers said instructoftj) will be drawn from professional

artists and from seminary mlf1I ~university faculties They willi provide training in the arts ~

reading speaking acting mngshy~ing gesturing and moving -atl these things apply to leading dlshy namic celebrations of the JD rirgy Father Rivers middotstated ~ The priest described the

SUDimer program as a pil~

project through which we hop(l to demonstrate iii concrete termo what we mean by adopting ~

skills of the performing arts ~

the need of the liturgy and ~

take the first steps in establishshyjng a 0 0 0 tradition of effeetivG performance via TV we will ~

Jess and less able to hold thew attention with second rate pel shy

formances in church FathGli Rivers stated

$ltoiUrillil$ ~U5(e1mreg~atJn ~ A$ ~v F lfelmli WASHINGTON (NC) - WDshy]iam Beigl 17 student at SLshyBenedict High School ChicagCll has been saluted here by Presishydent Johnson as the nations q example of juvenile decenCJ7

selected as Boy of the Year from among 750000 Boys Club of America members he was reshywarded with a- trip to the IIampshytions capitllt

Beigl selected for superlashytive service to his home Cbureil school community and boys

bull ~lub presented the Presidem With a scroll pledging theBo)1ll Clubs of America to a long

Cool Summer-plus an -eerQr bird honorary life BCA memshybership for Patrick Lyndon Nushygent the Presidents grandSOllshy

ltgt Complete

BANKING SERVICE

for Bristol County

Bri$to~ Countymiddot Trugtt Company

l AUNlION~ MASS

THIl RANK ON TAUNTON GREEN

Member 01 Federal Deposit

iDsurance CorporaUo6

Noel Shop-Provincetown Buzzards Bay Garage Wareham Lodge of Elks No

1548

Endorse March WASHINGTON (NC)-Direcshy

tors of Catholic charities organshy izations thrQughout the country

haveendorsedthe Poor Peoples Campaign as a citizens effort to end the degradation suffered by millions of Americans as a result of poverty and racism

ON CAPE COD

JOHN HINCKLEY amp SON CO I bull

BUILDING MATERIALS SPring 5-0700

49 YARMOUJH ROAD HYANNIS

AMPLE PARK~NG

5 Neames Book on Lourdes Differs From AII~ Ofthef~

By ~~ Rev MSgTbull John S Kennedy

Alan Neames The Happenings at Lourdes (Simon and chuster 630 Fiftili Ave New York NY 10020 $695) roncludes with an apocryphal story about Pope John XXm RiG Holiness according to the story had as luncheon guests during the oouneil two 00Jrshy

dinals desirous of a new docshytrinal definition of the PllVshyOegeg of our Lady and a theshyologian To all three he put the llIuestion middotCan you tell me why the Church in ~ liturgy so oflen prays the IIIrords Pray for llIG 0 holy Mother of God One carshydinal answered Because Boli shyliIleIS Mary is IIU - powertul IIrith God The eco n d said Because your IBlGlinesa illustrious predecesshy110m have decreed so

The theologians reply was So that we may be made worthy of the promlsea of ltChrist The Pope declared the llbeoIOgians anSW0l1 tn be the dGht one _

Mr Neame is ll Catholic He lIIdi ted the Old Testament secshylion of The Jerusalem Bible Svidently he has long been fasshyaoated by Lourdes has visited laquobe shrine often He has gone ~ly into the backgiound of lb9t region of France and of Bernadettes town in particular

Now he has written a b90k ltifferent from any other of the ~ns or scores which have ~It with Lourdes

Homely Trutll llt is a critical work but not

I1IlnIercritkal It attempts to illOnsider th~ phenomenon of Itourdes objectively It rejects lientimentality and superstition Aithougb it is idiosyncratic its ~l effect is to suggest the reality of supernatural intervenshyUOn both in the apparitions and ~ the cures

Much familiar ground lB oovshyltaed by Mr Neame He goes antltraquo the history ~ Bernashydettes family and summarizes ~[ own brief history before the ltPParitions (she was then 14) An trace of pietistic glamor is Illemoved The homely trinth is rkly set oul

Whell it comes to the apparishyns Mr Neame givCfl us a dear account of the location of 8he grotto its appearance its connection with the town In treating the apparitions themshylves he is succinct sticlting _ essentials avoiding exelamashyQIon

He cooly states and analyzes nat happened at the grotto What happened to the town eg ebe interrogations to which mernadette was subjected

The effect far from being III

clebunking is conviction that oomething humanly unaccountshyole did occur -

Acote lJgtuflfellences Mr Nearne is well aware that

IDtlny alleged Marian apparishytions have occurred Indeed the oountrr roundabout Loui-des was dotted with the scenes of tAch before Bernadettes time aut he well brings out the acute amd deeply significsnt differshy~ which mam off the Lwrdes story from all others

The words attri-bUted to Mary ~ Bernadette ate extremely 1iNI as against elaborate messhyooges said to have been delivshytUed elsewhere They are neither prophetic (in the sense of foreshyWling dire happenings) nor political

She makes DO two-edged fllDbiguous promises ampbe ~

no oontingent perspectives of IA golden age to corne She is anshyeKistentialist a Madonna for a

demythologized world propos- ing nothing but repentance and blind faith

Appeal to individual Or as he puts it in another

place No word Qf the temporal power from her of the sover- eigty of the Pope of the righw ol the Holy See or even of the rights of the Church itself No word of condemnation for the modern world or the secu1aJr state

Only the appeal to the indishyvidual Go and kiss the ground in penance for sinners $ ~) $ drink at the spring and wash in It shyactions symbolizing two fundashymental obligations to love onea neighbor and to sanctify one- self

Obviously Mr Neame seen Lourdes as very pertinent to the contempor~ry Church and the contemporary world Its meaning he finds expounded and concretely applied by Vatshyioan n This interpretation is 1I think unprecedented and should make us see Lourdes in a new way not eclipsed but Ilhiningmiddot out with fresh force

MatWr of ~

That it should have swviVed unimpaired he believes to be astounding He details the conshytroversies and themiddot vicissitudeu which have beset it There waS a kind of feud between the local clergy and the religious es~

cially assigned to the shrin~ llsect

this ~eveloped Also there Wwl

ID()re than one effort to involve Lourdes in politics

Mr Neame goes into the matshy~r of cures thlHr number tM standards (progressively toughshyer) ror judging their authenshyticity Curiously middothe regrets the exclusion of neurotics from conshy8ide~ation as genuinely curedl

The crYing need of our day be says is middotthe miracle that heals the disordered mind the unreconciled personality the ~otionally disturbed the tem- pennentally unstable These are the very cures to claim not the ones to set aside

Help sought GivcllIl This jolting book contains a

plethora of incidental infonnashytion about Lourdes the local peoples attitude toward the grotto (they are aware of it all Parisians are of the Eiffel Towshyer) the origins of the dialect which Bernadette spoke the number of visitors (about three

million a year) and the numshyber of postcards sent by them (about ~ven and a half million a year) the peculiar story of the Cagot people throug~ whose segregated quarter Bel1shynadette ran on one occasion even Bemadettes diet This Qften astonishing miscellany iD well woven into the text

The story with which thill not-ice began and the boOKcloses makes the point that Maryg help is sought and given whether ordinarily or as lilt Lourdes extraordinarily that middotwe may so live as to be worthmiddot of the promises of Christ A critical point

Accepts Invitaftion YJ[ENljA (NC) - FranziskUllJ

Cardinal Koenig of Vienna hlllSl accepted an invitation by Pampshytriarch Vasgen I of the Armenishyan-Gregorian Church in the So-shyviet Union to visJlt tIlat Church oocters ther~

FAnIER JOYCE 8 3

Name Fr JoyceBe President

BOSTON (NC) -Father W Seavey Joyce SJ 54 has been named president of Boston College to succeed Father Michshyael P Walsh SJ

Father Joyce has served atil chairman 00 the colleges deshypartment of economics dean of the college of businesS adminisshytration and since 1966 as viceshypresident of community affairs Acti ve in Boston civic affairs

Father Joyce began in 1953 the Booton Citizens Seminars at the college served from 1963 to 1968 as president of the Boston MetroshyJiolitan Area Planning Council and from 1963 to 1967 as chairshyman of the Boston Citizens Adshyvisory Committee on Community Development

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 231968

Praises Dedication of COB1vention To Memory of Martin Luther King

BALTIMORE (NC) - Lawshyrence Cardinal Shehan hailed the decision of the Baltimore Archdiocesan Holy Name Union to dedicate its 57th annual conshyvention to the memory of Dr Martin Luther King and stressed the obligation of Chrisshytians to work for better relashytions between the races Th~ oommunity can be made

worthwhile only if it is united Cardinal Shehan told several hundred delegates here H~ said that insofar as the community is divided by prejudice disshycrimination and hatred itmiddot ill impossible- for the Church to fulfill its mission

The cardinal said Catholics have an obligation to tgke the spirit of Christ into the com- munity

The obligations of Christians as individuals in this respect are inescapable he said

The cardinal observed that the Church is INlSsing through difficult times

We need a laity that is well-middot informed well-educated and completely dedicated to Christ and to Christs Church

He added that the mission of yenCnewal within the Church can be accomplished only if there is renewal within individuals Cardinal Shehan said this must be accompanied by a strengthshyening of love for Christ and Christs Church

Reject Resolution Nothing oan be accomshy

plished he slllid unless we

Now available 10 members of

have complete confidence that God is within the Church

The delegates rejected a resshyolution that would have called for a change in the name of the Holy Name Society

During a banquet in Balti shymores Civic Center the deleshygates heard a leading Canadian Catholic layman call for greater service to the poor

Rom Maione executive direcshytor of the Canadian Catholic Organization for Development and Peace said that Christians are not allowed to live any longer in solitude but must inshystead pour ourselves out into the world

He said that we are either going to grow in love for one another or were going to grow in hate

New York Teachers To Study Judaism

NEW YORK (NC)-Teachem in the New York Arahdiocesaan schools will take 11 five-pan course on Judaism and Jews mI literature next Fall

The course will consist of five one-hour programs for closed circuit television prepared by Jewish scholars and theologituW and taped by the television stushydios of the New York Archdioshycese The course is sponsored by the New York archdiocese and the Anti-Defamation League ltri BNai Brith

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~ River-TJiurs May 23 196amp Oversleeping

Riglkll Traditional spiritual writers advise those who are strivshy

llng for perfection to make an e~amina~ion of conscience ~ch day to check their spiritual condition of soul to measure themselves and their actions against th~ comm~nd-

ments and counsels Some wag called this period-You cant be right

A~hbishop Cooke of New York must feel that way He sent a letter to all priests of that archdiocese aking their lIreCOmmendations for diocesan offices And immediately one reaction from the New York Senate of Priests was that he had gone outside the established advisory groups namely apparently the Senate

And if the Archbishop h~d asked the Senate for JeC0Inshy

mendations some individuals would have stood up and proclaimed loudly that this was an example of referring a matter to an organization and bypassing the individual

The ans~er of course in this post-conciliar age is to consult all to broaden the base of consultation ~ widely as possible And then the Archbishop must fulfill his responshy8ibiJity and make decisions and choose men who will earry on the work of God in an effective and pastoral way

Even then there will be criticism But the riame of the ame~does seem to be-You oant be right

Here is another i~stance af where there must always be a posi-tive attitude toward what is being done Critieism

surely has its place--but only in the context of praise for what is being done and as a further proposal to bolster the forward thrust that is taking place Then it is positive and

~ ueative - euro th Church is to assist the Bish~ and the other clergy in servicemiddotm00QInG to GOds holy people The deashyWider Vision con is a man of prayer since he

A significant meeting -took place in Chi~ago the fi18t Revbull John Ff Moore St Josephs Taunton of this week representatives from priestsmiddot groups and

middot tf II th t to form a natIon~1 fed- lA MA MEdSena es rom a over e counry bull ltU poundQ

tion Of priestiS organization TheDi0ce8eOfall~RiVerwas C rime and the Indiyiilutrlepresented ~

It i~ unfortunate however that in middotsOme Publie]ty Alarmed Cmiddotmiddottmiddot emiddotmiddotnrymiddot aS FearfiI eomingout of Chicago one speaker in Particular uSed the tired old pre-eouncil language of pOUties instead of the bull Cmiddot 5 pastoral language Of this modem middotageHe spoke of the At Home cis on ty tret

clearly the office of the diao federation as a manifestation ofmiddotuderi1ltgtcraeymiddot entering into During the pas-tfour months over 2000 more citi~ns~onate It is tbe duty of fie the life of the church - -6 ~h Co alth l~ ht from ther 1 1 nn ndeacon to the extent that he h8lll

91 Ii IS mmonwe u~ve 80u~ ~ JVCoiW -bullbull been authotized by eompeteDi

If there is anything that the Couneflpointed out it is permission to carry small arms-such as pIstols ~authorityto administer baptisii that the Church is not a politicai grouping and 8hould~ volvers Thousands more have made the sale of riflefl a~ 8Olemnly to be custodian and be seen in the forms and language ()f poliiics To d9thiB is very profitalble business The ~ dispenser of the -Eucharist

to take a narrow nationalisti~viewpointand to inssentirely the fact that the Church is eatholi~madelip oot only of fifty million Americans but some several hundredmiUiorts of other nationalities

What this national organization will do is to bring about among priests more of a sense of national and indeed world-wie awareness and responsibility toward the Church whose servants they are toward all peoples all over the world whose salvation they are pledged to seek

Their cooperation and advice will certainly be sought and accepted by the National Conference of Bishops who are pledged with if anything even more pointedness and responsibility to the saJ11e high~urPoses

But the national federation willbe ill-served if Speakers talk about it it) the language of a Political party or aPolit shyicalsystem The vision must be a wider- arid ~adeeper One than this

rheANCIIOR lIlC1~L NEWSPAPEROF THE DIOCESE OF FALL piVER Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Dioces~ of Fall Ri~er bull 410 Highland Avenu~

Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connoy~ DDPhDbull

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER ~

It Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev johnmiddot P Driscollmiddot MANAGING EDITOR

H~gh J Goldenmiddot

for the loss of private prOperty bring Viaticwn to the dying bull questionoow must be asked ValUed atmore than two binioD read thesacred~rpture touMi

Why are private citizens seeking to protect them- aelves in such a manner

Why musthomes ~ protected by priwte weapons The answer of Course is fear

Private citizens of this and every state in the Union certainshyly are well aware of the rising tide of crime In the last two yearsin this country there were two victims of serious crime per 100 Persons an -increase of more than 12 per cent over 1965 and a 50 per cent increase over 1960 And during the same period over 80000 armed robberies were reported

Robberies burglaries larshycenies and auto thefts accounted

fied person now is no longer interested in police work

This rapfd iricrease in crime together with the corresponding factor of ineffectual public ac tion has now underminded the trust and confidence of the pri shyvate individual I

He now fears that the state can no longer give him the pro- teetion he needs as a citizerr The results can be seen in the

increased sale of weapons to privatemiddotpersons The citizen can nolonger walk after dark in man) sectors of OW IIIbancomshy

dollars faithful to inlfiruct and exhod With this rapid increase m

the crime rate there has also been aTapid decrease in effec-

tivemiddot public oontrol of crime This is due 10 many factors Perhaps the most insidious fact

rests in the extreme liberalizashytion of the law

It seems under present jurisshyprudence the law favors the criminal factor and fails to proshyteet the true innocent

Hand-in-hand with this great tr~nd to protect the so-called rights of the criminal goes the rather ineffective police methshyods that have been imWsed upon our local protectors of the

public

Imbalance of Scales of Justice

The modem policeman soon munities his home is nOW-tIM becoJl1ell discouraged and irus- target of financial Security bat Uate9 by the intrigues and the dope addictmustJ)OSSeSlj subtle maneuvers of the law his very lifemiddot now dePends 011shyHe ends -up by Saying ~wbats his own skill and abilities

the use As a result the quali- Indeed this is a tragic utua- tion

The formation of a private vigilante ariny in thiseOUDtry

defeats the total concept of thisshyunion In a way it is more iJeshystrpctive than any force of criminal element to the Amershy

ican ideal If we are to have anymiddot solution to this problem the re- sponsible forces of law and order must begin to completely reevaluate their role in CIW society

The cancer of crim~ together

Ordination Continued from Page One

eharist they were alSo ordereal to evangelize and baptize ~ this sense they were minist~

who shared intimately in f3nj priesthood of the Bishop

The word diaconate comEQ from the greek word diaxonilllJl which etymologically meaoo SERVICE The deacons office means service to the Church 4) ministerial service to Go~ people The deacon was ordered to minister to the sick the pooa and the afflicted Since by ordishynation he is fUled with ~ Spirithe is ordered to baptiza (introduce the Spirit into tOO lives of new Christians) By ()Iloo

bull dination he is a dispenser of tb6 Holy Eucharist and a ministell of the Word of God He shares embryonically maybe but stR9 he really shares in the sacraa mental powers of Holy Orders (the power to baptize to preaCll and to handle the Eucharist)

Minister Since Vatican II the impoJlioo bull

tance of the diaconate has beeli restored We hear even of tbe

possible restoration of a pe manent married diaconate FOI a long time the diaconate W81

just another step a vital OM yes but merely another step 1101 ordination to priesthood TOO diaconate was always considered to be a major order howev~ history made it to be sort ad unimportant and unhea~d of blv Gods people

The deacon Is a minister eI the Church His role in the local

has already received (in the ord~r of subdiaconate) thO Churchs delegation to pray the daily the Divine Office to be

ai PrayeJ The d~acon is ~

just a glorified Mass server iii the tniest sense of this expree sion he is a minister of Jesu Christ theSpeonlelemiddotdlliough rrlest

t The - ConstUidfon on --

Church has spelled out veq

the people to preside at ~ woShip and prayer Of ~ faithful to administer sacrampshymental and to officiate atf n~rals and burial services (art 29) In the ordination rite one III made a deacon by the Bishop laying on ot hands through thJ8 imposition of hands the deacoA receives a share in the Bishopll mission which is this ministrp to Gods people The deacoa takes on the duty of the minisshytry which was described a~ove

because he is co-missioned the Bishop to do so On June first Bishop Conn

ly will ordain eight men o the diocese to this office MCy remember these deacons in_ prayers that they might beshycame men full of faith filledwi~ th~breath of Gods spi generoUs servants Qf tbii Church and faithfu(witIi~

of gods beat Love for lIisholy peOple iIi the loCal ChurcD Fall~River 0 bull

unless society as a whole begu to wake up and act as a colleoo tive unit Liberty is nOt license mil justice is not self righteousneMo

middotAs this criminal elEfment beshycomes organized so too theeIshyfective control of crime

becoine a community effort JIIi single person can effect tile changes that must be undse taken but each man bound gether in a common effort

with the disease of individuality yet save tbiI 8hip ol natkmll will destroimiddot our Dational b0d7 p~

Clergy Ap~ntments AHect 16 eontinued from Page One Aft$ Portugal on Jan 29 1933 ~e newly ordained prie3b the son of Julio F llJld Blandina

tfust assigned are (Ferreira) da Sllvnmiddot -Rev Edwlllrd Eo Correia ~ After preliminary studies at

ur Lady of Vic1lol)7 Church the Seminario de S Jose FelshyCenterville 1Ueiras Portugal Father da

Rev Edmund JJ mtzgerald b Silva entered the CongregatioQ lJoly Name Church Fall River c2 the Missions (Vincentians)

Rev George E Harrison to 81 Imd studied at the Seminario de ~seph Church Taunton _ S V~cento de Paulo Limpiaf

Rev William J Hurley w ~( sanmiddottander and the Seminario Stanislaus Church Fall Rive1 ~ 818 Teresinha Felgueiras

Rev Comelius l Kiley ta Si JPIortugal seph Church JiaU River Ordained a priest OD July 19

Rev Robert A McGowan w Jl959 he returned to the semlshyCnrpus Christl Church sand-ll1ary to serve as instructor and

middot~ch m 1964 as seminary rector On Rev Donald 11 Messier to St Nov 1 1966 he was appointed

8hn the Baptist Church Fall sssistant at Mt Cannel Church niver New Bedf~rd

Rev Kevin F Tripp to Nqtro Jliltllneli lllitellneTIll Dame University fur Swprner Rev Edward Joseph Mitchell

middot c1Iudieampmiddot ronmiddot of William and Anne 17on~1i lLo~eg (Grace) Mitchell was born iml

One of six children Rev Wall Rivermiddot Jan 21 1932 EdushyIDhomas C Lopes assistant Bit ~ated in Fall River publie St Elizabeth Church Fall River schools Father Mitchell attendshynras born at Oak Bluffs on Aug ed Prevost High SChool Fall 14 1938 the son of Constantine River before stu~Ying at St ood Viola (Authier) Lopes Charles Se~inary- CatonsYille

After elementary and second- Md StMary ~eminary Baltishycry schooling on Marthas Vine- more Md and NOiIth Americali JBITSlHIO]S CONGlRAT1UlLAIlE U1UJBilLARJrAN Prior to the Mass of Thanksgiving Ofd yoard he studied ampt St~ ThoIIias College Rome fered by Bishop Connolly in the Sacred Heart Ohurch in honor of the priestly golden jUJ ampminary Bloomfield Conn Ordained a priest (lID Decla bilee of Rt Rev Felix S Cltildspastoremeritus three Bishops congratulate the jubil2lacrnd 51t Tohn Seminary Blrighton lQ5~ the Fall River priest rian Bishop Gerrard Bishop Gorman of DaU8I8 Te~as preacher Msgr Childs Bishop Ordained ) priem on FebmiddotlS served as assistant pastor aJt

Connolly who celebra-ted th~ lVlase1965 Father middotLopes has_ served Sacred Heart Church Taunton Gl assistant EitI Stmiddot EHzahetb and Sacred Heart Church Fall

Ohurch Fall middotRivermiddot since ord- lRiver before returning to

rultion l7atbeli mB~ ~ tou~~for~ S~~di~a Atm~OU~~~ ~ ~terf(llmthmiddotThe~gy ~ rnJS~0t((l[jj~h~ mev Ernest E Blais assistant Law

crt st Louis de France SWan- Since his return from Rome ~ rL l1f IJ ~ J1I 0 JI II fC A-- c2a was born May 26 1918 Am lTllIther Mitchell has served as ~~lfl]lli tr[(8 1m(Qj ~QW Ii lteS5 lJ sectl1ro1f ~Dlflm

middot Pawtucket R r the SOllll of assistant at Holy Name Churclilp BALTIMORE (NC) _ 1middotLa-__ is1 n Hi ~ rl L Doll of Maryland have aspects as well as their theologa ~ry (Bouchard) Bla anellthe Q ver rence Cardinal Shehanmiddotmiddot0f-i3i1lti- Jointly announced the openlng I ddtmiddot I d I ~e Edgar Blais i lFatllner Moll~ lea an oc nna eve opment

After schooling in Pawtucket I Ordained May 20 1i6f Rev more ati~ Epis~opalBis~o~Har- of an Ecumenical Evening lyenJIe~t Great NeOO middotn 1 Father B8ls prepared fur lJ~mes Harold Morse son of School of Theology for all qual- The institute represents a new

ifiedifhe priesthood at the seminarieo George and Grace (Prendergast) Arthur Flerrimingto mention candiates of any faith in idea in theological education ~ the Oblates 0 Mary Immmiddotacu- orse ~as bom - Rumford the Baltimore area M t h bUl -- ~ only a few of the Coalitions Th tt t h h os senunanes ave eeiilAn

~e Ordained to flhe priesth-- m I on April ~ 1939 After bull e IDS I U e w IC opens ill planning moves to secular unishyuvu founding fathers-strikes me asmiddot S t b U be ted t

on June 25 194A he servedmiddotM studving at St Mary School ep em er Wl AOca a t d 11 t th missionary in __ Cayes Hal 1t1f1rside R I ~d St Ra~ael being rather sophomoric and St Marys Roman Catholic verSI les an 00 eges momiddot e

Ugt JltWv~ strangely ou~ of character for a Semi h d 11 t seminary environment bull lIDtil appointed 00 middotSt Lou- ~- Pawtucket R I he oontmued nary ere an WI gran Jiather John Thlrkell iS shy paper which professes and gen- t _ d doc gtUmasFrance Swansea on Sept lllt Stbull Thomas SeminaryBloom_ er 0 11 an or 0 dean of the institute and shytgt erally lldheres to reasonably hil h d E lIm t ~ 52middot bull ed Conn and St ohn Semi- p osop y egrees nro en R d C S h M

poundJ JU A ampI high standards of editorial fair- 1 Iso be everen tep an ann anPIlther _ Brighton He has served Wlu a open to students not An r t f E 1 ~

llDvuoe - Lad th neas anq courtesy ireeKinga degreemiddot g Ican pnes rom ng an bull Rev Dm-a A Lamiddot-middotie - as asSistantmiddotat OW y of e 0 f associate dean

tuU v C on use Issu~ The facwtyof 18 is compOsed IS

Ief Herineneoil6e and Dena Assumption atbedral Fan Tlrdly whether Wlttingly or ofprofessors from St Marys In announcing the institutes ~ (Ouelette) Lavoiewas hom mgtmiddotv~rsince otdiXlati9J1 1 oot NCR was playmg games Johns Hopkins Un i v e r lJ i t y opening Cardinal Shehall middotmiddotmiddotmiddotftIl River OnmiddotJjm 1 i930 ~liumiddot4Fa~~~ wthilyDbers when forth~ Goucher College Baltimore He- pOnted out that up to nowthere A gradua~ of~t Ma~ea llev ~~~as Ill4W~ O~~ I~1ltwe~k in arqwi~susPi-brew College Loyola College has been no institution in the middot r8choo1 Fall Diver Flltber La- lllS~t ~ ~ James Church eiously contrasted the interim MountmiddotSt A Con d Baltimore arcbdiocese equipped middot vole studied at ~~PttOIllmiddot middotN~wBeiifordmiddotwasbomOctmiddot30middot sumof$25 thousand granted to1

the unlversii pe~r~aa to give special courses in the Prep Ilrtd COllege WoIeeSter 1934 in Taunton Ute son ofmiddotmiddotmiddot themiddotmiddot SoCialmiddot Action middotDepartmentmiddot field of religious education

middot where he obtained a BA Siun_Mlilirice OJeii ~ the 1a~ of the USCatholicmiddotConferencemiddot ~~y will teachco~ses in the He said -that he thought the middot mi cum 13ude Afterattetidfni1Marguerite (Dineen)OJ)ea for a~istra~ionexp~nses with ~aJor ~ofld ~~lglOns fro~ ~v- institute would meet a very

Ifhe Grand SeriUnaire hi Mon- His elementary and secondary the sum ofmiddot$22 million allocated era pomts of VIew and will an- great need in preparing college ibeaI Oanadahe was ordatned education was pUrSuedat Im-by tbeblshops oil an emergencymiddot aIyze ~he beliefs of the R~)Jnan gr-aduates to work in various Ia priest at the Cathedral ~Fan D8culate ConceptionSChoollmd basis to the Catholic University ~llliCI fhUrch ~eProtestant types ~ religious educationand

bull B1ver oil April 25 1959 Magr Coyle High School Taun- of America 1 81 s am Jud8lsm snd the in other apostolic work

I

iather Lavoie haa served as middotton His seminary fonnation was These two figures are com-middot ~~ons o~ the Far East middot IlSlfistant at st Miehael Church obtained at Our Lady of Provi- p1etely unrelated to one another and ~~studY the onglns

OCean Grove st fosepb dence Seminary Warwick Neck The editors of NCR must know rl ~eyelopment Cf Church Attleboro and sinee R][ Stonehill College North -and in fact explicitlystated themiddot ~arl~i reli~on8 and win hn 1962 at Notre Dame de Easton and st John Seminary in the course of their May 8 ed- examme e r SOCial and ethical lLourdes Fall River Brighton itorial-thlilt the tolal amount of

Father Martins Ordained III prie~ by Bishop Church money which will be Irotestant Chaplain Son of Joao and Rita CandIlda eonnollyon Jan 30 1960 Father allocated to inner city projects DETROIT (NC)-Dr Gene B

EFerreira) Martins Rev Jooo ODea has served as assistant at throughout the United states Montague an Episcopalian clershylOiprilKlo Martins was bom ~ st James Church New Bedford will undltlubtedly far exceed the gyman has been named first S Sebastiao Tenelra Azores since ordination figure of $22 million Protestant chaplain of the on Aug 11 1991 lf they wanted to argue that Jesuit~perated University of

Edltcmteltl in public schoohl b t PI even at l1hat the Church win Detroit Father Malcolm Carron ehe~ he entered the Seminario

p

middotres Y erOGJnS an notmiddot be meetings its obligatIons SJ president bas announced ltIe Angnn lierceita Azores R Cmiddotmiddot~ A middottmiddot they were perfectly free to de I

middot where he was ordained a Priest ace lrISOil cion liO but in my opinion they elIlIWIlIilIIllIlIlIlHIIIIIIWlllIlJlmnllllillllllll~ on April 10 1955 CINCINNATI (NC) -Presby shouldnt have confused the is- El DRY CLEANING El

i on Dec 13 1955 Father Mal1- - terians of this area p~dged~ SUe by dragging Catholic Uni- sect d sect Ilhs came to serve as assistant_m~t the racial risis with mversitys stepped-up budget into El an -El

at St Antbony Of Padua Churcln rllrograrrt of education and action the discussion as ~ rect herring sect fUR STORAGE sect m Fall River I1n~ ten years nclld~ng the est~li~~en~f1f fa Touch of ~greement sect DERMODY sectI

Qilter at St Anthony ChUrch n~w k1[~~ of congr~ga~lpn focus- ][n conclusion I must lillY that -El - El lElast Falmouth eli SPfCif~lIl~Yon ~acIa~ ~cltm- Xfull~ agree with the final par- sectCLEANERS sect

Father da Silva lt~iat~on agraph in NCR~s criticism Qf the El El ~ Vincentian Priest Rev Joa- Leaders of the Unimiddot~ed PJe~by- bishop~ progrm The trouble sect 34-441 CohannetStreet sect

CjU1m Ferreira Fernandes ella ~rians of the Cincm~~ti area with attackin~ racism is that sect TaUfl~on 822-616n sectm

Silva was bom in Vila dft9 said the new coDgmiddotrega~lonwould all the attackers themselvoes == - == ~X~ for perhaps three Qr four ~ffer from a touch of the dis- iiIIllIIllIIlIlIlIIllIIllIllIlIIllIIlIlIllHlIIlIIllIllllllllllllilii

~ellrs and WOUld CkawUgeth- ease and that alltheirpro-middotmiddotmiddot--__---11

Want Sta~p~ ltin ~ nucllS of comernedper-graIIlli could be better middot B1EFORE YOU Ffhe Siste~ of St Francis of ~Qs ~romexistiDg ~on~re~qyen()ns ~9W true-not 0nlY of ptpm- BUY -1ll

~egany jl Y express thankD I ~embers of the new CODgr~ga- inent ecclesiastics but presumshytn Ancho readers for sending ti~ wJUch will hlven~ build- ably of lllthe rest ofus as well PARK

them ca~celled ~lffiPS f9r for- mgQt its own will te ~~~ to inclJdiog I must lssme- the MOT0 IS eign missiol$ an4 ask th~t sup ~~ a ~covenant inQicaPng editors of even our most lib-I middot~ft continu~ dlUing tqe ~tmi- ther fuU com~itmel)ttoracial eral Citholic p~riodicals

Der months T~ei~ add~ss is St reconciliation and pledging We arelll in thisthjng to- OLDSMOBilE )ilichael~Stamp ~ureat st~~lf t4me and ~urcesf()r onegether and wea11 ~aveoUii OlUsmobile-Peugot-RenCiuit

bull ~~I~~be~hsiMo~pfh9~4llc- fJijyeir odQ(r the ex9centc~we ~rlt cut QUt ~ llil That13 fo 67 Middle Street Falrhavenmiddotmiddot PRY N1l ~ h~ ~ co~r~gati(lo t j ~ _

CENTER Paint and Wallpaper

Dupont Paint cor Middlo Stiiii 422 Acush Ave

Campampt New Bedford PARKING ~ Rear of Store

Tbe Best

~orrw~Ho Tr~pp SHEET METAl

Jl 1lESER Prop fftESIDENTIAl

iNDUSTRIAl COMME~pAU

253 e~all St New iampldf1d 993-3222

- ~ANCHORl)ioceseofFa RiYer-JIlh~Moy 23 l9cS8

---------------------------shy

~~Says Therre -Arr~ N~ lomnits b T ChrrD~llDcopyHru ~reg~~ITi)~D~D~DifY

~ lffiiY JBa]baJla Ward

l ihe amptarting point Pol judging our-role in the world Us ro lrnow where we are-Ohristians living in the wealthy West a white minority making up about 20 per cent of the worlds peoples and enjoying 80 per cent of the worlds ~me But this is only a ~nning a raw statement If fact And as we know Ilhwts rarely present themshyrelves without a oontext They (ilODle to us in a dense package IOf assumptions ond e~periences

1lake such a ~t as that Mr Brown worth a IlDillion dollars gives nothing to iltirs Smith This Is a fact JIlul- iliPlied a thoushysand times over by all the BroWns who do IiWthing for all ~ Smiths But suppose Mrs Smith is his widowed older sisshyter Iho rovingly brought himmiddot 1ilP as a boy Then the fact of ibis indifference becomes a comshypletely different fact because ~ eoJ1text has changed

Sense e(1 ltDomtext Most of the facts of our oonshy

temporary scene require this oonse of context They do not eome to us neat and bare And ~e first thing that has to be lJ8id about us as Christians is presumably that our context of presuppositions and oommitshyment is somewhat different ilrom that of anyone else

The Gospels are full of the lldea that the Christian angle of

o vision cannot be simply intershyehangeable with the secular or

worldly point of view Leaven makes bread rise because it is differenj Salt gives a taste beshyeause it is not identical with the 2ood Light shines in darkness because light and dark a~e disshyiWlguishable

All these images of the Chrisshy(gan community imply being other different set apart but at the same time guiding inshyGPiring changing ald entering into the whole sum of human ~xistence We are different but our aim is communion We are lteall~ to a vocation but the vocation is unity How is this fundameintal context of Chrisshyiian living to be interpreted in rtbe modern age

Personal Fortune Let us look at two widely

occepted reactions to modern facts and see how they square with the Christian vision The first concerns personal fortune On balance in the landli where the bulk of Christians live the White wealthy post-Christian oocieties of the North AtIantic~ North America Bribin Westshyern Europe - the basic notion about income is to increase it iIIJld about wealth to accumulate to

In general a familys standshyIIllds of living its ciaims on reshylIOurces and its expectations of ilun an~ comfort gO up in step

Institute Participant yeniss Marjorie A MorinNortb

Westport a faculty member at ~cred Hearts Academy Fan Ri~er bas been named as one cent 44 ~igh ~ool bi~19gy teachshy~rs frorn18 states to participate iln a Summer institute on recent bigh school biology curriculum ~evelopments at Wells College Aurora N Y The institute will be in session from June 30 through Julyen S

with bigher earnings One can find it hard to make both ends meet and be resentful of taxes at $6000 a year $12000 a year $24000 a year $48000 0 year ~d so on up - in fact since

taxes rise with income COlIlshy

plairits can be higher as wealth increases even though expendishytures now oover two houses and three cars

Christian teaching in stark contrast reminds us that the higher the income the greater the responsibility The final counsel of perfection was given to the dcb young man sell

all you have and give to the poor- Short of this evengelical extreme the wealthy must not satisfy their oWllJlising supershyfluities at the expense of the basic needs of others 11 they dothey will enter eternity as easshyily as a ca~el through the eye of a needle-not a wholly reasshysuring analogy for our Western societies who bave never had it so good

NQ lLfimfits A secHid pre-suppositionmiddot~

eontempolary society is that chapel z Mount St Mary Con- f te li d d or en rmg re glon an was n obligatIOns an responsibilities vent and a dInner f~r Csters t fr ti A ~ 031 teacher and principal at manyop a on ers man ofdifshyt ferent national I y or citizenship f al 18 no arm ooncern of ours The Gospel approach IS whollydifferent All must)be fed even-shythe least of the little ones All must be clothed and sheltered Even if th th dtch is

e ~an In e 1 a Jew and his rescuer a Samarshyillan their traditional enmity must make no diHerence~ The centurions son is cured even if he is in modern terms a hated

SJl8TER MJIJRlAM RSM o

former DiocesoD1l Supervisor Completes 50 Years As ~eiigiolUJs Sis~er of Mercy

Fifty years in religious life Katherine -ONeil retired prinshycipal of the Aldrich School inwill be marked Sunday by SisshyFall River Both are memberster Miriam RSM former eleshyof Holy Name parish Fall Rivermentary school supervisor in

the Fall River Diocesan systemON II St Louis JgtarishRev Pa trick el supennshy

tendent of schools will cele- Sister Miriam is a native of brate a Mass of Thanksgiving St Louis parish Fall River She at 1045 Sunday morning in the was a public school teacher beshy

and the JubIlanans ~~edIate~m Diocesan schools before beingfaml 11 f II I Y WI () ow appointed a supervisor in 1941

A reception will be held after together with Sister FeIicitadi f t S

e nner or V1S~ mg Isers RSM The two Mercy Sisters ~d a seoond recepti~n fr served as supervisors under

fnends and former p~pl1s WIll the late Rev Edward J Gorman take place from 2 to 5 m Mt Sl ana under Father ONeill pres-Mary Academy library ent superintendent of schools Bec~~vingguests wit~ the until their retirement in 1966

jubllanan WIll be her Sls~ers Since that time they have M~ James Conlin retIred tutored and aided students with prmcIpal of the Mason Barney reading problems at Mt Sl

imperialist There is neither School Swansea and lIfiss Mary COnvent Jew nor Gentile bond nor free ~ bullr

in the a)l-enoompassing gener~ J ~

=~~k~~ ~P-9morL13~J of our prayer Thy Kingdom

40~s eolumn will therefOe try over the coming months to give not only the facts about our strange new world round which the astronaut strolls in 90 minutes It will try tosug gest the oontext without which Christian judgment and re- sponse are hardly possible For if we judge only as secular cit shyizens will the salt keep its taste May it not be fit only to be thrown down the drain

~ L ~ IIrencn lIovor Priests Holding O~her Jobs

PARIS (NC)-A recent surshyvey indicates that Frenchmen are in favor of priests working at n~n-priestly jobs and being marned _

The editor-in-chief will 1roW~D1DXNG GOWNS rm afraid Im overworking the

word romantic in describing the fashions this season but with such-anabundance of frills and tiny waists it seems the only fitting adjective Nowhere does the word crop up with shym 0 r e meaning than when one is trying to convey the imshypression given by the fashions iQr the 68 bride Bridal gownsfor late Sumshymer and early Fall weddings are now being shown and snapped up dewy-eyed brides-to-be

by

~ a survey ~nducted by the Gone are the outlandish 1ent SocIety FrancaJse dEnquetes eire th par ~ndage (SOFRES) 00 Per sses e weIrd IDllll des~gns centCIf those questioned both ~ tte h~v~~ ~ere dSlgnS Catholics and non-Catholics re- Ig wIg ts e Pia~ f~W garded it as normal for a priest ~aso~s als are as n l~

1Q praclice a lleCUiar profession wedding g~wns ~ tor so many and 51 per cent said that work degthther fUlootfitBkmiddot ~lS slelas0ben but by priests in a f~ri or 011amp ey 1ftgt especlay auti shyconstruction JOb is ood ~ in thlS dre~ of dresses One

very g lovely princess design by Ven because that ereates an exchange b - rio1-1- ~ ~ be tb Ch as nerrow s pear

bullween e Ulch and the dli -- fimiddotmiddot 10 workers 0 nIng gure- rIDIng seven out~ 10 persons 81lIr- Bi~h~uette ~Cthe~ by Frmk

veyed favored -marriage for ~zzo for Pandora ~as an Ehzashypriests ~because that would per- bethan aJr to it WIth its lov~ly mit them to better understand 1Jff of OhantIllr lace ~ndmg family problems and difficul- bI~h around the neckline and ties And 25 per cent of those _spIlling d~wn the sleeves surveyed are convinced that Fur-Trimmecll GoWlm

soon~r or l~ter women will be If youre planning an elegant ordaIned prleStamp wedding m the late Fall ~

Alois Schardt a Bavarian tele- early Winter and money is no vision n~ws editor Dr HeE-oobject Mirra has designed a mann Abs of the Deutsche Bank gown with a bodice and sleeores of broadtail cuffed around the wrist and neckline with white mink The price-a mere $800 the price of a good living room oouch but then you could al shyways sit on old orange crates and admire your stunning wed ding pictures

Even the bridal hairdo is as hearts and flowers as Elizabeth Barrett Browiling Curls fall over shoulders peek out from under mantillas and veils and are even caught back in kershychief headpieces If your own

hair refuses to wave never mind curl order some stick-on curls ahead oftime to keep the romantic air

By BOme unexplained miracle all brides are b~autiful but this year the designers are giving the miracle workers a boost in JOWDS that spell romance

New Bedfordilea Elect Officers

The slate of officers el~ to serve for the 1968-69 year d the Catholic Womans Club clil New Bedford are Mn Thomas P Barry president Miss Jean

A McGinnis first vice-p~ dent Mrs Raymond M Atw~ second vice-presisient Mrs ViiDo cent L Hughes recording s~

retary Mrs Maurice A Hurl~ corresponding secretary lViM Charles D Phelan treasureJl Registrars named for ~ coming year are Mrs Ricbam A Parsons Mrs Norman amp Sylvia Mrs Albert J LamolZgt reux Mrs William A Horai Mrs Robert A Vermette lIhe Henry J Fanning Jr Mrs Joseph N Joseph Mlamp3 Dorothy A Curry and lIlra Roland F Mathieu will $erve mJ mrectors

Nome Laymon Official Of Catholic Schoois

MEMPHIS (NC)-Bishop JO seph A Durick apostolic adJ ministrator of the NashVille dl ocese has confirmed the apshypointment of William G Ho~

as administrative assistant tIlll Msgr John A Elliott dioce~ superintendent of schools

In his new Post Hoyt wild serve as coordinator for prCF grams that receive local and federal aid to private schoolBp in addition to general assistance in the overall responsibilities 001 the school board and supeJlgto visors

There are 18 Catholic blgili schools with 5892 students ancll 53 elementary schools with 15

405 students in the Nashvl1lG diocese which comprises the

entire state of Tennessee

Pro~estants to SerVe 0111 Catholic Paperr

BONN (NC)-Protestanf jOllDD nalists will serve on the editoshyrial staff of a new German nashytional Catholic weekly aimed at readers on a high intellectual level which will begin publbshy

-ction in September - Most of the 20 editors wh

will be selected fqr the weeklys staff will be drawn from the ranks of the secular daily press

has been elected director of the papers board of trustees

A total of $4000000 has been raised from among the Well0 Ge~an dioceses to finance the establishment of the paper Wgt be named Publik Stockwill ~ issued

~fiDDY Dining IN YHE

JOILRY WHAlLER -ANID--

SPOUTER INN RESTAURANTS

Always Free Parking

New Bedford Hotel

NASON Oil COMPANY

Our Heating 7 Perry Avenue

Oils Malee Taunton Mass Warm FrienJs 822-2282

Dailymiddot Aittention Necessary To ~[f~Dceate We~~~

1B1y 1J~JlDill alii wnJillYJil ~~

The ~ are on their way and 11 lreems that half r our time i1l spent digging them out ~ the garden No matter haw much time we Gpomd on them they have a way of reappearing within Q few days ad 1l1Inless we really live them OUattention they ean take over a garden middotin lW time Beginning gardenem

bull WOO approaeh gardemng casshyaally or em weekends are often ~helmed by these unwel-CIOme pests ond soon give up the Ilbip Our suggestion is that M)

minutes II day B sufficient to keep even big gardens weeded fithe gardener will get out into Illie garden every day This maw mean nomiddot mOIre than a short trip BIound the garden to look mt Ole plants and to pull out a few ~ds encountered on the weJr

Few llilmtJtes Dadlly

We usually keep a small wamshyms hoeohandy by the back door and as we PlVPare to go to worlx take a short walk in the garden hoe in hand to see what is new The result is that we spend flw minutes or so in the garden beshytore setting out for work in the morning 10 minutes at lunch and ap~roximately 10 minutea before dinner after the working day is over which incidentally il a good time to ioosen up ~

t1ore tearing the kids heads oIif llDr all the misdeeds of the day

The point is that weeding u

attitudes t2lat vtll shape their future are beginning now and IllS theU friends and relatives wish them well they pray that each couple will enjoy the graces and happiness that come from a good Christian marriage with Christ in the home

Ad~ Atmosphere Often a wedding gift can add

to the atmosphere of a Christian home One such gift is a plaque that hangs in our den On it are these words

Sacrifice s usually difficult and irksome only

Love can make ~ easy and perfect love can make it a

Joy I couldnt think of a better

motto with which to begin 0 marriage or one that becomes

more significant through sleepshyless nights with sick babies frustrating job problems or the everpresent money worries Qlat asually plague young couples

A handsome cross a richlY llIustrated b~ble a handsome religious Gtatue or plaque are eccellent gifts to begin a Chrisshy

11 th h t Uan couple on the road to Il we as many 0 er cores mus ~ done on n day-today buis cmd cannot be left for weekendll because there are so many other tmportant things that have to be ltilone then

The grass has to be cut a new lInge put on a door there is a ball game to watch a ride 00 take a tree to be pruned etc Cll of which ore time-eonsuming _ lIIllU necessary With the weather we have been exPeriencing al -te th d~n~ e ~ weedmg gives ll3 middot Iln oPprtunity to g~t a hWe ~h lUI 11 commodity whiclill middot D3ems t0 be gettmg scarcer fa 001 industrial live~ and ehance to commune With Nature een at the wrong end of n

lim tle Kltcbellllmiddot

Did you know that during a wedding ceremony the groom places the ring on the finger of Ule bride because the circlemiddot of gold symbolizes the love and devotion that from this moment on will have no end This is but lti)ne of the many traditions that lJlave come down through the years and now are an accepted ~rt of the Cana celebration

Another must for a wedding dJ the wedding cake that fur eenturies has signified breakshymg of bread in kinship as it Is ll1anded out to friends and relashyves Even the veil that graces tlle l)ead of the beautiful bride b a custom that has come into llUes~nt time from the days when the brides stood under eanopies to show that they were IIDlder the protection of the glOOrp

All these ancientgt traditions give a Uttle added meaning to lYle Cana feast and the sacred acrainent of matrimony but ltWen more significant are the rostoms and traditions that the 1l1Jride and groom will carry into rife as a f~ly Many of the

polsh Mmiddotsommiddot

n ill ~ilI CHiCAGO (NC)-First copies

of the Polish vernacular altar

gful C th li lif Let meanm a 0 c e someone else buy the sheets a~d and ~asters ma~e your pft one Wlt~ eve~las~lDg mea~ll~g

If ou re 1hinking of givmg ~ bridal shower in the n~ar future perbaP you w0llld hke to serve a Bndal Puddmg

Bridal Pudding 2 envelopes unflavored gelatiJm

cup cold water b ili t

llff If cup deghte wa er egg W I StI- ~_

74 aspoon - cup suglllr

q h cups eavy cream (ilDrgetth diet)

1 teapoon vamplilla 1 flaked tcup coconu 1) Soften the gelatin in the k

cup cold watermiddot and then pour the 1fJ cup ofboiling water over the gelatin mixture and stir unntil dissolved Cool

2) Beat the egg whites until foam slowly add the salt and sugar and continue beating unshytil stiff peaks are formed

3) Fold the gelatin into the stiff whites

4) Beat the heavy cream until stiff and add the vanilla Fold the cream into the whites and gelatin mixture

5) Rub the bottom and sides cf an eight-inch spring form pan with butter and sprinkle the bottom with lh cup of the coconut Pour in the cream mixshyture Sprinkle with the remainshying coconut -ltld chill at least four hours or overnight Upshymold and serve with s1rawshyberries and the following rum sauce

lltum Sauce 6 egg yolks (see we didnt

want them to go to waste) 1 cup sugarmiddot

04 cup dark 111m cognac or kirsch

1) Beat the yolks until lemon colored and slightly thickened

2) Gradually beat in the Dugar

Stir in half the rum and cook in tOp of a double boiler over boiling water stirring constantshy131 until the sauce coats a woodshy

THE ANCHORshy

lHIONOR MOTHER lPlilElRRE Mother Pierre Marie of St Annes Hospital Fan River left meets Mrs Joseph Giblin Mrs Richard Donovan and Mrs Eugene Dionne all members of The Friends of St Annes on bhe occasion of the groups honoring the sister in reCognition of her reshyception of the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice Medal from Pope Paul

Aim Is Unity INIUlDil leads New )errsey Periodic White Walkerrs

Se~king to Ascertain Needs of Negroes ENGLEWOOD (NC)-Led by We are trying to find out

a Sister from St Cecilias High what the needs are she said School a group of white resi- We realized that we would dents have been making peri- look liketourists going through odic informal walking toWfl but you have to begin someshythrough the predominantly Ne- where gro Fourth Ward to meet the One result of the middotwalks was people living there

The walks inaugurated by Sister Robert Jean are made in mn effort to break down barriere fllll an area where rioting took place last Summer

Gif~~ Contfnued from Page Four

lNJlf~ihlmiddotAuBehCJH) $750

Jeweled Cross Co Inc $225

Attleboro Particular Council St Vincent de Paul

$200 Society of St Vincent de PaW

St Mary Conference $150

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J Wright bull $75 No Attleboro Catholic Womshy

0ns Club $50

Dr Eugene Leco St Anne Sodality Sacred

Heart Church $40

Edward N Cook Plate Co Inc $35middot

Albert Morawski $30

CYD-Sacred Heart Church $25

Frank M Miller amp Son Inc No Attleboromiddot Coal Co y H Blackington amp Co Inc

II neighborhood meeting at which white and black people discussed the visits and the posshysibility of further involvement in the needs of the Fourth Ward community------------

Universal Roofing amp Sheet Metal Co

Alden Corrugated Container Corp

Mass Trucking Corp New Bedford Hotel Macedo Pharmacy

$51 Building Materials Inc

$5 Sacred Heart Home

Daughters of Isabella Hyacinth Circle No 71

A Friend Damien Council K of C Harbor Beach Club amp Lounge Laurans-Standard Grocery Co

Inc $35

Glemi-on Roofing Co $30

Browne Pharmacy Inc $25

Browne Pharmacy A Friend Local No 168 UAW AFL-CIO Cape Cod Fabrics Philip J

Kane Inc Lions Club of New Bedford

Duplicating Equipment amp Supshyply Atty Jack London New Bedford Catholic Guild for the Blind Sharkeys Tire amp Rubber Comiddot

Tum oto Page Ten

Thurs May 23 1968

AJumna Rece~ves

Tdn~ty Award WASHINGTON (NC)-Doroshy

thea F Sullivan social worker and alumna of Trinity College here was presented the 1968 Julie Billiart medal at the schools Spring honors convocashytion

The annual award established in 1961 in honor of the foundress of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur who conduct the colshylege honors an alumna whose life exemplifies Blessed Julie Billiarts educational objectives -the formation of strong womshyen of faith devoted to God and neighbor living dedicated and fruitful lives

Miss Sullivan a member of the Trinity class of 1926 had been an associate professor at the Catholic University of Americas School of Social Sershyvice since 1941 She has been project director of the South Florida Neighborhood Youth Corps in Miami since 1966

She has been active in a numshyber of youth and welfare organshyizations has contributed articles to numerous periodicals and edited several books

Form Sisterrs 0 Coull1ld~

~Dil HawOJii Diocese HONOLULU (NC)-A Sisshy

ters council ill being formed here with the approval of Bishshyou John J Scanlan of Honoshylulu The council is composed of any Sisters in the diocese who desire to affiliate herself with the organizations objecshytives

The projected aims of the council are to serve as a chanshynei of communication among Religious communities and to the bishop the priests senate shylay senate other religious groups to serve as a source of unity and strength among Reshyligious to foster a closer c0shy

operation among clergy Reshyligious and laity and to be [1

means of coordinating the works of the apostolate after studying the religious educational socishyal economic and ecumenical needs of the diocese

Mfiltie P~Mmbnrwg amp HealltDOI~ (Oe Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Master Plumber 702i1

JOSEPH RAPOSA JR $06 ~O MAUIN $1ltlEfEii

lraaD rlovell 675a74~

SCHOOl MaonteilCllnCe SIlJlPPUO~

$WIEIE~IERS - $OA~$

IOlISUINJIr~CijANIIsect IrU~1E E)IliINGUUSIHIEIl$

DAHill COo nS86 IPUlRCHIASE SIlRIEIETI

NEW I8lEll)fO~1Ol

~9lJ-lJ7~6

~IIII11IJ1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I11I1I11I1I11I11II11I1I1I1I1I1I1I1IJ1I1I1I1I11I11I11I1I1I11I11UIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIII1111I11I

1 ~ESADAV~ lIIli~ls for use at Mass in Polish Coo en spoQn Do not boil Remove ltihurches and institutions in this from the heat and stir in the country have been received ~y remaining rum John Cardinal Cody of Ohicago In answer to - a letter from II member of the Consilium far Mrs Mogardo of Falmouth the Cbe implementation of the Con- amount of all-purpose cream 10 IJtitution Oll the Sacred Liturgy the Creme de Menthe Squares IUN~~A~m M ~58 icIIf the Second Vatican COIDlcil is one pint iillllllJllIlIIlIlIIlIIlIlIlIlIIlIIlIlIlIlIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIlJlIlIlIIlIIllUlIIlIIlIlIlIlIlIIlIIUIIUlIIlIlIlIlIlIUlIlIUIIUIIIIII~I~

I

THE ANCHORTDi~c~se of Foil River-Thurs May 23 1968 indiana Prelate ~ i l bull - 10 Heads NCEACrawford Electrical Co DrSpecial Gifts Morris Feresten Dr Frank L mAiN FRANCISCO r(NC) shy

Collins Mr amp Mrsmiddot John P Bish()p Raymorid J GellagMrContinued from Page Nine Dwyer of Lafayette Ind was ~le~ted

Attleboromiddot Hub Clothing Bristol ~it- president general Of the Nashyting Mills Inc Dixon Burial tionlll1 Catholic Educational Asshy$150

sociation at the final meeting ofVauit Shelburne Shirt Co IncBarry J Boardman Ins Agency $125 the asSoclation~8 6Mb Mnuat

Almeida Electric Co August Elmer C Slater

convention hereraquoIlr amp Mrs James G Heagney He succeeds Bishop ErnestBadwey amp Sons Joseph A Parks$100 Primeau of Manchester N HMrs Mar-y Courtis Dr amp MrsL G Balfour Co

who rervOO as president general Norman pSadler Brothers Inc for three yearsBedford House ConvalescentShields Inc A native of Cleveland BishopHomeInc Dr Sanford I Udis$60 Gallagher was ordained in 1939llI Joseph Madowsky HarveyAtherton Furniture Co~ and served as a Navy chaplainProbber Inc $50 during World War n He w~s

Demers Brothers narned bishop of Lafayette inM S Company 1965 following service as secreshy[P[(D$Iroreg$ $40

tary of the National ConferenceAttleboro Printing amp Embosshy of Catholic Charities

olng Co Inc ~WltWI7il$~ltW Speaker at the election sesshy$35 sion was U S Commissioner ofIOUlIt lLADY IOlF lFAllDMIAReynolds amp Markman In~ $25 Education Harold Howe who

$27 said that Catholic schools willMr amp Mrs Ralph A GuerrieroLeedham Hardware be especially guilty if they doMr amp Mrs Peter J Hoss lFlIt ADlIt][AN OJFM lFlIt lFAJlUAN OJFM $25 not act to solve the crisis of

Attleboro Sun Publishing Co ST IDOMIllN][C ghetto educationmiddotlnc Connelly Gold Stamping $25 Christianity is supposed toCo MacDonald Moving amp Storshy ~[j1Jil~O$ltC[(il$ t[ Our tLC1~ls ~hauraquocetiMr amp Mrs Thomas Paiva offer something more the age Co Marathon Company Mr amp Mrs Thomas C Murphy commissioner told the 6000

Plastic Craft Novelty Co Ob$erve $iver Priestiy Jubilees delegates at the final sessionSTLOUIS OF FRANCE On May 26th the 9 AM Retreat House Pittsfield N 11 ~Let us be fools for Christs

Fall Ri~er $50 MlIss will be conceleprated where _ he served as Retreat sake said St Paul middotWe Ladies of St Ailne raquoy the Franciscan Friars at Our Director and Master~ badly need highminded visionshy

$1200 Holy Name Society Ladys Chapel New Bedford Four years later _1964 Fr aries who can help the poorestFan River Electric Light Co st Vincent de Paul Sooi~ eonmiemoratingthe Silver Ju Fabian was transfe~red to Our of our children see a new dream $1000 $26 bilee of the ordination of) Fr Ladys Ohapel New ~d~()rd and faShion a better reality FOO

FirestoneRubbe~ amp Latex ~ Mr amp Mrs Herman Lamppoin4e Fabian F Joyce OFM and Fr where he has served to the pres- ournations sake Catholic edushy $600 I~ k Adrian F Donachie OFM ent time He is ViCar of the cationmust jointhe rest of edshy

~all R~~er GasCQllpanYj Fr Fabian is a native of Franciscan CommuIlity Father ucation to give them a neW $500 Vineyard iavenc Watertown He is an alumll~sof is well known thr~ughout the botizon

lVlr amp Mrs Henry ~ Feitelberl Boston College High SChool and area as a preacher for the St Mooney amp Co Inc middotUT AUGUSTINE

0Boston College He entered the Jude Novena devotions on$300 FIRST COMMUNION- $46L50 Franciscans of Holy - Nilme Thursdayat the chapel andtbeRev JosephF ODonnell ResidentSofCatholic MemoJillJ Province with headquarters in radio Apostolate

~o~e I $50 ~ PORTRAITSNew Yo~k City in 1937~ - Fr Addlln F Donachie Of~ $300 Mrs James Boyle He was ordained at the Na- is a native of Glasgow Scotland IN LIVING COLOUR

St Augustines GuildCitizens Savings Bank iional Shrine of the Immaculate and was brought up in NewSt Augustines Holy NameFR Five Cent Savings Bank Conception Washington D C York Oity H~ entered ~t $200 St Augustines St Vincent de May 29 1943 His first assign- Joseph s SeraphIcSeminary Jtl Anderson-Little Co inc lPaul Society ment was to St EIizabeths 1932 in preparatIon for the A -Friend $30 - T)enver middotColo from Franciscan Priesthood

$150 Mr amp Mrs William Figueiredo 1944 to Hi58 He was received into the

PR Peoples Cooperative Bank Mr amp Mrs Francis Metell _ Pastor and Supe- Order in 1937 and was ordained $135 $25 rior of the Church and Monas- six years later on May 29 1943

Herve Lagasse Cmdr amp Mrs Daniel Burgo tery in Denver in 1951 and at the National Shrine of the $125 Frank Coutinho Mr amp Mrs served in this capacity for Immaculate Conception Washshy

Cliff Nursing Homes Michael Fonte) Mr- amp Mr~ Eushy seven years ington D C His priestly Hfe$120 gene Frieh Mrs John Hughes In 1958 he was stationed at has been in New York Coloshy

J O Neill Supply Co Marthas Vineyard National St Bonaventure Retreat House rado Connecticut NewHampshy $101 Bank Rep amp Mrs Benjamin C Paterson N J for a period of shire and finally- stationed in ~ Fall River Shopping Ce~nter Mayhew Jr Mr amp Mrs Boleslaw two years giving laymens re- Our Ladys Chapel since 1956Associates Nickowal Mrs Dean Swift 11 treats and days of recollection Fr Adrian came with the origishy $100 Mr amp Mrs Frederick Thifault to the clergy He was then nal group of Franciscans ~o staff

Norbut Mfg Co Inc transferred to St Anthonys- Our Ladys Chapel THE FINEST QU~LITYSullivans of Fall River dk Wareham Hyannis IS WORTH THE PLEASANT

H P Hood amp Sons Inc ST PATRICK Famed Church -Gift SHORT DRIVE TO THE I bull Borden amp Remington Co $50

AREAS LEADING STUDIOr Louis Hand Inc middotMr amp Mrs Thomas Choate To Mission SocietY William T Manning Colnt Mr amp Mrs middotWilliam McLaugbshy BOSJO~ (NC) B~stons

j OPEN SUNDAYS Radio Station WALE I lin famed St Stephens church hasbull Dring Communion Seasonbeen - turned over by Richard

Dr amp Mrs Americo Almeida ~ W Hurley Co Cardinal Cushing to the Misshy $75 $30

Walter A Fur-man Co $45

8io~ary society ot St James ~ BRIDAL PORTRAITS Beetlemiddot Plastics Albert- Guerzoni the Apostle 311d Deluxe Quality Candicts Fall River Lodge No 118 BPO $21 famous for RESERVE YOUR DATE EARLY - The edifice _a short distance E~~ Mrs Am~lia JJaptiste _ from the home of Paul Revere

St- vincent de Paul Salvage - $25 and other Revolutionary War ~rve as QUALITyand EvANS STUDIOS

JBureau Nlr amp I([rs Franci~Murp~y shrines will head- St Patricks Wofuens Guild Miamp Mrs Julius ]~abbitt -I quarters for the society which 18 MAIN STTAUNTON middotCall Rivermiddot Mr amp ~rs JsephNorris the ~ardinal founded to do mis- SERVI(E Tet 822-1181

sect(6nwork in Latin AmericaProvidence Pile Fabric Corp $50 St Stephens church was deshy

Robert L Germaine Inc o o

Atty amp Mrs JohriJ Harringshy OUR LADY OF LOURDF8 whose works also include tne ton $5 Massachusettsmiddot State House It

Simons Supply Co Inc Massasoit Hills Trailer Iark was first used as a CongregashyThe J L amp R Cohen Foundashy Inc

siglled by Charles BlJlfltJch

tienal church but with the influx ~ion of Catholics during the inlmishy

Nira WarehOUse Mart Inc West Harwich gration of the early 1800s it was $45 purchased by the Boston arch-

Drobyski Wallpaper Co HOLY TRINITY diocese $60 In 1964 Cardinal Cushing$40

Dr Harry Cooperstein Mr amp Mrs Theodore F Berg spent more than $1000000 W haus restore the building$30

Ashton Funeral Home $50 Magonis Ferry Landing Mr amp Mrs Manley E Boyce Priests COll1ference

$25 $26 STEUBENVILLE (NC) ~ A Atty Kenneth Sullivan Mr Captain William House group of priests here has fOJmed

- Mrs Lewis Morley Hathaway - $25 -- a CQnference of Steubenville ~nelal Service Cook Bord(l1 ~oha Gillahan Mr amp Mrs Priests to create a general

Co Dr Harry Levine Joseph lttiltpetteMr ampMrsJohn ~pirii of priestly fraterJ~iiy and l)rDa~id P~Iill Tyrells Mar- E Ke~ly ~r Mrs yen~j~ Cor- - professionalism Msgr 0

t Cascaltle Drug CoProfes- ra~o HarQJd~RmiddotMcK~nna ~Tolin A Cymbor pastor ()fStgt Qff~rincllid~SPeciaIILinlie9n~n~ $3 w~rf~ 0( ~ I~al ph~i-rnacy hr havills Mrs R R~ SmalI AnthonYThete~esect Church Piney F6rk

-- middote~rHolvitZampHorvitz Ryan MrampMr~_-JQnljMul- wasnamedtempotary chairman Ride TicketsFor additional details or reservatic5nsmiddot call Mrmiddot Conrad Feriamiddot at (4Ql) RE 14kgtOO collectl lC

High Point Fording Box Corp llnsMr-ampmiddotMrsAllgterf Daven- and chosen to repiesimt the _ ~ ~

A RossEvetett Motors port Mramp Mrs Frank Ball group at the initialmiddot meeting in

-uline Te~tile Co Eagle Mr amp Mrs John W- Anderson Chicago May 21 of the National ine Co Mr amp Mrs Paul Carney Federation of Priests coun(iMI

bull

~~ 1

Q I gt~ j

1tj _-_000 e

Comiddot

~ ~-

JUST OfF ROUTE 117

POINTmiddotRO~-_

SpecialSchool Outinils GjoupOffer $3 per Stuitentmiddot

father OWcopy) Sons Are OEd~glfDregd

BELMONT (NC) - Three members of the Habiger family -two sons and their fathershyare completing studies for the priesthood and will be ordained as Benedictine priests on June M

The lllabigers have prepared Jlor ~e priesthood at Belmont Abbey here They will be Qrshydained by Abbot Thomas Halmiddott shyman at St Benedicts Abbey in Atchinson Kans

John Habiger joined his two sons at Belmont Abbey after the death of his wife Mildred in December 1963 He said he did this because my wife and I just had an understanding that the survivor would give his or her life to the Lord

Before deciding to enter the priesthood Habiger had worked as a sales manager fOl a deep freeze home locker distlibutor

lHE ANCHORshy~urs May 23 1968

_ bull

II

Britista Cot1toIicI Suppolt New Bilt To Ovtlow Bios~

LONDON (NO) ~ 0aitJh0 ~ BeneFally appearr to be ~Ving strong BUPPOOt to the govemme~ controvemial new biJl 110 outlaw racial dls- crimination in Britain

Tile Catholie press glQ~~e bin Its blessing with some quBll shy iDeations Several Catholic anti shyaovermnent politicKms howshyweI have voiced oppositionshynot em principle they eblim but oocause they fear some sections of the bHl eould IIIggravate rather ampan mollify existing racism here by producing II privileged black and colored minority

The Race Relations Biil Which Is backed by the present Labor government and can reashysunably be expected to become law this Summer fs intended to i

strengthen existing legislation in this matter in view of the big rise in the number of Negro and colored (Indian Pakistani and as a labor pool manager for and West Indian) immigrants in the United States Air ForceFATHER AND SONS TO BE ORDAINED A father and his two sons will bethe past few years

Fellls Takeover m-d~ined June 14 to the priesthood at St Benedicts Abbey Church Artchi8on Kansas Nearly 2000 dock workers FoUo~ing the death of his wife five years ago John Paul Habiger (center) entereq the MethodlidsAdopt

quit work to delllonstrate BenedIctines joining his sons in the seminary Their nam~8 im religion are Father J~hJ) Project E~uaiityWJainst the bill and to sboW Igrlatius Habiger OSB (center) Father MatthewH~riy Habiger~ OSB (left) andsupport for the view o~ bullCon~ DALLAS (NC)-The ll-milshy2ervative party me~ber Eno~b F~thet Benedict John HabigeJrp OSW NC Photo li~)Il-member United Methodist ~

PPwell that Britain has too Church-formed by a merger l(Ilany elgtlQred immigranUi $50 $50 of the Methodist Church and

Powell had called for 8 vir WestpolIt Almon L Turner Holy Name Society the Evangelical United Brethshy tual halt to the entry of dependshy Thomas M Ross ren-has ill effect adoptedST GEORGE ST PATRICK~nts of colored immigrants and $45 Project Equality throughoutmiddot ~he$25 $250i for measures to encourage the United States Mr amp Mrsmiddotmiddot Leonard Langlois RobertE Eastman Re~ Tames F McDermottliepatriation of the immigrants The 1400 delegates to WleEveline Magnant Claire Magshy $25 $200 bull OtherWise he said black people QUldrennial General Confershynjllt Mr amp Mrs Roland McGee Dr Frederick G Doran ~ lDr amp Mrs Roger E Cadieuxwill take over whole areas ence adopted a resolution inMr amp Mrs Arthur Perry Landgraf Felix P Kaladin $125 Dnd I3cial violence will follow which the new church endorsesMr amp Mrs Donald Pittman Thomas W Whalen Thepnaa Mrs David M KilroyPowell was later ousted from Project Equality and recomshyMr amp Mrs Jacob Strunk Calisto Raymond P Paine $40his position in the shadow cab- mends cooperation both throup

Richard J McNally inet---the leadership that would participation and financial su~SandwichWoods Hole $30assume power if the Conservashy pori on the part of all United Fernand C E AuclairtiVe6 won control of the governshy CORPUS CHRISTI Methodist Ann u a 1 (regional)llT JOSI~IH Dr Thomas Clarkment - by Conservative party Conferences local churches 10shy$300 $350 John T ~mith

0leader Edward Heath who eal or national institutiomlPaul McCusker Rev William F Morristermed Powells speech racist $26 agencies or organizations$150 $100 William MoranAbstain From Voting Friends of Megansett Mr amp Mrs William Carr The resolution presen ted to

The House of Commons apshy $100 $50 $25 the Conference by the Methodshy

Leo A Bond Mrs Leonard Nproved the bill in principal ist ~neral Board of Christian lOr amp Mrs George Christman Mr amp Mrs Lawrence Perrault313-209 and sent it to commitshy Bilooeau Mr amp Mrs Francis Jr Social Concerns called Project$75 Dr amp Mrs J Minihan lKilgrew Mrs James E Sullivantee for additional study before Equality a responsible consist shyMrs Claudia Pendergast Mr amp Mrs Peter Becker Jrit is presented for fi nal passage Mrs Frank Souza Joseph Tin- ent ethical practical effective$50 Mi amp Mrs Robert KennedyTwenty-five Consenatives abshy Mr amp Mrs Cornelius Hickey Mother Cabrini Circle D of j

sley and positive means whereby the stained from the voting rather Sll ll~OMAS MORE United Methodist Church andMr amp Mrs John McCue Norman McEnaneythan fullow the palty line and $50 other churches can SUppOImiddott fail1Mr amp Mrs Emil Tietje $40vote against the bill Atty amp Mrs Richard N LaSalle employment practices intbe$35 Mr amp Mrs Francis CarpengerAlthough the British in the $2~ United StatesSt Josephs Womens Guild $35past two centuries have govshy In memory of Mr Y J Archshy $30 bull Mr amp Mrs Raymond Doucetteerned a large proportion of the 11mbeaultMr ampmiddotmiddotMrs ElmeiHallett $26 Oppose Cuts worlds black and colored $25 Mrs Charles Russell peoples it is a new thing for ~25 Mrs Margaretmiddot Harris Mr ampbull this country to have such peopie

Mrs Paul La Prade Thomas middotC H Berube MD Mr amp Mrsequal in law moving in by the Rooney Mr amp Mrs Charles Sefshy Joseph Silvia William J Dalton thousands and competing com

mereially and socially with ton Mr amp Mrs JG$eph Sylvia James W Blunt John Hart whites G Stanley Johnson Mr amp Mrs

Fred Comings Mrs Helen ClarkeThe new bill is aimed at outshy Oak Bluffs Mr amp Mrs George PereiraMYIllawing racial discrimination in

SACRraquo IIEAlltT Harry Walkerjobs housing hotels insurance and similar fields The most $125 The Percy Family Mrs Kay

Mr amp Mrs H~l1ry ~orey radical anti - discriminatioJ1 ~iggins ~ yenrsRalph Emerson measure ever Ploposed for Brit shy $100 yenrll Edith chamberlin Mr I

aIn it was introduced by the Reliable Market-In memory Mrs MIchael Cornick Mr amp yenrs of deceased loved ones govelllment of Prime Miliister Ernest Forni Jr

Harold Wilson not so much to $50 MI amp Mrs Shurtleff Mry deal with present circuinstances Mrs Corinne Fournier Ralph Jameson Mr amp Mrs Clemshyas with the future when the $30 mey Mr amp Mrs James Hamlen

A Friendproblem could become more Mr amp lVIIs Charles McHugh acute $25 Mr amp Mrs William Ward Mr

A Friend In memory of Mr amp amp Mrs Charles Pizzottimiddot Mr amp

Diocese Convenes Mrs Antone G Camacho Mr amp Mrs Charles Parks Frances Silva Mrs Thomas DeMont Mrs Rose

First Lay Congress M Peardon A Friend Seekonk BATON ROUGE (NC)The A Friend

first lay congress of the Baton Mr amp Mrs James L Kenney MT CARMELmiddot Rouge diocese convened at the $100 Catholic Lifc Center herc Ostellville St Vincent de Paul Society

More than 600 lay people repshy $50 OUR LADY 0 THEresellting the 12 civil paJishes Knights of Columbus

(~ounties) comprising the Loushy ASSUMPTION Mr amp Mrs Edwnrd McCrystal isiana diocese had the opportu- $50middot $25

nity middotto participate in matters The McKeon Family ToI11enS Guild Mr amp Mrs affecting diocesan finances the $25 Wilfred Blanchette middotMrbullamp Mrs

feasibility of continuingmiddotCath_ Mr ~ Mrs WiUiamHerron Edward Chal)~ler Mr amp Mrs Ciq education apart from the Manu~IJlendricks Jr HOlyName pu~gtlicschool systein the Ray ham ~9ci~ty Mr amp MrsE McPhillips Churchs il)VOlvcmcnt in social SJmiddotANNmiddot action admiriistrative middotstrllemiddot $90 Somerset

tures of themiddot Church and the Rev Thomas F Neilan ST JOHN OF GOD nymans place in diocesan 00shy $75 $150 ministratioa Cirino Dominic P amp Family Dr Americo B AlUehbl

SACRAMENTO (NC) ~ TheJSouth Dart~outh beads of Catholic charitable ST MARY agencies throughout CaliforniD

$125 have joined in opposing 00- Dr amp Mrs Paul E Corley 1~mptsof government to reduce

$50 public spending at the expense Dr ampmiddotMrs Victor Almeida of ihe needy and poor

$30 Mr 1 MrsWilliam Hines

]25 Mi amp Mrs Armand Borgesmiddot Mr amp Mrs Charles Nunes

Mr amp Mrs joseph MOlliz Jr The Johnson Family Dr amp Mr~ Archibald Senesac

Nantucket Sll MARY

OUR LADY OF THE ISLE $36

James E Worth $15

Grace Henry

9ffering You ~ SavingsPIQnsmiddot

lHlome Financingmiddot

WARFJI~~ (O-OP~RATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mass

Telephone 0 295-2400 flllnb-llv-Mall Servlu AYllIIIllII

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Check These Banking Services

bull Savings Bank life Insurance lleaDhtate Loans bull Chri~tmas and Vacation Clube

bull Savings Accoumiddotmiddot -

bull 5 CO~Yl1lient Locaiios bull - - middott

middotNEW BEDFORD INSTITUTImiddotONmiddot tor SAVINGSmiddot

12 -tAE ANCHOR-Diocesa ofFoti Rive~Thurs May 23 1968 l

$copylDfrTht ~$frml 1NJcopy1iU0il Wreg$U9gt[J1 JIl[OlLY CROSS OUIlt LADY OlF GIltACIE

$101 $50 Mr amp Mrs Donald L BergerOlll Rev Rene R Levesque

$100 $25Joseph P Kairys

Mr amp Mrs Orner Duqu~tte$50 Jennie E Overton Mr amp Mrs James R Jones SOWltrlm YIiUililOuii1mDr amp Mrs Thomas Berry Jr Mr amp Mrs John Pilz middotST pros X Mr amp Mrs Robert J Dray $150 John J Smith John F Martin Dr amp Mrs R Earl McLoud $100

$40 Anonymous 1IL F Bergeron $54l

$35 Philip J Hart Frank Ready Ano~ymous (2)

$30 $25 Dr amp Mrs Herbert L Evereti Edward P Hayes John J CarshyLouis Lyne amp Theodore Larishy roll Thomas P McDonough

mere Dorothy Schoonmaker Denis d Brophy Mary Geist Douglas Eo ~

$25 VampJl John Crawford Mr amp Mrs David Gomes M

ampMrs Leo R Schleicher Mr amp Mrs M J Hegarty Thomas F 1fltID01iJil~~ Gentile Mr amp Mrs EdwardlllL Slr JJOSEIPIHILoveday

Mr amp Mrs Robert E Coffey ~150

li$r Francis Welch Mr amp Mrs A Friend Leo F Sullivan Mr amp Mrs Robshy $40

Mr amp Mrs John Aiello I3ehleicher ltUt Downey Mr amp Mrs John E

Mr amp Mrs Gerald Tache $35

Mr amp M~ Arthur LeclairEast FaBmoutlh $30

ST ANTHONY VictormiddotL Brunette $275 Mrs Simonne Fisher

St Vincelllt de Paul Confer- Mr amp Mrs Edwin J Marmk ace Mr amp Mrs William A Olishy

voeira Mr amp Mrs Enos Days $21)

William Bartlett Mr amp Mrs Gerard Benoit Mr amp Mrs Nicholas F Tangshy

~y $25

Mrs Margaret Virgin Alice Bourassa Alexander Perri llIIllll lllli Braley Jr Dr amp Mrs Jell shyorne Brault

Cecile A Daley Mr amp Mra John I)ias Jr Mrs Mary P Gage Mr amp Mrs Ernest RLashysectesse Edward McGrath

Mr amp Mrs Leonard deMeshydeiros Mr amp Mrs Roland L Despres Mrs Irene FitzGeralcll Mr amp Mrs Edward Fitzsimshymons Mary Gogghi

Edmond Goulet Margaret Manghan Joseph C Mello Mrs Carmen Muldoon Mr amp Mrs Paul Murray

Margaret Nickerson Mra Edythe Rankin Mr amp_Mra Frank J Rezendes George Vishyveiros Mr amp Mrs JosephSevigny

Sli MAIlty

$81 St Vincent de Paul Society

$25 Sacred Hearts Association Raymond Dlugosinski Mr amp Mrs Manuel Allua amp

Nancy Mr amp Mrs Antone Costa J1l Mr amp Mrs John A Wojcik

SACRED IHIEARlr $25

St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ST IPATRRCK $iOO

Mr amp Mrs William BrennlUll $75

Anonymous $50

Mr amp Mrs Francis J Flynn Atty amp Mrs Edward Farrell

$30 Mr amp Mrs Albert W Lawrence

bull Major ampMrs Lawrence Uch-shymanowicz

$25 Mrmiddot amp Mrs Edward C Wen Jr John Keohane

Mr~ amp MrS JosephCardeIre Mr amp Mrs Melvin Dolan

Mrmiddotamp Mrs Walter Buguey Mr amp Mrs Robert Costa Mr amp Mrs John Kelliher John Lynch

Mr amp Mrs Thomas Magwre Mr amp Mrs Kenneth Paige

$30 lt $leo~ IJ=1J yltID Uilliil 0$ lllr amp MrsEdward McCarthJ7 lievbull~ 17 ~

Slr FRANCIS XAVlrEllt $2S st ~o Womeno CI~

Holy Name Society COO $450 Mramp RlIra Lee Kingsb~St Vincent de Paul Society $25 Mr amp lVlro Leo Parente

$300 Capitell Mr amp Mrs Richard Dr amp Mrs ~p Sibilll

Charles H McGrath Joan

Mr amp Mrs Larry Newman Sproul lllr amp Mrs Thomas ~$100 Loughlin Mr amp Mrs William Mr amp Mm GeorgeM~Doane Beale amp Ames E Donovan Mr amp lVlm Joseph FalDtoo

$50 Mr amp Mrs Harry SylvesterMr amp Mrs Frank J Dolan Mr amp Mrs Charles Flynn lltlr $25

A Friend Mrs Rockina CaftDoMr amp Mrs Irving Morrissey amp Mrs~ Marshall Field Mr amp amp Family Mr amp Mrs JOQD KmampJ R ~eyburn Mrs Robertmiddot Ryan Vetorlno Mr amp MrS Victor Narciso Mr IIMr amp Mrs John Hart Bros Ipc Fruitland

Scudder amp Taylor Oil Inc CarreiM Florist Mrs John Kinsley Dr amp Mrs Francis ONeil Ilflr amp Moo Wllliam ~

Captains Table Mr lie Mrs John Currivan Mr Bishop Tyler General Assem- McznsfieRdl Mrs Alfred Kuplast Mrs ~

My garet Jordan Mrs Grace Duma Charles J Ardito 8l MARY Mr amp Mrs Fred Taylor Josepla

$ltamp0 $150 E Donovan Jmiddotr Mr amp Mramp W tel Alfieri Catholic Youth Organization st VinceJntt de Paul Society

shy-

SENDYOUR GnJFT TO bull i l j middotcrmiddotmiddot

The Rig Rever~ Edward TO~MeiJramiddot The IUght Reverehd RiJYlIWnd T CQnsidiRf lVallonarpfreclor Olt Diocesiul Di~ecto i

366 Fifth Avenue 368 North MalnSteet f(eWYork New Yo~k ioooi Fall River Massachuseits027l0 -

1iWJlE ADDRESS

THE sectOClllETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH ~ shy

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~~ IiUrge Negro La Guidonce Boord ~n K~s~ Cety

KANSAS CJIIIY (NC~-A five-paltish cooperative illl

ner city ministry guided by a Negro lay board has been proposed os a way o~ bridging the gap betWeen the white Catholic CI1urch and the Negro community here in Misouri

A six-person committee headshyed by MrsThelma Work will identify the nee~ of the lComshymunity-Catholic or not-and to propose a structure fur meetshying those needs I

The action came as the result

of a meeting of the Catholie

V ~

Clergy Conference on Inner Oity bullneeds

Father James Lock chairman cited charges of the Black Cathshyolic ClergyCaucus in Detroit in conjunction with the IImnual meeting of the Catholic Clergy Conference on the Interracial Apostolate The Black Caucus statement said the Catholic Church in the United States 1s gtrimarily a white racist insti shytution which is rapidly dying in the black community and to which the black community no longer looks to with hope

On~ Out f li5 The Caucus recommended fha~ Harrison the Bishop Rev William J Hurley Rev DonaiiIll

white priests become supportshy E Messier Rear Rev Cornelu8 F Kiley Rey Robert A ers and learners listening tc McGowan Rev Edmund J Fitzgerald Rev Kevin F TrippNegroes to find out what tbeir lheir assignment~ are Olll page twoneeds are

The Kansas City-St Joseph diocese bas no Negro diocesan priests Ttrore~ DS~th~ Aoee Sl1m~PO rfif~ifflg tedera~ Jb ~~~

We are trying to start the wheels rolling for some kind of

~umlp~JrlMeFrot Nleereg~~rJ fr CmbCBi OW~iff1ychurch structure through which the black people of our diocese can voice opinions and partici shy WASHINGTON (lTC)-SPokesshy ment of public policy ~t Jlorth oommunity-based Social services esnie cultural values of ~hliv

pate in decision making said men for Protestant Catholic and in the Full Employment Act (l(f to meet Human and community country they said are sucll Father Lock Jewish organizations h a V e 1946 which provides for useshy needs Recipients of rondo that work becomes the basis by

backed federal legislation which ful employment opportunities should not conduct sectarian which a persons worth tnFather Dan Howe declared~

We have set up programB would provide one million jobs for all those able willing and programs judged A job not only tends ie i10r the nations unemployed seeking to work n determine an individuals acshygeared to Catholics in our parshy While they acknowledged that

ceptance by society but it alsish whom we have formed rn Their support was given in The Acts emphasis on education passage of this legislation would affects ones attitude abolll~the white mentality Since cl testimony before the House Seshy and training Training s1Mgtuld be no wre-all for the ills ci oneselfbest we are having contact lect Subcommittee on Iabor be open-ended so that the posshy poverty in America the spokesshy

with only about 2000 people out Studies have shown that unshywhi~ is holding hearings on sibility of permanent full-time men said that any attempt to of the 50000 in our area we the Guaranteed Employment employment beyond fIDe presshy combat poverty must provide employed persons have a ve~

can presume that the activities Act of 1968 ent situation is a reality Trainshy meaningful jobs low level of self-esteem anell we have structed as being our that this attitude tends to pro-ing programs of this ~Testifying were Father JohnChristian program of service do vide a self-fulfilling prophesrshould include basic educationMcCarthy assistant director ofnot reflect or reach black thinkshy MO~~U[ij] ~lW] ~O~S since it then becomes more dif~counseling and opportunities tothe Social Action Departmenting ficult to find or hold a joblearn about appearance manshy

E~GJHlll O]RDAllNJEID FOR IllmCJESJE Bishop Qgtnnolly m-dained eight deacons ro the priesthood for service in the Diocese 21t ceremonies oonducted at St Marys Cathedral Fall River Front Rev Edward E Correia Rev George Eo

We need a board of black of the U S Catholic Confershy OrJi1 AA~jjo Foreg[uGagement of income health IImdence Dr Grover Bagby of thelaymen to tell us what the pe0shy NEW YORK (NC)-Answershyother factors affecting personalDepartment of Social Justice ofple want to help change the well-being and development fog an appeal from the Ceylonthe National Council oftone to establish priorities government now fighting a mashyChurches and Rabbi Richard GFather Howe noted there are lWven fl Sellf-lEs~(()nim laria epidemic threatening 16Hirsch director of the Religiousapproximately 9000 Negro million persons the catholicAction Center of the Union of Involvement of private nonshyCatholics on the books but Medical Mission Board nere sentAmencan Hebrew Congrega- profit organizations Such Oll shynot necessarily active in Kansas by air Ifreight 364000 anti-mashytions - ganizations they said will c0shyCity out of a total Negro popu- laria tablets to Colombo Ceyshyoperate with the development ~lation of about 130000 They specifically suppoit4d lons seaport-capital The shipshyHe said that although the three provisions in the bill ment valued at $10746 conshy

structure of the lay board is yet Creation of an Office of Guarshy (cll)f AdldJrell$$ sisted of tablets for both ooults ro be determined it is the conshy anteed Employnient Opportushy and ~hildren sensus of 20 priests and laity at 1r~~regy Meefrolilregnity l8 a eontinued develop Earlier the CMMB respondingthe meeting that at least half

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-Theshythe lay members would be un- oro a plea for help from Indoneshyology must revolutionize it shyder 25 since the young people ~1JJlhJreg~ WODil$ [Q)~f sian authorities shipped 220shyself John Cogley former reshyare the thought-leaders in the 520 anti-malaria tablets ~aluedligion editor of the New Yorkblack community ~ial ~fit1hvllsW Times told the national convenshy at $7306

NeCeSS31lY ApPll03Cln SCOTCH PLAINS (NC) shytion of the College Theology so-A Negro lawyer Leonara BrotherHarold Woods a teacher The Catholic Medical Mission ciety IN the University m- SainHughes told the meeting at Union Catholic High School Board for 40 years has beenmiddot IfmiddotranciscoOne thlng is clear The clos- here in New Jersey has won a oonducting a worldwide mercy

Ing of any Catholic institution months delay to contest lim Cogley DOW a staff member cl program shipping medicines or cut-back in the inner-city order to report to his New York the Center for the Study m Deshy drugs bandages and various says one thing to Negroes We draft board for induction into mocratic Institutions Santa Barshy other hospital supplies and dont want you to be CathoUcs ~e Airmed Fo~ equipment to some 1000 misshybara Cal and editor of the Censhy

Father Vince~t Lovett dir~ BrOther B8rold la member of ter magazine tlgtld delegates that sion hospitals 4000 dispensaries tor of the new Diocesan Social theology must lead- rather than and clinics in developingAction office saidmiddot middotthe Marist BrotheJS had been eoUJlltriesfollow usemiddotits treasureS ratheT It seems to me we a- 4o_1krecJassified ll-A and Cllldered to than hoard them Liberatemiddot it shying about setting up something after rewmfug biB draft eard 011 self from its own prison ~ c0nshylike II couotywith II state goy- April 19 as a protem agaiDst the formity fear imd be dead Dbshyernment - a regional ministry U4o- actionism of th~ pastwithin tile diocese Be said the war VBallam

S~aking on The image off

WI report for Induction em April M

approach seems not so much lim The 22-year-old teachers ease ideal as lh necessitymiddot bas been taken up by the Amer-o Man as Citizenmiddot Cogley said

iean CDvil Uberties Union that the change in the religlO1Ul Which ealled middottbeboardll action mans self-image and the change

Silent Meditation in reclassifying him ~ new in the image of politleal man are TRENJON ~NC)-A bID pr0shy height of wegality Tbe ACLU not unrealated The image of a

viding for a period of silent said Brother Harolds religious free man redeemed from every meditation each day by students status had not collmged since he form of spiritual servitude and attending public schools was WIlI3 originally classified ~D subjugation he said b triumphshyintroduced in the New Jersey and that he hGd DOt ilrlterfered ing over the old image of eccleshyState Legislature by Assembly with the ndministratlon of the sia9Ucal man-a passive creature Speaker Albert B Smitlll 3eleet1ve ~ BWolltem eOOject ~ the Will ca ~thero

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THE At~~C~_ 15 Th M 231968 urs ~y World Communication Day CtmMG(f~ A~V[JK~$ObsecteWGR1CCe on S~ndl~w O[fi) ~copy~o~ A~fDcopy[jf)

WASHINGION (NC)-In response to an appeal by NEW ORLEANS (NC)-ArchshyPope Paul VI to the universal Ohurch the Church in the bishop PhHip M Hannan asshyUnited States will observe the second World Communicashy serted here As far as I am tions Day on Sunday May 26 The National Conference of concerned segregation in the

Church is dead We are past the Catholic Bishops awroved time for statements Now is thefor Motion Pictures and Bishoplast November the observshy time for actionClarence J Issenmann of Cleveshynnc of World Communicashy Tile archQishop of New Orshy

tions Day in this country on USCC Press Department land episcopal chairman of the

leans told delegates at an diocesan and parish levels ampnd archdiocesan conference on st) shy

members of the U S Bishops cial action I assure you we are going forwardCommittee for Social Commu- Senate Rev1ltews

nications have sent to individ- He outlined programs fe ual Ordinaries throughout the Continued from Page One beMer education for adequate country a cOpy of the Prayer lains to be assigned on a funmiddot housing and for recognition of of the Faithful for that Sunday time basis and that the needs the inherent digni ty of all men and a ooP1 of the Holy ~athers of the sick were being adequateshy The Church is exerting itll message issued earlier this ly met under the present arshy influence in every way to assistmonth ran~ement the poorest he said If we

It is recommended that the 3 Recommendations on salshy follow Christ we must begillilobservance in this country ary adjustments Taken into aeshy with the pOor even if thishave both religious and non- count _by Bishop in his direcshy means asking others to wait 0religious aspects The former tives for Aug I 1967 little longerwould highlight a Mass with 4 Meetings open to all clergy Anyone can live poor the

appropriate sermon in the 00- Bishop approved archbishop said The key thingthedral or some convenient 5 Extension of Synod prepshy is dignity This does not mean church to which executives aration time Bishop approved that this dignity is recognized Wld employes of communica- 6 Secretary to be Treasurer by a dole or a handout or eveD tions media would be specially and Senate budget Bishop apshy preferential treatment We are invited proved confusing issues when we talk

The non-religious asp e c t 7 ChOice of other Prayers of of dignity as if it can be bought would feature news conferences the Faithful Bishop approved or paid for he said articles in the press and radio 8 Referral of matters to Passhy - I am totally for equal oppollaand TV interviews and proshy tunity in jobs and for adequate

housing not just open housincgrams toral Council Bishop approved

In his message to the Church 9 Creation of Clergy Person-In human dignity everyone hasPope Paul invited Catholics to Del Board Bishop approved an equal right to education anell

consider the significance of 1() Clergy retirement policy to culture he declaredthe changes that are taking with Bishop accepting ormiddot not

AWARDS CEREMONIES At the annual Awards Day for hospital personnel at St Annes Hospital Fall River Manuel Benevides 38 years of service receives his award while Bertha Janson 42 years of service awaits her presshyentation from trustees Harold K Hudner left and Arthui Guimond right

place in this field (communica- according to diocesan ll1eed tions) under our very eyes and Bishop approved to ponder the serious responsi- 11 In-service training tor bJlities that theSe imply for one newly-ordained priests Bishop and all approved

Clamor forAttentlo~ 12 Various diocesan diredors Until recently the Holy to recommend men for middotpart shy

Father pointed out many did time or full-time further study not have anything more to Btim- Bishojgtmiddot approved 1IIate their inflection than vague 13 Full participation by memories of what they learned Catholics in middotYMCAyWCA ot school or in the family and programs Bishop aPlgtrov~ What they beard in their envi- 14 Rotation among religious ronment eomniunities of their represen-

Now however with the echo Uitives on Senate Bishop ap- r the press motion pictures proved radio and television clamoring 15 Clergy to recommend men lor attention new h~riZons oPenJor episcopacy Bishop applloved wide before them llIndmiddot they are 16 Lay Personnel pension ttuned to the throbbing life of plan study Bishop approved the ~niverse

Who will not rejoice at this 17 Adjustmentin diocesan progress Do we not 1111 see in assessments Bishop approved It a roadmiddotdestined by Providence 18 Clergy retirement study for the advance of themiddot whole Bishop approved of mankind There is room for 19 Bishop announced through all hopes if man learns to mas- Senate exchange of facultieS ter these techniques but every- between Diocese of Fall River thing can be lost if he shirks his and Providence responsibilities Various commfttees have made

Members of the bishops com- studies to implement some of mittee signing the letter to the these considerations Ordinaries included Auxiliarymiddot Senate representatives have Bishop Gerald V McDevitt of participated on a regional and Philadelphia episcopal moder- national basis regarding a nashyator of the United States Catb- tional organization of priests olic Conference Bureau of In- and its constitution and activity formation Bishop John A Donshyovan of Toledo episcopal chairshyman of the National Catholic Cursillo for Men Office for Radio and Television Bishop Christopher J Weldon Starts Tonightshyof Springfield episcopai chairshy

A mens ~ursillo win ~ginman of the Bishops qo~ttee tonight at La Salette C~nter of Christian Livingmiddot At~leboro Dishy

Delegate Recives rectors will be William Barnes of Marion and Rev GilesHonorary Degree Genest middotMS of the center

HONOLULU (NC) ~ Archshy Allmiddot eursillistas are invited to bishop Luigi RaimondiApostolicmiddotmiddot the firstmiddot anniversary of ultleya Delegate in the Unikld States middotmeetingsmiddotin the Fall River area baS received an honorary deshy at 745 Wednesday night May laquoree froIn Charninade College 29 at Sacred Hearts Academy here the only Catholic eollege Prospect Street Fall River A lID the state of Hawaii concelebrated Mass will be folshy In an Dterview with the Hashy lowed by a song session social

waUmiddotCatholic Herald ArehlSishop bour and refreshments Baimondi ~pressed tolerance Ul1reya meetings are schedshylor student activism in the Unishy uled in Attleboro oat Jettes ted States middotIltating Students Funeral Home Friday May 11 8ft adive everywhere Youth Monday May 27 Monday June ill UyiDg find its WBY aoc1 2 Friday June 14 and FridayecJar patterns of tbougbt IlBd June 21 eetioD e DOt lIS set asin pre A eursillo for W4)men is scbedshy paerationfl Cbolees were 1IIed for August and further inshy

-e fiSHthen tbin ~ tit formation is obtainable inla ~ -e LeSalleUe Centerbull --

You Live Better Electrically

trlc range bullbullbull with Iln ingenious oven that cleans Itself Make 8 clean break with the past bullbullbull and graduate to another appliance

that adds to the Joy of Total Electric Uvlng

Graduate to a ~fiameless electric range thatmiddotcleansits own ovenmiddot

Make 8 clean break~ with the past4

Why spend ~ours stooping scrubbing and scouring to clean your oven Why not grad- uate to a modern flarve1ess range bullbull with anoven that cleans itself electrically Its so

easy to use Set the controls and-zingo The oven cleans Itself (And drip pans) All you dois whisk awaya IIttie pOwder

- YOUll notice toothat a flamelessmiddot range keeps your kitchen clean cool a~d ~omshyfortable And because electric cookmg IS so automatic YOUll cook with pleasure So see

yOur appliance dealer about aflameless elecshy

See Yo~r Appliance Dealer or

FAll RIVER ~l~CTRIC LIGHT COMPANY

o

mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 23 196816 I

Mafttl[p)Dsellt $50 Raymond L W Benoit

$5BTANJrlllONY Jos~ph A Tully William J

$300 OLearY Mr ampMrs Alfred Baty ltlJbades McGowan Mr amp Mrs Fred Harney

$100 Mr amp Mrs Michael C ODonshyaarence G Verdi nell Mr amp Mrs ThomaS P Per~ lIugene F Phelan kins Mr amp Mrs John Kozlowski

$15 mosampry Altar Society

$66 Buzzard$ B~y I

iusan A McGowan ST MAJuiAR]ampTWilliam Keane

$SOshy$55 A Friendllohn P Delaney

$6$40 lIlr amp Mrs Thomas Pina

~h G Perry $25$35

Mr amp Mrs Edwin PaytonlInmothy Manning )l amp Mrs John KarlJfudge E C Horrocks J~

$30 Mr amp Mrs Edwin N Rose Wareham Lodge of Elks 15044bullbull Clayton King

Mr amp Mrs David Fannon$~

Mr amp Mrs John OCOnnellJames Downey Romeo Bedarql William Delaneyhnes H Gifford Mary M Chad Mr amp Mrs James Lopes

Wick George Smith Jr Antone Mr amp Mrs Louis Fougereshy-es Edmund Perry $25 Mr amp Mrs Armand Bedard

Mr amp Mrs Michael DelIsMark H McIntyre Teree JeminaBlossom Joseph Farley Robert Mr amp Mrs William BennettGIngras Real Breton Mr amp MrsLouis Eacobaoct

Jobn Tarvis Francis ODri9shyu Holy Nam~ Society Paull Glennon Joseph Zychowicz Central -VUlageIIaomas Renahan Richard SmiUll

ST JOHN THE BAPTIBJl

~50 bullNorth Dighton Mr amp Mrs John DeNadal

ST JOSEPH nolt Rev John P Hogan$156

IlR Vincent de Paul $75 Dr Peter F Piccinini$50

$25amp11 Name Society Florence I Bessette MrSt Josephs Womens Guild

$35 Mrs John J Ardagh Jr llim Raymond Williamsbull amp Mrs Joseph MWTaJ

Me amp Mrs Daniel TebreiN$30 J Jl)r amp Mrs William AcIamI Mr amp Mrs Robert Albanese

o Iohn W Perreira$5 Ch(ltham

Mr amp Mrs Joseph C Amarat 1lIJr amp Mrs Edward M Berobe HOLY ~EJI)EIEMEamp

bullbull amp Mrs Arthur A Ennes Mr $101 A Mm William Johnson Rose Pi Assqc of the SacredHea~ Mello $lOet

Mr amp Mrs Harold Mendoza Mr amp Mrs Robert Han lIffr amp Mrs Bruce Murph) Mr Col amp Mrs John McCa~ bull Mrs Robert Secatore $50

Mrs James Bell Jr St Vincent de Paul Sodeq Mr amp Mrs John J Cavanaup

IIMMACULATE CONCBPJIl[ON $30 $DOO A- Friend

Ambonymous $2-5 $a Chatham Trust Co Mr af

Anonymous MrS E Joseph Geller Dr~ amp MIlII Robert Harned A Friend (~)

Anonymous $75

Mr amp Mrs William Kent Mr amp Mrs Paul reF~vre Mr lIi$it

- Mrs~ Richard Sylva Mr amp MmHelen P Derby Patrick SullivanMr amp Mn Aibert Giordano

A Friend Mr amp Mrs Frank Dresseli Mr amp Mrs Philip S1iel]oA Friend Mr amp Mrs James Griffin shyAnonymous Mr amp Mrs Frank Wing _ImmaCU1ate Conception MenliI

Club $4G North Attleboro

Mr amp Mrs Raymond ~rgerotl SACRED HEART$35

Mr amp Mrs William Condoo $200 $5 Rev JOuter Lussier

Mr amp Mrs William Buchtman $30 Caesar Cardoza Mr amp Mrs RoT Mr amp MrsJeorge Merewe Howard Immaculate Conception $~ Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Joseph A Jette

Mr amp Mrs Co George Knapp $25 McCarthy Coal Co Mrs Fredshy Mr amp Mrs Paul Dion Mrbull elick H Murphy A Friend Mrs Frederick Fortin LionelL

Martineau Mr amp Mrs~ Philippe Rainville amp Florence

Mr amp Mrs George Beaulieu Sl lWAllUf A Friend

STMA-ElY$50 $150Mr amp Mrs Michael Murphy

Nelson GulskiMr amp Mrs Jose FernandesSIl $75$30 Rev Armando A- AnnunziabMr amp Mrs Thomas J Bryanamp

$50 Eva Morowski

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John HaugMr amp Mrs Roland Roberge Mr amp Mrs John StanfordDavid amp Martha Rocha M Veronica Reilly

Mary Cronin George Yefh Mildred Leary A ~riend

BreWSlfreli $4G Dr amp Mrs Domenie BalJiIe

OUR LADY OF TlIIE CAn $35 o $100 Dr amp Mrs Kenneth AtwiIl lllisBionaries of La saleUe jnr amp Mm JosepiL Dona

MONSIGNOR VI[lELSB

Heads Bishop$ Task force

WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr Aloysius J Welsh of Newark N J a recognized authority in race relations and social aclion work has been named to head the Urban Task Force estabshylished by the U S bishops

Bishop Joseph L Bernardin general secretary of the U S Catholic Conference who anshynounced the monsignors apshypointment said the task force was calhd for by the U S blsbshy

ops at theirmiddot April meeting in SL Louis in their statement on the mational racial crisis The bishshy

ops directed the task foree be established by the USCC Social[ Action Department

In this work he will cooperaW with MsgI George G Higgins director and Father John MeshyCartty assistallt director of the Social Action Department the bishop said

$30 Mr amp Mrs Frederick ThOIpG middotMr amp Mrs Clement Sbarolll

$26 Mr amp Mrs Andtew Boisvert Gertrude Cassi~y

Elizabeth Sheals $25

Mr amp Mrs Daniel J Cava- naugh Mr amp Mrs Raymond Bl~hard Mr~ amp Mrs Robert Brunelli A Friend

Mr amp Mrs Robert Gilmore Mrs James P Reynolds Mr amp Mrs John Donleymiddot Mr amp Mm James Battersby Mr Mn Jlohn bullCollins

Virginia G Robinson

AttRehoro BOLY GHOST

$150 Dr amp Mm LoneJglUl

~110 Mr amp Mm John CapoWglo

$50 Holy Ghost St Vineellllt cle Pail

$35 Mr amp Mra Joseph BJOdeur

$25 Mr amp Mrs Malcolm ~

Mr~ amp Mrs Harry Dowdall Mr amp Mrs RObert Geddes Mr~ I Mrs Frank Pistolese

ST JOlIN $200

In memory of Dn7 hwlbaDcI JIoseph F ODonn~

$100 Mr amp Mrs Raym9nd ENmlIlilll Anonymous Donor Inmemory of GabriGll lYaBltllloshy

alone bull $75 -

Rev Edwarcl A Ra~

Mr amp Mrs John P I4e $50

MaryL Wilhelm Mr amp Mrs J G WaJEll Jlr Mr amp Mrs Franclll Bo Mr Joseph ODonnell1 ~ amp Mrs Ernest ~

$30 m=teanor Robinqmiddot Alice~

ST JOSEPH $25

Counseil Jeanne DAre No 263

ST MARK $50 ~

Edward J Connors Jr $25

William J Roche Jr Joseph Dias Mrs Michael J Croke

ST MARY $50

Holy Name Society of St Mary Knights of Columbus Seekonk

Council Mrs Leland B Smith

$35 Mr amp Mrs Donald Blake

$~O ~r amp Mrs Henry E Woodcome st Marys Womeno Guild

$25 Mr amp Mrs Frank Padykula

Mr amp Mrs Russell J Sumner ST THERESA

$50 Mr amp Mrs Donald Boardman Mr amp Mrs George LeBeau

$30 William Cauley amp Family Mr amp Mrs George Boyd

0 $25 Mr amp Mrs RobeIt Generenl Mr amp MrsRobert St mlaiN

Taunton -HOLY ROSAILY

$30 Mr amp Mrs Russen Woodward stanley Radwansld

$25 Children of Mary Sodality Richard Januse

SACRED HEARi

$50 Mr amp Mrs Joseph S llosamp Mr amp Mrs Vincent BrimleF

$35 Mr amp MnJ Robert MeClellaml

_ S2i Walter Waltman Mr amp Mm

atephen Crosby The ~ Mr amp MrtI William Vaillan-

OOurt Mr amp Mrs Michael Barber

Mrs Margaret Rose llrtr~ bull II Frederick Reams

o

81 JAMES

$U Armand Desautels Tremblay Moving Iii 8tonlge

00mpany

STMABY $100

Dr~ Charles HoYt $60

GeOrge Dion Jr $51

Mr~ amp Mrs Kenneth $50

Mm A Hoffman Dr Normand ~ Mr amp M1lil J McNilmaN ar Dr John Fenton Mr amp Mrs Kicban sm

$36 ~ B Grant

~O Dr EdmWlld Fitzgerald D4niel A J Doyle

$U

Richard Barrington BIizabeCIa dIt Margaret Brady Mr - Mm kmea Bumtl Dr CarsiDbre e-- IlUOCi -Robert J mn JamesD hcige

Mr amp Mra Llocel IaImDee ftlomas Hoye Merrill lliaynard Jmelen amp Catherine McCariIll7

Alice McKenna Ruth MeshyJUona Susan McKenna II

Plan To B~ild

- See Us About ~

lotyCost Financing

WAuREHAM SAVltfGS BANK

WorehaftI falmouth cr J-3800 II 1-3000

Mrs James McMorrow Franeb Mulholland

Mary Mulholland Ma~ Neenan Joseph ODonnell Eveshylyn Rice Agnes amp Joseph Rose

Mrs Joseph Rowley Robert Sullivan J Roger Torme1 Charles H fripp Rita Baker

Mrs James Bennett William Carney John Gonzals James Holmes Mary E McNamara

Dr Thomas~OBrien Cbarleo OConnell Mr amp Mrs Edwarcll OGara Mr amp Mrs John 00 _ Ilfearne MlJI amp Mrs Edward OKeefe

1he Ralph Reckard Famil1 Cecelia F lfi Mary C Sheerin

ST PAUL $150

St Vincent de Paul st Pauh Taunton 0

$100 Rev Cornelius~ltYNem

$50 Mr amp Mrs Edward Roster

$24 Mr amp Mrs John Medas Jr

$25 Mrs Catherine Campbell Mr

amp Mrs Chester Jackman Mr c1i Mrs Richard Silva Mr amp Mrs Leo Leroux Mr Mrs John Steen

Mr amp Mrs Donald Emond Mr Be Mrs Gordon Seekel Mr amp Mrs Charles Welch Mr MllIl Paul Silva

New Bedford HOLY NAME

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John Hallonm Mr amp Mrs Jacob Teser

ST CASIMIR $150

Beltr cutnir Kwiatkowski $109

Atto~ Ferdinand Sowa $25

Mr amp Mrs Joseph FoUrnier The Poczatek Family Mramp M Antbony Rijo Jr Mr Mrs Stanle Scbkk Eve White

I

ST BYACINTB $100 -

Mr Mrs George Vigeallltl $50

st Vincent de Paul ConferenCe Gf Hyacinth Parisb

Tum to Page Seventeen

CONRAD SEGUIN BODY COMPANY

Aluminum or Steel 944 County Seet

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2-6618

w H RILEY amp SON Inc

CITIES SERVICE IDISTRIBUTORS-

0 Gasoline Fuel and Ra~ge

OILS OIL BURNERS

for Prompt Delivery amp hoy amp Night ~ice

8 IE BOIlER BURNER UNITS

80tItecI G48 Service

61 OOItANNET Sf TAUNTON

AJdeb DfO - No- Attleboro

TountoIamp

(l

SUMY pons Nuns (l)ffi) AifrMdl~$o

Re$M~~e~o trMture D~[freg~UDrru~ WASHINGTON (NC)-Resulto

of a survey of all United States nuns reveals a high ooceptance of post-Vatican II changes anell an eagerness robecome morrc involved in the inner city and poverty apostolates

The B1UVey conducted bythe Conference of Major Superiors of Women dlJring 1966 was the first extensive attempt to assess resources and attitudes of reli shygious communicenties c1 women and their memberll in the United States

The JPecific coal of the surshyvey was to assess the resources and determine 1ampIe responses that Religious are making and ean make to the invitation 13shysued in Vatican Us Decree on the Renewal of Religious ~e

More than 135000 Sisters parshyticipated in the survey respondshying to 649 questionnaire items covering religious beliefs atti shytudes toward change edu~shy

tional background present ocshycupation and future plans comshymunity life and proposals for future ohange

Results were processed by 00 Sister-sociologists across the country with the use of comshyputers

llleason for lIAlavnng The survey showed 1827 oil

the 175000 U S Sisters-107 per cent-left religious life durshying 1966 Of those Sisters only 869 had taken final vows In an interview with the NC News Servicemiddota spokesman for the Conference of Major Superiors of Women (CMSW) said most Sisters who have remained feel that a major reason for the inshy

ltereased number of Sisters leavshymg religious life is an increased ~penness to the idea within the lfcligious community

She said that the increased fucus on personal development has caused many Sisters to see that they are not suited to the religious life and that they will find areater personal fulfillment elsewhere

Statistics on be division of labor among U S Sisters show 72 per cent are teachers eight per cent are involved in health work five per cent in catechetshyill~ and missionary work lmd tbr~ per cenmiddott in welfare work

Seventy per cent of the teachshyem ore in elementary school work 195 per cent in high school education and 68 per

eent teach at the college level Of those involved in health care 18 per cent in health administration and 62 per cent in direct care jobs

lEnter New lFienlll1s The survey showed Sisters

have a strong desire to become involved in adult education inshyner city work pre-school teachshying and other s~ial work and to have greater contact with their local community Nuns expressed eagnerness to enter fieldc where few Sisters are now working In 1966 13 per cent ot U S Sisters were engaged in adult education 82 pel cent in speshycial education 31 per cent in poverty work and 06 per cent in migrant education The surshyvey indicafes that there will be a dramatic change in these figures in the next few years

Father Considine Leaves PC$tr Continued fC0m Page One

man of the U S Bishops Comshymittee for Latin America

Bishop Bernardin prai~ed the work of Father Considine in the Latin America Bureau noting

iota progress under his direction since its inauguration in 1960

It has been a labor of love for Father Considine he saici whose long standing interest in the people of Latin America and of other developing areaa is well known

Maryknon Father Considine will return

to his writing and teaching asshymgnments at Maryknoll Ossinshy

lng N Y where he had served as publications director before becoming director of the IAiltin

America Bureau He holds editorial and advishy

lOry posts with several internashytional organizations and servell DS a member of the Council OIl

Foreign Relations He was amp

member of the National Advishysory Council of the Peace Corps from 1961 to 1966 He also founded and directed Fides Inshyternational Service in Rome an Information and research unit of

the Holy See He was born Oct 9 1897 C1shy

1-

~ATIlGR CONSIDINE

da1ned in 1923 and received II

licentiate in sacred theology from the Catholic University of America in 1924 He has reshyceived honorary degrees from Fordham University Manhatshytsnville St John University St Benedicts Atchison and is the author of 10 books on Latin America Asia and Africa and hall edited several others

L9ng-Range

Father Considine Sllid that he IlIaW the Latin America Bureau as set for the proseution ~ tl

vigorous nation-wide program 10 serve our Latin American eonfreres for the next- generashytion through the year 2000 -and into ~ 21st century He felt lIlllch 11 long-range view was necessarJ because at stake are important socio-religious adshyVDnces among hundreds of milshyHons cd people Latin Americas leaders need time for these advances

Be pointed out thatsome of the best Church leadership tbroughout the Catholic world today is found in Latin AmershyICD In turn he noted our U S bi~hops are quietly acceptshying international responsibiliti~s

as never before Father Considine said that the

program of the U S Bishops Committee for Latin Americn ~ablishes the heavy day-to-day work of the Latin America Bureau

Jgtersonnel Father Considine said that

llIODle 60 per cent of all U S apOstolic personnel overseas throughout the world works in Latin America with more Ulan 600 Latin American parishes served by U S priests Major Superiors of women ha~e 2500 Sisters in Latin America PAVLA has put more than 800 laymen there for three-year terms and U S bishops hnv~

more than 300 priests working in Latin America Annual fundshying for Latin Amerietl by U S Catholics ~~ $1f) millioll

SJJREET SCENE This was a busy street scene in the nations capital at the encampment of the Poor Peoples Campaign near the Washington monument More than 100~OOO- protestors are expected to be in Washington for Memorial Day NC Photo

OUlll lLAIDY OlF ll1HI1amp

ASS1lJMJgtJlJlON $26

Clara Rose amp Family $25

Mr amp-Mrs Jose F Cruz St Martin de Porres G~

Mi CARMEL $100

In memory of Mr amp Mrs J~ ilino Simoes

Rev Antonio P Pinto middotCM $75

Rev Azitonio P Pinto em $60

Mary i Ltuiz $50

Mr amp lVIrs Albino daSilv8 1IIt Carmel Womans Club

$30 Manuel Bettencourt Mr amp Mrs Kenneth lltinu

John Rodrigues $26

Olivia M Luiz $25

Cecelia Bettencourt CbildYeli of Mary Mt Carmel ~ouft

Units James Perry Mr amp lnl Manuel G Souza Jr

Mr amp Mrs Arthur Caetano Mr amp Mrs Charles Frate Mramp Mrs Lauran Silva

OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HE]P

~26

Mrs Amelia E Bariteau $25

Dr amp Mrs Francis Green

OURLADY OFPU~GATOB~ l)1I00

In memory of Alex J Ka1He from Cltpe Coo Sportswear ~

lnc Fairhaven Lumber Co

$30 Atty George R Morad euroJ

Atty ~e E Morad $25

Josephine David 1bl mlE1lllllOllY of George A EI-Hillow Mr ampgt Mra ~rge JThomas Mr amp IIIlm Hykel G Simon

ST KIlldAN nSO

Rev WilMeT J Boekley

U~~ amp Wmeentde PaW ~

~ iWa1 1kntley

$2S AlmgeAo OH1feira

SAClllIampDlHlJEAlltT $25

Alexander Caruso

c S11 JAMES

$55 rulllbull amp lVIrs Francis O Quinn

$50 lilred Kelley

$40 William OMalley

~1 A Friend

$3~

Mr amp Mrs Jr Hugh Barry $25

Mr amp Mrs Andrew ONeil Mr 8 Mrs Robert Arnett

ST JOSEPH

$450 sa Josephs Church Societies

$70 Mr amp Mrs Maurice Dansereau

1130 II Mr amp Mrs Luigi Fiano lk Fmniy

125 Mr amp Mrs Thomas Weaver MI amp Mm Maurice Lamonshy

tagne Mrbull Mrs Raymond Rondel1

ST TBERIESA $100

Eugene Lemieux

Sturtevant 6 Hook lEst 1897

Bude~s Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New ~dforcJ

996-5661

THE ANCHOR- ~ 7 lfhuvs May 23 1968

~regreg [copy~G~ ~O~

Oa1l ~MOO~ []M~Orru NEWARK (NC)-A charge (l(

apparent ~racial discriminatiom in the assignment of tenants 00 public housing here is Oontainoo in s report issued by the New Jersey Advisory Committee 00 the U S Commission em CiWl Rights

It said the Newark Housing Authority follows a policy ef permitting people applying fOlr placement in public housin~ projects to choose the project tm whieh they want to live

lit said this policy has ~

llributed to the segregation Cl1I public housing and recomshymended that t1he policy 00 abandoned in favor of first-come first-serVed basis

The report noted that Q01l1li vast housing projects nre locatell in Newarks Central Ward-tho scene of widespread noting D year ago and of two massiv~ firo disasters this spring-and tll~

they are more thanSO Negf~ ~ccupied

It further charged that them Js U a disparity in maintenanceo between the predominantly N~

gro and the rgtredominantly whi~

projects a complaint lIiTegNgt leadership has frequently medea

It termed living conditiom b the Central Ward projects opshypressive and that the proj~cto

are JIOor)y designed llt recomshymeld~d that additionaI ~ev areas for young children ~Gl

meeting places for odww ~ teenagers be provided

Higher ~arnings

ON YOUR SAVINGS Per Annum

I W Ask abow

INVESTMEIlaquo

SAVINGS

CERTIFICATES

$IlFm - Savings insu~ed safe IIlyJ liII ClEerny of the US Government

IlVAILABIU1Y - No notice VCllIirfpound Your funds available when ooedea

Slllil by MAtL - We pr~e5S pt~ ood pay postage both ways

Assets over $41ooo0llC

FIRST fEDERAL SaYings and Loan Associatio1ll

of F~L~ RIVER shy~---__-------------~~~~ First Federal saYIngs bull Loan At ~

1 Borth Main St Fall llliTe1 Ibu ~ ~ Ii 02722 P1Imle 674-4001 ~ ~ ~ke llpplicatlOll oJ phone t1 fOOl wldl ~ o ~ o 0 IlllIivithllll Aceoullt 0 Jont Ac4cwot f)

PIlllse Cl3len II SllVings llCCOUCt blcelaquol

o eAomelamp) = ~ 0 ~ Address 0 ~ l 0 clleck In the amount of e--- ~ ~ 0 ~ _~___~~~_~uuJ

SPECIAL RATES FOR Schoo~ Outings and Picnics

amfACi MANAGERI - UNCOLN PARK 999-6984 636-2744

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs May 23196~

The Parish Parade OUR LADY OF ANGELS SACRED HEART WALL RIVER NORTH ATTLEBORO

Altar bOys willsponsor a cake The CCD program will be lJ81e Sunday May 26 following canonically established Friday Iill1 Masses June 21 the feast of the Sacred

Masses today the feast of the Heart The program will include Ascerision will be at 7 and 9 a 730 evening Mass followed AM and -1215 4 5 and 7 PM by proclamation and reception Confessions will be heard be- of CCD members and a social ~re each Mass hour

The Summer Mass schedule CCD students in grades 6 to will begin Sunday June 2 with 12 will attend a folk Mass and Masses from 6 to noon on the sing-out at La Salefte Shrine hour Monday night May 27 Tnose

Monday May 27 through Fri- participating will leave the ooy May 31 there will be church school yard at 645 and will be services at 7 each evening The returned at 930 living rosary will be sponsored Confirmation ceremonies will by the Holy Rosary Sodality be ~ld at 730 Sunday night Monday night the Council of May 26 Catholic Women on Tuesday ther societies on Wednesday and Thlusday and the Children New Bedford ~ M~~ on lfrIday

ST MARY HOLY NAME $25iALL RIVER Mr amp Mrs Roger Goyette

Contemporary music will acshy The Shea Family company the 1115 Mass Sunday Mrs Vivian Wegrzyniakmorning May 26

New CYO officers are Robert ST LAWRENCE amplois president Paul Durin $200 rice-president Polly Rockett Dr amp Mrs Stanley Koczera eecretary-treasurer A Friend

$125 OUR LADY OF FATIMA Dr amp Mrs Robert Srnan sWANSEA $106

The Womens Guild will hold William E King Its annual penny sale at 730 $100

Monday night May 27 in the Dr amp Mrs William Walsh ehurch hall on Gardners Neck $75 lRoad Rev William F OConnell

A Penny Sale will be held Dr amp Mrs James Bolton MondaYMay 27 at 730 in the $60 dlurch hall A Friend

$50 IMMACULATE CONClEPlIION Teremiddotsa Ruth amp John HarneyNEW BEDFORD Victor T Kondi

Parisnioners will celebrate John L Powell rthe feast of Santo Ohristo this Loretta Lamarre Sunday with a roast beef dinner $45 served from noon to 2 with Mrs Mary B Wheatoil

tickets available at the door $40 lRefreshments and entertainment Mr amp Mrs John Connor will be on the afternoon and Mr amp Mrs Thomas J Longevening program $35

A procession and auction will Mr amp Mrs James M Kearneyfollow the dinner with various Mrmiddot amp Mrs Leo St Aubin Holy Name Society units parti shy $30 cipating in the procession Mr amp Mrs Albert Anderson

Mr amp Mrs Joseph Griffin OUR LADY OF V()T(RY Mr amp Mrs Walter L9veridgeeENTERVILLE Mr camp Mrs Myron Tripp

New officers of the Womens $28amptiild are Mrs John J Pendershy Patricia Connor ~st pre~ident MrS James Murshy $26 phy and Mrs John McBarron Mr amp Mrs Thomas SullivanVoice-president Mrs George Mr amp Mrs Charles BerryReale recording secretary Mrs $25 Richard Griffith treasurer Mr amp Mrs Robert Bedard

A Communion dinner at Mr amp Mrs Albert McMulleneummaquid Inn will follow Mr amp Mrs Theodore J CalnanlB30 Mass Monday night June Mr amp Mrs Alfred Couto Mr amproo Mrs Gilbert Noonan of Falshy Mrs Manuel Guerreira Josephmouth will speak Reservations P Mullen should be made with Mrs Edshy Agnes Proctor Mr amp Misward Welch or Mrs- Stephen Joseph Porter Mr amp MrsOBrien Jr by Thursday June 6 James Ryan Mr amp Mrs Paul

saunders ST THERESA Mr amp Mrs Merton WalkerSOUTH ATTLEBORO Mr amp Mrs John F SullivanMiss Patricia Makin of the

Diocesan CCD Board spoke at the annual Communion breakshy Fall River fast of the Confraternity of

ST MARYS CATHEDRALChristian Mothers Fourteen $50 new members were received at

Gertrude OLoughlinthe monthly meeting arid new officers were installed by Rev $26

In memory of Caroline CasellaGerard J Chabot moderator $25They include Mrs Patricia Helen Burns Mr amp MrsBiziak president Mrs Georshy

George Johnston Corky Rowgette Vachon vice-president Club Rits OLaughlin FrancisMrs Kathy Lamarre treasurer amp Lena MoranMrs Dolores Leedham and Mrs

Mr amp Mrs Carlton GastallBeverly Sousa secretaries Mrs Raymond Reynolds

~CULATE CONC~ON BLESSED SACRAMENTlAUNTON $200A Spring Social and D~nce Rev Herve Jalbert

for the benefit of the church $50sponsored by the Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Michael Felixand the St Vincent de Paul Soshy $36ciety will be held Friday May Mr amp Mrs Richard Hamel24 from 8 to 12 at Lewis Lodge $30Winthrop Street Route 44 A W Root Beer StandTaunton Refreshments will be served Tickets are $200 per lIIIOLY CROSS person and wiU be available at $50 the door Holy Rosary Sodality

lt

PATRIARCH His Holishyness Vazken I of the Armeshynian (Monophysite) Chu~h which comprises five-milli~n communicants in the Soviet Union Near and Far East and the Americas is visiting in the US He paid a visit to the National Shrine of the

Immaculate Conception whilein the nations capital NC Photo

NOTRE DAME $40

The Anne-Marie MasSe fami17 $35

Conrad N Desmarais $25

Norman J A Belanger Rose D Perron

HOLY ROSARY $30

The DePaola Family $25

Mrs Philomena Germane

~CULATE CONCEPTION $50

A Frie~d $40

Mrs Diolinda Wilson $26

In memory of Charlotte DJicholson

$25 Holy Name Society Knights

of the Altar A Friend MlU7 Whitehead John R Burgess In memory of Daniel R Be

Manuel R Pimental Joseph Francoeur

SACRED HEART $l)O ()

~ Katherine D Adams $75

Mr amp Mrs William J Sullivan $5~

Margaret Morriss M~ry V amp Alice C HarrlngtoD Frederick B McD9nald

$31 Frances Mmiddot Cummings Mary C Cummings

$30 Mr amp Mrs John J HarrlngtOil

$28 Florence M Sullivan

$25 Vincent DAndrea Edward

Leary Mr ~ MrsN J Meyer Mary Louise OSullivan John J Sullivan middotMargaret F Lowney

ST MICHAEL $25

Manuel Rogers amp Sons At~

Manuel M Rezendes Henry Leshytendre ~eonardo Cabeceiras

Gerald Mulrooney A Friend edf Catholic Charities

ST ANNE ft JI08ZIII $30

Mrs Rhea Saurette 101at Vincent de Paul ConferenceIrene Theroux leapt amp Mrs Joseph J OCoDshy$26 nellThe Gauthier Family $25

Mr amp Mrs Reginald lerive

A Friend

Belshy $50

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J OCo nell k

$30 St rosephs Mens Club

ST ANTH()NY $25 OF THE DESERT Mr amp Mrs John L Mercer

$100 Mr amp Mrs Daniel W OCoDoshyChor Bishop Joseph Eid nell Dr amp Mrs James J Sabra

$25 SANTO CHRiSTO Rev Kenneth A Michael Mrs August Badway $50

ST ANTHONY OF PADUA $125

Rev Josephmiddot M Ferreira $100

Atty amp Mrs Milton R Silva

StVincent de Paul Society $30

Rev Ernesto R Borges $26

Mr amp Mrs Alfred 1 Cam~ $25

$50 Franco Family Singersmiddot

$25 Mrs Sofia Pacheco Antonio T Cabral

Mary amp Beatrice Costa~ SilD

CnristO Credit Union Manuel Medeiros Laureano Silva

AFriendFrank B Olivei

YDUR SONTHE PRIEST

HI HOLY PATHERS MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL DMURDH

A FUTURE

PRIEST NEEDS

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Have you ever wished you had a son a priest Now you can hlilve a priest of your own-and ahare forever In all the good he does _ _ Throughout the Near East this month grateful bishops ara ordainlng new priests trained by people like youbullbullbullbull Their own families are toe poor to support them In training but good catholics In America adopted these semIshynarians encouraged them all the way to ordinashytionbullbullbullbull Insome Inspiring cases this support was given at personal sacrifice How can youbegln7 Write to us now Well ~end you the name of ~ young seminarian who needs you and he will write to you Make the payments for his training to suit your convenlence ($850 a month or $100 a year or the total $600 all at once) Join your sacrifices to his and at every Sacrifice of the Mass he will always remember who made It possible

4

Native Sisters In our 18 developingcountries are teaching children of the poor preparing them for First Communion giving medical care to leplrs cal)cer sufferers the aging A SisterS training Ialts two years costs $1250 a month $150 a year or $300 altogetherbullbullbullbull Well send you the name of a Sister you can train as soon as we receive your first payment She will pray for you and write toyou

n An9 day now you may receive a letter contalnn the Holy Fathers appeal for the forgotten Arab refugees-l4 million people without a country bullbullbull most of them destitute bullbullbull more thari half of them childrenbullbullbullbull By trelnlng these children foi middotfuture selfsufflcel]cy we can help brln peace and new selfmiddothelp to the Holy Land atlll divided by warbullbullbullbull But why walt for your mal Hunger cant walt Neither can peace Send your amplIft now in any amount ($500 $200 $100 $75 $50 $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 $2 $1) and the Holy Fathercan put It to work right away Qril1 $10 wlllleed family for a monthl -----~-~---~~---~-IlNCL08ID PLllAIl PIND $_ c_O~__ rFOR _

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MSGR JOHN ClI NOLAN Natlonal5ecretary Write CATHOLIO NIlAR EAST WeLFARE Assoo ~30 Madson Avenue New York NY OOU telephonel 212vtJkon 6middot5840

CATHaLiD

19 DiJoridrrien Ere State r ourlitei

SChoelbOY leag~~Wmrn~regr~ Stii~Pretty Mu~h sampu [j)(Q)Mbt

By PETIm BARJrEK Nmon BitIh ~h

The gehooboy ba8ebaD mmpaignis cllNimatieaDy near- Inlaquo the climax of another spirited seasoo With approxishymately a week of competitioo Nllllaining oontlmdmg teams Me stmggling to keep their pennanf oopes alive while Wtling for the right to rep-JIe8eDt their ll e s pee t i v e leaguesin the nnand-eomin

-y- shy

Btate tournament The Eastshyem Massachusetts ehampionahip

baseball tournamen+ ClIffiMftl-~

tine of the wurney is tiPoDOOred bythe

II a II sac h u~_ lt Iietts Secondary

SChool Princishypals Association bull Par tie i p 8 t _ ing schools have bElen divided i IIl tot h r e e d3ses - A B and C---llccord- Peter iDg to leagues Blrtek r

and comparable independent teams Action tn all three clasampe3 starts Saturday June L

In addition to the three divishyidon3 the baseball tourney amp1shyem radically JIrom the popular

Two Spots for Both BCl (IDnd Marry Five Bristol County League Howard Ferguson which teams

teams Gre still in contention for will represent the circuit in the tourney play ebampionship event

At this writing Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Stang SpaltamJ of Qartmouth who hold a lllim ene-game edge over their rivals are a solid choice to annex one of the two berths to be filled bi BCL teams The second spot 18 un literally up for grabs

Bishop Feehan High of Attieshyboro which led the circuit untll last week Durfee High of Fan River Attleboro and Taunton lire in close pursuit middotof Stang hoping tomiddot overcome the Sparshytans or at least lInish in the league runner-up berth Both the first and second place finshyishers will8utomatically qualify

If either fim OX second place II decided by Monday May 21 league officials w~ have to DOUty the tournament Director

No~tons Lancers in Need cf Help I h e Narragansett league Class B - Southem

whkh got a head start on the its Iud Old Colony champ ft NaITlIlshyv er area Clrcu conc es gansett runner-upleague play today First place

middot Somerset travels to New Bed- Narragansett champ ~ Olcll ford to meet Holy Family High Colony runner-up Case High of Swansea entell-middotmiddot South Shore champ VB Hockshytains Dighton-Rehoboth West- omock runner-up port hoss Msgr Prevost High Hockomock cpamp vs South

middotof Fall River and Dima]l Voce- ShQre runner-up tional nlso of Fall River will 0I Am f N rth E stobe t Se k Iver es 0 0 a n a e o~k

Entering the final week of ac-middot middot tion Somerset and seekonk are in the top two spots in tbe 8tanding They loom the more likely to corral Class B tourney berths But DightOn-Rehoboth Case and Westwrt trail the sec ODd place club by oIl1yone game If the race ends in II tie ]league officials wlll have ample time to schedule play-off games before the tourney deadline

Pairings for Class Bare

Selecting Union PITTSBURGH (NC)-Twentyshy

five maintenance workers at Duquesne University here in Pennsylvania have left their jobs pending a detell1llnation as to which union will represent the workers The remaining 115 members of the maintenance erew lIlre not involved in the atrike which was called by the 2li who are represented by the tJmted Electrical WorkersUnion

Although it occurs infrequentshyly a team does not have to win Its league to represent its league in tourney eompetition

The Bristol County league champion is slated to play the

bull Bay State League runner-up in first round action with the Bay State champs taking on the County runner-up The winners would then meet in second round play

Pairings for Class A are Class A - Southem

Suburban champ w Middleshy8llX runnerup

Middlesex champ ft Suburshyban runner-up Bay state ehamp VB Bristol runner-up

Bristol champ V8 Bay sta~ runnerup

-Tech lxlsketban competition lllll order to qualifyfor the Tech a team mt1BSt win 70 per cent cd its games but onlythe leagu~ champions ond runner-ups M~ eligible ~r playmiddotiImiddotbasebalL

In both Class A andClass B iitOtalof i6 teams will qualify 1lt7middotmiddotmiddotJiY

for the diamond elimination event~ E~~ Will pai1i~ipate in

the nortlHln division and eight in the southern bracllet The winners in each bracket will meet in the Eastern- Massacilushy

llletts fi~ Preliminary games will be played on June 1 4 and 6 The finals are scheduloo June 8

Class C competition will coIi-BiEt of eight clubs in only one division Titlists in seven smallshyDChooI le1gues and one indeshypendent selected by the tournashy

ment coJiunittee Will comprise the field fur this tliil-d group

and Mansfield 1m the Hockoshymock circuit appear to be out of the running this season

Fo~ Class C schools Its Winmiddot or youre out Only the league champions will play in the championships The winner of the Capeway Conference will meet the Cape and Vineyard champ in opening round play Dennis-YarDlQuth and Sandshywich are the likely opponents

The only other school located within the confines of the diocshyesan territorial limits that has an outside ~hance of qualifying for the tournament is Norton of the Tri-Valley Conference The Lancers however will need some outside help if they are to overcome league leading Millis The Tri-Valley champs will take on the Dual County League champions Defending Class C champ Ashland again leading the Dual Co~nty is heavily favored to repeat both in league ond state competition

NOT A BALL-ITS GUM Yem might get the idea that a pitched ban is lodged in the mask of this young Vancouver BC catcher but it isnt a ball This young ma is trying to prove he is just as efficient behillld the plate as he is at blowing bubble gum NC ~middothoto

Stresses Inter~cicdmiddotmiddotPartnership As Solution to Racial Problem

CLEVELAND (NC) - A Nashy world would be better off lr tional ASsociation for Advanceshy iou hadnt gotten involved Jm

ment of Colored People official asserted here interracial part shynership is the key to oolution of the racial problem but it cannot be a partnership dom inated by either race

Dr John A Morrell NAACP assistant nat ion a 1 director speaking at the Cleveland Cathshyltnlic Interracial Councils annual Interracial Justice Awards banshyquet said the nation today is aj an unprecedented crossroads but the interracial way is the democratic part to justice

He spoke in place of Roy Wishydns NAACP national~ director who was with the U S delega- tion at the United Nations con vocation on human rights lin Tehran Iran -

Angry Voices There are angry Negro voiees

raised in protest because develshyopment of opportunity in recent years does not apply to twoshythirds of the Negro population he saidmiddot The kind of jobs they are capable of filling are vanshyishing from the economy he added

But if a fruitful partnership is to continue between the white and Negro the burden of know- ing the truth about Negro hisshytory must be borne by white as well as Negro Dr Morsell said

Vie are all fighting a bitter legacy of generations White people have to know where they stand and why Once you assume the burden of work toward interracial justice you assume the responsibilities be continued

If you are not going to ~

sume them then you and fhe

the first place Informed PariDership

Dr Morsell said a mere sPirit of commitment is not enough to

survive over the hard going Work must be based on a part shynership that is informed intelshyligent understanding and resil shyient he said

The interracial awards were presented to Father Edwan Camille assistant Catholic Charshyities director here and Thom811 C Westropp president of Womshyens Federal Savings and Loan Association

Westropp was cited for his efforts towards opening the

doors of banking and credit 1m the Cleveland area to all ciUshyzens regardless of race creed 011

color while Father CarniDe was cited for his leadership as director of Project Peace (~

irner-city diocesan organizati~ working with the poor mostly Negroes) and for his work as co-chairman of the first tri-faith Greater Cleveland Conference on Religion and Race

ELECTRICAl -Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

SS lPlE1rIEllt amp JgtAIDlj

$103 Womens Club Rose E Sullivan

$50 Joseph P Conaty

$35 Belen M amp William J

De7 $33

Mr amp Mrs James F McMahcm $25

Mrs Margaret Daly amp Mary John Dolan ~illiam Daley amp Mary Esther Mr amp Mrs Stanley M -laniek

~50 In memory of MrsMarga~

W Pow~rs RodneY S DeCecco

$26 Mr amp Mrs John Soula

$25 Edward Healey Mr amp Mrs Michael McCartbiY Mr amp Mrs James Crosson Mrs Gertrude Lomas Mr amp Mrs Norman GagnOOl

ST JOHN TEE BAPTlIS11

$30 St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ampt Jean Baptiste $25

Mr amp Mrs Ovila Caron Henri Demers

In memory of Mr amp lVlrm bullWilliam Sheehan

Open to An PORTLAND (NC)-The seeshy

ond annual Catholic youth conshyvention of the Portland Diocese has opened the convention to all Catholic students of the dioshycese in order to spread the agtOlgto tolate of youth to youth Thll

)faine convention has comprised only students who have takes themiddot youth leadership trainlJnl1 courses

Dont Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH

DO faJse teeth drop slip or wobblo when you talk eat laugh or sneeze Dont be annoyed and embarr1lEsetll lkllh hanl11caps FASTEETH Bamp

e (non-acid) powder to SPr1n~Ikle on your plates keeps false teetb more firmly set Gives confident feel~ Ing Of security and added comfort No gummy gooey taste or feellncr Dentures that 6t are essential to health see your dentist regulorly oet FASTEETH at alll1rug countemJ

o

WYman 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD MASS

IfIIfJltk del1WM

S H~~uO~ Oil

SAVE MONEY 0 OUROILHEATI bull eatt

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

Iritai~ If S)crap SuPPITreg~~5n Acts Of Re~(j[jmlt~oml

LONDON (NC)-It looks as if Britain is at long last glOing to stop suppressing the monasteries-officially that 0

Legal experts sifting through lenturies of forgotten laws clutshyooling the records have found (hat the Suppression of Reli shygious Houses Acts of 1535 and 0039 have never been repealed

They are among 155 statutes weeded out from the statute IJ)ooks between 1239 and 1705middot lmd now to be definitively leshy~aled by a special act of Par-Iliament

These two acts enforced the eosure and pillaging of Catholic monasteries friaries and other religious houses throughout the WINS nsc Chaplain

eountry following King Henry (Captain) Angelo J LitekyVIIIs break with Rome in 1534

assigned to the 199th InfanshyJhey brought vast fortunes On goods property and mog of try Brigade in Vietnam has ell land to the kings favorites been awarded the Distinshyoome of whose families have reshy guished Service Cross forWned their wealth to this day extraordinary heroism SevshyIgnored in Practice

Of course the laws against erely wounded when Viet me Roman Catholic Church Cong ambushed a US infanshyIhave long ago been shelved and try company Ohaplain Lit shyIgnored in practice The reli shy eky braved flying bullets toous houses are back probably

rescue and minister tomore numerous than before iIome have even reoccupied the WQunded and dying meR 0ld sites they hadmiddot before the lReformation

Another notable measure ~ewlfk ~[p)regID Gingled out for repeal is the 1loleration Act of 1688 This act W51f)$ ~WIfltdl although in itself it did not help

NEW YORK (NC)-The Adshy~he Catholics marked the end of

vocate weekly newspaper of1lhe Protestant Reformation and the Newark Archdiocese wont1he beginning of religious tolershythe first-place Silver Medalation in Britain Awarti for weekly newspapersIt allowed freedom of worship in the annual public serviceClgt Protestant Trinitarian Nonshycompetition sponsored by theoonformists provided theiT New York chapter of the Pubiicmeetings were opento the pubshy

Relations Society of AmericaIlk it did not relieve the existing The award was for a five-part

fenaWes of those days against analysis ttl the ills besetting the ~atholics other breakaway Newark public school system lhcnestants or Jews but it was )he analysis was written by a hisberic beginning It has been Advocate news editor Ed Grant ltJeseribed as the Great Oharter and was an examination into ~ religious freedom and the one of the areas of dissatisfacshy~umph ofc9mmon ~ense tion which led to widespread

rioting in Newark last Summer

The series ran lri the newsshylJays Help for Poor paper last september and Octoshy

lPeCice First ~eeds ber The Public Rellitlons SocishyMIAMI (NC)-The Catholic ety award - silver medals are (lihurch in this nation today awarded in each of five cateshy

gories-are given for the mostauast address itself to the presshynoteworthy contributions bullbull 0 toiloing needs of the poor and dis-

~vantaged as well as the better public ~derstanding of ltJnICial issue of peace says the _ community problems in the New

4Tchbishop of Miami York metropolitan area Archbishop Coleman F Calshy New s p a per 8 magazines 0011 following announcement of broadcasting an d television middotGte establishment of the ecclesshy media in the New York-New iastical province of Miami and Jersey-Connecti~ut metropolitan tMs appointment as its first area are eligible for the awards l)rehbishop stressed that the (fhurch must be concerned with ibe problems of the time in Retired ArttlhJboshop S)Vhich we exist Gets College lHlonorThe g~eatest problems at present are the problems of the DUBUQUE ( NC) - Retired disadvantaged the poor and Archbishop Edward D Howard Utase who are in need and of of Portland Ore has been named oourse peace he smiddotaid for Loras Colleges 1968 John

It is more difficult for us to Fitzgerald Kennedy Award The LiOlve in any real way the prob- prelate is a former president of iems that are our concern until the college we have a measure of peace The citation and gold medal And it is the prayer of all of us annual award honoring an out Chat peace will be established as standing Amercian will be preshyiluickly as possible on an honorshy sen ted to the archbishop at the able basis o college commencement cereshy

monies June 2 Camp Directory Archbishop Howard 90 a nashy

Nltlw available from the Nashy ti ve of Cresco Iowa and a Loras lItonal Catholic Camping Assn alumnus was ordained to the ~ 131~ Massachusetts Ave priesthood in 1906middot He became lM- W Washington D C 20005 president of the college in 1921 Is the 1968 Directory of Catholic In 1924 he was consecrated to ~mps which lists all known serve as auxiliary bishop of DavshyearriPs in the U S giving acshy enport He became archbishop of Civities charges dates open and Portland in 1926 and retired in lIbailing addresses 1966

National CYOPlans LeadershipTraining shyImpa~t to Aid Priests Adult Admiddotvisors

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tbe through the introduction of BaWmore June 23-28 ehicagoNational Catholic Youth Organshy leadership methodology which July 1-5 Boston July 14-19 ization Federation will launch a facilitates maximum involveshy Sen Antonio July 28-Aug 3 training program in June called ment 00 the local level and Denver Aug 11-16 and San Impaot be help priests and hence maximum commitment JFaoancisoo Aug 25-30 adults 00 work effectively with The National CYO Federation Dr Donald Ebalt a professhyteenagers in a leisure time proshy will sponsor six sessiOns this lIlional trainbig eonsul1lant of gram summer to train diocesan CYO Washington D c win diiecl

The program was designed in staffs m 1lhe use of the newmiddot ead11ab cooperation with Leadership program lhey win )e held m A pilot Jtudy of the effectiveshyResources Inc a firm _of beshy DeBS of Impact on a group of havior scientists -rolulbteers from the NewarlkAddress Graduates

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishy archdiocese was held at the SOUTH BEND (HC) -Mel-rector of the Youth Department Benedictine Retreat House ill

Jdte-rite Patriarcib Maximoo VUnited States Catholic Confershy jNewton N J ence in announcing ttie new Kakimof Antioch and Dr Ilhirtymiddot persons representashyprogram said tives of youth adult advisorsJames A Perkins of Cornell

The goal 01 Impact is 00 help and priest moderators met withUniversity will be speakers atthe priests who are moderators representattives of the CYO

the 123rd annual cOnW~ncementof CYO the ad~lt advisors and Federation staff and a member youth participating in CYO toshy exerci~ Sundly June 2 at Of Leadership rResources Inc ward maximumpersonal growth Notrlte Dame University 110 assess and to evaluate 1mpaltL

(Cathedral Camp-Resident and Day Camp for Boys

O~ Lady of the L_ke Day Camp fOr Girls

Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON LONG POND ROUTE 18 EAST FREETOWN MAS~

~ RESIDENT CAMP 49th Season June 30 thru August 24 - a Week Season

Diocesan seminar-ians - College Students amp Teachers Under direction StaH of a Diocesan Priest

Saili~g swimming water skiing horseback riding riflery archeryPrograni hiking overnight camping trips ~rts amp crafts Indian crafts camp crafts athletic (team amp individual) competition and inter-camp cOmpetition professional tutorial service available

Private beach large luxurious camphouse dining hall modernfacilities~ washrooms arts and crafts buildings camp store and office first aid and infirmary beautiful chapel overnight and weekend accomodashytions for parents

S WEEK PIERIOD $325 - 4 W~K PERIOD $165 - 2 weEK PERIOD $85

Cathedra~ Day Camp t=or Boys Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period

JULY W- AUGUST 23 Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period fEES INCLUDIE Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Horseback Riding Weekly Cook~Outs amp Milk Daily without Added Cost

--~----------------------------------------Our Lady of the Lake bay Camp For Girls

JULY l _ AUGUST 23 Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period

FEES INCLUD~Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Ilorseback Riding Weekly Cook-Outsmiddot Milk Daily without Added Cost

o

For further information write to

REV WALlER A 5ULLlVANDiredor PO Box 63 - East Freetown Mass 02717

Page 3: 05.23.68

3 THE ANCHORshyBro Zaccoreni Thurs May 23 1968No Easton Brother Plans to Establish First Religious

New Jersey CutsCouncil Head Latin America Food Training Centers

Social GainsBrother Herman ZaccareDt ~SC a top promoter of If YOU CMlcimagme a man dying of thirst because he doesnt know enough to put water TRENTON (NC)-New Jefoo

BeYs first Republican-controllecllfood-for-thought-about-food 10 his Hps you can imagine how the same kind of ignorance keeps the major population legislature in recent years conshy

lImlong religious educational of nine South American countries at the edge of starvation What most North Americans tinues to hack away at social mstitutions is the new presishy dont know is that south of the border most Americans are caught in the vicious circle of legislation enacted in previoWldent of the Institution Food Edshy sessionsignorance and starvationlIJorial Council-first Religious America with separate new The latest retrenchment camesays Brother Herman E Zacshyto hold the No 1 post in the 13shy projeCts and idea~istic aims when the State Senate denieOl earelliCSC International Brother Herman liaid TheselJle8r-old council the protection of the minimum

iIIle IFECcomposed of insti shy Director of the Food Reshy types of programs do not work wage law to migrant workersWe are going to add our proshytutional food and equipment searoh Center for ReligioWl Inshy The bill was sent to the Assemshy

([raquoOduct manufactures editors stitutions in North Easton grams to current education proshy bly by a 21-15 margingrams now in progress underand publishers channels the Brother Herman who just reshy

Current law which is a littienative supervisionflow of product information to turned from visitsmiddotto Guatemala more than a year old calls forThe organization which willIIepresentatives of the trade and Mexico Panama Costa Rica Brashya minimum wage of $140 aahandle the pilot training proshyiIhe general press More tmiddothan 80 zil Chile Peru Bolivia and hour But one proponent of thegram is called FE Y ALEGRIAPublications are represented in Venezuela plans middotto establish bill-which puts migrants back(Faith and Happiness) It is ane council ftlning centers for teachingmiddotthe on a piece-work basis-said mieciuca-tlonal organization staffedThe Holy Cross Brother dishy native populations methods of grants are sitting on theirand operated by Latin Amerishyeeets the Food Research Center processing and preservatWn of hands and collecting the minishycans in Venezuela PanamaIltr Catholic Institutions which tbek local foods mumEcuador Peru and Bolivia

~l1ege here The center con- -OVer 50 per cent of the nashy~ founded in 1956 at Stonehill COIPOratlons Cooperate

According to Brother Herman The bill is opposed by the adshy Clucts courses and workshops on tWe foods rot on and in the the success of the program wIll ministration of Gov Richard J tood purchasing preparation and ground emphasized Brother be based on the ability of the Hughes organized labor the rage menu planning diets Herman because the people local population to put the Consumer League of New Jersey IDUtritioil and kindred subjects lack elementary food knowlshy knowledge they can acquire at and the National Association for tIDr persons in charge of food edge He noted in some Central the training centers to producshy the Advancement of Colored tIe1vice in seminaries colleges and South America countries tive use He stressed that the People The New Jersey Farm and similar institutions vegetables like asparagus and Food Reearch Center for Reli shy Bureau favors it

Highly QuaUfied beets grow wild yet almost gious Institutions is not a charshy So far this year the legislature lln re~nt years representashy none are harvested nor eaten BRO 1II lEo ZACCARElLlLI CoSCbull ity organization but acts as the has pared unemployment beneshy

lives of non-Catholic institutions locally The Bay state Holy source from which participants fitsmiddot and school bus transportashyhave joined Catholics from vashy Cross Brother added that in the in Caracus Venezuela and in Ms education programs can tion oosts MeanWhile it has dous sections of the U S and birthplace of the potato most will begin operation next Sepshy take knowledge and build betshy failed to enact any of the meashyCanada as students at the censhy people do not know how to use tember Training centers willl ter futures for themselves sures suggested by the Govershytier Brother Zaccarelli also conshy it bow to cultivate or how to open in tlte eight remaining Self-Help Plan nors Commission on Civic Disshyducts seminars throughout the harvest and store it pointing countries during the next five In the past decade the Food order which recommended l eountry out that the primitive knowlshy years based on the success of Research Center has trained variety of laws designed to alleshy

As a high school teenager in edge of foods and their uses the pilot program over 5000 persons in insti-tushy viate conditions which spawned II1s native New Castle Pa oospite an abundance of variety Better Future tiona food service skills in the widespread rioting in the State Brother Zaccarelli began his haa limited the dietary staple of Several North American food United States Canada Europe eareer of quieting beefs about much of Latin America to corn and food equipment companies Puerto Rico Australia and food He got an after-school and rice have already contributed equipshy Hong Kong Student Federation iJob as bul boy in a restaurant Pegged at a cost of $10 milshy ment and personnel for vocashy With the inception of this ond quickly advanced to salad lion over the next half dozen tional schools where the local South American Self-Help plan In Financial Trouble ~ef years the immediate objective population can learn basic canshy the Center undertakes its first WASHINGTON (NC)- Afteli

Deciding on a Religious life 9pound Brother Zaccarellls visits ning and food preservation step in helping the poor of unshy 31 years of operations the Nashyeareer he joined the Holy was to middotfind a location for the methods der-developed nations to create tional Federation of Catholie Cross Brothers in the late 1940s pilOt training center It will be We are not going to LatilIl better lives for themselves College Students now is in dire attended Cornell Universitya financial difficulties and mayIhotel and restaurant adminisshy disband ibation school then took adshy Study Responsible Eucharistic Sharing MsgrThomas J Leonard di shyvanced courses at George Washshy

rectQr Youth Department USbullIngton University Washington Catholic Conference confirmedD C and founded the food Churchmen Exp~ore Circumstances Procedurereshythe dismal NFCCS situation bmerearch center at the college conshysaid it is too early now to stateducted by the Holy Cross comshy in LOUIS (NC)-Participants tian community and the power We have found sufficient theshywhether the organization willmunity heremiddot in the third consultation be- of Christian life are centered ological justification in prinshybe disbanded He said a definitetween the US Bishops laquoommit- upon the Eucharistic celebration ciple for some Eucharistic sharshydecision will be made beforeI Sled e tee for Ecumenical and Inter- For both of us the nature of the ing Furthermore we detect thatDe August ISP oy 0 I arlt religious Affairs and the Council Church is discernible principally urgent middottheological ecumenical

Once active in more than 100In Interracial Wa~k of Christian Unity of the Chris- in the fellowship of the Lords and especially pastoral reasons I Catholic colleges and universi shytian Churches-also known as Supper exist in our cOWltry to make

ELIZABETH (NC) - Some the Disciples of Christ _ have some Eucharistic sharing desirshy ties the NFCCS fostered Cathshy~OOO whites and blacks lwalked urged their respective commushy able olic action work among students hand in hand through the streets institute Releases We urge our communions to Since the early 1960s interestof this New Jersey citys decay- nions to explore as rapidly as in NFCCS has waned as studentsexplore as rapidly as possible theling Elizabethport area in a dis- poSsible the circumstances and first Publication chose to identify themselves withcircumstances and proceduresplay of solidarity co-sponsored procedures for responsible Eushy HOLLISTON (NC)-rhe first other stduent government organshyfOl responsible Eucharistic sharshyby the citys clergy and other charistic sharing publication of the Marsalin Press izationsing

r jj I

I

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0

groups Unhappy DIlisioDS was launched by the Marsalin The walk was patterned after Representatives of the two Institute of Religion and the

II similar walk held previously ehurches discussed Responsible Psychological Sciences at the in nearby Newark and was de- Theology for Eucharistic Intershy first quarterly meeting of its signed to acquaint people with com m u n ion in n Divided board of directors here Qrea conditions and involve Church After hl~aring papers The initial work Psychiat17 them in Summer and year- from members of both churches and Religion-A Historial PershylIIOund programs there and discussions they agreed on spective was written by Father

An interfaith prayer service six points James J Hayden OSB the inshywith Negro and white Protest- The act given to the Church stitutes founder and president ibmt Jewish and Catholic cler- by Our Lord Jesus Christ and Il Ben~ictine monk physician aYmen taking part preceded variously known as the EUcharshy and psychiatrist the demonstration Father Ro- ist Communion and the Lords hod W Muenzen administrator Supper is the highest expression Qf St Patricks Catholic parish of unity within the church oold the participants the one Since all have been baptized I6hing we dont want is toler- fmto the community which God rance which implies inequality pledges to mankind we have m ~at we want for all is equal- given unity in the Lord JesWl tty in love understanding anell Christ which our unhappy mshyknOWledge visions have not bee1ll able tCgt

destroy Even when we celebrate theAids Ex-Convicts Eucharist separately we are

NEWARK (NC) - The Mt aware that we are in communiOlli amprmel Guild special welfare with the same Lord and thereshyEtgency of the Newark archdioshy 1iore in union with one another lOOse helped find gainful emshy We have discovered that ourployment for 57 convicts last understandings of too Lords(fear Guild officials made the Supper are more similar than weltdisclosure at a seminar which had expected lit sponsored for parole officero bullSharilmg J])esirmbllGl IfIrom throughout the state Coshyoperating in the program were Both churches gather around ilihe Farm Labor Bureau and fhe TlIJble of our Loid nt least lUte New Jersey Employment eacll Sunday and we mutuallv ~vice EaCognize that the bond cJf Chrtlshy

middotOh a SYSTEMATIC5 5O 10 year SAVINGS MONTHLY DEPOSITS

5 00 01 a INVESTMENT 10 year SAVINGS

~OTlCE ACCOUNTS II REGULAR450 year_ SAVINGS

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 23 19~8

M~~Go [P)Greg~~U [f[]o[k) _~~[k)copy~ $)frMcdlltelroli CINCINNATI (NC)-A mon~

long program in the Arts laquoflNrrtiuregltdl $UUreg ~~~regUreg U ~reg~~ Liturgical Leadership will ~ b--J

Mreg~~olJi)~ ~ $~Mcampreg[ji)U ~lW[ji)~O~$ ~ l Congratulations to David Poisson of Prevost High in

Fall River whos been named national delegate from Massshyachusetts to the national convention of Student Councils to be held in Texas at the end of Jlne Hes also been asked to attend a Little White House conference in Hawaii during the Summer and to become an executive board member of the state association

of student councils and be presshyent at its Summer workshop

Sounds like a busy vacation At Mt St Mary Academy

Fall River the first annual scholarship in honor of Sister

Mary Carmela the schools first principal has beeil awarded to an eighth grader at Dominican Academy Shes Nancy Romanshyowicz The award carries full

1U[ji)~O$laquo[li)M[jamp~

IF0~U17 Ifreg li$

Siste M-ry Furse)T Sanshy tosof themiddot Franciscan Misshy sionaries of Mary ha~ just celebrated her Golden Jubilee

of service to God and mankind in her vocation Daughter of the late John F and Maria Medeiros Santos of 235middot Tremont Street in

Fall River Sister is pFesently stationed in St Francis Hospital in -Roslyn Long Island butobshyserved the occasion with her family in Fall- River-Theresa Joseph Antone and Qenis Sanshytos and Mrs Evangeline Plunkett and Mrs Hilda Barbosa

Sister has been no stranger to various parts of the world in her missionary career She took her novitiate in Quebec proshynounced her final vows in Moshyzambique and spent six years in this mission Then on to Enshygland for thirty-one years enshygaging in various social service

Q activities The war ~yearsin- Lonshydon saw the convent to which she was assigned completely destroyed by bombs-all exshycept the chapel

Sister returned to the United States to see her family after a forty-year Japse in 1958 and has been in hospital ~ork on Long Island ever since

And she is looking forWard eagerly to the wmk that she will continue to do in the fushyture--calm serene interested in God and His people

tuition for the four high school years

Sister Carmela who was Mountmiddots principal fOl 15 years is now English department chairman at St Xavier Acadshyemy Providence

At Jesus-Mary Academy Fall River sophomores and basketshyball-tearn members joined forces to spoilsor a Surfers Happenshying dance featuring the south

of Boston musiCal group Hiking Nun

Weve had fiYi~g nims and singing nuns now its a hiking nun Sister Albina Marie of Sacred Hearts Academy Fall

SISTER MARY ~URSEY

_ gers involved in the use of al shycohol and drugs Speakers group discilssions and reports have been scheduled and the program ended Tu~sdaywith a Day-O-Rama conducted by Rev Arthur Bourgeois MS of La Salette Center of Christian Livshying

Also on the junior-senior calendar-a Washington weekshyend with Sister Ann Dolores as one of the adults accompanying the group

Parents Night Holy Family High in New

Bedford held its senior prom last night and upcoming is a parents night for senior moms and dads oil MondayJune 3 Class day is set for TuesdayJune 4 -

At Prevost High theyve anshynounced that electiqn of the school president will take place in June Why Because ~ays the Maple Leaf in its usual forth- right manner this intere~iii1g

River organized 18 sophomores for a seven mile stroll to Lin colri Park Next on the agenda a trip by foot to a popul~i ice cream spot in Assonet

Mt St Marys junior lkomis slared for tomorrow night with Elizabeth Perry in general charge of arrangemerits while parents of SHA Fall River girls had their own prom with the Sucordium and Fathers Clubs

joining for a semi-formalaffair Jesus-Mary girls have been

piaying host to Mdther Del Rosario RJM pi-esid~i1t ofthe iilternatiqnal unfoi of Major

Superiors and counselor to the Sacred Congregation of Reli shygious Orders A special assemshybly was held in her honor

And last night at JMA the Parent-Teachers and Alumnae Association held its last meeting for the year Officers for next year were seated and seniors received into the group Freshshymen entertained with a drama and there was also time on the agenda for parents to confer with teachers

Not slowed up by year-end activities are The Parables

SHAs folk-singing and guitarshyplaying group Members are at

-Holy Name Church in Fall River each Sunday and other appearances will be for the St Marys Womenlts Guild and for a youth group in Bristol Other SHA folk groups are the Conshystellations and a junior highshyfreshman unit Both of the lat shyter units played at the Sucorshyoium Club installation banquet this month

Also upcoming at SHA pershyformances ihis weekend ei The Boy Friend presented by the schools new dramatic group Prospect Place Players

And seniors and dgniors at the Fall River school have just coinpleted a project on the daQshy

COYLE OFFICERS SeIiior class officers at Coyle High SchoolTaunton are seated Mjch~el Mal~)Ile t~as~i~r St Marys parish Taunton Alec Rich vice~president St -Marys Norton standing James Reid nresident St Marys Taunton Steven Strojnysecretary Holy Rosary Tau~~n

evenl will easemiddot the sUaiJi of talk by M~ Violet L~nard boredom on the closing days teacher at Bridgewater State of school Candidates for relievshy Prison on the need for work ing boredom and performing with young inmates at the insti shyother usefill chores are David tution Poisson Earle Flynn and Alan White

This is Arts Festival Month renin ton shyin Fall River and Mt St Mary $550 Academy contributed thereto Reed amp Barton Foundation Jnc with a Spring Concert presented $250 jointly with the 75 piece LaSalle Taunton Daily Gazette band of Providence $100

Also in Spring a young mans ~Thornas-E Donelan fancy lightly turns to thoughts $50 of love So does a young womshy Tlunton Printing Co anS so to be practical l)bout - $35 the matter Cassidy seniors William HurleyJrheard a discussion by Taunton $25 surgeon Dr David Gouveia on

Trocchi Discount Food StoreaThe Biological Aspect of Love Eagans Package Store CatholicHe presented an informal illus- Association of Foresters 1 Mtrated lecture and answered all Wells Louison _amp LOlisonstudent questions

And Cassidy juniors joined Mrs Joseph McCormick Parashythe seniors recently to hear a gon Gear Works William E

Barnes MD St Germaine amp Son Ed~ard F St Pierre SheridanSpecial Gifts Silver Co Taunton Co-Operashy

tive Bank A Friend Continued from Page Two

~ to Page Nine $50

Hunt Club Falmouth ~ Tommys Oil-Buzzards Bay A Friend DEBROSS Oll~Dr amp Mrs Thonrtls Perryshy

Provincetown co $30

Ferreiras Shoe Store-Provshy Heating Oilsincetown

$25 lOind BurnersAlf~ed Hall Edgartown

CYO Sacred Heart Oak Bluffs 365 NORTH FRONT STREElJ Falmouth Coopepative Bank Paul Peters Insurance Agency NEW BEDFORD

FalmQuth Dr amp Mrs George DeMello 992-5534

Falmouth Falniouth ~ackage Store A Friend

I oonducted jor seminarians abovo the high school level by the Na- shytional Institute of Ritual 131111

Drama beginning July 1 ~ GmilviUe national headqU8iD ters of the Grail movement ~

Loveland Ohio The course will be conducW

by Father Clarence J Ri~ priest~mposer of the CiQciDshy

nati archdiocese who laun~ the institute this year

Father Rivers said instructoftj) will be drawn from professional

artists and from seminary mlf1I ~university faculties They willi provide training in the arts ~

reading speaking acting mngshy~ing gesturing and moving -atl these things apply to leading dlshy namic celebrations of the JD rirgy Father Rivers middotstated ~ The priest described the

SUDimer program as a pil~

project through which we hop(l to demonstrate iii concrete termo what we mean by adopting ~

skills of the performing arts ~

the need of the liturgy and ~

take the first steps in establishshyjng a 0 0 0 tradition of effeetivG performance via TV we will ~

Jess and less able to hold thew attention with second rate pel shy

formances in church FathGli Rivers stated

$ltoiUrillil$ ~U5(e1mreg~atJn ~ A$ ~v F lfelmli WASHINGTON (NC) - WDshy]iam Beigl 17 student at SLshyBenedict High School ChicagCll has been saluted here by Presishydent Johnson as the nations q example of juvenile decenCJ7

selected as Boy of the Year from among 750000 Boys Club of America members he was reshywarded with a- trip to the IIampshytions capitllt

Beigl selected for superlashytive service to his home Cbureil school community and boys

bull ~lub presented the Presidem With a scroll pledging theBo)1ll Clubs of America to a long

Cool Summer-plus an -eerQr bird honorary life BCA memshybership for Patrick Lyndon Nushygent the Presidents grandSOllshy

ltgt Complete

BANKING SERVICE

for Bristol County

Bri$to~ Countymiddot Trugtt Company

l AUNlION~ MASS

THIl RANK ON TAUNTON GREEN

Member 01 Federal Deposit

iDsurance CorporaUo6

Noel Shop-Provincetown Buzzards Bay Garage Wareham Lodge of Elks No

1548

Endorse March WASHINGTON (NC)-Direcshy

tors of Catholic charities organshy izations thrQughout the country

haveendorsedthe Poor Peoples Campaign as a citizens effort to end the degradation suffered by millions of Americans as a result of poverty and racism

ON CAPE COD

JOHN HINCKLEY amp SON CO I bull

BUILDING MATERIALS SPring 5-0700

49 YARMOUJH ROAD HYANNIS

AMPLE PARK~NG

5 Neames Book on Lourdes Differs From AII~ Ofthef~

By ~~ Rev MSgTbull John S Kennedy

Alan Neames The Happenings at Lourdes (Simon and chuster 630 Fiftili Ave New York NY 10020 $695) roncludes with an apocryphal story about Pope John XXm RiG Holiness according to the story had as luncheon guests during the oouneil two 00Jrshy

dinals desirous of a new docshytrinal definition of the PllVshyOegeg of our Lady and a theshyologian To all three he put the llIuestion middotCan you tell me why the Church in ~ liturgy so oflen prays the IIIrords Pray for llIG 0 holy Mother of God One carshydinal answered Because Boli shyliIleIS Mary is IIU - powertul IIrith God The eco n d said Because your IBlGlinesa illustrious predecesshy110m have decreed so

The theologians reply was So that we may be made worthy of the promlsea of ltChrist The Pope declared the llbeoIOgians anSW0l1 tn be the dGht one _

Mr Neame is ll Catholic He lIIdi ted the Old Testament secshylion of The Jerusalem Bible Svidently he has long been fasshyaoated by Lourdes has visited laquobe shrine often He has gone ~ly into the backgiound of lb9t region of France and of Bernadettes town in particular

Now he has written a b90k ltifferent from any other of the ~ns or scores which have ~It with Lourdes

Homely Trutll llt is a critical work but not

I1IlnIercritkal It attempts to illOnsider th~ phenomenon of Itourdes objectively It rejects lientimentality and superstition Aithougb it is idiosyncratic its ~l effect is to suggest the reality of supernatural intervenshyUOn both in the apparitions and ~ the cures

Much familiar ground lB oovshyltaed by Mr Neame He goes antltraquo the history ~ Bernashydettes family and summarizes ~[ own brief history before the ltPParitions (she was then 14) An trace of pietistic glamor is Illemoved The homely trinth is rkly set oul

Whell it comes to the apparishyns Mr Neame givCfl us a dear account of the location of 8he grotto its appearance its connection with the town In treating the apparitions themshylves he is succinct sticlting _ essentials avoiding exelamashyQIon

He cooly states and analyzes nat happened at the grotto What happened to the town eg ebe interrogations to which mernadette was subjected

The effect far from being III

clebunking is conviction that oomething humanly unaccountshyole did occur -

Acote lJgtuflfellences Mr Nearne is well aware that

IDtlny alleged Marian apparishytions have occurred Indeed the oountrr roundabout Loui-des was dotted with the scenes of tAch before Bernadettes time aut he well brings out the acute amd deeply significsnt differshy~ which mam off the Lwrdes story from all others

The words attri-bUted to Mary ~ Bernadette ate extremely 1iNI as against elaborate messhyooges said to have been delivshytUed elsewhere They are neither prophetic (in the sense of foreshyWling dire happenings) nor political

She makes DO two-edged fllDbiguous promises ampbe ~

no oontingent perspectives of IA golden age to corne She is anshyeKistentialist a Madonna for a

demythologized world propos- ing nothing but repentance and blind faith

Appeal to individual Or as he puts it in another

place No word Qf the temporal power from her of the sover- eigty of the Pope of the righw ol the Holy See or even of the rights of the Church itself No word of condemnation for the modern world or the secu1aJr state

Only the appeal to the indishyvidual Go and kiss the ground in penance for sinners $ ~) $ drink at the spring and wash in It shyactions symbolizing two fundashymental obligations to love onea neighbor and to sanctify one- self

Obviously Mr Neame seen Lourdes as very pertinent to the contempor~ry Church and the contemporary world Its meaning he finds expounded and concretely applied by Vatshyioan n This interpretation is 1I think unprecedented and should make us see Lourdes in a new way not eclipsed but Ilhiningmiddot out with fresh force

MatWr of ~

That it should have swviVed unimpaired he believes to be astounding He details the conshytroversies and themiddot vicissitudeu which have beset it There waS a kind of feud between the local clergy and the religious es~

cially assigned to the shrin~ llsect

this ~eveloped Also there Wwl

ID()re than one effort to involve Lourdes in politics

Mr Neame goes into the matshy~r of cures thlHr number tM standards (progressively toughshyer) ror judging their authenshyticity Curiously middothe regrets the exclusion of neurotics from conshy8ide~ation as genuinely curedl

The crYing need of our day be says is middotthe miracle that heals the disordered mind the unreconciled personality the ~otionally disturbed the tem- pennentally unstable These are the very cures to claim not the ones to set aside

Help sought GivcllIl This jolting book contains a

plethora of incidental infonnashytion about Lourdes the local peoples attitude toward the grotto (they are aware of it all Parisians are of the Eiffel Towshyer) the origins of the dialect which Bernadette spoke the number of visitors (about three

million a year) and the numshyber of postcards sent by them (about ~ven and a half million a year) the peculiar story of the Cagot people throug~ whose segregated quarter Bel1shynadette ran on one occasion even Bemadettes diet This Qften astonishing miscellany iD well woven into the text

The story with which thill not-ice began and the boOKcloses makes the point that Maryg help is sought and given whether ordinarily or as lilt Lourdes extraordinarily that middotwe may so live as to be worthmiddot of the promises of Christ A critical point

Accepts Invitaftion YJ[ENljA (NC) - FranziskUllJ

Cardinal Koenig of Vienna hlllSl accepted an invitation by Pampshytriarch Vasgen I of the Armenishyan-Gregorian Church in the So-shyviet Union to visJlt tIlat Church oocters ther~

FAnIER JOYCE 8 3

Name Fr JoyceBe President

BOSTON (NC) -Father W Seavey Joyce SJ 54 has been named president of Boston College to succeed Father Michshyael P Walsh SJ

Father Joyce has served atil chairman 00 the colleges deshypartment of economics dean of the college of businesS adminisshytration and since 1966 as viceshypresident of community affairs Acti ve in Boston civic affairs

Father Joyce began in 1953 the Booton Citizens Seminars at the college served from 1963 to 1968 as president of the Boston MetroshyJiolitan Area Planning Council and from 1963 to 1967 as chairshyman of the Boston Citizens Adshyvisory Committee on Community Development

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 231968

Praises Dedication of COB1vention To Memory of Martin Luther King

BALTIMORE (NC) - Lawshyrence Cardinal Shehan hailed the decision of the Baltimore Archdiocesan Holy Name Union to dedicate its 57th annual conshyvention to the memory of Dr Martin Luther King and stressed the obligation of Chrisshytians to work for better relashytions between the races Th~ oommunity can be made

worthwhile only if it is united Cardinal Shehan told several hundred delegates here H~ said that insofar as the community is divided by prejudice disshycrimination and hatred itmiddot ill impossible- for the Church to fulfill its mission

The cardinal said Catholics have an obligation to tgke the spirit of Christ into the com- munity

The obligations of Christians as individuals in this respect are inescapable he said

The cardinal observed that the Church is INlSsing through difficult times

We need a laity that is well-middot informed well-educated and completely dedicated to Christ and to Christs Church

He added that the mission of yenCnewal within the Church can be accomplished only if there is renewal within individuals Cardinal Shehan said this must be accompanied by a strengthshyening of love for Christ and Christs Church

Reject Resolution Nothing oan be accomshy

plished he slllid unless we

Now available 10 members of

have complete confidence that God is within the Church

The delegates rejected a resshyolution that would have called for a change in the name of the Holy Name Society

During a banquet in Balti shymores Civic Center the deleshygates heard a leading Canadian Catholic layman call for greater service to the poor

Rom Maione executive direcshytor of the Canadian Catholic Organization for Development and Peace said that Christians are not allowed to live any longer in solitude but must inshystead pour ourselves out into the world

He said that we are either going to grow in love for one another or were going to grow in hate

New York Teachers To Study Judaism

NEW YORK (NC)-Teachem in the New York Arahdiocesaan schools will take 11 five-pan course on Judaism and Jews mI literature next Fall

The course will consist of five one-hour programs for closed circuit television prepared by Jewish scholars and theologituW and taped by the television stushydios of the New York Archdioshycese The course is sponsored by the New York archdiocese and the Anti-Defamation League ltri BNai Brith

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~ River-TJiurs May 23 196amp Oversleeping

Riglkll Traditional spiritual writers advise those who are strivshy

llng for perfection to make an e~amina~ion of conscience ~ch day to check their spiritual condition of soul to measure themselves and their actions against th~ comm~nd-

ments and counsels Some wag called this period-You cant be right

A~hbishop Cooke of New York must feel that way He sent a letter to all priests of that archdiocese aking their lIreCOmmendations for diocesan offices And immediately one reaction from the New York Senate of Priests was that he had gone outside the established advisory groups namely apparently the Senate

And if the Archbishop h~d asked the Senate for JeC0Inshy

mendations some individuals would have stood up and proclaimed loudly that this was an example of referring a matter to an organization and bypassing the individual

The ans~er of course in this post-conciliar age is to consult all to broaden the base of consultation ~ widely as possible And then the Archbishop must fulfill his responshy8ibiJity and make decisions and choose men who will earry on the work of God in an effective and pastoral way

Even then there will be criticism But the riame of the ame~does seem to be-You oant be right

Here is another i~stance af where there must always be a posi-tive attitude toward what is being done Critieism

surely has its place--but only in the context of praise for what is being done and as a further proposal to bolster the forward thrust that is taking place Then it is positive and

~ ueative - euro th Church is to assist the Bish~ and the other clergy in servicemiddotm00QInG to GOds holy people The deashyWider Vision con is a man of prayer since he

A significant meeting -took place in Chi~ago the fi18t Revbull John Ff Moore St Josephs Taunton of this week representatives from priestsmiddot groups and

middot tf II th t to form a natIon~1 fed- lA MA MEdSena es rom a over e counry bull ltU poundQ

tion Of priestiS organization TheDi0ce8eOfall~RiVerwas C rime and the Indiyiilutrlepresented ~

It i~ unfortunate however that in middotsOme Publie]ty Alarmed Cmiddotmiddottmiddot emiddotmiddotnrymiddot aS FearfiI eomingout of Chicago one speaker in Particular uSed the tired old pre-eouncil language of pOUties instead of the bull Cmiddot 5 pastoral language Of this modem middotageHe spoke of the At Home cis on ty tret

clearly the office of the diao federation as a manifestation ofmiddotuderi1ltgtcraeymiddot entering into During the pas-tfour months over 2000 more citi~ns~onate It is tbe duty of fie the life of the church - -6 ~h Co alth l~ ht from ther 1 1 nn ndeacon to the extent that he h8lll

91 Ii IS mmonwe u~ve 80u~ ~ JVCoiW -bullbull been authotized by eompeteDi

If there is anything that the Couneflpointed out it is permission to carry small arms-such as pIstols ~authorityto administer baptisii that the Church is not a politicai grouping and 8hould~ volvers Thousands more have made the sale of riflefl a~ 8Olemnly to be custodian and be seen in the forms and language ()f poliiics To d9thiB is very profitalble business The ~ dispenser of the -Eucharist

to take a narrow nationalisti~viewpointand to inssentirely the fact that the Church is eatholi~madelip oot only of fifty million Americans but some several hundredmiUiorts of other nationalities

What this national organization will do is to bring about among priests more of a sense of national and indeed world-wie awareness and responsibility toward the Church whose servants they are toward all peoples all over the world whose salvation they are pledged to seek

Their cooperation and advice will certainly be sought and accepted by the National Conference of Bishops who are pledged with if anything even more pointedness and responsibility to the saJ11e high~urPoses

But the national federation willbe ill-served if Speakers talk about it it) the language of a Political party or aPolit shyicalsystem The vision must be a wider- arid ~adeeper One than this

rheANCIIOR lIlC1~L NEWSPAPEROF THE DIOCESE OF FALL piVER Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Dioces~ of Fall Ri~er bull 410 Highland Avenu~

Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connoy~ DDPhDbull

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER ~

It Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev johnmiddot P Driscollmiddot MANAGING EDITOR

H~gh J Goldenmiddot

for the loss of private prOperty bring Viaticwn to the dying bull questionoow must be asked ValUed atmore than two binioD read thesacred~rpture touMi

Why are private citizens seeking to protect them- aelves in such a manner

Why musthomes ~ protected by priwte weapons The answer of Course is fear

Private citizens of this and every state in the Union certainshyly are well aware of the rising tide of crime In the last two yearsin this country there were two victims of serious crime per 100 Persons an -increase of more than 12 per cent over 1965 and a 50 per cent increase over 1960 And during the same period over 80000 armed robberies were reported

Robberies burglaries larshycenies and auto thefts accounted

fied person now is no longer interested in police work

This rapfd iricrease in crime together with the corresponding factor of ineffectual public ac tion has now underminded the trust and confidence of the pri shyvate individual I

He now fears that the state can no longer give him the pro- teetion he needs as a citizerr The results can be seen in the

increased sale of weapons to privatemiddotpersons The citizen can nolonger walk after dark in man) sectors of OW IIIbancomshy

dollars faithful to inlfiruct and exhod With this rapid increase m

the crime rate there has also been aTapid decrease in effec-

tivemiddot public oontrol of crime This is due 10 many factors Perhaps the most insidious fact

rests in the extreme liberalizashytion of the law

It seems under present jurisshyprudence the law favors the criminal factor and fails to proshyteet the true innocent

Hand-in-hand with this great tr~nd to protect the so-called rights of the criminal goes the rather ineffective police methshyods that have been imWsed upon our local protectors of the

public

Imbalance of Scales of Justice

The modem policeman soon munities his home is nOW-tIM becoJl1ell discouraged and irus- target of financial Security bat Uate9 by the intrigues and the dope addictmustJ)OSSeSlj subtle maneuvers of the law his very lifemiddot now dePends 011shyHe ends -up by Saying ~wbats his own skill and abilities

the use As a result the quali- Indeed this is a tragic utua- tion

The formation of a private vigilante ariny in thiseOUDtry

defeats the total concept of thisshyunion In a way it is more iJeshystrpctive than any force of criminal element to the Amershy

ican ideal If we are to have anymiddot solution to this problem the re- sponsible forces of law and order must begin to completely reevaluate their role in CIW society

The cancer of crim~ together

Ordination Continued from Page One

eharist they were alSo ordereal to evangelize and baptize ~ this sense they were minist~

who shared intimately in f3nj priesthood of the Bishop

The word diaconate comEQ from the greek word diaxonilllJl which etymologically meaoo SERVICE The deacons office means service to the Church 4) ministerial service to Go~ people The deacon was ordered to minister to the sick the pooa and the afflicted Since by ordishynation he is fUled with ~ Spirithe is ordered to baptiza (introduce the Spirit into tOO lives of new Christians) By ()Iloo

bull dination he is a dispenser of tb6 Holy Eucharist and a ministell of the Word of God He shares embryonically maybe but stR9 he really shares in the sacraa mental powers of Holy Orders (the power to baptize to preaCll and to handle the Eucharist)

Minister Since Vatican II the impoJlioo bull

tance of the diaconate has beeli restored We hear even of tbe

possible restoration of a pe manent married diaconate FOI a long time the diaconate W81

just another step a vital OM yes but merely another step 1101 ordination to priesthood TOO diaconate was always considered to be a major order howev~ history made it to be sort ad unimportant and unhea~d of blv Gods people

The deacon Is a minister eI the Church His role in the local

has already received (in the ord~r of subdiaconate) thO Churchs delegation to pray the daily the Divine Office to be

ai PrayeJ The d~acon is ~

just a glorified Mass server iii the tniest sense of this expree sion he is a minister of Jesu Christ theSpeonlelemiddotdlliough rrlest

t The - ConstUidfon on --

Church has spelled out veq

the people to preside at ~ woShip and prayer Of ~ faithful to administer sacrampshymental and to officiate atf n~rals and burial services (art 29) In the ordination rite one III made a deacon by the Bishop laying on ot hands through thJ8 imposition of hands the deacoA receives a share in the Bishopll mission which is this ministrp to Gods people The deacoa takes on the duty of the minisshytry which was described a~ove

because he is co-missioned the Bishop to do so On June first Bishop Conn

ly will ordain eight men o the diocese to this office MCy remember these deacons in_ prayers that they might beshycame men full of faith filledwi~ th~breath of Gods spi generoUs servants Qf tbii Church and faithfu(witIi~

of gods beat Love for lIisholy peOple iIi the loCal ChurcD Fall~River 0 bull

unless society as a whole begu to wake up and act as a colleoo tive unit Liberty is nOt license mil justice is not self righteousneMo

middotAs this criminal elEfment beshycomes organized so too theeIshyfective control of crime

becoine a community effort JIIi single person can effect tile changes that must be undse taken but each man bound gether in a common effort

with the disease of individuality yet save tbiI 8hip ol natkmll will destroimiddot our Dational b0d7 p~

Clergy Ap~ntments AHect 16 eontinued from Page One Aft$ Portugal on Jan 29 1933 ~e newly ordained prie3b the son of Julio F llJld Blandina

tfust assigned are (Ferreira) da Sllvnmiddot -Rev Edwlllrd Eo Correia ~ After preliminary studies at

ur Lady of Vic1lol)7 Church the Seminario de S Jose FelshyCenterville 1Ueiras Portugal Father da

Rev Edmund JJ mtzgerald b Silva entered the CongregatioQ lJoly Name Church Fall River c2 the Missions (Vincentians)

Rev George E Harrison to 81 Imd studied at the Seminario de ~seph Church Taunton _ S V~cento de Paulo Limpiaf

Rev William J Hurley w ~( sanmiddottander and the Seminario Stanislaus Church Fall Rive1 ~ 818 Teresinha Felgueiras

Rev Comelius l Kiley ta Si JPIortugal seph Church JiaU River Ordained a priest OD July 19

Rev Robert A McGowan w Jl959 he returned to the semlshyCnrpus Christl Church sand-ll1ary to serve as instructor and

middot~ch m 1964 as seminary rector On Rev Donald 11 Messier to St Nov 1 1966 he was appointed

8hn the Baptist Church Fall sssistant at Mt Cannel Church niver New Bedf~rd

Rev Kevin F Tripp to Nqtro Jliltllneli lllitellneTIll Dame University fur Swprner Rev Edward Joseph Mitchell

middot c1Iudieampmiddot ronmiddot of William and Anne 17on~1i lLo~eg (Grace) Mitchell was born iml

One of six children Rev Wall Rivermiddot Jan 21 1932 EdushyIDhomas C Lopes assistant Bit ~ated in Fall River publie St Elizabeth Church Fall River schools Father Mitchell attendshynras born at Oak Bluffs on Aug ed Prevost High SChool Fall 14 1938 the son of Constantine River before stu~Ying at St ood Viola (Authier) Lopes Charles Se~inary- CatonsYille

After elementary and second- Md StMary ~eminary Baltishycry schooling on Marthas Vine- more Md and NOiIth Americali JBITSlHIO]S CONGlRAT1UlLAIlE U1UJBilLARJrAN Prior to the Mass of Thanksgiving Ofd yoard he studied ampt St~ ThoIIias College Rome fered by Bishop Connolly in the Sacred Heart Ohurch in honor of the priestly golden jUJ ampminary Bloomfield Conn Ordained a priest (lID Decla bilee of Rt Rev Felix S Cltildspastoremeritus three Bishops congratulate the jubil2lacrnd 51t Tohn Seminary Blrighton lQ5~ the Fall River priest rian Bishop Gerrard Bishop Gorman of DaU8I8 Te~as preacher Msgr Childs Bishop Ordained ) priem on FebmiddotlS served as assistant pastor aJt

Connolly who celebra-ted th~ lVlase1965 Father middotLopes has_ served Sacred Heart Church Taunton Gl assistant EitI Stmiddot EHzahetb and Sacred Heart Church Fall

Ohurch Fall middotRivermiddot since ord- lRiver before returning to

rultion l7atbeli mB~ ~ tou~~for~ S~~di~a Atm~OU~~~ ~ ~terf(llmthmiddotThe~gy ~ rnJS~0t((l[jj~h~ mev Ernest E Blais assistant Law

crt st Louis de France SWan- Since his return from Rome ~ rL l1f IJ ~ J1I 0 JI II fC A-- c2a was born May 26 1918 Am lTllIther Mitchell has served as ~~lfl]lli tr[(8 1m(Qj ~QW Ii lteS5 lJ sectl1ro1f ~Dlflm

middot Pawtucket R r the SOllll of assistant at Holy Name Churclilp BALTIMORE (NC) _ 1middotLa-__ is1 n Hi ~ rl L Doll of Maryland have aspects as well as their theologa ~ry (Bouchard) Bla anellthe Q ver rence Cardinal Shehanmiddotmiddot0f-i3i1lti- Jointly announced the openlng I ddtmiddot I d I ~e Edgar Blais i lFatllner Moll~ lea an oc nna eve opment

After schooling in Pawtucket I Ordained May 20 1i6f Rev more ati~ Epis~opalBis~o~Har- of an Ecumenical Evening lyenJIe~t Great NeOO middotn 1 Father B8ls prepared fur lJ~mes Harold Morse son of School of Theology for all qual- The institute represents a new

ifiedifhe priesthood at the seminarieo George and Grace (Prendergast) Arthur Flerrimingto mention candiates of any faith in idea in theological education ~ the Oblates 0 Mary Immmiddotacu- orse ~as bom - Rumford the Baltimore area M t h bUl -- ~ only a few of the Coalitions Th tt t h h os senunanes ave eeiilAn

~e Ordained to flhe priesth-- m I on April ~ 1939 After bull e IDS I U e w IC opens ill planning moves to secular unishyuvu founding fathers-strikes me asmiddot S t b U be ted t

on June 25 194A he servedmiddotM studving at St Mary School ep em er Wl AOca a t d 11 t th missionary in __ Cayes Hal 1t1f1rside R I ~d St Ra~ael being rather sophomoric and St Marys Roman Catholic verSI les an 00 eges momiddot e

Ugt JltWv~ strangely ou~ of character for a Semi h d 11 t seminary environment bull lIDtil appointed 00 middotSt Lou- ~- Pawtucket R I he oontmued nary ere an WI gran Jiather John Thlrkell iS shy paper which professes and gen- t _ d doc gtUmasFrance Swansea on Sept lllt Stbull Thomas SeminaryBloom_ er 0 11 an or 0 dean of the institute and shytgt erally lldheres to reasonably hil h d E lIm t ~ 52middot bull ed Conn and St ohn Semi- p osop y egrees nro en R d C S h M

poundJ JU A ampI high standards of editorial fair- 1 Iso be everen tep an ann anPIlther _ Brighton He has served Wlu a open to students not An r t f E 1 ~

llDvuoe - Lad th neas anq courtesy ireeKinga degreemiddot g Ican pnes rom ng an bull Rev Dm-a A Lamiddot-middotie - as asSistantmiddotat OW y of e 0 f associate dean

tuU v C on use Issu~ The facwtyof 18 is compOsed IS

Ief Herineneoil6e and Dena Assumption atbedral Fan Tlrdly whether Wlttingly or ofprofessors from St Marys In announcing the institutes ~ (Ouelette) Lavoiewas hom mgtmiddotv~rsince otdiXlati9J1 1 oot NCR was playmg games Johns Hopkins Un i v e r lJ i t y opening Cardinal Shehall middotmiddotmiddotmiddotftIl River OnmiddotJjm 1 i930 ~liumiddot4Fa~~~ wthilyDbers when forth~ Goucher College Baltimore He- pOnted out that up to nowthere A gradua~ of~t Ma~ea llev ~~~as Ill4W~ O~~ I~1ltwe~k in arqwi~susPi-brew College Loyola College has been no institution in the middot r8choo1 Fall Diver Flltber La- lllS~t ~ ~ James Church eiously contrasted the interim MountmiddotSt A Con d Baltimore arcbdiocese equipped middot vole studied at ~~PttOIllmiddot middotN~wBeiifordmiddotwasbomOctmiddot30middot sumof$25 thousand granted to1

the unlversii pe~r~aa to give special courses in the Prep Ilrtd COllege WoIeeSter 1934 in Taunton Ute son ofmiddotmiddotmiddot themiddotmiddot SoCialmiddot Action middotDepartmentmiddot field of religious education

middot where he obtained a BA Siun_Mlilirice OJeii ~ the 1a~ of the USCatholicmiddotConferencemiddot ~~y will teachco~ses in the He said -that he thought the middot mi cum 13ude Afterattetidfni1Marguerite (Dineen)OJ)ea for a~istra~ionexp~nses with ~aJor ~ofld ~~lglOns fro~ ~v- institute would meet a very

Ifhe Grand SeriUnaire hi Mon- His elementary and secondary the sum ofmiddot$22 million allocated era pomts of VIew and will an- great need in preparing college ibeaI Oanadahe was ordatned education was pUrSuedat Im-by tbeblshops oil an emergencymiddot aIyze ~he beliefs of the R~)Jnan gr-aduates to work in various Ia priest at the Cathedral ~Fan D8culate ConceptionSChoollmd basis to the Catholic University ~llliCI fhUrch ~eProtestant types ~ religious educationand

bull B1ver oil April 25 1959 Magr Coyle High School Taun- of America 1 81 s am Jud8lsm snd the in other apostolic work

I

iather Lavoie haa served as middotton His seminary fonnation was These two figures are com-middot ~~ons o~ the Far East middot IlSlfistant at st Miehael Church obtained at Our Lady of Provi- p1etely unrelated to one another and ~~studY the onglns

OCean Grove st fosepb dence Seminary Warwick Neck The editors of NCR must know rl ~eyelopment Cf Church Attleboro and sinee R][ Stonehill College North -and in fact explicitlystated themiddot ~arl~i reli~on8 and win hn 1962 at Notre Dame de Easton and st John Seminary in the course of their May 8 ed- examme e r SOCial and ethical lLourdes Fall River Brighton itorial-thlilt the tolal amount of

Father Martins Ordained III prie~ by Bishop Church money which will be Irotestant Chaplain Son of Joao and Rita CandIlda eonnollyon Jan 30 1960 Father allocated to inner city projects DETROIT (NC)-Dr Gene B

EFerreira) Martins Rev Jooo ODea has served as assistant at throughout the United states Montague an Episcopalian clershylOiprilKlo Martins was bom ~ st James Church New Bedford will undltlubtedly far exceed the gyman has been named first S Sebastiao Tenelra Azores since ordination figure of $22 million Protestant chaplain of the on Aug 11 1991 lf they wanted to argue that Jesuit~perated University of

Edltcmteltl in public schoohl b t PI even at l1hat the Church win Detroit Father Malcolm Carron ehe~ he entered the Seminario

p

middotres Y erOGJnS an notmiddot be meetings its obligatIons SJ president bas announced ltIe Angnn lierceita Azores R Cmiddotmiddot~ A middottmiddot they were perfectly free to de I

middot where he was ordained a Priest ace lrISOil cion liO but in my opinion they elIlIWIlIilIIllIlIlIlHIIIIIIWlllIlJlmnllllillllllll~ on April 10 1955 CINCINNATI (NC) -Presby shouldnt have confused the is- El DRY CLEANING El

i on Dec 13 1955 Father Mal1- - terians of this area p~dged~ SUe by dragging Catholic Uni- sect d sect Ilhs came to serve as assistant_m~t the racial risis with mversitys stepped-up budget into El an -El

at St Antbony Of Padua Churcln rllrograrrt of education and action the discussion as ~ rect herring sect fUR STORAGE sect m Fall River I1n~ ten years nclld~ng the est~li~~en~f1f fa Touch of ~greement sect DERMODY sectI

Qilter at St Anthony ChUrch n~w k1[~~ of congr~ga~lpn focus- ][n conclusion I must lillY that -El - El lElast Falmouth eli SPfCif~lIl~Yon ~acIa~ ~cltm- Xfull~ agree with the final par- sectCLEANERS sect

Father da Silva lt~iat~on agraph in NCR~s criticism Qf the El El ~ Vincentian Priest Rev Joa- Leaders of the Unimiddot~ed PJe~by- bishop~ progrm The trouble sect 34-441 CohannetStreet sect

CjU1m Ferreira Fernandes ella ~rians of the Cincm~~ti area with attackin~ racism is that sect TaUfl~on 822-616n sectm

Silva was bom in Vila dft9 said the new coDgmiddotrega~lonwould all the attackers themselvoes == - == ~X~ for perhaps three Qr four ~ffer from a touch of the dis- iiIIllIIllIIlIlIlIIllIIllIllIlIIllIIlIlIllHlIIlIIllIllllllllllllilii

~ellrs and WOUld CkawUgeth- ease and that alltheirpro-middotmiddotmiddot--__---11

Want Sta~p~ ltin ~ nucllS of comernedper-graIIlli could be better middot B1EFORE YOU Ffhe Siste~ of St Francis of ~Qs ~romexistiDg ~on~re~qyen()ns ~9W true-not 0nlY of ptpm- BUY -1ll

~egany jl Y express thankD I ~embers of the new CODgr~ga- inent ecclesiastics but presumshytn Ancho readers for sending ti~ wJUch will hlven~ build- ably of lllthe rest ofus as well PARK

them ca~celled ~lffiPS f9r for- mgQt its own will te ~~~ to inclJdiog I must lssme- the MOT0 IS eign missiol$ an4 ask th~t sup ~~ a ~covenant inQicaPng editors of even our most lib-I middot~ft continu~ dlUing tqe ~tmi- ther fuU com~itmel)ttoracial eral Citholic p~riodicals

Der months T~ei~ add~ss is St reconciliation and pledging We arelll in thisthjng to- OLDSMOBilE )ilichael~Stamp ~ureat st~~lf t4me and ~urcesf()r onegether and wea11 ~aveoUii OlUsmobile-Peugot-RenCiuit

bull ~~I~~be~hsiMo~pfh9~4llc- fJijyeir odQ(r the ex9centc~we ~rlt cut QUt ~ llil That13 fo 67 Middle Street Falrhavenmiddotmiddot PRY N1l ~ h~ ~ co~r~gati(lo t j ~ _

CENTER Paint and Wallpaper

Dupont Paint cor Middlo Stiiii 422 Acush Ave

Campampt New Bedford PARKING ~ Rear of Store

Tbe Best

~orrw~Ho Tr~pp SHEET METAl

Jl 1lESER Prop fftESIDENTIAl

iNDUSTRIAl COMME~pAU

253 e~all St New iampldf1d 993-3222

- ~ANCHORl)ioceseofFa RiYer-JIlh~Moy 23 l9cS8

---------------------------shy

~~Says Therre -Arr~ N~ lomnits b T ChrrD~llDcopyHru ~reg~~ITi)~D~D~DifY

~ lffiiY JBa]baJla Ward

l ihe amptarting point Pol judging our-role in the world Us ro lrnow where we are-Ohristians living in the wealthy West a white minority making up about 20 per cent of the worlds peoples and enjoying 80 per cent of the worlds ~me But this is only a ~nning a raw statement If fact And as we know Ilhwts rarely present themshyrelves without a oontext They (ilODle to us in a dense package IOf assumptions ond e~periences

1lake such a ~t as that Mr Brown worth a IlDillion dollars gives nothing to iltirs Smith This Is a fact JIlul- iliPlied a thoushysand times over by all the BroWns who do IiWthing for all ~ Smiths But suppose Mrs Smith is his widowed older sisshyter Iho rovingly brought himmiddot 1ilP as a boy Then the fact of ibis indifference becomes a comshypletely different fact because ~ eoJ1text has changed

Sense e(1 ltDomtext Most of the facts of our oonshy

temporary scene require this oonse of context They do not eome to us neat and bare And ~e first thing that has to be lJ8id about us as Christians is presumably that our context of presuppositions and oommitshyment is somewhat different ilrom that of anyone else

The Gospels are full of the lldea that the Christian angle of

o vision cannot be simply intershyehangeable with the secular or

worldly point of view Leaven makes bread rise because it is differenj Salt gives a taste beshyeause it is not identical with the 2ood Light shines in darkness because light and dark a~e disshyiWlguishable

All these images of the Chrisshy(gan community imply being other different set apart but at the same time guiding inshyGPiring changing ald entering into the whole sum of human ~xistence We are different but our aim is communion We are lteall~ to a vocation but the vocation is unity How is this fundameintal context of Chrisshyiian living to be interpreted in rtbe modern age

Personal Fortune Let us look at two widely

occepted reactions to modern facts and see how they square with the Christian vision The first concerns personal fortune On balance in the landli where the bulk of Christians live the White wealthy post-Christian oocieties of the North AtIantic~ North America Bribin Westshyern Europe - the basic notion about income is to increase it iIIJld about wealth to accumulate to

In general a familys standshyIIllds of living its ciaims on reshylIOurces and its expectations of ilun an~ comfort gO up in step

Institute Participant yeniss Marjorie A MorinNortb

Westport a faculty member at ~cred Hearts Academy Fan Ri~er bas been named as one cent 44 ~igh ~ool bi~19gy teachshy~rs frorn18 states to participate iln a Summer institute on recent bigh school biology curriculum ~evelopments at Wells College Aurora N Y The institute will be in session from June 30 through Julyen S

with bigher earnings One can find it hard to make both ends meet and be resentful of taxes at $6000 a year $12000 a year $24000 a year $48000 0 year ~d so on up - in fact since

taxes rise with income COlIlshy

plairits can be higher as wealth increases even though expendishytures now oover two houses and three cars

Christian teaching in stark contrast reminds us that the higher the income the greater the responsibility The final counsel of perfection was given to the dcb young man sell

all you have and give to the poor- Short of this evengelical extreme the wealthy must not satisfy their oWllJlising supershyfluities at the expense of the basic needs of others 11 they dothey will enter eternity as easshyily as a ca~el through the eye of a needle-not a wholly reasshysuring analogy for our Western societies who bave never had it so good

NQ lLfimfits A secHid pre-suppositionmiddot~

eontempolary society is that chapel z Mount St Mary Con- f te li d d or en rmg re glon an was n obligatIOns an responsibilities vent and a dInner f~r Csters t fr ti A ~ 031 teacher and principal at manyop a on ers man ofdifshyt ferent national I y or citizenship f al 18 no arm ooncern of ours The Gospel approach IS whollydifferent All must)be fed even-shythe least of the little ones All must be clothed and sheltered Even if th th dtch is

e ~an In e 1 a Jew and his rescuer a Samarshyillan their traditional enmity must make no diHerence~ The centurions son is cured even if he is in modern terms a hated

SJl8TER MJIJRlAM RSM o

former DiocesoD1l Supervisor Completes 50 Years As ~eiigiolUJs Sis~er of Mercy

Fifty years in religious life Katherine -ONeil retired prinshycipal of the Aldrich School inwill be marked Sunday by SisshyFall River Both are memberster Miriam RSM former eleshyof Holy Name parish Fall Rivermentary school supervisor in

the Fall River Diocesan systemON II St Louis JgtarishRev Pa trick el supennshy

tendent of schools will cele- Sister Miriam is a native of brate a Mass of Thanksgiving St Louis parish Fall River She at 1045 Sunday morning in the was a public school teacher beshy

and the JubIlanans ~~edIate~m Diocesan schools before beingfaml 11 f II I Y WI () ow appointed a supervisor in 1941

A reception will be held after together with Sister FeIicitadi f t S

e nner or V1S~ mg Isers RSM The two Mercy Sisters ~d a seoond recepti~n fr served as supervisors under

fnends and former p~pl1s WIll the late Rev Edward J Gorman take place from 2 to 5 m Mt Sl ana under Father ONeill pres-Mary Academy library ent superintendent of schools Bec~~vingguests wit~ the until their retirement in 1966

jubllanan WIll be her Sls~ers Since that time they have M~ James Conlin retIred tutored and aided students with prmcIpal of the Mason Barney reading problems at Mt Sl

imperialist There is neither School Swansea and lIfiss Mary COnvent Jew nor Gentile bond nor free ~ bullr

in the a)l-enoompassing gener~ J ~

=~~k~~ ~P-9morL13~J of our prayer Thy Kingdom

40~s eolumn will therefOe try over the coming months to give not only the facts about our strange new world round which the astronaut strolls in 90 minutes It will try tosug gest the oontext without which Christian judgment and re- sponse are hardly possible For if we judge only as secular cit shyizens will the salt keep its taste May it not be fit only to be thrown down the drain

~ L ~ IIrencn lIovor Priests Holding O~her Jobs

PARIS (NC)-A recent surshyvey indicates that Frenchmen are in favor of priests working at n~n-priestly jobs and being marned _

The editor-in-chief will 1roW~D1DXNG GOWNS rm afraid Im overworking the

word romantic in describing the fashions this season but with such-anabundance of frills and tiny waists it seems the only fitting adjective Nowhere does the word crop up with shym 0 r e meaning than when one is trying to convey the imshypression given by the fashions iQr the 68 bride Bridal gownsfor late Sumshymer and early Fall weddings are now being shown and snapped up dewy-eyed brides-to-be

by

~ a survey ~nducted by the Gone are the outlandish 1ent SocIety FrancaJse dEnquetes eire th par ~ndage (SOFRES) 00 Per sses e weIrd IDllll des~gns centCIf those questioned both ~ tte h~v~~ ~ere dSlgnS Catholics and non-Catholics re- Ig wIg ts e Pia~ f~W garded it as normal for a priest ~aso~s als are as n l~

1Q praclice a lleCUiar profession wedding g~wns ~ tor so many and 51 per cent said that work degthther fUlootfitBkmiddot ~lS slelas0ben but by priests in a f~ri or 011amp ey 1ftgt especlay auti shyconstruction JOb is ood ~ in thlS dre~ of dresses One

very g lovely princess design by Ven because that ereates an exchange b - rio1-1- ~ ~ be tb Ch as nerrow s pear

bullween e Ulch and the dli -- fimiddotmiddot 10 workers 0 nIng gure- rIDIng seven out~ 10 persons 81lIr- Bi~h~uette ~Cthe~ by Frmk

veyed favored -marriage for ~zzo for Pandora ~as an Ehzashypriests ~because that would per- bethan aJr to it WIth its lov~ly mit them to better understand 1Jff of OhantIllr lace ~ndmg family problems and difficul- bI~h around the neckline and ties And 25 per cent of those _spIlling d~wn the sleeves surveyed are convinced that Fur-Trimmecll GoWlm

soon~r or l~ter women will be If youre planning an elegant ordaIned prleStamp wedding m the late Fall ~

Alois Schardt a Bavarian tele- early Winter and money is no vision n~ws editor Dr HeE-oobject Mirra has designed a mann Abs of the Deutsche Bank gown with a bodice and sleeores of broadtail cuffed around the wrist and neckline with white mink The price-a mere $800 the price of a good living room oouch but then you could al shyways sit on old orange crates and admire your stunning wed ding pictures

Even the bridal hairdo is as hearts and flowers as Elizabeth Barrett Browiling Curls fall over shoulders peek out from under mantillas and veils and are even caught back in kershychief headpieces If your own

hair refuses to wave never mind curl order some stick-on curls ahead oftime to keep the romantic air

By BOme unexplained miracle all brides are b~autiful but this year the designers are giving the miracle workers a boost in JOWDS that spell romance

New Bedfordilea Elect Officers

The slate of officers el~ to serve for the 1968-69 year d the Catholic Womans Club clil New Bedford are Mn Thomas P Barry president Miss Jean

A McGinnis first vice-p~ dent Mrs Raymond M Atw~ second vice-presisient Mrs ViiDo cent L Hughes recording s~

retary Mrs Maurice A Hurl~ corresponding secretary lViM Charles D Phelan treasureJl Registrars named for ~ coming year are Mrs Ricbam A Parsons Mrs Norman amp Sylvia Mrs Albert J LamolZgt reux Mrs William A Horai Mrs Robert A Vermette lIhe Henry J Fanning Jr Mrs Joseph N Joseph Mlamp3 Dorothy A Curry and lIlra Roland F Mathieu will $erve mJ mrectors

Nome Laymon Official Of Catholic Schoois

MEMPHIS (NC)-Bishop JO seph A Durick apostolic adJ ministrator of the NashVille dl ocese has confirmed the apshypointment of William G Ho~

as administrative assistant tIlll Msgr John A Elliott dioce~ superintendent of schools

In his new Post Hoyt wild serve as coordinator for prCF grams that receive local and federal aid to private schoolBp in addition to general assistance in the overall responsibilities 001 the school board and supeJlgto visors

There are 18 Catholic blgili schools with 5892 students ancll 53 elementary schools with 15

405 students in the Nashvl1lG diocese which comprises the

entire state of Tennessee

Pro~estants to SerVe 0111 Catholic Paperr

BONN (NC)-Protestanf jOllDD nalists will serve on the editoshyrial staff of a new German nashytional Catholic weekly aimed at readers on a high intellectual level which will begin publbshy

-ction in September - Most of the 20 editors wh

will be selected fqr the weeklys staff will be drawn from the ranks of the secular daily press

has been elected director of the papers board of trustees

A total of $4000000 has been raised from among the Well0 Ge~an dioceses to finance the establishment of the paper Wgt be named Publik Stockwill ~ issued

~fiDDY Dining IN YHE

JOILRY WHAlLER -ANID--

SPOUTER INN RESTAURANTS

Always Free Parking

New Bedford Hotel

NASON Oil COMPANY

Our Heating 7 Perry Avenue

Oils Malee Taunton Mass Warm FrienJs 822-2282

Dailymiddot Aittention Necessary To ~[f~Dceate We~~~

1B1y 1J~JlDill alii wnJillYJil ~~

The ~ are on their way and 11 lreems that half r our time i1l spent digging them out ~ the garden No matter haw much time we Gpomd on them they have a way of reappearing within Q few days ad 1l1Inless we really live them OUattention they ean take over a garden middotin lW time Beginning gardenem

bull WOO approaeh gardemng casshyaally or em weekends are often ~helmed by these unwel-CIOme pests ond soon give up the Ilbip Our suggestion is that M)

minutes II day B sufficient to keep even big gardens weeded fithe gardener will get out into Illie garden every day This maw mean nomiddot mOIre than a short trip BIound the garden to look mt Ole plants and to pull out a few ~ds encountered on the weJr

Few llilmtJtes Dadlly

We usually keep a small wamshyms hoeohandy by the back door and as we PlVPare to go to worlx take a short walk in the garden hoe in hand to see what is new The result is that we spend flw minutes or so in the garden beshytore setting out for work in the morning 10 minutes at lunch and ap~roximately 10 minutea before dinner after the working day is over which incidentally il a good time to ioosen up ~

t1ore tearing the kids heads oIif llDr all the misdeeds of the day

The point is that weeding u

attitudes t2lat vtll shape their future are beginning now and IllS theU friends and relatives wish them well they pray that each couple will enjoy the graces and happiness that come from a good Christian marriage with Christ in the home

Ad~ Atmosphere Often a wedding gift can add

to the atmosphere of a Christian home One such gift is a plaque that hangs in our den On it are these words

Sacrifice s usually difficult and irksome only

Love can make ~ easy and perfect love can make it a

Joy I couldnt think of a better

motto with which to begin 0 marriage or one that becomes

more significant through sleepshyless nights with sick babies frustrating job problems or the everpresent money worries Qlat asually plague young couples

A handsome cross a richlY llIustrated b~ble a handsome religious Gtatue or plaque are eccellent gifts to begin a Chrisshy

11 th h t Uan couple on the road to Il we as many 0 er cores mus ~ done on n day-today buis cmd cannot be left for weekendll because there are so many other tmportant things that have to be ltilone then

The grass has to be cut a new lInge put on a door there is a ball game to watch a ride 00 take a tree to be pruned etc Cll of which ore time-eonsuming _ lIIllU necessary With the weather we have been exPeriencing al -te th d~n~ e ~ weedmg gives ll3 middot Iln oPprtunity to g~t a hWe ~h lUI 11 commodity whiclill middot D3ems t0 be gettmg scarcer fa 001 industrial live~ and ehance to commune With Nature een at the wrong end of n

lim tle Kltcbellllmiddot

Did you know that during a wedding ceremony the groom places the ring on the finger of Ule bride because the circlemiddot of gold symbolizes the love and devotion that from this moment on will have no end This is but lti)ne of the many traditions that lJlave come down through the years and now are an accepted ~rt of the Cana celebration

Another must for a wedding dJ the wedding cake that fur eenturies has signified breakshymg of bread in kinship as it Is ll1anded out to friends and relashyves Even the veil that graces tlle l)ead of the beautiful bride b a custom that has come into llUes~nt time from the days when the brides stood under eanopies to show that they were IIDlder the protection of the glOOrp

All these ancientgt traditions give a Uttle added meaning to lYle Cana feast and the sacred acrainent of matrimony but ltWen more significant are the rostoms and traditions that the 1l1Jride and groom will carry into rife as a f~ly Many of the

polsh Mmiddotsommiddot

n ill ~ilI CHiCAGO (NC)-First copies

of the Polish vernacular altar

gful C th li lif Let meanm a 0 c e someone else buy the sheets a~d and ~asters ma~e your pft one Wlt~ eve~las~lDg mea~ll~g

If ou re 1hinking of givmg ~ bridal shower in the n~ar future perbaP you w0llld hke to serve a Bndal Puddmg

Bridal Pudding 2 envelopes unflavored gelatiJm

cup cold water b ili t

llff If cup deghte wa er egg W I StI- ~_

74 aspoon - cup suglllr

q h cups eavy cream (ilDrgetth diet)

1 teapoon vamplilla 1 flaked tcup coconu 1) Soften the gelatin in the k

cup cold watermiddot and then pour the 1fJ cup ofboiling water over the gelatin mixture and stir unntil dissolved Cool

2) Beat the egg whites until foam slowly add the salt and sugar and continue beating unshytil stiff peaks are formed

3) Fold the gelatin into the stiff whites

4) Beat the heavy cream until stiff and add the vanilla Fold the cream into the whites and gelatin mixture

5) Rub the bottom and sides cf an eight-inch spring form pan with butter and sprinkle the bottom with lh cup of the coconut Pour in the cream mixshyture Sprinkle with the remainshying coconut -ltld chill at least four hours or overnight Upshymold and serve with s1rawshyberries and the following rum sauce

lltum Sauce 6 egg yolks (see we didnt

want them to go to waste) 1 cup sugarmiddot

04 cup dark 111m cognac or kirsch

1) Beat the yolks until lemon colored and slightly thickened

2) Gradually beat in the Dugar

Stir in half the rum and cook in tOp of a double boiler over boiling water stirring constantshy131 until the sauce coats a woodshy

THE ANCHORshy

lHIONOR MOTHER lPlilElRRE Mother Pierre Marie of St Annes Hospital Fan River left meets Mrs Joseph Giblin Mrs Richard Donovan and Mrs Eugene Dionne all members of The Friends of St Annes on bhe occasion of the groups honoring the sister in reCognition of her reshyception of the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice Medal from Pope Paul

Aim Is Unity INIUlDil leads New )errsey Periodic White Walkerrs

Se~king to Ascertain Needs of Negroes ENGLEWOOD (NC)-Led by We are trying to find out

a Sister from St Cecilias High what the needs are she said School a group of white resi- We realized that we would dents have been making peri- look liketourists going through odic informal walking toWfl but you have to begin someshythrough the predominantly Ne- where gro Fourth Ward to meet the One result of the middotwalks was people living there

The walks inaugurated by Sister Robert Jean are made in mn effort to break down barriere fllll an area where rioting took place last Summer

Gif~~ Contfnued from Page Four

lNJlf~ihlmiddotAuBehCJH) $750

Jeweled Cross Co Inc $225

Attleboro Particular Council St Vincent de Paul

$200 Society of St Vincent de PaW

St Mary Conference $150

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J Wright bull $75 No Attleboro Catholic Womshy

0ns Club $50

Dr Eugene Leco St Anne Sodality Sacred

Heart Church $40

Edward N Cook Plate Co Inc $35middot

Albert Morawski $30

CYD-Sacred Heart Church $25

Frank M Miller amp Son Inc No Attleboromiddot Coal Co y H Blackington amp Co Inc

II neighborhood meeting at which white and black people discussed the visits and the posshysibility of further involvement in the needs of the Fourth Ward community------------

Universal Roofing amp Sheet Metal Co

Alden Corrugated Container Corp

Mass Trucking Corp New Bedford Hotel Macedo Pharmacy

$51 Building Materials Inc

$5 Sacred Heart Home

Daughters of Isabella Hyacinth Circle No 71

A Friend Damien Council K of C Harbor Beach Club amp Lounge Laurans-Standard Grocery Co

Inc $35

Glemi-on Roofing Co $30

Browne Pharmacy Inc $25

Browne Pharmacy A Friend Local No 168 UAW AFL-CIO Cape Cod Fabrics Philip J

Kane Inc Lions Club of New Bedford

Duplicating Equipment amp Supshyply Atty Jack London New Bedford Catholic Guild for the Blind Sharkeys Tire amp Rubber Comiddot

Tum oto Page Ten

Thurs May 23 1968

AJumna Rece~ves

Tdn~ty Award WASHINGTON (NC)-Doroshy

thea F Sullivan social worker and alumna of Trinity College here was presented the 1968 Julie Billiart medal at the schools Spring honors convocashytion

The annual award established in 1961 in honor of the foundress of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur who conduct the colshylege honors an alumna whose life exemplifies Blessed Julie Billiarts educational objectives -the formation of strong womshyen of faith devoted to God and neighbor living dedicated and fruitful lives

Miss Sullivan a member of the Trinity class of 1926 had been an associate professor at the Catholic University of Americas School of Social Sershyvice since 1941 She has been project director of the South Florida Neighborhood Youth Corps in Miami since 1966

She has been active in a numshyber of youth and welfare organshyizations has contributed articles to numerous periodicals and edited several books

Form Sisterrs 0 Coull1ld~

~Dil HawOJii Diocese HONOLULU (NC)-A Sisshy

ters council ill being formed here with the approval of Bishshyou John J Scanlan of Honoshylulu The council is composed of any Sisters in the diocese who desire to affiliate herself with the organizations objecshytives

The projected aims of the council are to serve as a chanshynei of communication among Religious communities and to the bishop the priests senate shylay senate other religious groups to serve as a source of unity and strength among Reshyligious to foster a closer c0shy

operation among clergy Reshyligious and laity and to be [1

means of coordinating the works of the apostolate after studying the religious educational socishyal economic and ecumenical needs of the diocese

Mfiltie P~Mmbnrwg amp HealltDOI~ (Oe Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Master Plumber 702i1

JOSEPH RAPOSA JR $06 ~O MAUIN $1ltlEfEii

lraaD rlovell 675a74~

SCHOOl MaonteilCllnCe SIlJlPPUO~

$WIEIE~IERS - $OA~$

IOlISUINJIr~CijANIIsect IrU~1E E)IliINGUUSIHIEIl$

DAHill COo nS86 IPUlRCHIASE SIlRIEIETI

NEW I8lEll)fO~1Ol

~9lJ-lJ7~6

~IIII11IJ1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I11I1I11I1I11I11II11I1I1I1I1I1I1I1IJ1I1I1I1I11I11I11I1I1I11I11UIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIII1111I11I

1 ~ESADAV~ lIIli~ls for use at Mass in Polish Coo en spoQn Do not boil Remove ltihurches and institutions in this from the heat and stir in the country have been received ~y remaining rum John Cardinal Cody of Ohicago In answer to - a letter from II member of the Consilium far Mrs Mogardo of Falmouth the Cbe implementation of the Con- amount of all-purpose cream 10 IJtitution Oll the Sacred Liturgy the Creme de Menthe Squares IUN~~A~m M ~58 icIIf the Second Vatican COIDlcil is one pint iillllllJllIlIIlIlIIlIIlIlIlIlIIlIIlIlIlIlIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIlJlIlIlIIlIIllUlIIlIIlIlIlIlIlIIlIIUIIUlIIlIlIlIlIlIUlIlIUIIUIIIIII~I~

I

THE ANCHORTDi~c~se of Foil River-Thurs May 23 1968 indiana Prelate ~ i l bull - 10 Heads NCEACrawford Electrical Co DrSpecial Gifts Morris Feresten Dr Frank L mAiN FRANCISCO r(NC) shy

Collins Mr amp Mrsmiddot John P Bish()p Raymorid J GellagMrContinued from Page Nine Dwyer of Lafayette Ind was ~le~ted

Attleboromiddot Hub Clothing Bristol ~it- president general Of the Nashyting Mills Inc Dixon Burial tionlll1 Catholic Educational Asshy$150

sociation at the final meeting ofVauit Shelburne Shirt Co IncBarry J Boardman Ins Agency $125 the asSoclation~8 6Mb Mnuat

Almeida Electric Co August Elmer C Slater

convention hereraquoIlr amp Mrs James G Heagney He succeeds Bishop ErnestBadwey amp Sons Joseph A Parks$100 Primeau of Manchester N HMrs Mar-y Courtis Dr amp MrsL G Balfour Co

who rervOO as president general Norman pSadler Brothers Inc for three yearsBedford House ConvalescentShields Inc A native of Cleveland BishopHomeInc Dr Sanford I Udis$60 Gallagher was ordained in 1939llI Joseph Madowsky HarveyAtherton Furniture Co~ and served as a Navy chaplainProbber Inc $50 during World War n He w~s

Demers Brothers narned bishop of Lafayette inM S Company 1965 following service as secreshy[P[(D$Iroreg$ $40

tary of the National ConferenceAttleboro Printing amp Embosshy of Catholic Charities

olng Co Inc ~WltWI7il$~ltW Speaker at the election sesshy$35 sion was U S Commissioner ofIOUlIt lLADY IOlF lFAllDMIAReynolds amp Markman In~ $25 Education Harold Howe who

$27 said that Catholic schools willMr amp Mrs Ralph A GuerrieroLeedham Hardware be especially guilty if they doMr amp Mrs Peter J Hoss lFlIt ADlIt][AN OJFM lFlIt lFAJlUAN OJFM $25 not act to solve the crisis of

Attleboro Sun Publishing Co ST IDOMIllN][C ghetto educationmiddotlnc Connelly Gold Stamping $25 Christianity is supposed toCo MacDonald Moving amp Storshy ~[j1Jil~O$ltC[(il$ t[ Our tLC1~ls ~hauraquocetiMr amp Mrs Thomas Paiva offer something more the age Co Marathon Company Mr amp Mrs Thomas C Murphy commissioner told the 6000

Plastic Craft Novelty Co Ob$erve $iver Priestiy Jubilees delegates at the final sessionSTLOUIS OF FRANCE On May 26th the 9 AM Retreat House Pittsfield N 11 ~Let us be fools for Christs

Fall Ri~er $50 MlIss will be conceleprated where _ he served as Retreat sake said St Paul middotWe Ladies of St Ailne raquoy the Franciscan Friars at Our Director and Master~ badly need highminded visionshy

$1200 Holy Name Society Ladys Chapel New Bedford Four years later _1964 Fr aries who can help the poorestFan River Electric Light Co st Vincent de Paul Sooi~ eonmiemoratingthe Silver Ju Fabian was transfe~red to Our of our children see a new dream $1000 $26 bilee of the ordination of) Fr Ladys Ohapel New ~d~()rd and faShion a better reality FOO

FirestoneRubbe~ amp Latex ~ Mr amp Mrs Herman Lamppoin4e Fabian F Joyce OFM and Fr where he has served to the pres- ournations sake Catholic edushy $600 I~ k Adrian F Donachie OFM ent time He is ViCar of the cationmust jointhe rest of edshy

~all R~~er GasCQllpanYj Fr Fabian is a native of Franciscan CommuIlity Father ucation to give them a neW $500 Vineyard iavenc Watertown He is an alumll~sof is well known thr~ughout the botizon

lVlr amp Mrs Henry ~ Feitelberl Boston College High SChool and area as a preacher for the St Mooney amp Co Inc middotUT AUGUSTINE

0Boston College He entered the Jude Novena devotions on$300 FIRST COMMUNION- $46L50 Franciscans of Holy - Nilme Thursdayat the chapel andtbeRev JosephF ODonnell ResidentSofCatholic MemoJillJ Province with headquarters in radio Apostolate

~o~e I $50 ~ PORTRAITSNew Yo~k City in 1937~ - Fr Addlln F Donachie Of~ $300 Mrs James Boyle He was ordained at the Na- is a native of Glasgow Scotland IN LIVING COLOUR

St Augustines GuildCitizens Savings Bank iional Shrine of the Immaculate and was brought up in NewSt Augustines Holy NameFR Five Cent Savings Bank Conception Washington D C York Oity H~ entered ~t $200 St Augustines St Vincent de May 29 1943 His first assign- Joseph s SeraphIcSeminary Jtl Anderson-Little Co inc lPaul Society ment was to St EIizabeths 1932 in preparatIon for the A -Friend $30 - T)enver middotColo from Franciscan Priesthood

$150 Mr amp Mrs William Figueiredo 1944 to Hi58 He was received into the

PR Peoples Cooperative Bank Mr amp Mrs Francis Metell _ Pastor and Supe- Order in 1937 and was ordained $135 $25 rior of the Church and Monas- six years later on May 29 1943

Herve Lagasse Cmdr amp Mrs Daniel Burgo tery in Denver in 1951 and at the National Shrine of the $125 Frank Coutinho Mr amp Mrs served in this capacity for Immaculate Conception Washshy

Cliff Nursing Homes Michael Fonte) Mr- amp Mr~ Eushy seven years ington D C His priestly Hfe$120 gene Frieh Mrs John Hughes In 1958 he was stationed at has been in New York Coloshy

J O Neill Supply Co Marthas Vineyard National St Bonaventure Retreat House rado Connecticut NewHampshy $101 Bank Rep amp Mrs Benjamin C Paterson N J for a period of shire and finally- stationed in ~ Fall River Shopping Ce~nter Mayhew Jr Mr amp Mrs Boleslaw two years giving laymens re- Our Ladys Chapel since 1956Associates Nickowal Mrs Dean Swift 11 treats and days of recollection Fr Adrian came with the origishy $100 Mr amp Mrs Frederick Thifault to the clergy He was then nal group of Franciscans ~o staff

Norbut Mfg Co Inc transferred to St Anthonys- Our Ladys Chapel THE FINEST QU~LITYSullivans of Fall River dk Wareham Hyannis IS WORTH THE PLEASANT

H P Hood amp Sons Inc ST PATRICK Famed Church -Gift SHORT DRIVE TO THE I bull Borden amp Remington Co $50

AREAS LEADING STUDIOr Louis Hand Inc middotMr amp Mrs Thomas Choate To Mission SocietY William T Manning Colnt Mr amp Mrs middotWilliam McLaugbshy BOSJO~ (NC) B~stons

j OPEN SUNDAYS Radio Station WALE I lin famed St Stephens church hasbull Dring Communion Seasonbeen - turned over by Richard

Dr amp Mrs Americo Almeida ~ W Hurley Co Cardinal Cushing to the Misshy $75 $30

Walter A Fur-man Co $45

8io~ary society ot St James ~ BRIDAL PORTRAITS Beetlemiddot Plastics Albert- Guerzoni the Apostle 311d Deluxe Quality Candicts Fall River Lodge No 118 BPO $21 famous for RESERVE YOUR DATE EARLY - The edifice _a short distance E~~ Mrs Am~lia JJaptiste _ from the home of Paul Revere

St- vincent de Paul Salvage - $25 and other Revolutionary War ~rve as QUALITyand EvANS STUDIOS

JBureau Nlr amp I([rs Franci~Murp~y shrines will head- St Patricks Wofuens Guild Miamp Mrs Julius ]~abbitt -I quarters for the society which 18 MAIN STTAUNTON middotCall Rivermiddot Mr amp ~rs JsephNorris the ~ardinal founded to do mis- SERVI(E Tet 822-1181

sect(6nwork in Latin AmericaProvidence Pile Fabric Corp $50 St Stephens church was deshy

Robert L Germaine Inc o o

Atty amp Mrs JohriJ Harringshy OUR LADY OF LOURDF8 whose works also include tne ton $5 Massachusettsmiddot State House It

Simons Supply Co Inc Massasoit Hills Trailer Iark was first used as a CongregashyThe J L amp R Cohen Foundashy Inc

siglled by Charles BlJlfltJch

tienal church but with the influx ~ion of Catholics during the inlmishy

Nira WarehOUse Mart Inc West Harwich gration of the early 1800s it was $45 purchased by the Boston arch-

Drobyski Wallpaper Co HOLY TRINITY diocese $60 In 1964 Cardinal Cushing$40

Dr Harry Cooperstein Mr amp Mrs Theodore F Berg spent more than $1000000 W haus restore the building$30

Ashton Funeral Home $50 Magonis Ferry Landing Mr amp Mrs Manley E Boyce Priests COll1ference

$25 $26 STEUBENVILLE (NC) ~ A Atty Kenneth Sullivan Mr Captain William House group of priests here has fOJmed

- Mrs Lewis Morley Hathaway - $25 -- a CQnference of Steubenville ~nelal Service Cook Bord(l1 ~oha Gillahan Mr amp Mrs Priests to create a general

Co Dr Harry Levine Joseph lttiltpetteMr ampMrsJohn ~pirii of priestly fraterJ~iiy and l)rDa~id P~Iill Tyrells Mar- E Ke~ly ~r Mrs yen~j~ Cor- - professionalism Msgr 0

t Cascaltle Drug CoProfes- ra~o HarQJd~RmiddotMcK~nna ~Tolin A Cymbor pastor ()fStgt Qff~rincllid~SPeciaIILinlie9n~n~ $3 w~rf~ 0( ~ I~al ph~i-rnacy hr havills Mrs R R~ SmalI AnthonYThete~esect Church Piney F6rk

-- middote~rHolvitZampHorvitz Ryan MrampMr~_-JQnljMul- wasnamedtempotary chairman Ride TicketsFor additional details or reservatic5nsmiddot call Mrmiddot Conrad Feriamiddot at (4Ql) RE 14kgtOO collectl lC

High Point Fording Box Corp llnsMr-ampmiddotMrsAllgterf Daven- and chosen to repiesimt the _ ~ ~

A RossEvetett Motors port Mramp Mrs Frank Ball group at the initialmiddot meeting in

-uline Te~tile Co Eagle Mr amp Mrs John W- Anderson Chicago May 21 of the National ine Co Mr amp Mrs Paul Carney Federation of Priests coun(iMI

bull

~~ 1

Q I gt~ j

1tj _-_000 e

Comiddot

~ ~-

JUST OfF ROUTE 117

POINTmiddotRO~-_

SpecialSchool Outinils GjoupOffer $3 per Stuitentmiddot

father OWcopy) Sons Are OEd~glfDregd

BELMONT (NC) - Three members of the Habiger family -two sons and their fathershyare completing studies for the priesthood and will be ordained as Benedictine priests on June M

The lllabigers have prepared Jlor ~e priesthood at Belmont Abbey here They will be Qrshydained by Abbot Thomas Halmiddott shyman at St Benedicts Abbey in Atchinson Kans

John Habiger joined his two sons at Belmont Abbey after the death of his wife Mildred in December 1963 He said he did this because my wife and I just had an understanding that the survivor would give his or her life to the Lord

Before deciding to enter the priesthood Habiger had worked as a sales manager fOl a deep freeze home locker distlibutor

lHE ANCHORshy~urs May 23 1968

_ bull

II

Britista Cot1toIicI Suppolt New Bilt To Ovtlow Bios~

LONDON (NO) ~ 0aitJh0 ~ BeneFally appearr to be ~Ving strong BUPPOOt to the govemme~ controvemial new biJl 110 outlaw racial dls- crimination in Britain

Tile Catholie press glQ~~e bin Its blessing with some quBll shy iDeations Several Catholic anti shyaovermnent politicKms howshyweI have voiced oppositionshynot em principle they eblim but oocause they fear some sections of the bHl eould IIIggravate rather ampan mollify existing racism here by producing II privileged black and colored minority

The Race Relations Biil Which Is backed by the present Labor government and can reashysunably be expected to become law this Summer fs intended to i

strengthen existing legislation in this matter in view of the big rise in the number of Negro and colored (Indian Pakistani and as a labor pool manager for and West Indian) immigrants in the United States Air ForceFATHER AND SONS TO BE ORDAINED A father and his two sons will bethe past few years

Fellls Takeover m-d~ined June 14 to the priesthood at St Benedicts Abbey Church Artchi8on Kansas Nearly 2000 dock workers FoUo~ing the death of his wife five years ago John Paul Habiger (center) entereq the MethodlidsAdopt

quit work to delllonstrate BenedIctines joining his sons in the seminary Their nam~8 im religion are Father J~hJ) Project E~uaiityWJainst the bill and to sboW Igrlatius Habiger OSB (center) Father MatthewH~riy Habiger~ OSB (left) andsupport for the view o~ bullCon~ DALLAS (NC)-The ll-milshy2ervative party me~ber Eno~b F~thet Benedict John HabigeJrp OSW NC Photo li~)Il-member United Methodist ~

PPwell that Britain has too Church-formed by a merger l(Ilany elgtlQred immigranUi $50 $50 of the Methodist Church and

Powell had called for 8 vir WestpolIt Almon L Turner Holy Name Society the Evangelical United Brethshy tual halt to the entry of dependshy Thomas M Ross ren-has ill effect adoptedST GEORGE ST PATRICK~nts of colored immigrants and $45 Project Equality throughoutmiddot ~he$25 $250i for measures to encourage the United States Mr amp Mrsmiddotmiddot Leonard Langlois RobertE Eastman Re~ Tames F McDermottliepatriation of the immigrants The 1400 delegates to WleEveline Magnant Claire Magshy $25 $200 bull OtherWise he said black people QUldrennial General Confershynjllt Mr amp Mrs Roland McGee Dr Frederick G Doran ~ lDr amp Mrs Roger E Cadieuxwill take over whole areas ence adopted a resolution inMr amp Mrs Arthur Perry Landgraf Felix P Kaladin $125 Dnd I3cial violence will follow which the new church endorsesMr amp Mrs Donald Pittman Thomas W Whalen Thepnaa Mrs David M KilroyPowell was later ousted from Project Equality and recomshyMr amp Mrs Jacob Strunk Calisto Raymond P Paine $40his position in the shadow cab- mends cooperation both throup

Richard J McNally inet---the leadership that would participation and financial su~SandwichWoods Hole $30assume power if the Conservashy pori on the part of all United Fernand C E AuclairtiVe6 won control of the governshy CORPUS CHRISTI Methodist Ann u a 1 (regional)llT JOSI~IH Dr Thomas Clarkment - by Conservative party Conferences local churches 10shy$300 $350 John T ~mith

0leader Edward Heath who eal or national institutiomlPaul McCusker Rev William F Morristermed Powells speech racist $26 agencies or organizations$150 $100 William MoranAbstain From Voting Friends of Megansett Mr amp Mrs William Carr The resolution presen ted to

The House of Commons apshy $100 $50 $25 the Conference by the Methodshy

Leo A Bond Mrs Leonard Nproved the bill in principal ist ~neral Board of Christian lOr amp Mrs George Christman Mr amp Mrs Lawrence Perrault313-209 and sent it to commitshy Bilooeau Mr amp Mrs Francis Jr Social Concerns called Project$75 Dr amp Mrs J Minihan lKilgrew Mrs James E Sullivantee for additional study before Equality a responsible consist shyMrs Claudia Pendergast Mr amp Mrs Peter Becker Jrit is presented for fi nal passage Mrs Frank Souza Joseph Tin- ent ethical practical effective$50 Mi amp Mrs Robert KennedyTwenty-five Consenatives abshy Mr amp Mrs Cornelius Hickey Mother Cabrini Circle D of j

sley and positive means whereby the stained from the voting rather Sll ll~OMAS MORE United Methodist Church andMr amp Mrs John McCue Norman McEnaneythan fullow the palty line and $50 other churches can SUppOImiddott fail1Mr amp Mrs Emil Tietje $40vote against the bill Atty amp Mrs Richard N LaSalle employment practices intbe$35 Mr amp Mrs Francis CarpengerAlthough the British in the $2~ United StatesSt Josephs Womens Guild $35past two centuries have govshy In memory of Mr Y J Archshy $30 bull Mr amp Mrs Raymond Doucetteerned a large proportion of the 11mbeaultMr ampmiddotmiddotMrs ElmeiHallett $26 Oppose Cuts worlds black and colored $25 Mrs Charles Russell peoples it is a new thing for ~25 Mrs Margaretmiddot Harris Mr ampbull this country to have such peopie

Mrs Paul La Prade Thomas middotC H Berube MD Mr amp Mrsequal in law moving in by the Rooney Mr amp Mrs Charles Sefshy Joseph Silvia William J Dalton thousands and competing com

mereially and socially with ton Mr amp Mrs JG$eph Sylvia James W Blunt John Hart whites G Stanley Johnson Mr amp Mrs

Fred Comings Mrs Helen ClarkeThe new bill is aimed at outshy Oak Bluffs Mr amp Mrs George PereiraMYIllawing racial discrimination in

SACRraquo IIEAlltT Harry Walkerjobs housing hotels insurance and similar fields The most $125 The Percy Family Mrs Kay

Mr amp Mrs H~l1ry ~orey radical anti - discriminatioJ1 ~iggins ~ yenrsRalph Emerson measure ever Ploposed for Brit shy $100 yenrll Edith chamberlin Mr I

aIn it was introduced by the Reliable Market-In memory Mrs MIchael Cornick Mr amp yenrs of deceased loved ones govelllment of Prime Miliister Ernest Forni Jr

Harold Wilson not so much to $50 MI amp Mrs Shurtleff Mry deal with present circuinstances Mrs Corinne Fournier Ralph Jameson Mr amp Mrs Clemshyas with the future when the $30 mey Mr amp Mrs James Hamlen

A Friendproblem could become more Mr amp lVIIs Charles McHugh acute $25 Mr amp Mrs William Ward Mr

A Friend In memory of Mr amp amp Mrs Charles Pizzottimiddot Mr amp

Diocese Convenes Mrs Antone G Camacho Mr amp Mrs Charles Parks Frances Silva Mrs Thomas DeMont Mrs Rose

First Lay Congress M Peardon A Friend Seekonk BATON ROUGE (NC)The A Friend

first lay congress of the Baton Mr amp Mrs James L Kenney MT CARMELmiddot Rouge diocese convened at the $100 Catholic Lifc Center herc Ostellville St Vincent de Paul Society

More than 600 lay people repshy $50 OUR LADY 0 THEresellting the 12 civil paJishes Knights of Columbus

(~ounties) comprising the Loushy ASSUMPTION Mr amp Mrs Edwnrd McCrystal isiana diocese had the opportu- $50middot $25

nity middotto participate in matters The McKeon Family ToI11enS Guild Mr amp Mrs affecting diocesan finances the $25 Wilfred Blanchette middotMrbullamp Mrs

feasibility of continuingmiddotCath_ Mr ~ Mrs WiUiamHerron Edward Chal)~ler Mr amp Mrs Ciq education apart from the Manu~IJlendricks Jr HOlyName pu~gtlicschool systein the Ray ham ~9ci~ty Mr amp MrsE McPhillips Churchs il)VOlvcmcnt in social SJmiddotANNmiddot action admiriistrative middotstrllemiddot $90 Somerset

tures of themiddot Church and the Rev Thomas F Neilan ST JOHN OF GOD nymans place in diocesan 00shy $75 $150 ministratioa Cirino Dominic P amp Family Dr Americo B AlUehbl

SACRAMENTO (NC) ~ TheJSouth Dart~outh beads of Catholic charitable ST MARY agencies throughout CaliforniD

$125 have joined in opposing 00- Dr amp Mrs Paul E Corley 1~mptsof government to reduce

$50 public spending at the expense Dr ampmiddotMrs Victor Almeida of ihe needy and poor

$30 Mr 1 MrsWilliam Hines

]25 Mi amp Mrs Armand Borgesmiddot Mr amp Mrs Charles Nunes

Mr amp Mrs joseph MOlliz Jr The Johnson Family Dr amp Mr~ Archibald Senesac

Nantucket Sll MARY

OUR LADY OF THE ISLE $36

James E Worth $15

Grace Henry

9ffering You ~ SavingsPIQnsmiddot

lHlome Financingmiddot

WARFJI~~ (O-OP~RATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mass

Telephone 0 295-2400 flllnb-llv-Mall Servlu AYllIIIllII

Q

Check These Banking Services

bull Savings Bank life Insurance lleaDhtate Loans bull Chri~tmas and Vacation Clube

bull Savings Accoumiddotmiddot -

bull 5 CO~Yl1lient Locaiios bull - - middott

middotNEW BEDFORD INSTITUTImiddotONmiddot tor SAVINGSmiddot

12 -tAE ANCHOR-Diocesa ofFoti Rive~Thurs May 23 1968 l

$copylDfrTht ~$frml 1NJcopy1iU0il Wreg$U9gt[J1 JIl[OlLY CROSS OUIlt LADY OlF GIltACIE

$101 $50 Mr amp Mrs Donald L BergerOlll Rev Rene R Levesque

$100 $25Joseph P Kairys

Mr amp Mrs Orner Duqu~tte$50 Jennie E Overton Mr amp Mrs James R Jones SOWltrlm YIiUililOuii1mDr amp Mrs Thomas Berry Jr Mr amp Mrs John Pilz middotST pros X Mr amp Mrs Robert J Dray $150 John J Smith John F Martin Dr amp Mrs R Earl McLoud $100

$40 Anonymous 1IL F Bergeron $54l

$35 Philip J Hart Frank Ready Ano~ymous (2)

$30 $25 Dr amp Mrs Herbert L Evereti Edward P Hayes John J CarshyLouis Lyne amp Theodore Larishy roll Thomas P McDonough

mere Dorothy Schoonmaker Denis d Brophy Mary Geist Douglas Eo ~

$25 VampJl John Crawford Mr amp Mrs David Gomes M

ampMrs Leo R Schleicher Mr amp Mrs M J Hegarty Thomas F 1fltID01iJil~~ Gentile Mr amp Mrs EdwardlllL Slr JJOSEIPIHILoveday

Mr amp Mrs Robert E Coffey ~150

li$r Francis Welch Mr amp Mrs A Friend Leo F Sullivan Mr amp Mrs Robshy $40

Mr amp Mrs John Aiello I3ehleicher ltUt Downey Mr amp Mrs John E

Mr amp Mrs Gerald Tache $35

Mr amp M~ Arthur LeclairEast FaBmoutlh $30

ST ANTHONY VictormiddotL Brunette $275 Mrs Simonne Fisher

St Vincelllt de Paul Confer- Mr amp Mrs Edwin J Marmk ace Mr amp Mrs William A Olishy

voeira Mr amp Mrs Enos Days $21)

William Bartlett Mr amp Mrs Gerard Benoit Mr amp Mrs Nicholas F Tangshy

~y $25

Mrs Margaret Virgin Alice Bourassa Alexander Perri llIIllll lllli Braley Jr Dr amp Mrs Jell shyorne Brault

Cecile A Daley Mr amp Mra John I)ias Jr Mrs Mary P Gage Mr amp Mrs Ernest RLashysectesse Edward McGrath

Mr amp Mrs Leonard deMeshydeiros Mr amp Mrs Roland L Despres Mrs Irene FitzGeralcll Mr amp Mrs Edward Fitzsimshymons Mary Gogghi

Edmond Goulet Margaret Manghan Joseph C Mello Mrs Carmen Muldoon Mr amp Mrs Paul Murray

Margaret Nickerson Mra Edythe Rankin Mr amp_Mra Frank J Rezendes George Vishyveiros Mr amp Mrs JosephSevigny

Sli MAIlty

$81 St Vincent de Paul Society

$25 Sacred Hearts Association Raymond Dlugosinski Mr amp Mrs Manuel Allua amp

Nancy Mr amp Mrs Antone Costa J1l Mr amp Mrs John A Wojcik

SACRED IHIEARlr $25

St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ST IPATRRCK $iOO

Mr amp Mrs William BrennlUll $75

Anonymous $50

Mr amp Mrs Francis J Flynn Atty amp Mrs Edward Farrell

$30 Mr amp Mrs Albert W Lawrence

bull Major ampMrs Lawrence Uch-shymanowicz

$25 Mrmiddot amp Mrs Edward C Wen Jr John Keohane

Mr~ amp MrS JosephCardeIre Mr amp Mrs Melvin Dolan

Mrmiddotamp Mrs Walter Buguey Mr amp Mrs Robert Costa Mr amp Mrs John Kelliher John Lynch

Mr amp Mrs Thomas Magwre Mr amp Mrs Kenneth Paige

$30 lt $leo~ IJ=1J yltID Uilliil 0$ lllr amp MrsEdward McCarthJ7 lievbull~ 17 ~

Slr FRANCIS XAVlrEllt $2S st ~o Womeno CI~

Holy Name Society COO $450 Mramp RlIra Lee Kingsb~St Vincent de Paul Society $25 Mr amp lVlro Leo Parente

$300 Capitell Mr amp Mrs Richard Dr amp Mrs ~p Sibilll

Charles H McGrath Joan

Mr amp Mrs Larry Newman Sproul lllr amp Mrs Thomas ~$100 Loughlin Mr amp Mrs William Mr amp Mm GeorgeM~Doane Beale amp Ames E Donovan Mr amp lVlm Joseph FalDtoo

$50 Mr amp Mrs Harry SylvesterMr amp Mrs Frank J Dolan Mr amp Mrs Charles Flynn lltlr $25

A Friend Mrs Rockina CaftDoMr amp Mrs Irving Morrissey amp Mrs~ Marshall Field Mr amp amp Family Mr amp Mrs JOQD KmampJ R ~eyburn Mrs Robertmiddot Ryan Vetorlno Mr amp MrS Victor Narciso Mr IIMr amp Mrs John Hart Bros Ipc Fruitland

Scudder amp Taylor Oil Inc CarreiM Florist Mrs John Kinsley Dr amp Mrs Francis ONeil Ilflr amp Moo Wllliam ~

Captains Table Mr lie Mrs John Currivan Mr Bishop Tyler General Assem- McznsfieRdl Mrs Alfred Kuplast Mrs ~

My garet Jordan Mrs Grace Duma Charles J Ardito 8l MARY Mr amp Mrs Fred Taylor Josepla

$ltamp0 $150 E Donovan Jmiddotr Mr amp Mramp W tel Alfieri Catholic Youth Organization st VinceJntt de Paul Society

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SENDYOUR GnJFT TO bull i l j middotcrmiddotmiddot

The Rig Rever~ Edward TO~MeiJramiddot The IUght Reverehd RiJYlIWnd T CQnsidiRf lVallonarpfreclor Olt Diocesiul Di~ecto i

366 Fifth Avenue 368 North MalnSteet f(eWYork New Yo~k ioooi Fall River Massachuseits027l0 -

1iWJlE ADDRESS

THE sectOClllETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH ~ shy

I

~~ IiUrge Negro La Guidonce Boord ~n K~s~ Cety

KANSAS CJIIIY (NC~-A five-paltish cooperative illl

ner city ministry guided by a Negro lay board has been proposed os a way o~ bridging the gap betWeen the white Catholic CI1urch and the Negro community here in Misouri

A six-person committee headshyed by MrsThelma Work will identify the nee~ of the lComshymunity-Catholic or not-and to propose a structure fur meetshying those needs I

The action came as the result

of a meeting of the Catholie

V ~

Clergy Conference on Inner Oity bullneeds

Father James Lock chairman cited charges of the Black Cathshyolic ClergyCaucus in Detroit in conjunction with the IImnual meeting of the Catholic Clergy Conference on the Interracial Apostolate The Black Caucus statement said the Catholic Church in the United States 1s gtrimarily a white racist insti shytution which is rapidly dying in the black community and to which the black community no longer looks to with hope

On~ Out f li5 The Caucus recommended fha~ Harrison the Bishop Rev William J Hurley Rev DonaiiIll

white priests become supportshy E Messier Rear Rev Cornelu8 F Kiley Rey Robert A ers and learners listening tc McGowan Rev Edmund J Fitzgerald Rev Kevin F TrippNegroes to find out what tbeir lheir assignment~ are Olll page twoneeds are

The Kansas City-St Joseph diocese bas no Negro diocesan priests Ttrore~ DS~th~ Aoee Sl1m~PO rfif~ifflg tedera~ Jb ~~~

We are trying to start the wheels rolling for some kind of

~umlp~JrlMeFrot Nleereg~~rJ fr CmbCBi OW~iff1ychurch structure through which the black people of our diocese can voice opinions and partici shy WASHINGTON (lTC)-SPokesshy ment of public policy ~t Jlorth oommunity-based Social services esnie cultural values of ~hliv

pate in decision making said men for Protestant Catholic and in the Full Employment Act (l(f to meet Human and community country they said are sucll Father Lock Jewish organizations h a V e 1946 which provides for useshy needs Recipients of rondo that work becomes the basis by

backed federal legislation which ful employment opportunities should not conduct sectarian which a persons worth tnFather Dan Howe declared~

We have set up programB would provide one million jobs for all those able willing and programs judged A job not only tends ie i10r the nations unemployed seeking to work n determine an individuals acshygeared to Catholics in our parshy While they acknowledged that

ceptance by society but it alsish whom we have formed rn Their support was given in The Acts emphasis on education passage of this legislation would affects ones attitude abolll~the white mentality Since cl testimony before the House Seshy and training Training s1Mgtuld be no wre-all for the ills ci oneselfbest we are having contact lect Subcommittee on Iabor be open-ended so that the posshy poverty in America the spokesshy

with only about 2000 people out Studies have shown that unshywhi~ is holding hearings on sibility of permanent full-time men said that any attempt to of the 50000 in our area we the Guaranteed Employment employment beyond fIDe presshy combat poverty must provide employed persons have a ve~

can presume that the activities Act of 1968 ent situation is a reality Trainshy meaningful jobs low level of self-esteem anell we have structed as being our that this attitude tends to pro-ing programs of this ~Testifying were Father JohnChristian program of service do vide a self-fulfilling prophesrshould include basic educationMcCarthy assistant director ofnot reflect or reach black thinkshy MO~~U[ij] ~lW] ~O~S since it then becomes more dif~counseling and opportunities tothe Social Action Departmenting ficult to find or hold a joblearn about appearance manshy

E~GJHlll O]RDAllNJEID FOR IllmCJESJE Bishop Qgtnnolly m-dained eight deacons ro the priesthood for service in the Diocese 21t ceremonies oonducted at St Marys Cathedral Fall River Front Rev Edward E Correia Rev George Eo

We need a board of black of the U S Catholic Confershy OrJi1 AA~jjo Foreg[uGagement of income health IImdence Dr Grover Bagby of thelaymen to tell us what the pe0shy NEW YORK (NC)-Answershyother factors affecting personalDepartment of Social Justice ofple want to help change the well-being and development fog an appeal from the Ceylonthe National Council oftone to establish priorities government now fighting a mashyChurches and Rabbi Richard GFather Howe noted there are lWven fl Sellf-lEs~(()nim laria epidemic threatening 16Hirsch director of the Religiousapproximately 9000 Negro million persons the catholicAction Center of the Union of Involvement of private nonshyCatholics on the books but Medical Mission Board nere sentAmencan Hebrew Congrega- profit organizations Such Oll shynot necessarily active in Kansas by air Ifreight 364000 anti-mashytions - ganizations they said will c0shyCity out of a total Negro popu- laria tablets to Colombo Ceyshyoperate with the development ~lation of about 130000 They specifically suppoit4d lons seaport-capital The shipshyHe said that although the three provisions in the bill ment valued at $10746 conshy

structure of the lay board is yet Creation of an Office of Guarshy (cll)f AdldJrell$$ sisted of tablets for both ooults ro be determined it is the conshy anteed Employnient Opportushy and ~hildren sensus of 20 priests and laity at 1r~~regy Meefrolilregnity l8 a eontinued develop Earlier the CMMB respondingthe meeting that at least half

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-Theshythe lay members would be un- oro a plea for help from Indoneshyology must revolutionize it shyder 25 since the young people ~1JJlhJreg~ WODil$ [Q)~f sian authorities shipped 220shyself John Cogley former reshyare the thought-leaders in the 520 anti-malaria tablets ~aluedligion editor of the New Yorkblack community ~ial ~fit1hvllsW Times told the national convenshy at $7306

NeCeSS31lY ApPll03Cln SCOTCH PLAINS (NC) shytion of the College Theology so-A Negro lawyer Leonara BrotherHarold Woods a teacher The Catholic Medical Mission ciety IN the University m- SainHughes told the meeting at Union Catholic High School Board for 40 years has beenmiddot IfmiddotranciscoOne thlng is clear The clos- here in New Jersey has won a oonducting a worldwide mercy

Ing of any Catholic institution months delay to contest lim Cogley DOW a staff member cl program shipping medicines or cut-back in the inner-city order to report to his New York the Center for the Study m Deshy drugs bandages and various says one thing to Negroes We draft board for induction into mocratic Institutions Santa Barshy other hospital supplies and dont want you to be CathoUcs ~e Airmed Fo~ equipment to some 1000 misshybara Cal and editor of the Censhy

Father Vince~t Lovett dir~ BrOther B8rold la member of ter magazine tlgtld delegates that sion hospitals 4000 dispensaries tor of the new Diocesan Social theology must lead- rather than and clinics in developingAction office saidmiddot middotthe Marist BrotheJS had been eoUJlltriesfollow usemiddotits treasureS ratheT It seems to me we a- 4o_1krecJassified ll-A and Cllldered to than hoard them Liberatemiddot it shying about setting up something after rewmfug biB draft eard 011 self from its own prison ~ c0nshylike II couotywith II state goy- April 19 as a protem agaiDst the formity fear imd be dead Dbshyernment - a regional ministry U4o- actionism of th~ pastwithin tile diocese Be said the war VBallam

S~aking on The image off

WI report for Induction em April M

approach seems not so much lim The 22-year-old teachers ease ideal as lh necessitymiddot bas been taken up by the Amer-o Man as Citizenmiddot Cogley said

iean CDvil Uberties Union that the change in the religlO1Ul Which ealled middottbeboardll action mans self-image and the change

Silent Meditation in reclassifying him ~ new in the image of politleal man are TRENJON ~NC)-A bID pr0shy height of wegality Tbe ACLU not unrealated The image of a

viding for a period of silent said Brother Harolds religious free man redeemed from every meditation each day by students status had not collmged since he form of spiritual servitude and attending public schools was WIlI3 originally classified ~D subjugation he said b triumphshyintroduced in the New Jersey and that he hGd DOt ilrlterfered ing over the old image of eccleshyState Legislature by Assembly with the ndministratlon of the sia9Ucal man-a passive creature Speaker Albert B Smitlll 3eleet1ve ~ BWolltem eOOject ~ the Will ca ~thero

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THE At~~C~_ 15 Th M 231968 urs ~y World Communication Day CtmMG(f~ A~V[JK~$ObsecteWGR1CCe on S~ndl~w O[fi) ~copy~o~ A~fDcopy[jf)

WASHINGION (NC)-In response to an appeal by NEW ORLEANS (NC)-ArchshyPope Paul VI to the universal Ohurch the Church in the bishop PhHip M Hannan asshyUnited States will observe the second World Communicashy serted here As far as I am tions Day on Sunday May 26 The National Conference of concerned segregation in the

Church is dead We are past the Catholic Bishops awroved time for statements Now is thefor Motion Pictures and Bishoplast November the observshy time for actionClarence J Issenmann of Cleveshynnc of World Communicashy Tile archQishop of New Orshy

tions Day in this country on USCC Press Department land episcopal chairman of the

leans told delegates at an diocesan and parish levels ampnd archdiocesan conference on st) shy

members of the U S Bishops cial action I assure you we are going forwardCommittee for Social Commu- Senate Rev1ltews

nications have sent to individ- He outlined programs fe ual Ordinaries throughout the Continued from Page One beMer education for adequate country a cOpy of the Prayer lains to be assigned on a funmiddot housing and for recognition of of the Faithful for that Sunday time basis and that the needs the inherent digni ty of all men and a ooP1 of the Holy ~athers of the sick were being adequateshy The Church is exerting itll message issued earlier this ly met under the present arshy influence in every way to assistmonth ran~ement the poorest he said If we

It is recommended that the 3 Recommendations on salshy follow Christ we must begillilobservance in this country ary adjustments Taken into aeshy with the pOor even if thishave both religious and non- count _by Bishop in his direcshy means asking others to wait 0religious aspects The former tives for Aug I 1967 little longerwould highlight a Mass with 4 Meetings open to all clergy Anyone can live poor the

appropriate sermon in the 00- Bishop approved archbishop said The key thingthedral or some convenient 5 Extension of Synod prepshy is dignity This does not mean church to which executives aration time Bishop approved that this dignity is recognized Wld employes of communica- 6 Secretary to be Treasurer by a dole or a handout or eveD tions media would be specially and Senate budget Bishop apshy preferential treatment We are invited proved confusing issues when we talk

The non-religious asp e c t 7 ChOice of other Prayers of of dignity as if it can be bought would feature news conferences the Faithful Bishop approved or paid for he said articles in the press and radio 8 Referral of matters to Passhy - I am totally for equal oppollaand TV interviews and proshy tunity in jobs and for adequate

housing not just open housincgrams toral Council Bishop approved

In his message to the Church 9 Creation of Clergy Person-In human dignity everyone hasPope Paul invited Catholics to Del Board Bishop approved an equal right to education anell

consider the significance of 1() Clergy retirement policy to culture he declaredthe changes that are taking with Bishop accepting ormiddot not

AWARDS CEREMONIES At the annual Awards Day for hospital personnel at St Annes Hospital Fall River Manuel Benevides 38 years of service receives his award while Bertha Janson 42 years of service awaits her presshyentation from trustees Harold K Hudner left and Arthui Guimond right

place in this field (communica- according to diocesan ll1eed tions) under our very eyes and Bishop approved to ponder the serious responsi- 11 In-service training tor bJlities that theSe imply for one newly-ordained priests Bishop and all approved

Clamor forAttentlo~ 12 Various diocesan diredors Until recently the Holy to recommend men for middotpart shy

Father pointed out many did time or full-time further study not have anything more to Btim- Bishojgtmiddot approved 1IIate their inflection than vague 13 Full participation by memories of what they learned Catholics in middotYMCAyWCA ot school or in the family and programs Bishop aPlgtrov~ What they beard in their envi- 14 Rotation among religious ronment eomniunities of their represen-

Now however with the echo Uitives on Senate Bishop ap- r the press motion pictures proved radio and television clamoring 15 Clergy to recommend men lor attention new h~riZons oPenJor episcopacy Bishop applloved wide before them llIndmiddot they are 16 Lay Personnel pension ttuned to the throbbing life of plan study Bishop approved the ~niverse

Who will not rejoice at this 17 Adjustmentin diocesan progress Do we not 1111 see in assessments Bishop approved It a roadmiddotdestined by Providence 18 Clergy retirement study for the advance of themiddot whole Bishop approved of mankind There is room for 19 Bishop announced through all hopes if man learns to mas- Senate exchange of facultieS ter these techniques but every- between Diocese of Fall River thing can be lost if he shirks his and Providence responsibilities Various commfttees have made

Members of the bishops com- studies to implement some of mittee signing the letter to the these considerations Ordinaries included Auxiliarymiddot Senate representatives have Bishop Gerald V McDevitt of participated on a regional and Philadelphia episcopal moder- national basis regarding a nashyator of the United States Catb- tional organization of priests olic Conference Bureau of In- and its constitution and activity formation Bishop John A Donshyovan of Toledo episcopal chairshyman of the National Catholic Cursillo for Men Office for Radio and Television Bishop Christopher J Weldon Starts Tonightshyof Springfield episcopai chairshy

A mens ~ursillo win ~ginman of the Bishops qo~ttee tonight at La Salette C~nter of Christian Livingmiddot At~leboro Dishy

Delegate Recives rectors will be William Barnes of Marion and Rev GilesHonorary Degree Genest middotMS of the center

HONOLULU (NC) ~ Archshy Allmiddot eursillistas are invited to bishop Luigi RaimondiApostolicmiddotmiddot the firstmiddot anniversary of ultleya Delegate in the Unikld States middotmeetingsmiddotin the Fall River area baS received an honorary deshy at 745 Wednesday night May laquoree froIn Charninade College 29 at Sacred Hearts Academy here the only Catholic eollege Prospect Street Fall River A lID the state of Hawaii concelebrated Mass will be folshy In an Dterview with the Hashy lowed by a song session social

waUmiddotCatholic Herald ArehlSishop bour and refreshments Baimondi ~pressed tolerance Ul1reya meetings are schedshylor student activism in the Unishy uled in Attleboro oat Jettes ted States middotIltating Students Funeral Home Friday May 11 8ft adive everywhere Youth Monday May 27 Monday June ill UyiDg find its WBY aoc1 2 Friday June 14 and FridayecJar patterns of tbougbt IlBd June 21 eetioD e DOt lIS set asin pre A eursillo for W4)men is scbedshy paerationfl Cbolees were 1IIed for August and further inshy

-e fiSHthen tbin ~ tit formation is obtainable inla ~ -e LeSalleUe Centerbull --

You Live Better Electrically

trlc range bullbullbull with Iln ingenious oven that cleans Itself Make 8 clean break with the past bullbullbull and graduate to another appliance

that adds to the Joy of Total Electric Uvlng

Graduate to a ~fiameless electric range thatmiddotcleansits own ovenmiddot

Make 8 clean break~ with the past4

Why spend ~ours stooping scrubbing and scouring to clean your oven Why not grad- uate to a modern flarve1ess range bullbull with anoven that cleans itself electrically Its so

easy to use Set the controls and-zingo The oven cleans Itself (And drip pans) All you dois whisk awaya IIttie pOwder

- YOUll notice toothat a flamelessmiddot range keeps your kitchen clean cool a~d ~omshyfortable And because electric cookmg IS so automatic YOUll cook with pleasure So see

yOur appliance dealer about aflameless elecshy

See Yo~r Appliance Dealer or

FAll RIVER ~l~CTRIC LIGHT COMPANY

o

mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 23 196816 I

Mafttl[p)Dsellt $50 Raymond L W Benoit

$5BTANJrlllONY Jos~ph A Tully William J

$300 OLearY Mr ampMrs Alfred Baty ltlJbades McGowan Mr amp Mrs Fred Harney

$100 Mr amp Mrs Michael C ODonshyaarence G Verdi nell Mr amp Mrs ThomaS P Per~ lIugene F Phelan kins Mr amp Mrs John Kozlowski

$15 mosampry Altar Society

$66 Buzzard$ B~y I

iusan A McGowan ST MAJuiAR]ampTWilliam Keane

$SOshy$55 A Friendllohn P Delaney

$6$40 lIlr amp Mrs Thomas Pina

~h G Perry $25$35

Mr amp Mrs Edwin PaytonlInmothy Manning )l amp Mrs John KarlJfudge E C Horrocks J~

$30 Mr amp Mrs Edwin N Rose Wareham Lodge of Elks 15044bullbull Clayton King

Mr amp Mrs David Fannon$~

Mr amp Mrs John OCOnnellJames Downey Romeo Bedarql William Delaneyhnes H Gifford Mary M Chad Mr amp Mrs James Lopes

Wick George Smith Jr Antone Mr amp Mrs Louis Fougereshy-es Edmund Perry $25 Mr amp Mrs Armand Bedard

Mr amp Mrs Michael DelIsMark H McIntyre Teree JeminaBlossom Joseph Farley Robert Mr amp Mrs William BennettGIngras Real Breton Mr amp MrsLouis Eacobaoct

Jobn Tarvis Francis ODri9shyu Holy Nam~ Society Paull Glennon Joseph Zychowicz Central -VUlageIIaomas Renahan Richard SmiUll

ST JOHN THE BAPTIBJl

~50 bullNorth Dighton Mr amp Mrs John DeNadal

ST JOSEPH nolt Rev John P Hogan$156

IlR Vincent de Paul $75 Dr Peter F Piccinini$50

$25amp11 Name Society Florence I Bessette MrSt Josephs Womens Guild

$35 Mrs John J Ardagh Jr llim Raymond Williamsbull amp Mrs Joseph MWTaJ

Me amp Mrs Daniel TebreiN$30 J Jl)r amp Mrs William AcIamI Mr amp Mrs Robert Albanese

o Iohn W Perreira$5 Ch(ltham

Mr amp Mrs Joseph C Amarat 1lIJr amp Mrs Edward M Berobe HOLY ~EJI)EIEMEamp

bullbull amp Mrs Arthur A Ennes Mr $101 A Mm William Johnson Rose Pi Assqc of the SacredHea~ Mello $lOet

Mr amp Mrs Harold Mendoza Mr amp Mrs Robert Han lIffr amp Mrs Bruce Murph) Mr Col amp Mrs John McCa~ bull Mrs Robert Secatore $50

Mrs James Bell Jr St Vincent de Paul Sodeq Mr amp Mrs John J Cavanaup

IIMMACULATE CONCBPJIl[ON $30 $DOO A- Friend

Ambonymous $2-5 $a Chatham Trust Co Mr af

Anonymous MrS E Joseph Geller Dr~ amp MIlII Robert Harned A Friend (~)

Anonymous $75

Mr amp Mrs William Kent Mr amp Mrs Paul reF~vre Mr lIi$it

- Mrs~ Richard Sylva Mr amp MmHelen P Derby Patrick SullivanMr amp Mn Aibert Giordano

A Friend Mr amp Mrs Frank Dresseli Mr amp Mrs Philip S1iel]oA Friend Mr amp Mrs James Griffin shyAnonymous Mr amp Mrs Frank Wing _ImmaCU1ate Conception MenliI

Club $4G North Attleboro

Mr amp Mrs Raymond ~rgerotl SACRED HEART$35

Mr amp Mrs William Condoo $200 $5 Rev JOuter Lussier

Mr amp Mrs William Buchtman $30 Caesar Cardoza Mr amp Mrs RoT Mr amp MrsJeorge Merewe Howard Immaculate Conception $~ Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Joseph A Jette

Mr amp Mrs Co George Knapp $25 McCarthy Coal Co Mrs Fredshy Mr amp Mrs Paul Dion Mrbull elick H Murphy A Friend Mrs Frederick Fortin LionelL

Martineau Mr amp Mrs~ Philippe Rainville amp Florence

Mr amp Mrs George Beaulieu Sl lWAllUf A Friend

STMA-ElY$50 $150Mr amp Mrs Michael Murphy

Nelson GulskiMr amp Mrs Jose FernandesSIl $75$30 Rev Armando A- AnnunziabMr amp Mrs Thomas J Bryanamp

$50 Eva Morowski

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John HaugMr amp Mrs Roland Roberge Mr amp Mrs John StanfordDavid amp Martha Rocha M Veronica Reilly

Mary Cronin George Yefh Mildred Leary A ~riend

BreWSlfreli $4G Dr amp Mrs Domenie BalJiIe

OUR LADY OF TlIIE CAn $35 o $100 Dr amp Mrs Kenneth AtwiIl lllisBionaries of La saleUe jnr amp Mm JosepiL Dona

MONSIGNOR VI[lELSB

Heads Bishop$ Task force

WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr Aloysius J Welsh of Newark N J a recognized authority in race relations and social aclion work has been named to head the Urban Task Force estabshylished by the U S bishops

Bishop Joseph L Bernardin general secretary of the U S Catholic Conference who anshynounced the monsignors apshypointment said the task force was calhd for by the U S blsbshy

ops at theirmiddot April meeting in SL Louis in their statement on the mational racial crisis The bishshy

ops directed the task foree be established by the USCC Social[ Action Department

In this work he will cooperaW with MsgI George G Higgins director and Father John MeshyCartty assistallt director of the Social Action Department the bishop said

$30 Mr amp Mrs Frederick ThOIpG middotMr amp Mrs Clement Sbarolll

$26 Mr amp Mrs Andtew Boisvert Gertrude Cassi~y

Elizabeth Sheals $25

Mr amp Mrs Daniel J Cava- naugh Mr amp Mrs Raymond Bl~hard Mr~ amp Mrs Robert Brunelli A Friend

Mr amp Mrs Robert Gilmore Mrs James P Reynolds Mr amp Mrs John Donleymiddot Mr amp Mm James Battersby Mr Mn Jlohn bullCollins

Virginia G Robinson

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$150 Dr amp Mm LoneJglUl

~110 Mr amp Mm John CapoWglo

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$25 Mr amp Mrs Malcolm ~

Mr~ amp Mrs Harry Dowdall Mr amp Mrs RObert Geddes Mr~ I Mrs Frank Pistolese

ST JOlIN $200

In memory of Dn7 hwlbaDcI JIoseph F ODonn~

$100 Mr amp Mrs Raym9nd ENmlIlilll Anonymous Donor Inmemory of GabriGll lYaBltllloshy

alone bull $75 -

Rev Edwarcl A Ra~

Mr amp Mrs John P I4e $50

MaryL Wilhelm Mr amp Mrs J G WaJEll Jlr Mr amp Mrs Franclll Bo Mr Joseph ODonnell1 ~ amp Mrs Ernest ~

$30 m=teanor Robinqmiddot Alice~

ST JOSEPH $25

Counseil Jeanne DAre No 263

ST MARK $50 ~

Edward J Connors Jr $25

William J Roche Jr Joseph Dias Mrs Michael J Croke

ST MARY $50

Holy Name Society of St Mary Knights of Columbus Seekonk

Council Mrs Leland B Smith

$35 Mr amp Mrs Donald Blake

$~O ~r amp Mrs Henry E Woodcome st Marys Womeno Guild

$25 Mr amp Mrs Frank Padykula

Mr amp Mrs Russell J Sumner ST THERESA

$50 Mr amp Mrs Donald Boardman Mr amp Mrs George LeBeau

$30 William Cauley amp Family Mr amp Mrs George Boyd

0 $25 Mr amp Mrs RobeIt Generenl Mr amp MrsRobert St mlaiN

Taunton -HOLY ROSAILY

$30 Mr amp Mrs Russen Woodward stanley Radwansld

$25 Children of Mary Sodality Richard Januse

SACRED HEARi

$50 Mr amp Mrs Joseph S llosamp Mr amp Mrs Vincent BrimleF

$35 Mr amp MnJ Robert MeClellaml

_ S2i Walter Waltman Mr amp Mm

atephen Crosby The ~ Mr amp MrtI William Vaillan-

OOurt Mr amp Mrs Michael Barber

Mrs Margaret Rose llrtr~ bull II Frederick Reams

o

81 JAMES

$U Armand Desautels Tremblay Moving Iii 8tonlge

00mpany

STMABY $100

Dr~ Charles HoYt $60

GeOrge Dion Jr $51

Mr~ amp Mrs Kenneth $50

Mm A Hoffman Dr Normand ~ Mr amp M1lil J McNilmaN ar Dr John Fenton Mr amp Mrs Kicban sm

$36 ~ B Grant

~O Dr EdmWlld Fitzgerald D4niel A J Doyle

$U

Richard Barrington BIizabeCIa dIt Margaret Brady Mr - Mm kmea Bumtl Dr CarsiDbre e-- IlUOCi -Robert J mn JamesD hcige

Mr amp Mra Llocel IaImDee ftlomas Hoye Merrill lliaynard Jmelen amp Catherine McCariIll7

Alice McKenna Ruth MeshyJUona Susan McKenna II

Plan To B~ild

- See Us About ~

lotyCost Financing

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Mrs James McMorrow Franeb Mulholland

Mary Mulholland Ma~ Neenan Joseph ODonnell Eveshylyn Rice Agnes amp Joseph Rose

Mrs Joseph Rowley Robert Sullivan J Roger Torme1 Charles H fripp Rita Baker

Mrs James Bennett William Carney John Gonzals James Holmes Mary E McNamara

Dr Thomas~OBrien Cbarleo OConnell Mr amp Mrs Edwarcll OGara Mr amp Mrs John 00 _ Ilfearne MlJI amp Mrs Edward OKeefe

1he Ralph Reckard Famil1 Cecelia F lfi Mary C Sheerin

ST PAUL $150

St Vincent de Paul st Pauh Taunton 0

$100 Rev Cornelius~ltYNem

$50 Mr amp Mrs Edward Roster

$24 Mr amp Mrs John Medas Jr

$25 Mrs Catherine Campbell Mr

amp Mrs Chester Jackman Mr c1i Mrs Richard Silva Mr amp Mrs Leo Leroux Mr Mrs John Steen

Mr amp Mrs Donald Emond Mr Be Mrs Gordon Seekel Mr amp Mrs Charles Welch Mr MllIl Paul Silva

New Bedford HOLY NAME

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John Hallonm Mr amp Mrs Jacob Teser

ST CASIMIR $150

Beltr cutnir Kwiatkowski $109

Atto~ Ferdinand Sowa $25

Mr amp Mrs Joseph FoUrnier The Poczatek Family Mramp M Antbony Rijo Jr Mr Mrs Stanle Scbkk Eve White

I

ST BYACINTB $100 -

Mr Mrs George Vigeallltl $50

st Vincent de Paul ConferenCe Gf Hyacinth Parisb

Tum to Page Seventeen

CONRAD SEGUIN BODY COMPANY

Aluminum or Steel 944 County Seet

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2-6618

w H RILEY amp SON Inc

CITIES SERVICE IDISTRIBUTORS-

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for Prompt Delivery amp hoy amp Night ~ice

8 IE BOIlER BURNER UNITS

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61 OOItANNET Sf TAUNTON

AJdeb DfO - No- Attleboro

TountoIamp

(l

SUMY pons Nuns (l)ffi) AifrMdl~$o

Re$M~~e~o trMture D~[freg~UDrru~ WASHINGTON (NC)-Resulto

of a survey of all United States nuns reveals a high ooceptance of post-Vatican II changes anell an eagerness robecome morrc involved in the inner city and poverty apostolates

The B1UVey conducted bythe Conference of Major Superiors of Women dlJring 1966 was the first extensive attempt to assess resources and attitudes of reli shygious communicenties c1 women and their memberll in the United States

The JPecific coal of the surshyvey was to assess the resources and determine 1ampIe responses that Religious are making and ean make to the invitation 13shysued in Vatican Us Decree on the Renewal of Religious ~e

More than 135000 Sisters parshyticipated in the survey respondshying to 649 questionnaire items covering religious beliefs atti shytudes toward change edu~shy

tional background present ocshycupation and future plans comshymunity life and proposals for future ohange

Results were processed by 00 Sister-sociologists across the country with the use of comshyputers

llleason for lIAlavnng The survey showed 1827 oil

the 175000 U S Sisters-107 per cent-left religious life durshying 1966 Of those Sisters only 869 had taken final vows In an interview with the NC News Servicemiddota spokesman for the Conference of Major Superiors of Women (CMSW) said most Sisters who have remained feel that a major reason for the inshy

ltereased number of Sisters leavshymg religious life is an increased ~penness to the idea within the lfcligious community

She said that the increased fucus on personal development has caused many Sisters to see that they are not suited to the religious life and that they will find areater personal fulfillment elsewhere

Statistics on be division of labor among U S Sisters show 72 per cent are teachers eight per cent are involved in health work five per cent in catechetshyill~ and missionary work lmd tbr~ per cenmiddott in welfare work

Seventy per cent of the teachshyem ore in elementary school work 195 per cent in high school education and 68 per

eent teach at the college level Of those involved in health care 18 per cent in health administration and 62 per cent in direct care jobs

lEnter New lFienlll1s The survey showed Sisters

have a strong desire to become involved in adult education inshyner city work pre-school teachshying and other s~ial work and to have greater contact with their local community Nuns expressed eagnerness to enter fieldc where few Sisters are now working In 1966 13 per cent ot U S Sisters were engaged in adult education 82 pel cent in speshycial education 31 per cent in poverty work and 06 per cent in migrant education The surshyvey indicafes that there will be a dramatic change in these figures in the next few years

Father Considine Leaves PC$tr Continued fC0m Page One

man of the U S Bishops Comshymittee for Latin America

Bishop Bernardin prai~ed the work of Father Considine in the Latin America Bureau noting

iota progress under his direction since its inauguration in 1960

It has been a labor of love for Father Considine he saici whose long standing interest in the people of Latin America and of other developing areaa is well known

Maryknon Father Considine will return

to his writing and teaching asshymgnments at Maryknoll Ossinshy

lng N Y where he had served as publications director before becoming director of the IAiltin

America Bureau He holds editorial and advishy

lOry posts with several internashytional organizations and servell DS a member of the Council OIl

Foreign Relations He was amp

member of the National Advishysory Council of the Peace Corps from 1961 to 1966 He also founded and directed Fides Inshyternational Service in Rome an Information and research unit of

the Holy See He was born Oct 9 1897 C1shy

1-

~ATIlGR CONSIDINE

da1ned in 1923 and received II

licentiate in sacred theology from the Catholic University of America in 1924 He has reshyceived honorary degrees from Fordham University Manhatshytsnville St John University St Benedicts Atchison and is the author of 10 books on Latin America Asia and Africa and hall edited several others

L9ng-Range

Father Considine Sllid that he IlIaW the Latin America Bureau as set for the proseution ~ tl

vigorous nation-wide program 10 serve our Latin American eonfreres for the next- generashytion through the year 2000 -and into ~ 21st century He felt lIlllch 11 long-range view was necessarJ because at stake are important socio-religious adshyVDnces among hundreds of milshyHons cd people Latin Americas leaders need time for these advances

Be pointed out thatsome of the best Church leadership tbroughout the Catholic world today is found in Latin AmershyICD In turn he noted our U S bi~hops are quietly acceptshying international responsibiliti~s

as never before Father Considine said that the

program of the U S Bishops Committee for Latin Americn ~ablishes the heavy day-to-day work of the Latin America Bureau

Jgtersonnel Father Considine said that

llIODle 60 per cent of all U S apOstolic personnel overseas throughout the world works in Latin America with more Ulan 600 Latin American parishes served by U S priests Major Superiors of women ha~e 2500 Sisters in Latin America PAVLA has put more than 800 laymen there for three-year terms and U S bishops hnv~

more than 300 priests working in Latin America Annual fundshying for Latin Amerietl by U S Catholics ~~ $1f) millioll

SJJREET SCENE This was a busy street scene in the nations capital at the encampment of the Poor Peoples Campaign near the Washington monument More than 100~OOO- protestors are expected to be in Washington for Memorial Day NC Photo

OUlll lLAIDY OlF ll1HI1amp

ASS1lJMJgtJlJlON $26

Clara Rose amp Family $25

Mr amp-Mrs Jose F Cruz St Martin de Porres G~

Mi CARMEL $100

In memory of Mr amp Mrs J~ ilino Simoes

Rev Antonio P Pinto middotCM $75

Rev Azitonio P Pinto em $60

Mary i Ltuiz $50

Mr amp lVIrs Albino daSilv8 1IIt Carmel Womans Club

$30 Manuel Bettencourt Mr amp Mrs Kenneth lltinu

John Rodrigues $26

Olivia M Luiz $25

Cecelia Bettencourt CbildYeli of Mary Mt Carmel ~ouft

Units James Perry Mr amp lnl Manuel G Souza Jr

Mr amp Mrs Arthur Caetano Mr amp Mrs Charles Frate Mramp Mrs Lauran Silva

OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HE]P

~26

Mrs Amelia E Bariteau $25

Dr amp Mrs Francis Green

OURLADY OFPU~GATOB~ l)1I00

In memory of Alex J Ka1He from Cltpe Coo Sportswear ~

lnc Fairhaven Lumber Co

$30 Atty George R Morad euroJ

Atty ~e E Morad $25

Josephine David 1bl mlE1lllllOllY of George A EI-Hillow Mr ampgt Mra ~rge JThomas Mr amp IIIlm Hykel G Simon

ST KIlldAN nSO

Rev WilMeT J Boekley

U~~ amp Wmeentde PaW ~

~ iWa1 1kntley

$2S AlmgeAo OH1feira

SAClllIampDlHlJEAlltT $25

Alexander Caruso

c S11 JAMES

$55 rulllbull amp lVIrs Francis O Quinn

$50 lilred Kelley

$40 William OMalley

~1 A Friend

$3~

Mr amp Mrs Jr Hugh Barry $25

Mr amp Mrs Andrew ONeil Mr 8 Mrs Robert Arnett

ST JOSEPH

$450 sa Josephs Church Societies

$70 Mr amp Mrs Maurice Dansereau

1130 II Mr amp Mrs Luigi Fiano lk Fmniy

125 Mr amp Mrs Thomas Weaver MI amp Mm Maurice Lamonshy

tagne Mrbull Mrs Raymond Rondel1

ST TBERIESA $100

Eugene Lemieux

Sturtevant 6 Hook lEst 1897

Bude~s Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New ~dforcJ

996-5661

THE ANCHOR- ~ 7 lfhuvs May 23 1968

~regreg [copy~G~ ~O~

Oa1l ~MOO~ []M~Orru NEWARK (NC)-A charge (l(

apparent ~racial discriminatiom in the assignment of tenants 00 public housing here is Oontainoo in s report issued by the New Jersey Advisory Committee 00 the U S Commission em CiWl Rights

It said the Newark Housing Authority follows a policy ef permitting people applying fOlr placement in public housin~ projects to choose the project tm whieh they want to live

lit said this policy has ~

llributed to the segregation Cl1I public housing and recomshymended that t1he policy 00 abandoned in favor of first-come first-serVed basis

The report noted that Q01l1li vast housing projects nre locatell in Newarks Central Ward-tho scene of widespread noting D year ago and of two massiv~ firo disasters this spring-and tll~

they are more thanSO Negf~ ~ccupied

It further charged that them Js U a disparity in maintenanceo between the predominantly N~

gro and the rgtredominantly whi~

projects a complaint lIiTegNgt leadership has frequently medea

It termed living conditiom b the Central Ward projects opshypressive and that the proj~cto

are JIOor)y designed llt recomshymeld~d that additionaI ~ev areas for young children ~Gl

meeting places for odww ~ teenagers be provided

Higher ~arnings

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amfACi MANAGERI - UNCOLN PARK 999-6984 636-2744

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs May 23196~

The Parish Parade OUR LADY OF ANGELS SACRED HEART WALL RIVER NORTH ATTLEBORO

Altar bOys willsponsor a cake The CCD program will be lJ81e Sunday May 26 following canonically established Friday Iill1 Masses June 21 the feast of the Sacred

Masses today the feast of the Heart The program will include Ascerision will be at 7 and 9 a 730 evening Mass followed AM and -1215 4 5 and 7 PM by proclamation and reception Confessions will be heard be- of CCD members and a social ~re each Mass hour

The Summer Mass schedule CCD students in grades 6 to will begin Sunday June 2 with 12 will attend a folk Mass and Masses from 6 to noon on the sing-out at La Salefte Shrine hour Monday night May 27 Tnose

Monday May 27 through Fri- participating will leave the ooy May 31 there will be church school yard at 645 and will be services at 7 each evening The returned at 930 living rosary will be sponsored Confirmation ceremonies will by the Holy Rosary Sodality be ~ld at 730 Sunday night Monday night the Council of May 26 Catholic Women on Tuesday ther societies on Wednesday and Thlusday and the Children New Bedford ~ M~~ on lfrIday

ST MARY HOLY NAME $25iALL RIVER Mr amp Mrs Roger Goyette

Contemporary music will acshy The Shea Family company the 1115 Mass Sunday Mrs Vivian Wegrzyniakmorning May 26

New CYO officers are Robert ST LAWRENCE amplois president Paul Durin $200 rice-president Polly Rockett Dr amp Mrs Stanley Koczera eecretary-treasurer A Friend

$125 OUR LADY OF FATIMA Dr amp Mrs Robert Srnan sWANSEA $106

The Womens Guild will hold William E King Its annual penny sale at 730 $100

Monday night May 27 in the Dr amp Mrs William Walsh ehurch hall on Gardners Neck $75 lRoad Rev William F OConnell

A Penny Sale will be held Dr amp Mrs James Bolton MondaYMay 27 at 730 in the $60 dlurch hall A Friend

$50 IMMACULATE CONClEPlIION Teremiddotsa Ruth amp John HarneyNEW BEDFORD Victor T Kondi

Parisnioners will celebrate John L Powell rthe feast of Santo Ohristo this Loretta Lamarre Sunday with a roast beef dinner $45 served from noon to 2 with Mrs Mary B Wheatoil

tickets available at the door $40 lRefreshments and entertainment Mr amp Mrs John Connor will be on the afternoon and Mr amp Mrs Thomas J Longevening program $35

A procession and auction will Mr amp Mrs James M Kearneyfollow the dinner with various Mrmiddot amp Mrs Leo St Aubin Holy Name Society units parti shy $30 cipating in the procession Mr amp Mrs Albert Anderson

Mr amp Mrs Joseph Griffin OUR LADY OF V()T(RY Mr amp Mrs Walter L9veridgeeENTERVILLE Mr camp Mrs Myron Tripp

New officers of the Womens $28amptiild are Mrs John J Pendershy Patricia Connor ~st pre~ident MrS James Murshy $26 phy and Mrs John McBarron Mr amp Mrs Thomas SullivanVoice-president Mrs George Mr amp Mrs Charles BerryReale recording secretary Mrs $25 Richard Griffith treasurer Mr amp Mrs Robert Bedard

A Communion dinner at Mr amp Mrs Albert McMulleneummaquid Inn will follow Mr amp Mrs Theodore J CalnanlB30 Mass Monday night June Mr amp Mrs Alfred Couto Mr amproo Mrs Gilbert Noonan of Falshy Mrs Manuel Guerreira Josephmouth will speak Reservations P Mullen should be made with Mrs Edshy Agnes Proctor Mr amp Misward Welch or Mrs- Stephen Joseph Porter Mr amp MrsOBrien Jr by Thursday June 6 James Ryan Mr amp Mrs Paul

saunders ST THERESA Mr amp Mrs Merton WalkerSOUTH ATTLEBORO Mr amp Mrs John F SullivanMiss Patricia Makin of the

Diocesan CCD Board spoke at the annual Communion breakshy Fall River fast of the Confraternity of

ST MARYS CATHEDRALChristian Mothers Fourteen $50 new members were received at

Gertrude OLoughlinthe monthly meeting arid new officers were installed by Rev $26

In memory of Caroline CasellaGerard J Chabot moderator $25They include Mrs Patricia Helen Burns Mr amp MrsBiziak president Mrs Georshy

George Johnston Corky Rowgette Vachon vice-president Club Rits OLaughlin FrancisMrs Kathy Lamarre treasurer amp Lena MoranMrs Dolores Leedham and Mrs

Mr amp Mrs Carlton GastallBeverly Sousa secretaries Mrs Raymond Reynolds

~CULATE CONC~ON BLESSED SACRAMENTlAUNTON $200A Spring Social and D~nce Rev Herve Jalbert

for the benefit of the church $50sponsored by the Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Michael Felixand the St Vincent de Paul Soshy $36ciety will be held Friday May Mr amp Mrs Richard Hamel24 from 8 to 12 at Lewis Lodge $30Winthrop Street Route 44 A W Root Beer StandTaunton Refreshments will be served Tickets are $200 per lIIIOLY CROSS person and wiU be available at $50 the door Holy Rosary Sodality

lt

PATRIARCH His Holishyness Vazken I of the Armeshynian (Monophysite) Chu~h which comprises five-milli~n communicants in the Soviet Union Near and Far East and the Americas is visiting in the US He paid a visit to the National Shrine of the

Immaculate Conception whilein the nations capital NC Photo

NOTRE DAME $40

The Anne-Marie MasSe fami17 $35

Conrad N Desmarais $25

Norman J A Belanger Rose D Perron

HOLY ROSARY $30

The DePaola Family $25

Mrs Philomena Germane

~CULATE CONCEPTION $50

A Frie~d $40

Mrs Diolinda Wilson $26

In memory of Charlotte DJicholson

$25 Holy Name Society Knights

of the Altar A Friend MlU7 Whitehead John R Burgess In memory of Daniel R Be

Manuel R Pimental Joseph Francoeur

SACRED HEART $l)O ()

~ Katherine D Adams $75

Mr amp Mrs William J Sullivan $5~

Margaret Morriss M~ry V amp Alice C HarrlngtoD Frederick B McD9nald

$31 Frances Mmiddot Cummings Mary C Cummings

$30 Mr amp Mrs John J HarrlngtOil

$28 Florence M Sullivan

$25 Vincent DAndrea Edward

Leary Mr ~ MrsN J Meyer Mary Louise OSullivan John J Sullivan middotMargaret F Lowney

ST MICHAEL $25

Manuel Rogers amp Sons At~

Manuel M Rezendes Henry Leshytendre ~eonardo Cabeceiras

Gerald Mulrooney A Friend edf Catholic Charities

ST ANNE ft JI08ZIII $30

Mrs Rhea Saurette 101at Vincent de Paul ConferenceIrene Theroux leapt amp Mrs Joseph J OCoDshy$26 nellThe Gauthier Family $25

Mr amp Mrs Reginald lerive

A Friend

Belshy $50

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J OCo nell k

$30 St rosephs Mens Club

ST ANTH()NY $25 OF THE DESERT Mr amp Mrs John L Mercer

$100 Mr amp Mrs Daniel W OCoDoshyChor Bishop Joseph Eid nell Dr amp Mrs James J Sabra

$25 SANTO CHRiSTO Rev Kenneth A Michael Mrs August Badway $50

ST ANTHONY OF PADUA $125

Rev Josephmiddot M Ferreira $100

Atty amp Mrs Milton R Silva

StVincent de Paul Society $30

Rev Ernesto R Borges $26

Mr amp Mrs Alfred 1 Cam~ $25

$50 Franco Family Singersmiddot

$25 Mrs Sofia Pacheco Antonio T Cabral

Mary amp Beatrice Costa~ SilD

CnristO Credit Union Manuel Medeiros Laureano Silva

AFriendFrank B Olivei

YDUR SONTHE PRIEST

HI HOLY PATHERS MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL DMURDH

A FUTURE

PRIEST NEEDS

bull SOMEONES HELP

TRAiN ASfSTER

Tau

HUNGER CANT

WAIT

Deai MonBr~orNolam

Please

return couponwith your

offering

Have you ever wished you had a son a priest Now you can hlilve a priest of your own-and ahare forever In all the good he does _ _ Throughout the Near East this month grateful bishops ara ordainlng new priests trained by people like youbullbullbullbull Their own families are toe poor to support them In training but good catholics In America adopted these semIshynarians encouraged them all the way to ordinashytionbullbullbullbull Insome Inspiring cases this support was given at personal sacrifice How can youbegln7 Write to us now Well ~end you the name of ~ young seminarian who needs you and he will write to you Make the payments for his training to suit your convenlence ($850 a month or $100 a year or the total $600 all at once) Join your sacrifices to his and at every Sacrifice of the Mass he will always remember who made It possible

4

Native Sisters In our 18 developingcountries are teaching children of the poor preparing them for First Communion giving medical care to leplrs cal)cer sufferers the aging A SisterS training Ialts two years costs $1250 a month $150 a year or $300 altogetherbullbullbullbull Well send you the name of a Sister you can train as soon as we receive your first payment She will pray for you and write toyou

n An9 day now you may receive a letter contalnn the Holy Fathers appeal for the forgotten Arab refugees-l4 million people without a country bullbullbull most of them destitute bullbullbull more thari half of them childrenbullbullbullbull By trelnlng these children foi middotfuture selfsufflcel]cy we can help brln peace and new selfmiddothelp to the Holy Land atlll divided by warbullbullbullbull But why walt for your mal Hunger cant walt Neither can peace Send your amplIft now in any amount ($500 $200 $100 $75 $50 $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 $2 $1) and the Holy Fathercan put It to work right away Qril1 $10 wlllleed family for a monthl -----~-~---~~---~-IlNCL08ID PLllAIl PIND $_ c_O~__ rFOR _

NAMI ___~

8TRIU ~~=

OlTt ~_eTATIl_lrIp OODII-

NIAll lAST WIILFAAI ASSaDIATtOrlaquo

NEAR EAST MISSIONS J

MSGR JOHN ClI NOLAN Natlonal5ecretary Write CATHOLIO NIlAR EAST WeLFARE Assoo ~30 Madson Avenue New York NY OOU telephonel 212vtJkon 6middot5840

CATHaLiD

19 DiJoridrrien Ere State r ourlitei

SChoelbOY leag~~Wmrn~regr~ Stii~Pretty Mu~h sampu [j)(Q)Mbt

By PETIm BARJrEK Nmon BitIh ~h

The gehooboy ba8ebaD mmpaignis cllNimatieaDy near- Inlaquo the climax of another spirited seasoo With approxishymately a week of competitioo Nllllaining oontlmdmg teams Me stmggling to keep their pennanf oopes alive while Wtling for the right to rep-JIe8eDt their ll e s pee t i v e leaguesin the nnand-eomin

-y- shy

Btate tournament The Eastshyem Massachusetts ehampionahip

baseball tournamen+ ClIffiMftl-~

tine of the wurney is tiPoDOOred bythe

II a II sac h u~_ lt Iietts Secondary

SChool Princishypals Association bull Par tie i p 8 t _ ing schools have bElen divided i IIl tot h r e e d3ses - A B and C---llccord- Peter iDg to leagues Blrtek r

and comparable independent teams Action tn all three clasampe3 starts Saturday June L

In addition to the three divishyidon3 the baseball tourney amp1shyem radically JIrom the popular

Two Spots for Both BCl (IDnd Marry Five Bristol County League Howard Ferguson which teams

teams Gre still in contention for will represent the circuit in the tourney play ebampionship event

At this writing Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Stang SpaltamJ of Qartmouth who hold a lllim ene-game edge over their rivals are a solid choice to annex one of the two berths to be filled bi BCL teams The second spot 18 un literally up for grabs

Bishop Feehan High of Attieshyboro which led the circuit untll last week Durfee High of Fan River Attleboro and Taunton lire in close pursuit middotof Stang hoping tomiddot overcome the Sparshytans or at least lInish in the league runner-up berth Both the first and second place finshyishers will8utomatically qualify

If either fim OX second place II decided by Monday May 21 league officials w~ have to DOUty the tournament Director

No~tons Lancers in Need cf Help I h e Narragansett league Class B - Southem

whkh got a head start on the its Iud Old Colony champ ft NaITlIlshyv er area Clrcu conc es gansett runner-upleague play today First place

middot Somerset travels to New Bed- Narragansett champ ~ Olcll ford to meet Holy Family High Colony runner-up Case High of Swansea entell-middotmiddot South Shore champ VB Hockshytains Dighton-Rehoboth West- omock runner-up port hoss Msgr Prevost High Hockomock cpamp vs South

middotof Fall River and Dima]l Voce- ShQre runner-up tional nlso of Fall River will 0I Am f N rth E stobe t Se k Iver es 0 0 a n a e o~k

Entering the final week of ac-middot middot tion Somerset and seekonk are in the top two spots in tbe 8tanding They loom the more likely to corral Class B tourney berths But DightOn-Rehoboth Case and Westwrt trail the sec ODd place club by oIl1yone game If the race ends in II tie ]league officials wlll have ample time to schedule play-off games before the tourney deadline

Pairings for Class Bare

Selecting Union PITTSBURGH (NC)-Twentyshy

five maintenance workers at Duquesne University here in Pennsylvania have left their jobs pending a detell1llnation as to which union will represent the workers The remaining 115 members of the maintenance erew lIlre not involved in the atrike which was called by the 2li who are represented by the tJmted Electrical WorkersUnion

Although it occurs infrequentshyly a team does not have to win Its league to represent its league in tourney eompetition

The Bristol County league champion is slated to play the

bull Bay State League runner-up in first round action with the Bay State champs taking on the County runner-up The winners would then meet in second round play

Pairings for Class A are Class A - Southem

Suburban champ w Middleshy8llX runnerup

Middlesex champ ft Suburshyban runner-up Bay state ehamp VB Bristol runner-up

Bristol champ V8 Bay sta~ runnerup

-Tech lxlsketban competition lllll order to qualifyfor the Tech a team mt1BSt win 70 per cent cd its games but onlythe leagu~ champions ond runner-ups M~ eligible ~r playmiddotiImiddotbasebalL

In both Class A andClass B iitOtalof i6 teams will qualify 1lt7middotmiddotmiddotJiY

for the diamond elimination event~ E~~ Will pai1i~ipate in

the nortlHln division and eight in the southern bracllet The winners in each bracket will meet in the Eastern- Massacilushy

llletts fi~ Preliminary games will be played on June 1 4 and 6 The finals are scheduloo June 8

Class C competition will coIi-BiEt of eight clubs in only one division Titlists in seven smallshyDChooI le1gues and one indeshypendent selected by the tournashy

ment coJiunittee Will comprise the field fur this tliil-d group

and Mansfield 1m the Hockoshymock circuit appear to be out of the running this season

Fo~ Class C schools Its Winmiddot or youre out Only the league champions will play in the championships The winner of the Capeway Conference will meet the Cape and Vineyard champ in opening round play Dennis-YarDlQuth and Sandshywich are the likely opponents

The only other school located within the confines of the diocshyesan territorial limits that has an outside ~hance of qualifying for the tournament is Norton of the Tri-Valley Conference The Lancers however will need some outside help if they are to overcome league leading Millis The Tri-Valley champs will take on the Dual County League champions Defending Class C champ Ashland again leading the Dual Co~nty is heavily favored to repeat both in league ond state competition

NOT A BALL-ITS GUM Yem might get the idea that a pitched ban is lodged in the mask of this young Vancouver BC catcher but it isnt a ball This young ma is trying to prove he is just as efficient behillld the plate as he is at blowing bubble gum NC ~middothoto

Stresses Inter~cicdmiddotmiddotPartnership As Solution to Racial Problem

CLEVELAND (NC) - A Nashy world would be better off lr tional ASsociation for Advanceshy iou hadnt gotten involved Jm

ment of Colored People official asserted here interracial part shynership is the key to oolution of the racial problem but it cannot be a partnership dom inated by either race

Dr John A Morrell NAACP assistant nat ion a 1 director speaking at the Cleveland Cathshyltnlic Interracial Councils annual Interracial Justice Awards banshyquet said the nation today is aj an unprecedented crossroads but the interracial way is the democratic part to justice

He spoke in place of Roy Wishydns NAACP national~ director who was with the U S delega- tion at the United Nations con vocation on human rights lin Tehran Iran -

Angry Voices There are angry Negro voiees

raised in protest because develshyopment of opportunity in recent years does not apply to twoshythirds of the Negro population he saidmiddot The kind of jobs they are capable of filling are vanshyishing from the economy he added

But if a fruitful partnership is to continue between the white and Negro the burden of know- ing the truth about Negro hisshytory must be borne by white as well as Negro Dr Morsell said

Vie are all fighting a bitter legacy of generations White people have to know where they stand and why Once you assume the burden of work toward interracial justice you assume the responsibilities be continued

If you are not going to ~

sume them then you and fhe

the first place Informed PariDership

Dr Morsell said a mere sPirit of commitment is not enough to

survive over the hard going Work must be based on a part shynership that is informed intelshyligent understanding and resil shyient he said

The interracial awards were presented to Father Edwan Camille assistant Catholic Charshyities director here and Thom811 C Westropp president of Womshyens Federal Savings and Loan Association

Westropp was cited for his efforts towards opening the

doors of banking and credit 1m the Cleveland area to all ciUshyzens regardless of race creed 011

color while Father CarniDe was cited for his leadership as director of Project Peace (~

irner-city diocesan organizati~ working with the poor mostly Negroes) and for his work as co-chairman of the first tri-faith Greater Cleveland Conference on Religion and Race

ELECTRICAl -Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

SS lPlE1rIEllt amp JgtAIDlj

$103 Womens Club Rose E Sullivan

$50 Joseph P Conaty

$35 Belen M amp William J

De7 $33

Mr amp Mrs James F McMahcm $25

Mrs Margaret Daly amp Mary John Dolan ~illiam Daley amp Mary Esther Mr amp Mrs Stanley M -laniek

~50 In memory of MrsMarga~

W Pow~rs RodneY S DeCecco

$26 Mr amp Mrs John Soula

$25 Edward Healey Mr amp Mrs Michael McCartbiY Mr amp Mrs James Crosson Mrs Gertrude Lomas Mr amp Mrs Norman GagnOOl

ST JOHN TEE BAPTlIS11

$30 St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ampt Jean Baptiste $25

Mr amp Mrs Ovila Caron Henri Demers

In memory of Mr amp lVlrm bullWilliam Sheehan

Open to An PORTLAND (NC)-The seeshy

ond annual Catholic youth conshyvention of the Portland Diocese has opened the convention to all Catholic students of the dioshycese in order to spread the agtOlgto tolate of youth to youth Thll

)faine convention has comprised only students who have takes themiddot youth leadership trainlJnl1 courses

Dont Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH

DO faJse teeth drop slip or wobblo when you talk eat laugh or sneeze Dont be annoyed and embarr1lEsetll lkllh hanl11caps FASTEETH Bamp

e (non-acid) powder to SPr1n~Ikle on your plates keeps false teetb more firmly set Gives confident feel~ Ing Of security and added comfort No gummy gooey taste or feellncr Dentures that 6t are essential to health see your dentist regulorly oet FASTEETH at alll1rug countemJ

o

WYman 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD MASS

IfIIfJltk del1WM

S H~~uO~ Oil

SAVE MONEY 0 OUROILHEATI bull eatt

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

Iritai~ If S)crap SuPPITreg~~5n Acts Of Re~(j[jmlt~oml

LONDON (NC)-It looks as if Britain is at long last glOing to stop suppressing the monasteries-officially that 0

Legal experts sifting through lenturies of forgotten laws clutshyooling the records have found (hat the Suppression of Reli shygious Houses Acts of 1535 and 0039 have never been repealed

They are among 155 statutes weeded out from the statute IJ)ooks between 1239 and 1705middot lmd now to be definitively leshy~aled by a special act of Par-Iliament

These two acts enforced the eosure and pillaging of Catholic monasteries friaries and other religious houses throughout the WINS nsc Chaplain

eountry following King Henry (Captain) Angelo J LitekyVIIIs break with Rome in 1534

assigned to the 199th InfanshyJhey brought vast fortunes On goods property and mog of try Brigade in Vietnam has ell land to the kings favorites been awarded the Distinshyoome of whose families have reshy guished Service Cross forWned their wealth to this day extraordinary heroism SevshyIgnored in Practice

Of course the laws against erely wounded when Viet me Roman Catholic Church Cong ambushed a US infanshyIhave long ago been shelved and try company Ohaplain Lit shyIgnored in practice The reli shy eky braved flying bullets toous houses are back probably

rescue and minister tomore numerous than before iIome have even reoccupied the WQunded and dying meR 0ld sites they hadmiddot before the lReformation

Another notable measure ~ewlfk ~[p)regID Gingled out for repeal is the 1loleration Act of 1688 This act W51f)$ ~WIfltdl although in itself it did not help

NEW YORK (NC)-The Adshy~he Catholics marked the end of

vocate weekly newspaper of1lhe Protestant Reformation and the Newark Archdiocese wont1he beginning of religious tolershythe first-place Silver Medalation in Britain Awarti for weekly newspapersIt allowed freedom of worship in the annual public serviceClgt Protestant Trinitarian Nonshycompetition sponsored by theoonformists provided theiT New York chapter of the Pubiicmeetings were opento the pubshy

Relations Society of AmericaIlk it did not relieve the existing The award was for a five-part

fenaWes of those days against analysis ttl the ills besetting the ~atholics other breakaway Newark public school system lhcnestants or Jews but it was )he analysis was written by a hisberic beginning It has been Advocate news editor Ed Grant ltJeseribed as the Great Oharter and was an examination into ~ religious freedom and the one of the areas of dissatisfacshy~umph ofc9mmon ~ense tion which led to widespread

rioting in Newark last Summer

The series ran lri the newsshylJays Help for Poor paper last september and Octoshy

lPeCice First ~eeds ber The Public Rellitlons SocishyMIAMI (NC)-The Catholic ety award - silver medals are (lihurch in this nation today awarded in each of five cateshy

gories-are given for the mostauast address itself to the presshynoteworthy contributions bullbull 0 toiloing needs of the poor and dis-

~vantaged as well as the better public ~derstanding of ltJnICial issue of peace says the _ community problems in the New

4Tchbishop of Miami York metropolitan area Archbishop Coleman F Calshy New s p a per 8 magazines 0011 following announcement of broadcasting an d television middotGte establishment of the ecclesshy media in the New York-New iastical province of Miami and Jersey-Connecti~ut metropolitan tMs appointment as its first area are eligible for the awards l)rehbishop stressed that the (fhurch must be concerned with ibe problems of the time in Retired ArttlhJboshop S)Vhich we exist Gets College lHlonorThe g~eatest problems at present are the problems of the DUBUQUE ( NC) - Retired disadvantaged the poor and Archbishop Edward D Howard Utase who are in need and of of Portland Ore has been named oourse peace he smiddotaid for Loras Colleges 1968 John

It is more difficult for us to Fitzgerald Kennedy Award The LiOlve in any real way the prob- prelate is a former president of iems that are our concern until the college we have a measure of peace The citation and gold medal And it is the prayer of all of us annual award honoring an out Chat peace will be established as standing Amercian will be preshyiluickly as possible on an honorshy sen ted to the archbishop at the able basis o college commencement cereshy

monies June 2 Camp Directory Archbishop Howard 90 a nashy

Nltlw available from the Nashy ti ve of Cresco Iowa and a Loras lItonal Catholic Camping Assn alumnus was ordained to the ~ 131~ Massachusetts Ave priesthood in 1906middot He became lM- W Washington D C 20005 president of the college in 1921 Is the 1968 Directory of Catholic In 1924 he was consecrated to ~mps which lists all known serve as auxiliary bishop of DavshyearriPs in the U S giving acshy enport He became archbishop of Civities charges dates open and Portland in 1926 and retired in lIbailing addresses 1966

National CYOPlans LeadershipTraining shyImpa~t to Aid Priests Adult Admiddotvisors

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tbe through the introduction of BaWmore June 23-28 ehicagoNational Catholic Youth Organshy leadership methodology which July 1-5 Boston July 14-19 ization Federation will launch a facilitates maximum involveshy Sen Antonio July 28-Aug 3 training program in June called ment 00 the local level and Denver Aug 11-16 and San Impaot be help priests and hence maximum commitment JFaoancisoo Aug 25-30 adults 00 work effectively with The National CYO Federation Dr Donald Ebalt a professhyteenagers in a leisure time proshy will sponsor six sessiOns this lIlional trainbig eonsul1lant of gram summer to train diocesan CYO Washington D c win diiecl

The program was designed in staffs m 1lhe use of the newmiddot ead11ab cooperation with Leadership program lhey win )e held m A pilot Jtudy of the effectiveshyResources Inc a firm _of beshy DeBS of Impact on a group of havior scientists -rolulbteers from the NewarlkAddress Graduates

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishy archdiocese was held at the SOUTH BEND (HC) -Mel-rector of the Youth Department Benedictine Retreat House ill

Jdte-rite Patriarcib Maximoo VUnited States Catholic Confershy jNewton N J ence in announcing ttie new Kakimof Antioch and Dr Ilhirtymiddot persons representashyprogram said tives of youth adult advisorsJames A Perkins of Cornell

The goal 01 Impact is 00 help and priest moderators met withUniversity will be speakers atthe priests who are moderators representattives of the CYO

the 123rd annual cOnW~ncementof CYO the ad~lt advisors and Federation staff and a member youth participating in CYO toshy exerci~ Sundly June 2 at Of Leadership rResources Inc ward maximumpersonal growth Notrlte Dame University 110 assess and to evaluate 1mpaltL

(Cathedral Camp-Resident and Day Camp for Boys

O~ Lady of the L_ke Day Camp fOr Girls

Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON LONG POND ROUTE 18 EAST FREETOWN MAS~

~ RESIDENT CAMP 49th Season June 30 thru August 24 - a Week Season

Diocesan seminar-ians - College Students amp Teachers Under direction StaH of a Diocesan Priest

Saili~g swimming water skiing horseback riding riflery archeryPrograni hiking overnight camping trips ~rts amp crafts Indian crafts camp crafts athletic (team amp individual) competition and inter-camp cOmpetition professional tutorial service available

Private beach large luxurious camphouse dining hall modernfacilities~ washrooms arts and crafts buildings camp store and office first aid and infirmary beautiful chapel overnight and weekend accomodashytions for parents

S WEEK PIERIOD $325 - 4 W~K PERIOD $165 - 2 weEK PERIOD $85

Cathedra~ Day Camp t=or Boys Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period

JULY W- AUGUST 23 Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period fEES INCLUDIE Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Horseback Riding Weekly Cook~Outs amp Milk Daily without Added Cost

--~----------------------------------------Our Lady of the Lake bay Camp For Girls

JULY l _ AUGUST 23 Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period

FEES INCLUD~Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Ilorseback Riding Weekly Cook-Outsmiddot Milk Daily without Added Cost

o

For further information write to

REV WALlER A 5ULLlVANDiredor PO Box 63 - East Freetown Mass 02717

Page 4: 05.23.68

bull bull

i

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 23 19~8

M~~Go [P)Greg~~U [f[]o[k) _~~[k)copy~ $)frMcdlltelroli CINCINNATI (NC)-A mon~

long program in the Arts laquoflNrrtiuregltdl $UUreg ~~~regUreg U ~reg~~ Liturgical Leadership will ~ b--J

Mreg~~olJi)~ ~ $~Mcampreg[ji)U ~lW[ji)~O~$ ~ l Congratulations to David Poisson of Prevost High in

Fall River whos been named national delegate from Massshyachusetts to the national convention of Student Councils to be held in Texas at the end of Jlne Hes also been asked to attend a Little White House conference in Hawaii during the Summer and to become an executive board member of the state association

of student councils and be presshyent at its Summer workshop

Sounds like a busy vacation At Mt St Mary Academy

Fall River the first annual scholarship in honor of Sister

Mary Carmela the schools first principal has beeil awarded to an eighth grader at Dominican Academy Shes Nancy Romanshyowicz The award carries full

1U[ji)~O$laquo[li)M[jamp~

IF0~U17 Ifreg li$

Siste M-ry Furse)T Sanshy tosof themiddot Franciscan Misshy sionaries of Mary ha~ just celebrated her Golden Jubilee

of service to God and mankind in her vocation Daughter of the late John F and Maria Medeiros Santos of 235middot Tremont Street in

Fall River Sister is pFesently stationed in St Francis Hospital in -Roslyn Long Island butobshyserved the occasion with her family in Fall- River-Theresa Joseph Antone and Qenis Sanshytos and Mrs Evangeline Plunkett and Mrs Hilda Barbosa

Sister has been no stranger to various parts of the world in her missionary career She took her novitiate in Quebec proshynounced her final vows in Moshyzambique and spent six years in this mission Then on to Enshygland for thirty-one years enshygaging in various social service

Q activities The war ~yearsin- Lonshydon saw the convent to which she was assigned completely destroyed by bombs-all exshycept the chapel

Sister returned to the United States to see her family after a forty-year Japse in 1958 and has been in hospital ~ork on Long Island ever since

And she is looking forWard eagerly to the wmk that she will continue to do in the fushyture--calm serene interested in God and His people

tuition for the four high school years

Sister Carmela who was Mountmiddots principal fOl 15 years is now English department chairman at St Xavier Acadshyemy Providence

At Jesus-Mary Academy Fall River sophomores and basketshyball-tearn members joined forces to spoilsor a Surfers Happenshying dance featuring the south

of Boston musiCal group Hiking Nun

Weve had fiYi~g nims and singing nuns now its a hiking nun Sister Albina Marie of Sacred Hearts Academy Fall

SISTER MARY ~URSEY

_ gers involved in the use of al shycohol and drugs Speakers group discilssions and reports have been scheduled and the program ended Tu~sdaywith a Day-O-Rama conducted by Rev Arthur Bourgeois MS of La Salette Center of Christian Livshying

Also on the junior-senior calendar-a Washington weekshyend with Sister Ann Dolores as one of the adults accompanying the group

Parents Night Holy Family High in New

Bedford held its senior prom last night and upcoming is a parents night for senior moms and dads oil MondayJune 3 Class day is set for TuesdayJune 4 -

At Prevost High theyve anshynounced that electiqn of the school president will take place in June Why Because ~ays the Maple Leaf in its usual forth- right manner this intere~iii1g

River organized 18 sophomores for a seven mile stroll to Lin colri Park Next on the agenda a trip by foot to a popul~i ice cream spot in Assonet

Mt St Marys junior lkomis slared for tomorrow night with Elizabeth Perry in general charge of arrangemerits while parents of SHA Fall River girls had their own prom with the Sucordium and Fathers Clubs

joining for a semi-formalaffair Jesus-Mary girls have been

piaying host to Mdther Del Rosario RJM pi-esid~i1t ofthe iilternatiqnal unfoi of Major

Superiors and counselor to the Sacred Congregation of Reli shygious Orders A special assemshybly was held in her honor

And last night at JMA the Parent-Teachers and Alumnae Association held its last meeting for the year Officers for next year were seated and seniors received into the group Freshshymen entertained with a drama and there was also time on the agenda for parents to confer with teachers

Not slowed up by year-end activities are The Parables

SHAs folk-singing and guitarshyplaying group Members are at

-Holy Name Church in Fall River each Sunday and other appearances will be for the St Marys Womenlts Guild and for a youth group in Bristol Other SHA folk groups are the Conshystellations and a junior highshyfreshman unit Both of the lat shyter units played at the Sucorshyoium Club installation banquet this month

Also upcoming at SHA pershyformances ihis weekend ei The Boy Friend presented by the schools new dramatic group Prospect Place Players

And seniors and dgniors at the Fall River school have just coinpleted a project on the daQshy

COYLE OFFICERS SeIiior class officers at Coyle High SchoolTaunton are seated Mjch~el Mal~)Ile t~as~i~r St Marys parish Taunton Alec Rich vice~president St -Marys Norton standing James Reid nresident St Marys Taunton Steven Strojnysecretary Holy Rosary Tau~~n

evenl will easemiddot the sUaiJi of talk by M~ Violet L~nard boredom on the closing days teacher at Bridgewater State of school Candidates for relievshy Prison on the need for work ing boredom and performing with young inmates at the insti shyother usefill chores are David tution Poisson Earle Flynn and Alan White

This is Arts Festival Month renin ton shyin Fall River and Mt St Mary $550 Academy contributed thereto Reed amp Barton Foundation Jnc with a Spring Concert presented $250 jointly with the 75 piece LaSalle Taunton Daily Gazette band of Providence $100

Also in Spring a young mans ~Thornas-E Donelan fancy lightly turns to thoughts $50 of love So does a young womshy Tlunton Printing Co anS so to be practical l)bout - $35 the matter Cassidy seniors William HurleyJrheard a discussion by Taunton $25 surgeon Dr David Gouveia on

Trocchi Discount Food StoreaThe Biological Aspect of Love Eagans Package Store CatholicHe presented an informal illus- Association of Foresters 1 Mtrated lecture and answered all Wells Louison _amp LOlisonstudent questions

And Cassidy juniors joined Mrs Joseph McCormick Parashythe seniors recently to hear a gon Gear Works William E

Barnes MD St Germaine amp Son Ed~ard F St Pierre SheridanSpecial Gifts Silver Co Taunton Co-Operashy

tive Bank A Friend Continued from Page Two

~ to Page Nine $50

Hunt Club Falmouth ~ Tommys Oil-Buzzards Bay A Friend DEBROSS Oll~Dr amp Mrs Thonrtls Perryshy

Provincetown co $30

Ferreiras Shoe Store-Provshy Heating Oilsincetown

$25 lOind BurnersAlf~ed Hall Edgartown

CYO Sacred Heart Oak Bluffs 365 NORTH FRONT STREElJ Falmouth Coopepative Bank Paul Peters Insurance Agency NEW BEDFORD

FalmQuth Dr amp Mrs George DeMello 992-5534

Falmouth Falniouth ~ackage Store A Friend

I oonducted jor seminarians abovo the high school level by the Na- shytional Institute of Ritual 131111

Drama beginning July 1 ~ GmilviUe national headqU8iD ters of the Grail movement ~

Loveland Ohio The course will be conducW

by Father Clarence J Ri~ priest~mposer of the CiQciDshy

nati archdiocese who laun~ the institute this year

Father Rivers said instructoftj) will be drawn from professional

artists and from seminary mlf1I ~university faculties They willi provide training in the arts ~

reading speaking acting mngshy~ing gesturing and moving -atl these things apply to leading dlshy namic celebrations of the JD rirgy Father Rivers middotstated ~ The priest described the

SUDimer program as a pil~

project through which we hop(l to demonstrate iii concrete termo what we mean by adopting ~

skills of the performing arts ~

the need of the liturgy and ~

take the first steps in establishshyjng a 0 0 0 tradition of effeetivG performance via TV we will ~

Jess and less able to hold thew attention with second rate pel shy

formances in church FathGli Rivers stated

$ltoiUrillil$ ~U5(e1mreg~atJn ~ A$ ~v F lfelmli WASHINGTON (NC) - WDshy]iam Beigl 17 student at SLshyBenedict High School ChicagCll has been saluted here by Presishydent Johnson as the nations q example of juvenile decenCJ7

selected as Boy of the Year from among 750000 Boys Club of America members he was reshywarded with a- trip to the IIampshytions capitllt

Beigl selected for superlashytive service to his home Cbureil school community and boys

bull ~lub presented the Presidem With a scroll pledging theBo)1ll Clubs of America to a long

Cool Summer-plus an -eerQr bird honorary life BCA memshybership for Patrick Lyndon Nushygent the Presidents grandSOllshy

ltgt Complete

BANKING SERVICE

for Bristol County

Bri$to~ Countymiddot Trugtt Company

l AUNlION~ MASS

THIl RANK ON TAUNTON GREEN

Member 01 Federal Deposit

iDsurance CorporaUo6

Noel Shop-Provincetown Buzzards Bay Garage Wareham Lodge of Elks No

1548

Endorse March WASHINGTON (NC)-Direcshy

tors of Catholic charities organshy izations thrQughout the country

haveendorsedthe Poor Peoples Campaign as a citizens effort to end the degradation suffered by millions of Americans as a result of poverty and racism

ON CAPE COD

JOHN HINCKLEY amp SON CO I bull

BUILDING MATERIALS SPring 5-0700

49 YARMOUJH ROAD HYANNIS

AMPLE PARK~NG

5 Neames Book on Lourdes Differs From AII~ Ofthef~

By ~~ Rev MSgTbull John S Kennedy

Alan Neames The Happenings at Lourdes (Simon and chuster 630 Fiftili Ave New York NY 10020 $695) roncludes with an apocryphal story about Pope John XXm RiG Holiness according to the story had as luncheon guests during the oouneil two 00Jrshy

dinals desirous of a new docshytrinal definition of the PllVshyOegeg of our Lady and a theshyologian To all three he put the llIuestion middotCan you tell me why the Church in ~ liturgy so oflen prays the IIIrords Pray for llIG 0 holy Mother of God One carshydinal answered Because Boli shyliIleIS Mary is IIU - powertul IIrith God The eco n d said Because your IBlGlinesa illustrious predecesshy110m have decreed so

The theologians reply was So that we may be made worthy of the promlsea of ltChrist The Pope declared the llbeoIOgians anSW0l1 tn be the dGht one _

Mr Neame is ll Catholic He lIIdi ted the Old Testament secshylion of The Jerusalem Bible Svidently he has long been fasshyaoated by Lourdes has visited laquobe shrine often He has gone ~ly into the backgiound of lb9t region of France and of Bernadettes town in particular

Now he has written a b90k ltifferent from any other of the ~ns or scores which have ~It with Lourdes

Homely Trutll llt is a critical work but not

I1IlnIercritkal It attempts to illOnsider th~ phenomenon of Itourdes objectively It rejects lientimentality and superstition Aithougb it is idiosyncratic its ~l effect is to suggest the reality of supernatural intervenshyUOn both in the apparitions and ~ the cures

Much familiar ground lB oovshyltaed by Mr Neame He goes antltraquo the history ~ Bernashydettes family and summarizes ~[ own brief history before the ltPParitions (she was then 14) An trace of pietistic glamor is Illemoved The homely trinth is rkly set oul

Whell it comes to the apparishyns Mr Neame givCfl us a dear account of the location of 8he grotto its appearance its connection with the town In treating the apparitions themshylves he is succinct sticlting _ essentials avoiding exelamashyQIon

He cooly states and analyzes nat happened at the grotto What happened to the town eg ebe interrogations to which mernadette was subjected

The effect far from being III

clebunking is conviction that oomething humanly unaccountshyole did occur -

Acote lJgtuflfellences Mr Nearne is well aware that

IDtlny alleged Marian apparishytions have occurred Indeed the oountrr roundabout Loui-des was dotted with the scenes of tAch before Bernadettes time aut he well brings out the acute amd deeply significsnt differshy~ which mam off the Lwrdes story from all others

The words attri-bUted to Mary ~ Bernadette ate extremely 1iNI as against elaborate messhyooges said to have been delivshytUed elsewhere They are neither prophetic (in the sense of foreshyWling dire happenings) nor political

She makes DO two-edged fllDbiguous promises ampbe ~

no oontingent perspectives of IA golden age to corne She is anshyeKistentialist a Madonna for a

demythologized world propos- ing nothing but repentance and blind faith

Appeal to individual Or as he puts it in another

place No word Qf the temporal power from her of the sover- eigty of the Pope of the righw ol the Holy See or even of the rights of the Church itself No word of condemnation for the modern world or the secu1aJr state

Only the appeal to the indishyvidual Go and kiss the ground in penance for sinners $ ~) $ drink at the spring and wash in It shyactions symbolizing two fundashymental obligations to love onea neighbor and to sanctify one- self

Obviously Mr Neame seen Lourdes as very pertinent to the contempor~ry Church and the contemporary world Its meaning he finds expounded and concretely applied by Vatshyioan n This interpretation is 1I think unprecedented and should make us see Lourdes in a new way not eclipsed but Ilhiningmiddot out with fresh force

MatWr of ~

That it should have swviVed unimpaired he believes to be astounding He details the conshytroversies and themiddot vicissitudeu which have beset it There waS a kind of feud between the local clergy and the religious es~

cially assigned to the shrin~ llsect

this ~eveloped Also there Wwl

ID()re than one effort to involve Lourdes in politics

Mr Neame goes into the matshy~r of cures thlHr number tM standards (progressively toughshyer) ror judging their authenshyticity Curiously middothe regrets the exclusion of neurotics from conshy8ide~ation as genuinely curedl

The crYing need of our day be says is middotthe miracle that heals the disordered mind the unreconciled personality the ~otionally disturbed the tem- pennentally unstable These are the very cures to claim not the ones to set aside

Help sought GivcllIl This jolting book contains a

plethora of incidental infonnashytion about Lourdes the local peoples attitude toward the grotto (they are aware of it all Parisians are of the Eiffel Towshyer) the origins of the dialect which Bernadette spoke the number of visitors (about three

million a year) and the numshyber of postcards sent by them (about ~ven and a half million a year) the peculiar story of the Cagot people throug~ whose segregated quarter Bel1shynadette ran on one occasion even Bemadettes diet This Qften astonishing miscellany iD well woven into the text

The story with which thill not-ice began and the boOKcloses makes the point that Maryg help is sought and given whether ordinarily or as lilt Lourdes extraordinarily that middotwe may so live as to be worthmiddot of the promises of Christ A critical point

Accepts Invitaftion YJ[ENljA (NC) - FranziskUllJ

Cardinal Koenig of Vienna hlllSl accepted an invitation by Pampshytriarch Vasgen I of the Armenishyan-Gregorian Church in the So-shyviet Union to visJlt tIlat Church oocters ther~

FAnIER JOYCE 8 3

Name Fr JoyceBe President

BOSTON (NC) -Father W Seavey Joyce SJ 54 has been named president of Boston College to succeed Father Michshyael P Walsh SJ

Father Joyce has served atil chairman 00 the colleges deshypartment of economics dean of the college of businesS adminisshytration and since 1966 as viceshypresident of community affairs Acti ve in Boston civic affairs

Father Joyce began in 1953 the Booton Citizens Seminars at the college served from 1963 to 1968 as president of the Boston MetroshyJiolitan Area Planning Council and from 1963 to 1967 as chairshyman of the Boston Citizens Adshyvisory Committee on Community Development

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 231968

Praises Dedication of COB1vention To Memory of Martin Luther King

BALTIMORE (NC) - Lawshyrence Cardinal Shehan hailed the decision of the Baltimore Archdiocesan Holy Name Union to dedicate its 57th annual conshyvention to the memory of Dr Martin Luther King and stressed the obligation of Chrisshytians to work for better relashytions between the races Th~ oommunity can be made

worthwhile only if it is united Cardinal Shehan told several hundred delegates here H~ said that insofar as the community is divided by prejudice disshycrimination and hatred itmiddot ill impossible- for the Church to fulfill its mission

The cardinal said Catholics have an obligation to tgke the spirit of Christ into the com- munity

The obligations of Christians as individuals in this respect are inescapable he said

The cardinal observed that the Church is INlSsing through difficult times

We need a laity that is well-middot informed well-educated and completely dedicated to Christ and to Christs Church

He added that the mission of yenCnewal within the Church can be accomplished only if there is renewal within individuals Cardinal Shehan said this must be accompanied by a strengthshyening of love for Christ and Christs Church

Reject Resolution Nothing oan be accomshy

plished he slllid unless we

Now available 10 members of

have complete confidence that God is within the Church

The delegates rejected a resshyolution that would have called for a change in the name of the Holy Name Society

During a banquet in Balti shymores Civic Center the deleshygates heard a leading Canadian Catholic layman call for greater service to the poor

Rom Maione executive direcshytor of the Canadian Catholic Organization for Development and Peace said that Christians are not allowed to live any longer in solitude but must inshystead pour ourselves out into the world

He said that we are either going to grow in love for one another or were going to grow in hate

New York Teachers To Study Judaism

NEW YORK (NC)-Teachem in the New York Arahdiocesaan schools will take 11 five-pan course on Judaism and Jews mI literature next Fall

The course will consist of five one-hour programs for closed circuit television prepared by Jewish scholars and theologituW and taped by the television stushydios of the New York Archdioshycese The course is sponsored by the New York archdiocese and the Anti-Defamation League ltri BNai Brith

KNIGHTS of COLUMBUS of MASSACHUSETTS

H44114I t~AI~II41~

VIA TRANS INTERNATIONAL AIAlINES~ corllcotbd D~ TIIree daylin

115 VEEI5 bull 3 nights at Ihe fabulous Flamingo Hotel Aeservea tables for big name dinner shows Throughout your enlire IIlay in Las Vegas reu will enjoy Ilfoakfaat lunch and dinner at rour hotI In addition you will enjoy unllmltod leverages and cock_Is of _ choice 81 I~ Flamingo - jus( siun DIe cItedlo

Snapln

HOnOWLU bull Flower lei greeting on arrlva bull 1 nights at worldmiddotlamous Hillon Hawaitan Village Waikiki Biltmore or Hikai Hotel Breaklasts daily at holel bull Exolic dinners nightly al lop restauranls rom lisllo be supplied AloN Cocktail Party Free Sightseeinglrip

TIl ctaye In

SAR FRIIII15ID bull 3 nights in the beautiful San Francisco Hilton Del Webbs Towne Hous~ or Jack Tar Hotel Breakfasts daily at holel bull Luxurious dinners nighlly Irom list of lOp reslauranls 10 be supplied Jelllighis all the way wilb lood and beverages aloft

Hawallllll Carnival Represenlalives ill each cily 10 IOtve you and a HawDiillft Carnival tour escort with you Ihroughoul-however Ihere is NEVER ANY

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I

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~ River-TJiurs May 23 196amp Oversleeping

Riglkll Traditional spiritual writers advise those who are strivshy

llng for perfection to make an e~amina~ion of conscience ~ch day to check their spiritual condition of soul to measure themselves and their actions against th~ comm~nd-

ments and counsels Some wag called this period-You cant be right

A~hbishop Cooke of New York must feel that way He sent a letter to all priests of that archdiocese aking their lIreCOmmendations for diocesan offices And immediately one reaction from the New York Senate of Priests was that he had gone outside the established advisory groups namely apparently the Senate

And if the Archbishop h~d asked the Senate for JeC0Inshy

mendations some individuals would have stood up and proclaimed loudly that this was an example of referring a matter to an organization and bypassing the individual

The ans~er of course in this post-conciliar age is to consult all to broaden the base of consultation ~ widely as possible And then the Archbishop must fulfill his responshy8ibiJity and make decisions and choose men who will earry on the work of God in an effective and pastoral way

Even then there will be criticism But the riame of the ame~does seem to be-You oant be right

Here is another i~stance af where there must always be a posi-tive attitude toward what is being done Critieism

surely has its place--but only in the context of praise for what is being done and as a further proposal to bolster the forward thrust that is taking place Then it is positive and

~ ueative - euro th Church is to assist the Bish~ and the other clergy in servicemiddotm00QInG to GOds holy people The deashyWider Vision con is a man of prayer since he

A significant meeting -took place in Chi~ago the fi18t Revbull John Ff Moore St Josephs Taunton of this week representatives from priestsmiddot groups and

middot tf II th t to form a natIon~1 fed- lA MA MEdSena es rom a over e counry bull ltU poundQ

tion Of priestiS organization TheDi0ce8eOfall~RiVerwas C rime and the Indiyiilutrlepresented ~

It i~ unfortunate however that in middotsOme Publie]ty Alarmed Cmiddotmiddottmiddot emiddotmiddotnrymiddot aS FearfiI eomingout of Chicago one speaker in Particular uSed the tired old pre-eouncil language of pOUties instead of the bull Cmiddot 5 pastoral language Of this modem middotageHe spoke of the At Home cis on ty tret

clearly the office of the diao federation as a manifestation ofmiddotuderi1ltgtcraeymiddot entering into During the pas-tfour months over 2000 more citi~ns~onate It is tbe duty of fie the life of the church - -6 ~h Co alth l~ ht from ther 1 1 nn ndeacon to the extent that he h8lll

91 Ii IS mmonwe u~ve 80u~ ~ JVCoiW -bullbull been authotized by eompeteDi

If there is anything that the Couneflpointed out it is permission to carry small arms-such as pIstols ~authorityto administer baptisii that the Church is not a politicai grouping and 8hould~ volvers Thousands more have made the sale of riflefl a~ 8Olemnly to be custodian and be seen in the forms and language ()f poliiics To d9thiB is very profitalble business The ~ dispenser of the -Eucharist

to take a narrow nationalisti~viewpointand to inssentirely the fact that the Church is eatholi~madelip oot only of fifty million Americans but some several hundredmiUiorts of other nationalities

What this national organization will do is to bring about among priests more of a sense of national and indeed world-wie awareness and responsibility toward the Church whose servants they are toward all peoples all over the world whose salvation they are pledged to seek

Their cooperation and advice will certainly be sought and accepted by the National Conference of Bishops who are pledged with if anything even more pointedness and responsibility to the saJ11e high~urPoses

But the national federation willbe ill-served if Speakers talk about it it) the language of a Political party or aPolit shyicalsystem The vision must be a wider- arid ~adeeper One than this

rheANCIIOR lIlC1~L NEWSPAPEROF THE DIOCESE OF FALL piVER Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Dioces~ of Fall Ri~er bull 410 Highland Avenu~

Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connoy~ DDPhDbull

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER ~

It Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev johnmiddot P Driscollmiddot MANAGING EDITOR

H~gh J Goldenmiddot

for the loss of private prOperty bring Viaticwn to the dying bull questionoow must be asked ValUed atmore than two binioD read thesacred~rpture touMi

Why are private citizens seeking to protect them- aelves in such a manner

Why musthomes ~ protected by priwte weapons The answer of Course is fear

Private citizens of this and every state in the Union certainshyly are well aware of the rising tide of crime In the last two yearsin this country there were two victims of serious crime per 100 Persons an -increase of more than 12 per cent over 1965 and a 50 per cent increase over 1960 And during the same period over 80000 armed robberies were reported

Robberies burglaries larshycenies and auto thefts accounted

fied person now is no longer interested in police work

This rapfd iricrease in crime together with the corresponding factor of ineffectual public ac tion has now underminded the trust and confidence of the pri shyvate individual I

He now fears that the state can no longer give him the pro- teetion he needs as a citizerr The results can be seen in the

increased sale of weapons to privatemiddotpersons The citizen can nolonger walk after dark in man) sectors of OW IIIbancomshy

dollars faithful to inlfiruct and exhod With this rapid increase m

the crime rate there has also been aTapid decrease in effec-

tivemiddot public oontrol of crime This is due 10 many factors Perhaps the most insidious fact

rests in the extreme liberalizashytion of the law

It seems under present jurisshyprudence the law favors the criminal factor and fails to proshyteet the true innocent

Hand-in-hand with this great tr~nd to protect the so-called rights of the criminal goes the rather ineffective police methshyods that have been imWsed upon our local protectors of the

public

Imbalance of Scales of Justice

The modem policeman soon munities his home is nOW-tIM becoJl1ell discouraged and irus- target of financial Security bat Uate9 by the intrigues and the dope addictmustJ)OSSeSlj subtle maneuvers of the law his very lifemiddot now dePends 011shyHe ends -up by Saying ~wbats his own skill and abilities

the use As a result the quali- Indeed this is a tragic utua- tion

The formation of a private vigilante ariny in thiseOUDtry

defeats the total concept of thisshyunion In a way it is more iJeshystrpctive than any force of criminal element to the Amershy

ican ideal If we are to have anymiddot solution to this problem the re- sponsible forces of law and order must begin to completely reevaluate their role in CIW society

The cancer of crim~ together

Ordination Continued from Page One

eharist they were alSo ordereal to evangelize and baptize ~ this sense they were minist~

who shared intimately in f3nj priesthood of the Bishop

The word diaconate comEQ from the greek word diaxonilllJl which etymologically meaoo SERVICE The deacons office means service to the Church 4) ministerial service to Go~ people The deacon was ordered to minister to the sick the pooa and the afflicted Since by ordishynation he is fUled with ~ Spirithe is ordered to baptiza (introduce the Spirit into tOO lives of new Christians) By ()Iloo

bull dination he is a dispenser of tb6 Holy Eucharist and a ministell of the Word of God He shares embryonically maybe but stR9 he really shares in the sacraa mental powers of Holy Orders (the power to baptize to preaCll and to handle the Eucharist)

Minister Since Vatican II the impoJlioo bull

tance of the diaconate has beeli restored We hear even of tbe

possible restoration of a pe manent married diaconate FOI a long time the diaconate W81

just another step a vital OM yes but merely another step 1101 ordination to priesthood TOO diaconate was always considered to be a major order howev~ history made it to be sort ad unimportant and unhea~d of blv Gods people

The deacon Is a minister eI the Church His role in the local

has already received (in the ord~r of subdiaconate) thO Churchs delegation to pray the daily the Divine Office to be

ai PrayeJ The d~acon is ~

just a glorified Mass server iii the tniest sense of this expree sion he is a minister of Jesu Christ theSpeonlelemiddotdlliough rrlest

t The - ConstUidfon on --

Church has spelled out veq

the people to preside at ~ woShip and prayer Of ~ faithful to administer sacrampshymental and to officiate atf n~rals and burial services (art 29) In the ordination rite one III made a deacon by the Bishop laying on ot hands through thJ8 imposition of hands the deacoA receives a share in the Bishopll mission which is this ministrp to Gods people The deacoa takes on the duty of the minisshytry which was described a~ove

because he is co-missioned the Bishop to do so On June first Bishop Conn

ly will ordain eight men o the diocese to this office MCy remember these deacons in_ prayers that they might beshycame men full of faith filledwi~ th~breath of Gods spi generoUs servants Qf tbii Church and faithfu(witIi~

of gods beat Love for lIisholy peOple iIi the loCal ChurcD Fall~River 0 bull

unless society as a whole begu to wake up and act as a colleoo tive unit Liberty is nOt license mil justice is not self righteousneMo

middotAs this criminal elEfment beshycomes organized so too theeIshyfective control of crime

becoine a community effort JIIi single person can effect tile changes that must be undse taken but each man bound gether in a common effort

with the disease of individuality yet save tbiI 8hip ol natkmll will destroimiddot our Dational b0d7 p~

Clergy Ap~ntments AHect 16 eontinued from Page One Aft$ Portugal on Jan 29 1933 ~e newly ordained prie3b the son of Julio F llJld Blandina

tfust assigned are (Ferreira) da Sllvnmiddot -Rev Edwlllrd Eo Correia ~ After preliminary studies at

ur Lady of Vic1lol)7 Church the Seminario de S Jose FelshyCenterville 1Ueiras Portugal Father da

Rev Edmund JJ mtzgerald b Silva entered the CongregatioQ lJoly Name Church Fall River c2 the Missions (Vincentians)

Rev George E Harrison to 81 Imd studied at the Seminario de ~seph Church Taunton _ S V~cento de Paulo Limpiaf

Rev William J Hurley w ~( sanmiddottander and the Seminario Stanislaus Church Fall Rive1 ~ 818 Teresinha Felgueiras

Rev Comelius l Kiley ta Si JPIortugal seph Church JiaU River Ordained a priest OD July 19

Rev Robert A McGowan w Jl959 he returned to the semlshyCnrpus Christl Church sand-ll1ary to serve as instructor and

middot~ch m 1964 as seminary rector On Rev Donald 11 Messier to St Nov 1 1966 he was appointed

8hn the Baptist Church Fall sssistant at Mt Cannel Church niver New Bedf~rd

Rev Kevin F Tripp to Nqtro Jliltllneli lllitellneTIll Dame University fur Swprner Rev Edward Joseph Mitchell

middot c1Iudieampmiddot ronmiddot of William and Anne 17on~1i lLo~eg (Grace) Mitchell was born iml

One of six children Rev Wall Rivermiddot Jan 21 1932 EdushyIDhomas C Lopes assistant Bit ~ated in Fall River publie St Elizabeth Church Fall River schools Father Mitchell attendshynras born at Oak Bluffs on Aug ed Prevost High SChool Fall 14 1938 the son of Constantine River before stu~Ying at St ood Viola (Authier) Lopes Charles Se~inary- CatonsYille

After elementary and second- Md StMary ~eminary Baltishycry schooling on Marthas Vine- more Md and NOiIth Americali JBITSlHIO]S CONGlRAT1UlLAIlE U1UJBilLARJrAN Prior to the Mass of Thanksgiving Ofd yoard he studied ampt St~ ThoIIias College Rome fered by Bishop Connolly in the Sacred Heart Ohurch in honor of the priestly golden jUJ ampminary Bloomfield Conn Ordained a priest (lID Decla bilee of Rt Rev Felix S Cltildspastoremeritus three Bishops congratulate the jubil2lacrnd 51t Tohn Seminary Blrighton lQ5~ the Fall River priest rian Bishop Gerrard Bishop Gorman of DaU8I8 Te~as preacher Msgr Childs Bishop Ordained ) priem on FebmiddotlS served as assistant pastor aJt

Connolly who celebra-ted th~ lVlase1965 Father middotLopes has_ served Sacred Heart Church Taunton Gl assistant EitI Stmiddot EHzahetb and Sacred Heart Church Fall

Ohurch Fall middotRivermiddot since ord- lRiver before returning to

rultion l7atbeli mB~ ~ tou~~for~ S~~di~a Atm~OU~~~ ~ ~terf(llmthmiddotThe~gy ~ rnJS~0t((l[jj~h~ mev Ernest E Blais assistant Law

crt st Louis de France SWan- Since his return from Rome ~ rL l1f IJ ~ J1I 0 JI II fC A-- c2a was born May 26 1918 Am lTllIther Mitchell has served as ~~lfl]lli tr[(8 1m(Qj ~QW Ii lteS5 lJ sectl1ro1f ~Dlflm

middot Pawtucket R r the SOllll of assistant at Holy Name Churclilp BALTIMORE (NC) _ 1middotLa-__ is1 n Hi ~ rl L Doll of Maryland have aspects as well as their theologa ~ry (Bouchard) Bla anellthe Q ver rence Cardinal Shehanmiddotmiddot0f-i3i1lti- Jointly announced the openlng I ddtmiddot I d I ~e Edgar Blais i lFatllner Moll~ lea an oc nna eve opment

After schooling in Pawtucket I Ordained May 20 1i6f Rev more ati~ Epis~opalBis~o~Har- of an Ecumenical Evening lyenJIe~t Great NeOO middotn 1 Father B8ls prepared fur lJ~mes Harold Morse son of School of Theology for all qual- The institute represents a new

ifiedifhe priesthood at the seminarieo George and Grace (Prendergast) Arthur Flerrimingto mention candiates of any faith in idea in theological education ~ the Oblates 0 Mary Immmiddotacu- orse ~as bom - Rumford the Baltimore area M t h bUl -- ~ only a few of the Coalitions Th tt t h h os senunanes ave eeiilAn

~e Ordained to flhe priesth-- m I on April ~ 1939 After bull e IDS I U e w IC opens ill planning moves to secular unishyuvu founding fathers-strikes me asmiddot S t b U be ted t

on June 25 194A he servedmiddotM studving at St Mary School ep em er Wl AOca a t d 11 t th missionary in __ Cayes Hal 1t1f1rside R I ~d St Ra~ael being rather sophomoric and St Marys Roman Catholic verSI les an 00 eges momiddot e

Ugt JltWv~ strangely ou~ of character for a Semi h d 11 t seminary environment bull lIDtil appointed 00 middotSt Lou- ~- Pawtucket R I he oontmued nary ere an WI gran Jiather John Thlrkell iS shy paper which professes and gen- t _ d doc gtUmasFrance Swansea on Sept lllt Stbull Thomas SeminaryBloom_ er 0 11 an or 0 dean of the institute and shytgt erally lldheres to reasonably hil h d E lIm t ~ 52middot bull ed Conn and St ohn Semi- p osop y egrees nro en R d C S h M

poundJ JU A ampI high standards of editorial fair- 1 Iso be everen tep an ann anPIlther _ Brighton He has served Wlu a open to students not An r t f E 1 ~

llDvuoe - Lad th neas anq courtesy ireeKinga degreemiddot g Ican pnes rom ng an bull Rev Dm-a A Lamiddot-middotie - as asSistantmiddotat OW y of e 0 f associate dean

tuU v C on use Issu~ The facwtyof 18 is compOsed IS

Ief Herineneoil6e and Dena Assumption atbedral Fan Tlrdly whether Wlttingly or ofprofessors from St Marys In announcing the institutes ~ (Ouelette) Lavoiewas hom mgtmiddotv~rsince otdiXlati9J1 1 oot NCR was playmg games Johns Hopkins Un i v e r lJ i t y opening Cardinal Shehall middotmiddotmiddotmiddotftIl River OnmiddotJjm 1 i930 ~liumiddot4Fa~~~ wthilyDbers when forth~ Goucher College Baltimore He- pOnted out that up to nowthere A gradua~ of~t Ma~ea llev ~~~as Ill4W~ O~~ I~1ltwe~k in arqwi~susPi-brew College Loyola College has been no institution in the middot r8choo1 Fall Diver Flltber La- lllS~t ~ ~ James Church eiously contrasted the interim MountmiddotSt A Con d Baltimore arcbdiocese equipped middot vole studied at ~~PttOIllmiddot middotN~wBeiifordmiddotwasbomOctmiddot30middot sumof$25 thousand granted to1

the unlversii pe~r~aa to give special courses in the Prep Ilrtd COllege WoIeeSter 1934 in Taunton Ute son ofmiddotmiddotmiddot themiddotmiddot SoCialmiddot Action middotDepartmentmiddot field of religious education

middot where he obtained a BA Siun_Mlilirice OJeii ~ the 1a~ of the USCatholicmiddotConferencemiddot ~~y will teachco~ses in the He said -that he thought the middot mi cum 13ude Afterattetidfni1Marguerite (Dineen)OJ)ea for a~istra~ionexp~nses with ~aJor ~ofld ~~lglOns fro~ ~v- institute would meet a very

Ifhe Grand SeriUnaire hi Mon- His elementary and secondary the sum ofmiddot$22 million allocated era pomts of VIew and will an- great need in preparing college ibeaI Oanadahe was ordatned education was pUrSuedat Im-by tbeblshops oil an emergencymiddot aIyze ~he beliefs of the R~)Jnan gr-aduates to work in various Ia priest at the Cathedral ~Fan D8culate ConceptionSChoollmd basis to the Catholic University ~llliCI fhUrch ~eProtestant types ~ religious educationand

bull B1ver oil April 25 1959 Magr Coyle High School Taun- of America 1 81 s am Jud8lsm snd the in other apostolic work

I

iather Lavoie haa served as middotton His seminary fonnation was These two figures are com-middot ~~ons o~ the Far East middot IlSlfistant at st Miehael Church obtained at Our Lady of Provi- p1etely unrelated to one another and ~~studY the onglns

OCean Grove st fosepb dence Seminary Warwick Neck The editors of NCR must know rl ~eyelopment Cf Church Attleboro and sinee R][ Stonehill College North -and in fact explicitlystated themiddot ~arl~i reli~on8 and win hn 1962 at Notre Dame de Easton and st John Seminary in the course of their May 8 ed- examme e r SOCial and ethical lLourdes Fall River Brighton itorial-thlilt the tolal amount of

Father Martins Ordained III prie~ by Bishop Church money which will be Irotestant Chaplain Son of Joao and Rita CandIlda eonnollyon Jan 30 1960 Father allocated to inner city projects DETROIT (NC)-Dr Gene B

EFerreira) Martins Rev Jooo ODea has served as assistant at throughout the United states Montague an Episcopalian clershylOiprilKlo Martins was bom ~ st James Church New Bedford will undltlubtedly far exceed the gyman has been named first S Sebastiao Tenelra Azores since ordination figure of $22 million Protestant chaplain of the on Aug 11 1991 lf they wanted to argue that Jesuit~perated University of

Edltcmteltl in public schoohl b t PI even at l1hat the Church win Detroit Father Malcolm Carron ehe~ he entered the Seminario

p

middotres Y erOGJnS an notmiddot be meetings its obligatIons SJ president bas announced ltIe Angnn lierceita Azores R Cmiddotmiddot~ A middottmiddot they were perfectly free to de I

middot where he was ordained a Priest ace lrISOil cion liO but in my opinion they elIlIWIlIilIIllIlIlIlHIIIIIIWlllIlJlmnllllillllllll~ on April 10 1955 CINCINNATI (NC) -Presby shouldnt have confused the is- El DRY CLEANING El

i on Dec 13 1955 Father Mal1- - terians of this area p~dged~ SUe by dragging Catholic Uni- sect d sect Ilhs came to serve as assistant_m~t the racial risis with mversitys stepped-up budget into El an -El

at St Antbony Of Padua Churcln rllrograrrt of education and action the discussion as ~ rect herring sect fUR STORAGE sect m Fall River I1n~ ten years nclld~ng the est~li~~en~f1f fa Touch of ~greement sect DERMODY sectI

Qilter at St Anthony ChUrch n~w k1[~~ of congr~ga~lpn focus- ][n conclusion I must lillY that -El - El lElast Falmouth eli SPfCif~lIl~Yon ~acIa~ ~cltm- Xfull~ agree with the final par- sectCLEANERS sect

Father da Silva lt~iat~on agraph in NCR~s criticism Qf the El El ~ Vincentian Priest Rev Joa- Leaders of the Unimiddot~ed PJe~by- bishop~ progrm The trouble sect 34-441 CohannetStreet sect

CjU1m Ferreira Fernandes ella ~rians of the Cincm~~ti area with attackin~ racism is that sect TaUfl~on 822-616n sectm

Silva was bom in Vila dft9 said the new coDgmiddotrega~lonwould all the attackers themselvoes == - == ~X~ for perhaps three Qr four ~ffer from a touch of the dis- iiIIllIIllIIlIlIlIIllIIllIllIlIIllIIlIlIllHlIIlIIllIllllllllllllilii

~ellrs and WOUld CkawUgeth- ease and that alltheirpro-middotmiddotmiddot--__---11

Want Sta~p~ ltin ~ nucllS of comernedper-graIIlli could be better middot B1EFORE YOU Ffhe Siste~ of St Francis of ~Qs ~romexistiDg ~on~re~qyen()ns ~9W true-not 0nlY of ptpm- BUY -1ll

~egany jl Y express thankD I ~embers of the new CODgr~ga- inent ecclesiastics but presumshytn Ancho readers for sending ti~ wJUch will hlven~ build- ably of lllthe rest ofus as well PARK

them ca~celled ~lffiPS f9r for- mgQt its own will te ~~~ to inclJdiog I must lssme- the MOT0 IS eign missiol$ an4 ask th~t sup ~~ a ~covenant inQicaPng editors of even our most lib-I middot~ft continu~ dlUing tqe ~tmi- ther fuU com~itmel)ttoracial eral Citholic p~riodicals

Der months T~ei~ add~ss is St reconciliation and pledging We arelll in thisthjng to- OLDSMOBilE )ilichael~Stamp ~ureat st~~lf t4me and ~urcesf()r onegether and wea11 ~aveoUii OlUsmobile-Peugot-RenCiuit

bull ~~I~~be~hsiMo~pfh9~4llc- fJijyeir odQ(r the ex9centc~we ~rlt cut QUt ~ llil That13 fo 67 Middle Street Falrhavenmiddotmiddot PRY N1l ~ h~ ~ co~r~gati(lo t j ~ _

CENTER Paint and Wallpaper

Dupont Paint cor Middlo Stiiii 422 Acush Ave

Campampt New Bedford PARKING ~ Rear of Store

Tbe Best

~orrw~Ho Tr~pp SHEET METAl

Jl 1lESER Prop fftESIDENTIAl

iNDUSTRIAl COMME~pAU

253 e~all St New iampldf1d 993-3222

- ~ANCHORl)ioceseofFa RiYer-JIlh~Moy 23 l9cS8

---------------------------shy

~~Says Therre -Arr~ N~ lomnits b T ChrrD~llDcopyHru ~reg~~ITi)~D~D~DifY

~ lffiiY JBa]baJla Ward

l ihe amptarting point Pol judging our-role in the world Us ro lrnow where we are-Ohristians living in the wealthy West a white minority making up about 20 per cent of the worlds peoples and enjoying 80 per cent of the worlds ~me But this is only a ~nning a raw statement If fact And as we know Ilhwts rarely present themshyrelves without a oontext They (ilODle to us in a dense package IOf assumptions ond e~periences

1lake such a ~t as that Mr Brown worth a IlDillion dollars gives nothing to iltirs Smith This Is a fact JIlul- iliPlied a thoushysand times over by all the BroWns who do IiWthing for all ~ Smiths But suppose Mrs Smith is his widowed older sisshyter Iho rovingly brought himmiddot 1ilP as a boy Then the fact of ibis indifference becomes a comshypletely different fact because ~ eoJ1text has changed

Sense e(1 ltDomtext Most of the facts of our oonshy

temporary scene require this oonse of context They do not eome to us neat and bare And ~e first thing that has to be lJ8id about us as Christians is presumably that our context of presuppositions and oommitshyment is somewhat different ilrom that of anyone else

The Gospels are full of the lldea that the Christian angle of

o vision cannot be simply intershyehangeable with the secular or

worldly point of view Leaven makes bread rise because it is differenj Salt gives a taste beshyeause it is not identical with the 2ood Light shines in darkness because light and dark a~e disshyiWlguishable

All these images of the Chrisshy(gan community imply being other different set apart but at the same time guiding inshyGPiring changing ald entering into the whole sum of human ~xistence We are different but our aim is communion We are lteall~ to a vocation but the vocation is unity How is this fundameintal context of Chrisshyiian living to be interpreted in rtbe modern age

Personal Fortune Let us look at two widely

occepted reactions to modern facts and see how they square with the Christian vision The first concerns personal fortune On balance in the landli where the bulk of Christians live the White wealthy post-Christian oocieties of the North AtIantic~ North America Bribin Westshyern Europe - the basic notion about income is to increase it iIIJld about wealth to accumulate to

In general a familys standshyIIllds of living its ciaims on reshylIOurces and its expectations of ilun an~ comfort gO up in step

Institute Participant yeniss Marjorie A MorinNortb

Westport a faculty member at ~cred Hearts Academy Fan Ri~er bas been named as one cent 44 ~igh ~ool bi~19gy teachshy~rs frorn18 states to participate iln a Summer institute on recent bigh school biology curriculum ~evelopments at Wells College Aurora N Y The institute will be in session from June 30 through Julyen S

with bigher earnings One can find it hard to make both ends meet and be resentful of taxes at $6000 a year $12000 a year $24000 a year $48000 0 year ~d so on up - in fact since

taxes rise with income COlIlshy

plairits can be higher as wealth increases even though expendishytures now oover two houses and three cars

Christian teaching in stark contrast reminds us that the higher the income the greater the responsibility The final counsel of perfection was given to the dcb young man sell

all you have and give to the poor- Short of this evengelical extreme the wealthy must not satisfy their oWllJlising supershyfluities at the expense of the basic needs of others 11 they dothey will enter eternity as easshyily as a ca~el through the eye of a needle-not a wholly reasshysuring analogy for our Western societies who bave never had it so good

NQ lLfimfits A secHid pre-suppositionmiddot~

eontempolary society is that chapel z Mount St Mary Con- f te li d d or en rmg re glon an was n obligatIOns an responsibilities vent and a dInner f~r Csters t fr ti A ~ 031 teacher and principal at manyop a on ers man ofdifshyt ferent national I y or citizenship f al 18 no arm ooncern of ours The Gospel approach IS whollydifferent All must)be fed even-shythe least of the little ones All must be clothed and sheltered Even if th th dtch is

e ~an In e 1 a Jew and his rescuer a Samarshyillan their traditional enmity must make no diHerence~ The centurions son is cured even if he is in modern terms a hated

SJl8TER MJIJRlAM RSM o

former DiocesoD1l Supervisor Completes 50 Years As ~eiigiolUJs Sis~er of Mercy

Fifty years in religious life Katherine -ONeil retired prinshycipal of the Aldrich School inwill be marked Sunday by SisshyFall River Both are memberster Miriam RSM former eleshyof Holy Name parish Fall Rivermentary school supervisor in

the Fall River Diocesan systemON II St Louis JgtarishRev Pa trick el supennshy

tendent of schools will cele- Sister Miriam is a native of brate a Mass of Thanksgiving St Louis parish Fall River She at 1045 Sunday morning in the was a public school teacher beshy

and the JubIlanans ~~edIate~m Diocesan schools before beingfaml 11 f II I Y WI () ow appointed a supervisor in 1941

A reception will be held after together with Sister FeIicitadi f t S

e nner or V1S~ mg Isers RSM The two Mercy Sisters ~d a seoond recepti~n fr served as supervisors under

fnends and former p~pl1s WIll the late Rev Edward J Gorman take place from 2 to 5 m Mt Sl ana under Father ONeill pres-Mary Academy library ent superintendent of schools Bec~~vingguests wit~ the until their retirement in 1966

jubllanan WIll be her Sls~ers Since that time they have M~ James Conlin retIred tutored and aided students with prmcIpal of the Mason Barney reading problems at Mt Sl

imperialist There is neither School Swansea and lIfiss Mary COnvent Jew nor Gentile bond nor free ~ bullr

in the a)l-enoompassing gener~ J ~

=~~k~~ ~P-9morL13~J of our prayer Thy Kingdom

40~s eolumn will therefOe try over the coming months to give not only the facts about our strange new world round which the astronaut strolls in 90 minutes It will try tosug gest the oontext without which Christian judgment and re- sponse are hardly possible For if we judge only as secular cit shyizens will the salt keep its taste May it not be fit only to be thrown down the drain

~ L ~ IIrencn lIovor Priests Holding O~her Jobs

PARIS (NC)-A recent surshyvey indicates that Frenchmen are in favor of priests working at n~n-priestly jobs and being marned _

The editor-in-chief will 1roW~D1DXNG GOWNS rm afraid Im overworking the

word romantic in describing the fashions this season but with such-anabundance of frills and tiny waists it seems the only fitting adjective Nowhere does the word crop up with shym 0 r e meaning than when one is trying to convey the imshypression given by the fashions iQr the 68 bride Bridal gownsfor late Sumshymer and early Fall weddings are now being shown and snapped up dewy-eyed brides-to-be

by

~ a survey ~nducted by the Gone are the outlandish 1ent SocIety FrancaJse dEnquetes eire th par ~ndage (SOFRES) 00 Per sses e weIrd IDllll des~gns centCIf those questioned both ~ tte h~v~~ ~ere dSlgnS Catholics and non-Catholics re- Ig wIg ts e Pia~ f~W garded it as normal for a priest ~aso~s als are as n l~

1Q praclice a lleCUiar profession wedding g~wns ~ tor so many and 51 per cent said that work degthther fUlootfitBkmiddot ~lS slelas0ben but by priests in a f~ri or 011amp ey 1ftgt especlay auti shyconstruction JOb is ood ~ in thlS dre~ of dresses One

very g lovely princess design by Ven because that ereates an exchange b - rio1-1- ~ ~ be tb Ch as nerrow s pear

bullween e Ulch and the dli -- fimiddotmiddot 10 workers 0 nIng gure- rIDIng seven out~ 10 persons 81lIr- Bi~h~uette ~Cthe~ by Frmk

veyed favored -marriage for ~zzo for Pandora ~as an Ehzashypriests ~because that would per- bethan aJr to it WIth its lov~ly mit them to better understand 1Jff of OhantIllr lace ~ndmg family problems and difficul- bI~h around the neckline and ties And 25 per cent of those _spIlling d~wn the sleeves surveyed are convinced that Fur-Trimmecll GoWlm

soon~r or l~ter women will be If youre planning an elegant ordaIned prleStamp wedding m the late Fall ~

Alois Schardt a Bavarian tele- early Winter and money is no vision n~ws editor Dr HeE-oobject Mirra has designed a mann Abs of the Deutsche Bank gown with a bodice and sleeores of broadtail cuffed around the wrist and neckline with white mink The price-a mere $800 the price of a good living room oouch but then you could al shyways sit on old orange crates and admire your stunning wed ding pictures

Even the bridal hairdo is as hearts and flowers as Elizabeth Barrett Browiling Curls fall over shoulders peek out from under mantillas and veils and are even caught back in kershychief headpieces If your own

hair refuses to wave never mind curl order some stick-on curls ahead oftime to keep the romantic air

By BOme unexplained miracle all brides are b~autiful but this year the designers are giving the miracle workers a boost in JOWDS that spell romance

New Bedfordilea Elect Officers

The slate of officers el~ to serve for the 1968-69 year d the Catholic Womans Club clil New Bedford are Mn Thomas P Barry president Miss Jean

A McGinnis first vice-p~ dent Mrs Raymond M Atw~ second vice-presisient Mrs ViiDo cent L Hughes recording s~

retary Mrs Maurice A Hurl~ corresponding secretary lViM Charles D Phelan treasureJl Registrars named for ~ coming year are Mrs Ricbam A Parsons Mrs Norman amp Sylvia Mrs Albert J LamolZgt reux Mrs William A Horai Mrs Robert A Vermette lIhe Henry J Fanning Jr Mrs Joseph N Joseph Mlamp3 Dorothy A Curry and lIlra Roland F Mathieu will $erve mJ mrectors

Nome Laymon Official Of Catholic Schoois

MEMPHIS (NC)-Bishop JO seph A Durick apostolic adJ ministrator of the NashVille dl ocese has confirmed the apshypointment of William G Ho~

as administrative assistant tIlll Msgr John A Elliott dioce~ superintendent of schools

In his new Post Hoyt wild serve as coordinator for prCF grams that receive local and federal aid to private schoolBp in addition to general assistance in the overall responsibilities 001 the school board and supeJlgto visors

There are 18 Catholic blgili schools with 5892 students ancll 53 elementary schools with 15

405 students in the Nashvl1lG diocese which comprises the

entire state of Tennessee

Pro~estants to SerVe 0111 Catholic Paperr

BONN (NC)-Protestanf jOllDD nalists will serve on the editoshyrial staff of a new German nashytional Catholic weekly aimed at readers on a high intellectual level which will begin publbshy

-ction in September - Most of the 20 editors wh

will be selected fqr the weeklys staff will be drawn from the ranks of the secular daily press

has been elected director of the papers board of trustees

A total of $4000000 has been raised from among the Well0 Ge~an dioceses to finance the establishment of the paper Wgt be named Publik Stockwill ~ issued

~fiDDY Dining IN YHE

JOILRY WHAlLER -ANID--

SPOUTER INN RESTAURANTS

Always Free Parking

New Bedford Hotel

NASON Oil COMPANY

Our Heating 7 Perry Avenue

Oils Malee Taunton Mass Warm FrienJs 822-2282

Dailymiddot Aittention Necessary To ~[f~Dceate We~~~

1B1y 1J~JlDill alii wnJillYJil ~~

The ~ are on their way and 11 lreems that half r our time i1l spent digging them out ~ the garden No matter haw much time we Gpomd on them they have a way of reappearing within Q few days ad 1l1Inless we really live them OUattention they ean take over a garden middotin lW time Beginning gardenem

bull WOO approaeh gardemng casshyaally or em weekends are often ~helmed by these unwel-CIOme pests ond soon give up the Ilbip Our suggestion is that M)

minutes II day B sufficient to keep even big gardens weeded fithe gardener will get out into Illie garden every day This maw mean nomiddot mOIre than a short trip BIound the garden to look mt Ole plants and to pull out a few ~ds encountered on the weJr

Few llilmtJtes Dadlly

We usually keep a small wamshyms hoeohandy by the back door and as we PlVPare to go to worlx take a short walk in the garden hoe in hand to see what is new The result is that we spend flw minutes or so in the garden beshytore setting out for work in the morning 10 minutes at lunch and ap~roximately 10 minutea before dinner after the working day is over which incidentally il a good time to ioosen up ~

t1ore tearing the kids heads oIif llDr all the misdeeds of the day

The point is that weeding u

attitudes t2lat vtll shape their future are beginning now and IllS theU friends and relatives wish them well they pray that each couple will enjoy the graces and happiness that come from a good Christian marriage with Christ in the home

Ad~ Atmosphere Often a wedding gift can add

to the atmosphere of a Christian home One such gift is a plaque that hangs in our den On it are these words

Sacrifice s usually difficult and irksome only

Love can make ~ easy and perfect love can make it a

Joy I couldnt think of a better

motto with which to begin 0 marriage or one that becomes

more significant through sleepshyless nights with sick babies frustrating job problems or the everpresent money worries Qlat asually plague young couples

A handsome cross a richlY llIustrated b~ble a handsome religious Gtatue or plaque are eccellent gifts to begin a Chrisshy

11 th h t Uan couple on the road to Il we as many 0 er cores mus ~ done on n day-today buis cmd cannot be left for weekendll because there are so many other tmportant things that have to be ltilone then

The grass has to be cut a new lInge put on a door there is a ball game to watch a ride 00 take a tree to be pruned etc Cll of which ore time-eonsuming _ lIIllU necessary With the weather we have been exPeriencing al -te th d~n~ e ~ weedmg gives ll3 middot Iln oPprtunity to g~t a hWe ~h lUI 11 commodity whiclill middot D3ems t0 be gettmg scarcer fa 001 industrial live~ and ehance to commune With Nature een at the wrong end of n

lim tle Kltcbellllmiddot

Did you know that during a wedding ceremony the groom places the ring on the finger of Ule bride because the circlemiddot of gold symbolizes the love and devotion that from this moment on will have no end This is but lti)ne of the many traditions that lJlave come down through the years and now are an accepted ~rt of the Cana celebration

Another must for a wedding dJ the wedding cake that fur eenturies has signified breakshymg of bread in kinship as it Is ll1anded out to friends and relashyves Even the veil that graces tlle l)ead of the beautiful bride b a custom that has come into llUes~nt time from the days when the brides stood under eanopies to show that they were IIDlder the protection of the glOOrp

All these ancientgt traditions give a Uttle added meaning to lYle Cana feast and the sacred acrainent of matrimony but ltWen more significant are the rostoms and traditions that the 1l1Jride and groom will carry into rife as a f~ly Many of the

polsh Mmiddotsommiddot

n ill ~ilI CHiCAGO (NC)-First copies

of the Polish vernacular altar

gful C th li lif Let meanm a 0 c e someone else buy the sheets a~d and ~asters ma~e your pft one Wlt~ eve~las~lDg mea~ll~g

If ou re 1hinking of givmg ~ bridal shower in the n~ar future perbaP you w0llld hke to serve a Bndal Puddmg

Bridal Pudding 2 envelopes unflavored gelatiJm

cup cold water b ili t

llff If cup deghte wa er egg W I StI- ~_

74 aspoon - cup suglllr

q h cups eavy cream (ilDrgetth diet)

1 teapoon vamplilla 1 flaked tcup coconu 1) Soften the gelatin in the k

cup cold watermiddot and then pour the 1fJ cup ofboiling water over the gelatin mixture and stir unntil dissolved Cool

2) Beat the egg whites until foam slowly add the salt and sugar and continue beating unshytil stiff peaks are formed

3) Fold the gelatin into the stiff whites

4) Beat the heavy cream until stiff and add the vanilla Fold the cream into the whites and gelatin mixture

5) Rub the bottom and sides cf an eight-inch spring form pan with butter and sprinkle the bottom with lh cup of the coconut Pour in the cream mixshyture Sprinkle with the remainshying coconut -ltld chill at least four hours or overnight Upshymold and serve with s1rawshyberries and the following rum sauce

lltum Sauce 6 egg yolks (see we didnt

want them to go to waste) 1 cup sugarmiddot

04 cup dark 111m cognac or kirsch

1) Beat the yolks until lemon colored and slightly thickened

2) Gradually beat in the Dugar

Stir in half the rum and cook in tOp of a double boiler over boiling water stirring constantshy131 until the sauce coats a woodshy

THE ANCHORshy

lHIONOR MOTHER lPlilElRRE Mother Pierre Marie of St Annes Hospital Fan River left meets Mrs Joseph Giblin Mrs Richard Donovan and Mrs Eugene Dionne all members of The Friends of St Annes on bhe occasion of the groups honoring the sister in reCognition of her reshyception of the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice Medal from Pope Paul

Aim Is Unity INIUlDil leads New )errsey Periodic White Walkerrs

Se~king to Ascertain Needs of Negroes ENGLEWOOD (NC)-Led by We are trying to find out

a Sister from St Cecilias High what the needs are she said School a group of white resi- We realized that we would dents have been making peri- look liketourists going through odic informal walking toWfl but you have to begin someshythrough the predominantly Ne- where gro Fourth Ward to meet the One result of the middotwalks was people living there

The walks inaugurated by Sister Robert Jean are made in mn effort to break down barriere fllll an area where rioting took place last Summer

Gif~~ Contfnued from Page Four

lNJlf~ihlmiddotAuBehCJH) $750

Jeweled Cross Co Inc $225

Attleboro Particular Council St Vincent de Paul

$200 Society of St Vincent de PaW

St Mary Conference $150

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J Wright bull $75 No Attleboro Catholic Womshy

0ns Club $50

Dr Eugene Leco St Anne Sodality Sacred

Heart Church $40

Edward N Cook Plate Co Inc $35middot

Albert Morawski $30

CYD-Sacred Heart Church $25

Frank M Miller amp Son Inc No Attleboromiddot Coal Co y H Blackington amp Co Inc

II neighborhood meeting at which white and black people discussed the visits and the posshysibility of further involvement in the needs of the Fourth Ward community------------

Universal Roofing amp Sheet Metal Co

Alden Corrugated Container Corp

Mass Trucking Corp New Bedford Hotel Macedo Pharmacy

$51 Building Materials Inc

$5 Sacred Heart Home

Daughters of Isabella Hyacinth Circle No 71

A Friend Damien Council K of C Harbor Beach Club amp Lounge Laurans-Standard Grocery Co

Inc $35

Glemi-on Roofing Co $30

Browne Pharmacy Inc $25

Browne Pharmacy A Friend Local No 168 UAW AFL-CIO Cape Cod Fabrics Philip J

Kane Inc Lions Club of New Bedford

Duplicating Equipment amp Supshyply Atty Jack London New Bedford Catholic Guild for the Blind Sharkeys Tire amp Rubber Comiddot

Tum oto Page Ten

Thurs May 23 1968

AJumna Rece~ves

Tdn~ty Award WASHINGTON (NC)-Doroshy

thea F Sullivan social worker and alumna of Trinity College here was presented the 1968 Julie Billiart medal at the schools Spring honors convocashytion

The annual award established in 1961 in honor of the foundress of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur who conduct the colshylege honors an alumna whose life exemplifies Blessed Julie Billiarts educational objectives -the formation of strong womshyen of faith devoted to God and neighbor living dedicated and fruitful lives

Miss Sullivan a member of the Trinity class of 1926 had been an associate professor at the Catholic University of Americas School of Social Sershyvice since 1941 She has been project director of the South Florida Neighborhood Youth Corps in Miami since 1966

She has been active in a numshyber of youth and welfare organshyizations has contributed articles to numerous periodicals and edited several books

Form Sisterrs 0 Coull1ld~

~Dil HawOJii Diocese HONOLULU (NC)-A Sisshy

ters council ill being formed here with the approval of Bishshyou John J Scanlan of Honoshylulu The council is composed of any Sisters in the diocese who desire to affiliate herself with the organizations objecshytives

The projected aims of the council are to serve as a chanshynei of communication among Religious communities and to the bishop the priests senate shylay senate other religious groups to serve as a source of unity and strength among Reshyligious to foster a closer c0shy

operation among clergy Reshyligious and laity and to be [1

means of coordinating the works of the apostolate after studying the religious educational socishyal economic and ecumenical needs of the diocese

Mfiltie P~Mmbnrwg amp HealltDOI~ (Oe Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Master Plumber 702i1

JOSEPH RAPOSA JR $06 ~O MAUIN $1ltlEfEii

lraaD rlovell 675a74~

SCHOOl MaonteilCllnCe SIlJlPPUO~

$WIEIE~IERS - $OA~$

IOlISUINJIr~CijANIIsect IrU~1E E)IliINGUUSIHIEIl$

DAHill COo nS86 IPUlRCHIASE SIlRIEIETI

NEW I8lEll)fO~1Ol

~9lJ-lJ7~6

~IIII11IJ1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I11I1I11I1I11I11II11I1I1I1I1I1I1I1IJ1I1I1I1I11I11I11I1I1I11I11UIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIII1111I11I

1 ~ESADAV~ lIIli~ls for use at Mass in Polish Coo en spoQn Do not boil Remove ltihurches and institutions in this from the heat and stir in the country have been received ~y remaining rum John Cardinal Cody of Ohicago In answer to - a letter from II member of the Consilium far Mrs Mogardo of Falmouth the Cbe implementation of the Con- amount of all-purpose cream 10 IJtitution Oll the Sacred Liturgy the Creme de Menthe Squares IUN~~A~m M ~58 icIIf the Second Vatican COIDlcil is one pint iillllllJllIlIIlIlIIlIIlIlIlIlIIlIIlIlIlIlIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIlJlIlIlIIlIIllUlIIlIIlIlIlIlIlIIlIIUIIUlIIlIlIlIlIlIUlIlIUIIUIIIIII~I~

I

THE ANCHORTDi~c~se of Foil River-Thurs May 23 1968 indiana Prelate ~ i l bull - 10 Heads NCEACrawford Electrical Co DrSpecial Gifts Morris Feresten Dr Frank L mAiN FRANCISCO r(NC) shy

Collins Mr amp Mrsmiddot John P Bish()p Raymorid J GellagMrContinued from Page Nine Dwyer of Lafayette Ind was ~le~ted

Attleboromiddot Hub Clothing Bristol ~it- president general Of the Nashyting Mills Inc Dixon Burial tionlll1 Catholic Educational Asshy$150

sociation at the final meeting ofVauit Shelburne Shirt Co IncBarry J Boardman Ins Agency $125 the asSoclation~8 6Mb Mnuat

Almeida Electric Co August Elmer C Slater

convention hereraquoIlr amp Mrs James G Heagney He succeeds Bishop ErnestBadwey amp Sons Joseph A Parks$100 Primeau of Manchester N HMrs Mar-y Courtis Dr amp MrsL G Balfour Co

who rervOO as president general Norman pSadler Brothers Inc for three yearsBedford House ConvalescentShields Inc A native of Cleveland BishopHomeInc Dr Sanford I Udis$60 Gallagher was ordained in 1939llI Joseph Madowsky HarveyAtherton Furniture Co~ and served as a Navy chaplainProbber Inc $50 during World War n He w~s

Demers Brothers narned bishop of Lafayette inM S Company 1965 following service as secreshy[P[(D$Iroreg$ $40

tary of the National ConferenceAttleboro Printing amp Embosshy of Catholic Charities

olng Co Inc ~WltWI7il$~ltW Speaker at the election sesshy$35 sion was U S Commissioner ofIOUlIt lLADY IOlF lFAllDMIAReynolds amp Markman In~ $25 Education Harold Howe who

$27 said that Catholic schools willMr amp Mrs Ralph A GuerrieroLeedham Hardware be especially guilty if they doMr amp Mrs Peter J Hoss lFlIt ADlIt][AN OJFM lFlIt lFAJlUAN OJFM $25 not act to solve the crisis of

Attleboro Sun Publishing Co ST IDOMIllN][C ghetto educationmiddotlnc Connelly Gold Stamping $25 Christianity is supposed toCo MacDonald Moving amp Storshy ~[j1Jil~O$ltC[(il$ t[ Our tLC1~ls ~hauraquocetiMr amp Mrs Thomas Paiva offer something more the age Co Marathon Company Mr amp Mrs Thomas C Murphy commissioner told the 6000

Plastic Craft Novelty Co Ob$erve $iver Priestiy Jubilees delegates at the final sessionSTLOUIS OF FRANCE On May 26th the 9 AM Retreat House Pittsfield N 11 ~Let us be fools for Christs

Fall Ri~er $50 MlIss will be conceleprated where _ he served as Retreat sake said St Paul middotWe Ladies of St Ailne raquoy the Franciscan Friars at Our Director and Master~ badly need highminded visionshy

$1200 Holy Name Society Ladys Chapel New Bedford Four years later _1964 Fr aries who can help the poorestFan River Electric Light Co st Vincent de Paul Sooi~ eonmiemoratingthe Silver Ju Fabian was transfe~red to Our of our children see a new dream $1000 $26 bilee of the ordination of) Fr Ladys Ohapel New ~d~()rd and faShion a better reality FOO

FirestoneRubbe~ amp Latex ~ Mr amp Mrs Herman Lamppoin4e Fabian F Joyce OFM and Fr where he has served to the pres- ournations sake Catholic edushy $600 I~ k Adrian F Donachie OFM ent time He is ViCar of the cationmust jointhe rest of edshy

~all R~~er GasCQllpanYj Fr Fabian is a native of Franciscan CommuIlity Father ucation to give them a neW $500 Vineyard iavenc Watertown He is an alumll~sof is well known thr~ughout the botizon

lVlr amp Mrs Henry ~ Feitelberl Boston College High SChool and area as a preacher for the St Mooney amp Co Inc middotUT AUGUSTINE

0Boston College He entered the Jude Novena devotions on$300 FIRST COMMUNION- $46L50 Franciscans of Holy - Nilme Thursdayat the chapel andtbeRev JosephF ODonnell ResidentSofCatholic MemoJillJ Province with headquarters in radio Apostolate

~o~e I $50 ~ PORTRAITSNew Yo~k City in 1937~ - Fr Addlln F Donachie Of~ $300 Mrs James Boyle He was ordained at the Na- is a native of Glasgow Scotland IN LIVING COLOUR

St Augustines GuildCitizens Savings Bank iional Shrine of the Immaculate and was brought up in NewSt Augustines Holy NameFR Five Cent Savings Bank Conception Washington D C York Oity H~ entered ~t $200 St Augustines St Vincent de May 29 1943 His first assign- Joseph s SeraphIcSeminary Jtl Anderson-Little Co inc lPaul Society ment was to St EIizabeths 1932 in preparatIon for the A -Friend $30 - T)enver middotColo from Franciscan Priesthood

$150 Mr amp Mrs William Figueiredo 1944 to Hi58 He was received into the

PR Peoples Cooperative Bank Mr amp Mrs Francis Metell _ Pastor and Supe- Order in 1937 and was ordained $135 $25 rior of the Church and Monas- six years later on May 29 1943

Herve Lagasse Cmdr amp Mrs Daniel Burgo tery in Denver in 1951 and at the National Shrine of the $125 Frank Coutinho Mr amp Mrs served in this capacity for Immaculate Conception Washshy

Cliff Nursing Homes Michael Fonte) Mr- amp Mr~ Eushy seven years ington D C His priestly Hfe$120 gene Frieh Mrs John Hughes In 1958 he was stationed at has been in New York Coloshy

J O Neill Supply Co Marthas Vineyard National St Bonaventure Retreat House rado Connecticut NewHampshy $101 Bank Rep amp Mrs Benjamin C Paterson N J for a period of shire and finally- stationed in ~ Fall River Shopping Ce~nter Mayhew Jr Mr amp Mrs Boleslaw two years giving laymens re- Our Ladys Chapel since 1956Associates Nickowal Mrs Dean Swift 11 treats and days of recollection Fr Adrian came with the origishy $100 Mr amp Mrs Frederick Thifault to the clergy He was then nal group of Franciscans ~o staff

Norbut Mfg Co Inc transferred to St Anthonys- Our Ladys Chapel THE FINEST QU~LITYSullivans of Fall River dk Wareham Hyannis IS WORTH THE PLEASANT

H P Hood amp Sons Inc ST PATRICK Famed Church -Gift SHORT DRIVE TO THE I bull Borden amp Remington Co $50

AREAS LEADING STUDIOr Louis Hand Inc middotMr amp Mrs Thomas Choate To Mission SocietY William T Manning Colnt Mr amp Mrs middotWilliam McLaugbshy BOSJO~ (NC) B~stons

j OPEN SUNDAYS Radio Station WALE I lin famed St Stephens church hasbull Dring Communion Seasonbeen - turned over by Richard

Dr amp Mrs Americo Almeida ~ W Hurley Co Cardinal Cushing to the Misshy $75 $30

Walter A Fur-man Co $45

8io~ary society ot St James ~ BRIDAL PORTRAITS Beetlemiddot Plastics Albert- Guerzoni the Apostle 311d Deluxe Quality Candicts Fall River Lodge No 118 BPO $21 famous for RESERVE YOUR DATE EARLY - The edifice _a short distance E~~ Mrs Am~lia JJaptiste _ from the home of Paul Revere

St- vincent de Paul Salvage - $25 and other Revolutionary War ~rve as QUALITyand EvANS STUDIOS

JBureau Nlr amp I([rs Franci~Murp~y shrines will head- St Patricks Wofuens Guild Miamp Mrs Julius ]~abbitt -I quarters for the society which 18 MAIN STTAUNTON middotCall Rivermiddot Mr amp ~rs JsephNorris the ~ardinal founded to do mis- SERVI(E Tet 822-1181

sect(6nwork in Latin AmericaProvidence Pile Fabric Corp $50 St Stephens church was deshy

Robert L Germaine Inc o o

Atty amp Mrs JohriJ Harringshy OUR LADY OF LOURDF8 whose works also include tne ton $5 Massachusettsmiddot State House It

Simons Supply Co Inc Massasoit Hills Trailer Iark was first used as a CongregashyThe J L amp R Cohen Foundashy Inc

siglled by Charles BlJlfltJch

tienal church but with the influx ~ion of Catholics during the inlmishy

Nira WarehOUse Mart Inc West Harwich gration of the early 1800s it was $45 purchased by the Boston arch-

Drobyski Wallpaper Co HOLY TRINITY diocese $60 In 1964 Cardinal Cushing$40

Dr Harry Cooperstein Mr amp Mrs Theodore F Berg spent more than $1000000 W haus restore the building$30

Ashton Funeral Home $50 Magonis Ferry Landing Mr amp Mrs Manley E Boyce Priests COll1ference

$25 $26 STEUBENVILLE (NC) ~ A Atty Kenneth Sullivan Mr Captain William House group of priests here has fOJmed

- Mrs Lewis Morley Hathaway - $25 -- a CQnference of Steubenville ~nelal Service Cook Bord(l1 ~oha Gillahan Mr amp Mrs Priests to create a general

Co Dr Harry Levine Joseph lttiltpetteMr ampMrsJohn ~pirii of priestly fraterJ~iiy and l)rDa~id P~Iill Tyrells Mar- E Ke~ly ~r Mrs yen~j~ Cor- - professionalism Msgr 0

t Cascaltle Drug CoProfes- ra~o HarQJd~RmiddotMcK~nna ~Tolin A Cymbor pastor ()fStgt Qff~rincllid~SPeciaIILinlie9n~n~ $3 w~rf~ 0( ~ I~al ph~i-rnacy hr havills Mrs R R~ SmalI AnthonYThete~esect Church Piney F6rk

-- middote~rHolvitZampHorvitz Ryan MrampMr~_-JQnljMul- wasnamedtempotary chairman Ride TicketsFor additional details or reservatic5nsmiddot call Mrmiddot Conrad Feriamiddot at (4Ql) RE 14kgtOO collectl lC

High Point Fording Box Corp llnsMr-ampmiddotMrsAllgterf Daven- and chosen to repiesimt the _ ~ ~

A RossEvetett Motors port Mramp Mrs Frank Ball group at the initialmiddot meeting in

-uline Te~tile Co Eagle Mr amp Mrs John W- Anderson Chicago May 21 of the National ine Co Mr amp Mrs Paul Carney Federation of Priests coun(iMI

bull

~~ 1

Q I gt~ j

1tj _-_000 e

Comiddot

~ ~-

JUST OfF ROUTE 117

POINTmiddotRO~-_

SpecialSchool Outinils GjoupOffer $3 per Stuitentmiddot

father OWcopy) Sons Are OEd~glfDregd

BELMONT (NC) - Three members of the Habiger family -two sons and their fathershyare completing studies for the priesthood and will be ordained as Benedictine priests on June M

The lllabigers have prepared Jlor ~e priesthood at Belmont Abbey here They will be Qrshydained by Abbot Thomas Halmiddott shyman at St Benedicts Abbey in Atchinson Kans

John Habiger joined his two sons at Belmont Abbey after the death of his wife Mildred in December 1963 He said he did this because my wife and I just had an understanding that the survivor would give his or her life to the Lord

Before deciding to enter the priesthood Habiger had worked as a sales manager fOl a deep freeze home locker distlibutor

lHE ANCHORshy~urs May 23 1968

_ bull

II

Britista Cot1toIicI Suppolt New Bilt To Ovtlow Bios~

LONDON (NO) ~ 0aitJh0 ~ BeneFally appearr to be ~Ving strong BUPPOOt to the govemme~ controvemial new biJl 110 outlaw racial dls- crimination in Britain

Tile Catholie press glQ~~e bin Its blessing with some quBll shy iDeations Several Catholic anti shyaovermnent politicKms howshyweI have voiced oppositionshynot em principle they eblim but oocause they fear some sections of the bHl eould IIIggravate rather ampan mollify existing racism here by producing II privileged black and colored minority

The Race Relations Biil Which Is backed by the present Labor government and can reashysunably be expected to become law this Summer fs intended to i

strengthen existing legislation in this matter in view of the big rise in the number of Negro and colored (Indian Pakistani and as a labor pool manager for and West Indian) immigrants in the United States Air ForceFATHER AND SONS TO BE ORDAINED A father and his two sons will bethe past few years

Fellls Takeover m-d~ined June 14 to the priesthood at St Benedicts Abbey Church Artchi8on Kansas Nearly 2000 dock workers FoUo~ing the death of his wife five years ago John Paul Habiger (center) entereq the MethodlidsAdopt

quit work to delllonstrate BenedIctines joining his sons in the seminary Their nam~8 im religion are Father J~hJ) Project E~uaiityWJainst the bill and to sboW Igrlatius Habiger OSB (center) Father MatthewH~riy Habiger~ OSB (left) andsupport for the view o~ bullCon~ DALLAS (NC)-The ll-milshy2ervative party me~ber Eno~b F~thet Benedict John HabigeJrp OSW NC Photo li~)Il-member United Methodist ~

PPwell that Britain has too Church-formed by a merger l(Ilany elgtlQred immigranUi $50 $50 of the Methodist Church and

Powell had called for 8 vir WestpolIt Almon L Turner Holy Name Society the Evangelical United Brethshy tual halt to the entry of dependshy Thomas M Ross ren-has ill effect adoptedST GEORGE ST PATRICK~nts of colored immigrants and $45 Project Equality throughoutmiddot ~he$25 $250i for measures to encourage the United States Mr amp Mrsmiddotmiddot Leonard Langlois RobertE Eastman Re~ Tames F McDermottliepatriation of the immigrants The 1400 delegates to WleEveline Magnant Claire Magshy $25 $200 bull OtherWise he said black people QUldrennial General Confershynjllt Mr amp Mrs Roland McGee Dr Frederick G Doran ~ lDr amp Mrs Roger E Cadieuxwill take over whole areas ence adopted a resolution inMr amp Mrs Arthur Perry Landgraf Felix P Kaladin $125 Dnd I3cial violence will follow which the new church endorsesMr amp Mrs Donald Pittman Thomas W Whalen Thepnaa Mrs David M KilroyPowell was later ousted from Project Equality and recomshyMr amp Mrs Jacob Strunk Calisto Raymond P Paine $40his position in the shadow cab- mends cooperation both throup

Richard J McNally inet---the leadership that would participation and financial su~SandwichWoods Hole $30assume power if the Conservashy pori on the part of all United Fernand C E AuclairtiVe6 won control of the governshy CORPUS CHRISTI Methodist Ann u a 1 (regional)llT JOSI~IH Dr Thomas Clarkment - by Conservative party Conferences local churches 10shy$300 $350 John T ~mith

0leader Edward Heath who eal or national institutiomlPaul McCusker Rev William F Morristermed Powells speech racist $26 agencies or organizations$150 $100 William MoranAbstain From Voting Friends of Megansett Mr amp Mrs William Carr The resolution presen ted to

The House of Commons apshy $100 $50 $25 the Conference by the Methodshy

Leo A Bond Mrs Leonard Nproved the bill in principal ist ~neral Board of Christian lOr amp Mrs George Christman Mr amp Mrs Lawrence Perrault313-209 and sent it to commitshy Bilooeau Mr amp Mrs Francis Jr Social Concerns called Project$75 Dr amp Mrs J Minihan lKilgrew Mrs James E Sullivantee for additional study before Equality a responsible consist shyMrs Claudia Pendergast Mr amp Mrs Peter Becker Jrit is presented for fi nal passage Mrs Frank Souza Joseph Tin- ent ethical practical effective$50 Mi amp Mrs Robert KennedyTwenty-five Consenatives abshy Mr amp Mrs Cornelius Hickey Mother Cabrini Circle D of j

sley and positive means whereby the stained from the voting rather Sll ll~OMAS MORE United Methodist Church andMr amp Mrs John McCue Norman McEnaneythan fullow the palty line and $50 other churches can SUppOImiddott fail1Mr amp Mrs Emil Tietje $40vote against the bill Atty amp Mrs Richard N LaSalle employment practices intbe$35 Mr amp Mrs Francis CarpengerAlthough the British in the $2~ United StatesSt Josephs Womens Guild $35past two centuries have govshy In memory of Mr Y J Archshy $30 bull Mr amp Mrs Raymond Doucetteerned a large proportion of the 11mbeaultMr ampmiddotmiddotMrs ElmeiHallett $26 Oppose Cuts worlds black and colored $25 Mrs Charles Russell peoples it is a new thing for ~25 Mrs Margaretmiddot Harris Mr ampbull this country to have such peopie

Mrs Paul La Prade Thomas middotC H Berube MD Mr amp Mrsequal in law moving in by the Rooney Mr amp Mrs Charles Sefshy Joseph Silvia William J Dalton thousands and competing com

mereially and socially with ton Mr amp Mrs JG$eph Sylvia James W Blunt John Hart whites G Stanley Johnson Mr amp Mrs

Fred Comings Mrs Helen ClarkeThe new bill is aimed at outshy Oak Bluffs Mr amp Mrs George PereiraMYIllawing racial discrimination in

SACRraquo IIEAlltT Harry Walkerjobs housing hotels insurance and similar fields The most $125 The Percy Family Mrs Kay

Mr amp Mrs H~l1ry ~orey radical anti - discriminatioJ1 ~iggins ~ yenrsRalph Emerson measure ever Ploposed for Brit shy $100 yenrll Edith chamberlin Mr I

aIn it was introduced by the Reliable Market-In memory Mrs MIchael Cornick Mr amp yenrs of deceased loved ones govelllment of Prime Miliister Ernest Forni Jr

Harold Wilson not so much to $50 MI amp Mrs Shurtleff Mry deal with present circuinstances Mrs Corinne Fournier Ralph Jameson Mr amp Mrs Clemshyas with the future when the $30 mey Mr amp Mrs James Hamlen

A Friendproblem could become more Mr amp lVIIs Charles McHugh acute $25 Mr amp Mrs William Ward Mr

A Friend In memory of Mr amp amp Mrs Charles Pizzottimiddot Mr amp

Diocese Convenes Mrs Antone G Camacho Mr amp Mrs Charles Parks Frances Silva Mrs Thomas DeMont Mrs Rose

First Lay Congress M Peardon A Friend Seekonk BATON ROUGE (NC)The A Friend

first lay congress of the Baton Mr amp Mrs James L Kenney MT CARMELmiddot Rouge diocese convened at the $100 Catholic Lifc Center herc Ostellville St Vincent de Paul Society

More than 600 lay people repshy $50 OUR LADY 0 THEresellting the 12 civil paJishes Knights of Columbus

(~ounties) comprising the Loushy ASSUMPTION Mr amp Mrs Edwnrd McCrystal isiana diocese had the opportu- $50middot $25

nity middotto participate in matters The McKeon Family ToI11enS Guild Mr amp Mrs affecting diocesan finances the $25 Wilfred Blanchette middotMrbullamp Mrs

feasibility of continuingmiddotCath_ Mr ~ Mrs WiUiamHerron Edward Chal)~ler Mr amp Mrs Ciq education apart from the Manu~IJlendricks Jr HOlyName pu~gtlicschool systein the Ray ham ~9ci~ty Mr amp MrsE McPhillips Churchs il)VOlvcmcnt in social SJmiddotANNmiddot action admiriistrative middotstrllemiddot $90 Somerset

tures of themiddot Church and the Rev Thomas F Neilan ST JOHN OF GOD nymans place in diocesan 00shy $75 $150 ministratioa Cirino Dominic P amp Family Dr Americo B AlUehbl

SACRAMENTO (NC) ~ TheJSouth Dart~outh beads of Catholic charitable ST MARY agencies throughout CaliforniD

$125 have joined in opposing 00- Dr amp Mrs Paul E Corley 1~mptsof government to reduce

$50 public spending at the expense Dr ampmiddotMrs Victor Almeida of ihe needy and poor

$30 Mr 1 MrsWilliam Hines

]25 Mi amp Mrs Armand Borgesmiddot Mr amp Mrs Charles Nunes

Mr amp Mrs joseph MOlliz Jr The Johnson Family Dr amp Mr~ Archibald Senesac

Nantucket Sll MARY

OUR LADY OF THE ISLE $36

James E Worth $15

Grace Henry

9ffering You ~ SavingsPIQnsmiddot

lHlome Financingmiddot

WARFJI~~ (O-OP~RATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mass

Telephone 0 295-2400 flllnb-llv-Mall Servlu AYllIIIllII

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Check These Banking Services

bull Savings Bank life Insurance lleaDhtate Loans bull Chri~tmas and Vacation Clube

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bull 5 CO~Yl1lient Locaiios bull - - middott

middotNEW BEDFORD INSTITUTImiddotONmiddot tor SAVINGSmiddot

12 -tAE ANCHOR-Diocesa ofFoti Rive~Thurs May 23 1968 l

$copylDfrTht ~$frml 1NJcopy1iU0il Wreg$U9gt[J1 JIl[OlLY CROSS OUIlt LADY OlF GIltACIE

$101 $50 Mr amp Mrs Donald L BergerOlll Rev Rene R Levesque

$100 $25Joseph P Kairys

Mr amp Mrs Orner Duqu~tte$50 Jennie E Overton Mr amp Mrs James R Jones SOWltrlm YIiUililOuii1mDr amp Mrs Thomas Berry Jr Mr amp Mrs John Pilz middotST pros X Mr amp Mrs Robert J Dray $150 John J Smith John F Martin Dr amp Mrs R Earl McLoud $100

$40 Anonymous 1IL F Bergeron $54l

$35 Philip J Hart Frank Ready Ano~ymous (2)

$30 $25 Dr amp Mrs Herbert L Evereti Edward P Hayes John J CarshyLouis Lyne amp Theodore Larishy roll Thomas P McDonough

mere Dorothy Schoonmaker Denis d Brophy Mary Geist Douglas Eo ~

$25 VampJl John Crawford Mr amp Mrs David Gomes M

ampMrs Leo R Schleicher Mr amp Mrs M J Hegarty Thomas F 1fltID01iJil~~ Gentile Mr amp Mrs EdwardlllL Slr JJOSEIPIHILoveday

Mr amp Mrs Robert E Coffey ~150

li$r Francis Welch Mr amp Mrs A Friend Leo F Sullivan Mr amp Mrs Robshy $40

Mr amp Mrs John Aiello I3ehleicher ltUt Downey Mr amp Mrs John E

Mr amp Mrs Gerald Tache $35

Mr amp M~ Arthur LeclairEast FaBmoutlh $30

ST ANTHONY VictormiddotL Brunette $275 Mrs Simonne Fisher

St Vincelllt de Paul Confer- Mr amp Mrs Edwin J Marmk ace Mr amp Mrs William A Olishy

voeira Mr amp Mrs Enos Days $21)

William Bartlett Mr amp Mrs Gerard Benoit Mr amp Mrs Nicholas F Tangshy

~y $25

Mrs Margaret Virgin Alice Bourassa Alexander Perri llIIllll lllli Braley Jr Dr amp Mrs Jell shyorne Brault

Cecile A Daley Mr amp Mra John I)ias Jr Mrs Mary P Gage Mr amp Mrs Ernest RLashysectesse Edward McGrath

Mr amp Mrs Leonard deMeshydeiros Mr amp Mrs Roland L Despres Mrs Irene FitzGeralcll Mr amp Mrs Edward Fitzsimshymons Mary Gogghi

Edmond Goulet Margaret Manghan Joseph C Mello Mrs Carmen Muldoon Mr amp Mrs Paul Murray

Margaret Nickerson Mra Edythe Rankin Mr amp_Mra Frank J Rezendes George Vishyveiros Mr amp Mrs JosephSevigny

Sli MAIlty

$81 St Vincent de Paul Society

$25 Sacred Hearts Association Raymond Dlugosinski Mr amp Mrs Manuel Allua amp

Nancy Mr amp Mrs Antone Costa J1l Mr amp Mrs John A Wojcik

SACRED IHIEARlr $25

St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ST IPATRRCK $iOO

Mr amp Mrs William BrennlUll $75

Anonymous $50

Mr amp Mrs Francis J Flynn Atty amp Mrs Edward Farrell

$30 Mr amp Mrs Albert W Lawrence

bull Major ampMrs Lawrence Uch-shymanowicz

$25 Mrmiddot amp Mrs Edward C Wen Jr John Keohane

Mr~ amp MrS JosephCardeIre Mr amp Mrs Melvin Dolan

Mrmiddotamp Mrs Walter Buguey Mr amp Mrs Robert Costa Mr amp Mrs John Kelliher John Lynch

Mr amp Mrs Thomas Magwre Mr amp Mrs Kenneth Paige

$30 lt $leo~ IJ=1J yltID Uilliil 0$ lllr amp MrsEdward McCarthJ7 lievbull~ 17 ~

Slr FRANCIS XAVlrEllt $2S st ~o Womeno CI~

Holy Name Society COO $450 Mramp RlIra Lee Kingsb~St Vincent de Paul Society $25 Mr amp lVlro Leo Parente

$300 Capitell Mr amp Mrs Richard Dr amp Mrs ~p Sibilll

Charles H McGrath Joan

Mr amp Mrs Larry Newman Sproul lllr amp Mrs Thomas ~$100 Loughlin Mr amp Mrs William Mr amp Mm GeorgeM~Doane Beale amp Ames E Donovan Mr amp lVlm Joseph FalDtoo

$50 Mr amp Mrs Harry SylvesterMr amp Mrs Frank J Dolan Mr amp Mrs Charles Flynn lltlr $25

A Friend Mrs Rockina CaftDoMr amp Mrs Irving Morrissey amp Mrs~ Marshall Field Mr amp amp Family Mr amp Mrs JOQD KmampJ R ~eyburn Mrs Robertmiddot Ryan Vetorlno Mr amp MrS Victor Narciso Mr IIMr amp Mrs John Hart Bros Ipc Fruitland

Scudder amp Taylor Oil Inc CarreiM Florist Mrs John Kinsley Dr amp Mrs Francis ONeil Ilflr amp Moo Wllliam ~

Captains Table Mr lie Mrs John Currivan Mr Bishop Tyler General Assem- McznsfieRdl Mrs Alfred Kuplast Mrs ~

My garet Jordan Mrs Grace Duma Charles J Ardito 8l MARY Mr amp Mrs Fred Taylor Josepla

$ltamp0 $150 E Donovan Jmiddotr Mr amp Mramp W tel Alfieri Catholic Youth Organization st VinceJntt de Paul Society

shy-

SENDYOUR GnJFT TO bull i l j middotcrmiddotmiddot

The Rig Rever~ Edward TO~MeiJramiddot The IUght Reverehd RiJYlIWnd T CQnsidiRf lVallonarpfreclor Olt Diocesiul Di~ecto i

366 Fifth Avenue 368 North MalnSteet f(eWYork New Yo~k ioooi Fall River Massachuseits027l0 -

1iWJlE ADDRESS

THE sectOClllETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH ~ shy

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~~ IiUrge Negro La Guidonce Boord ~n K~s~ Cety

KANSAS CJIIIY (NC~-A five-paltish cooperative illl

ner city ministry guided by a Negro lay board has been proposed os a way o~ bridging the gap betWeen the white Catholic CI1urch and the Negro community here in Misouri

A six-person committee headshyed by MrsThelma Work will identify the nee~ of the lComshymunity-Catholic or not-and to propose a structure fur meetshying those needs I

The action came as the result

of a meeting of the Catholie

V ~

Clergy Conference on Inner Oity bullneeds

Father James Lock chairman cited charges of the Black Cathshyolic ClergyCaucus in Detroit in conjunction with the IImnual meeting of the Catholic Clergy Conference on the Interracial Apostolate The Black Caucus statement said the Catholic Church in the United States 1s gtrimarily a white racist insti shytution which is rapidly dying in the black community and to which the black community no longer looks to with hope

On~ Out f li5 The Caucus recommended fha~ Harrison the Bishop Rev William J Hurley Rev DonaiiIll

white priests become supportshy E Messier Rear Rev Cornelu8 F Kiley Rey Robert A ers and learners listening tc McGowan Rev Edmund J Fitzgerald Rev Kevin F TrippNegroes to find out what tbeir lheir assignment~ are Olll page twoneeds are

The Kansas City-St Joseph diocese bas no Negro diocesan priests Ttrore~ DS~th~ Aoee Sl1m~PO rfif~ifflg tedera~ Jb ~~~

We are trying to start the wheels rolling for some kind of

~umlp~JrlMeFrot Nleereg~~rJ fr CmbCBi OW~iff1ychurch structure through which the black people of our diocese can voice opinions and partici shy WASHINGTON (lTC)-SPokesshy ment of public policy ~t Jlorth oommunity-based Social services esnie cultural values of ~hliv

pate in decision making said men for Protestant Catholic and in the Full Employment Act (l(f to meet Human and community country they said are sucll Father Lock Jewish organizations h a V e 1946 which provides for useshy needs Recipients of rondo that work becomes the basis by

backed federal legislation which ful employment opportunities should not conduct sectarian which a persons worth tnFather Dan Howe declared~

We have set up programB would provide one million jobs for all those able willing and programs judged A job not only tends ie i10r the nations unemployed seeking to work n determine an individuals acshygeared to Catholics in our parshy While they acknowledged that

ceptance by society but it alsish whom we have formed rn Their support was given in The Acts emphasis on education passage of this legislation would affects ones attitude abolll~the white mentality Since cl testimony before the House Seshy and training Training s1Mgtuld be no wre-all for the ills ci oneselfbest we are having contact lect Subcommittee on Iabor be open-ended so that the posshy poverty in America the spokesshy

with only about 2000 people out Studies have shown that unshywhi~ is holding hearings on sibility of permanent full-time men said that any attempt to of the 50000 in our area we the Guaranteed Employment employment beyond fIDe presshy combat poverty must provide employed persons have a ve~

can presume that the activities Act of 1968 ent situation is a reality Trainshy meaningful jobs low level of self-esteem anell we have structed as being our that this attitude tends to pro-ing programs of this ~Testifying were Father JohnChristian program of service do vide a self-fulfilling prophesrshould include basic educationMcCarthy assistant director ofnot reflect or reach black thinkshy MO~~U[ij] ~lW] ~O~S since it then becomes more dif~counseling and opportunities tothe Social Action Departmenting ficult to find or hold a joblearn about appearance manshy

E~GJHlll O]RDAllNJEID FOR IllmCJESJE Bishop Qgtnnolly m-dained eight deacons ro the priesthood for service in the Diocese 21t ceremonies oonducted at St Marys Cathedral Fall River Front Rev Edward E Correia Rev George Eo

We need a board of black of the U S Catholic Confershy OrJi1 AA~jjo Foreg[uGagement of income health IImdence Dr Grover Bagby of thelaymen to tell us what the pe0shy NEW YORK (NC)-Answershyother factors affecting personalDepartment of Social Justice ofple want to help change the well-being and development fog an appeal from the Ceylonthe National Council oftone to establish priorities government now fighting a mashyChurches and Rabbi Richard GFather Howe noted there are lWven fl Sellf-lEs~(()nim laria epidemic threatening 16Hirsch director of the Religiousapproximately 9000 Negro million persons the catholicAction Center of the Union of Involvement of private nonshyCatholics on the books but Medical Mission Board nere sentAmencan Hebrew Congrega- profit organizations Such Oll shynot necessarily active in Kansas by air Ifreight 364000 anti-mashytions - ganizations they said will c0shyCity out of a total Negro popu- laria tablets to Colombo Ceyshyoperate with the development ~lation of about 130000 They specifically suppoit4d lons seaport-capital The shipshyHe said that although the three provisions in the bill ment valued at $10746 conshy

structure of the lay board is yet Creation of an Office of Guarshy (cll)f AdldJrell$$ sisted of tablets for both ooults ro be determined it is the conshy anteed Employnient Opportushy and ~hildren sensus of 20 priests and laity at 1r~~regy Meefrolilregnity l8 a eontinued develop Earlier the CMMB respondingthe meeting that at least half

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-Theshythe lay members would be un- oro a plea for help from Indoneshyology must revolutionize it shyder 25 since the young people ~1JJlhJreg~ WODil$ [Q)~f sian authorities shipped 220shyself John Cogley former reshyare the thought-leaders in the 520 anti-malaria tablets ~aluedligion editor of the New Yorkblack community ~ial ~fit1hvllsW Times told the national convenshy at $7306

NeCeSS31lY ApPll03Cln SCOTCH PLAINS (NC) shytion of the College Theology so-A Negro lawyer Leonara BrotherHarold Woods a teacher The Catholic Medical Mission ciety IN the University m- SainHughes told the meeting at Union Catholic High School Board for 40 years has beenmiddot IfmiddotranciscoOne thlng is clear The clos- here in New Jersey has won a oonducting a worldwide mercy

Ing of any Catholic institution months delay to contest lim Cogley DOW a staff member cl program shipping medicines or cut-back in the inner-city order to report to his New York the Center for the Study m Deshy drugs bandages and various says one thing to Negroes We draft board for induction into mocratic Institutions Santa Barshy other hospital supplies and dont want you to be CathoUcs ~e Airmed Fo~ equipment to some 1000 misshybara Cal and editor of the Censhy

Father Vince~t Lovett dir~ BrOther B8rold la member of ter magazine tlgtld delegates that sion hospitals 4000 dispensaries tor of the new Diocesan Social theology must lead- rather than and clinics in developingAction office saidmiddot middotthe Marist BrotheJS had been eoUJlltriesfollow usemiddotits treasureS ratheT It seems to me we a- 4o_1krecJassified ll-A and Cllldered to than hoard them Liberatemiddot it shying about setting up something after rewmfug biB draft eard 011 self from its own prison ~ c0nshylike II couotywith II state goy- April 19 as a protem agaiDst the formity fear imd be dead Dbshyernment - a regional ministry U4o- actionism of th~ pastwithin tile diocese Be said the war VBallam

S~aking on The image off

WI report for Induction em April M

approach seems not so much lim The 22-year-old teachers ease ideal as lh necessitymiddot bas been taken up by the Amer-o Man as Citizenmiddot Cogley said

iean CDvil Uberties Union that the change in the religlO1Ul Which ealled middottbeboardll action mans self-image and the change

Silent Meditation in reclassifying him ~ new in the image of politleal man are TRENJON ~NC)-A bID pr0shy height of wegality Tbe ACLU not unrealated The image of a

viding for a period of silent said Brother Harolds religious free man redeemed from every meditation each day by students status had not collmged since he form of spiritual servitude and attending public schools was WIlI3 originally classified ~D subjugation he said b triumphshyintroduced in the New Jersey and that he hGd DOt ilrlterfered ing over the old image of eccleshyState Legislature by Assembly with the ndministratlon of the sia9Ucal man-a passive creature Speaker Albert B Smitlll 3eleet1ve ~ BWolltem eOOject ~ the Will ca ~thero

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THE At~~C~_ 15 Th M 231968 urs ~y World Communication Day CtmMG(f~ A~V[JK~$ObsecteWGR1CCe on S~ndl~w O[fi) ~copy~o~ A~fDcopy[jf)

WASHINGION (NC)-In response to an appeal by NEW ORLEANS (NC)-ArchshyPope Paul VI to the universal Ohurch the Church in the bishop PhHip M Hannan asshyUnited States will observe the second World Communicashy serted here As far as I am tions Day on Sunday May 26 The National Conference of concerned segregation in the

Church is dead We are past the Catholic Bishops awroved time for statements Now is thefor Motion Pictures and Bishoplast November the observshy time for actionClarence J Issenmann of Cleveshynnc of World Communicashy Tile archQishop of New Orshy

tions Day in this country on USCC Press Department land episcopal chairman of the

leans told delegates at an diocesan and parish levels ampnd archdiocesan conference on st) shy

members of the U S Bishops cial action I assure you we are going forwardCommittee for Social Commu- Senate Rev1ltews

nications have sent to individ- He outlined programs fe ual Ordinaries throughout the Continued from Page One beMer education for adequate country a cOpy of the Prayer lains to be assigned on a funmiddot housing and for recognition of of the Faithful for that Sunday time basis and that the needs the inherent digni ty of all men and a ooP1 of the Holy ~athers of the sick were being adequateshy The Church is exerting itll message issued earlier this ly met under the present arshy influence in every way to assistmonth ran~ement the poorest he said If we

It is recommended that the 3 Recommendations on salshy follow Christ we must begillilobservance in this country ary adjustments Taken into aeshy with the pOor even if thishave both religious and non- count _by Bishop in his direcshy means asking others to wait 0religious aspects The former tives for Aug I 1967 little longerwould highlight a Mass with 4 Meetings open to all clergy Anyone can live poor the

appropriate sermon in the 00- Bishop approved archbishop said The key thingthedral or some convenient 5 Extension of Synod prepshy is dignity This does not mean church to which executives aration time Bishop approved that this dignity is recognized Wld employes of communica- 6 Secretary to be Treasurer by a dole or a handout or eveD tions media would be specially and Senate budget Bishop apshy preferential treatment We are invited proved confusing issues when we talk

The non-religious asp e c t 7 ChOice of other Prayers of of dignity as if it can be bought would feature news conferences the Faithful Bishop approved or paid for he said articles in the press and radio 8 Referral of matters to Passhy - I am totally for equal oppollaand TV interviews and proshy tunity in jobs and for adequate

housing not just open housincgrams toral Council Bishop approved

In his message to the Church 9 Creation of Clergy Person-In human dignity everyone hasPope Paul invited Catholics to Del Board Bishop approved an equal right to education anell

consider the significance of 1() Clergy retirement policy to culture he declaredthe changes that are taking with Bishop accepting ormiddot not

AWARDS CEREMONIES At the annual Awards Day for hospital personnel at St Annes Hospital Fall River Manuel Benevides 38 years of service receives his award while Bertha Janson 42 years of service awaits her presshyentation from trustees Harold K Hudner left and Arthui Guimond right

place in this field (communica- according to diocesan ll1eed tions) under our very eyes and Bishop approved to ponder the serious responsi- 11 In-service training tor bJlities that theSe imply for one newly-ordained priests Bishop and all approved

Clamor forAttentlo~ 12 Various diocesan diredors Until recently the Holy to recommend men for middotpart shy

Father pointed out many did time or full-time further study not have anything more to Btim- Bishojgtmiddot approved 1IIate their inflection than vague 13 Full participation by memories of what they learned Catholics in middotYMCAyWCA ot school or in the family and programs Bishop aPlgtrov~ What they beard in their envi- 14 Rotation among religious ronment eomniunities of their represen-

Now however with the echo Uitives on Senate Bishop ap- r the press motion pictures proved radio and television clamoring 15 Clergy to recommend men lor attention new h~riZons oPenJor episcopacy Bishop applloved wide before them llIndmiddot they are 16 Lay Personnel pension ttuned to the throbbing life of plan study Bishop approved the ~niverse

Who will not rejoice at this 17 Adjustmentin diocesan progress Do we not 1111 see in assessments Bishop approved It a roadmiddotdestined by Providence 18 Clergy retirement study for the advance of themiddot whole Bishop approved of mankind There is room for 19 Bishop announced through all hopes if man learns to mas- Senate exchange of facultieS ter these techniques but every- between Diocese of Fall River thing can be lost if he shirks his and Providence responsibilities Various commfttees have made

Members of the bishops com- studies to implement some of mittee signing the letter to the these considerations Ordinaries included Auxiliarymiddot Senate representatives have Bishop Gerald V McDevitt of participated on a regional and Philadelphia episcopal moder- national basis regarding a nashyator of the United States Catb- tional organization of priests olic Conference Bureau of In- and its constitution and activity formation Bishop John A Donshyovan of Toledo episcopal chairshyman of the National Catholic Cursillo for Men Office for Radio and Television Bishop Christopher J Weldon Starts Tonightshyof Springfield episcopai chairshy

A mens ~ursillo win ~ginman of the Bishops qo~ttee tonight at La Salette C~nter of Christian Livingmiddot At~leboro Dishy

Delegate Recives rectors will be William Barnes of Marion and Rev GilesHonorary Degree Genest middotMS of the center

HONOLULU (NC) ~ Archshy Allmiddot eursillistas are invited to bishop Luigi RaimondiApostolicmiddotmiddot the firstmiddot anniversary of ultleya Delegate in the Unikld States middotmeetingsmiddotin the Fall River area baS received an honorary deshy at 745 Wednesday night May laquoree froIn Charninade College 29 at Sacred Hearts Academy here the only Catholic eollege Prospect Street Fall River A lID the state of Hawaii concelebrated Mass will be folshy In an Dterview with the Hashy lowed by a song session social

waUmiddotCatholic Herald ArehlSishop bour and refreshments Baimondi ~pressed tolerance Ul1reya meetings are schedshylor student activism in the Unishy uled in Attleboro oat Jettes ted States middotIltating Students Funeral Home Friday May 11 8ft adive everywhere Youth Monday May 27 Monday June ill UyiDg find its WBY aoc1 2 Friday June 14 and FridayecJar patterns of tbougbt IlBd June 21 eetioD e DOt lIS set asin pre A eursillo for W4)men is scbedshy paerationfl Cbolees were 1IIed for August and further inshy

-e fiSHthen tbin ~ tit formation is obtainable inla ~ -e LeSalleUe Centerbull --

You Live Better Electrically

trlc range bullbullbull with Iln ingenious oven that cleans Itself Make 8 clean break with the past bullbullbull and graduate to another appliance

that adds to the Joy of Total Electric Uvlng

Graduate to a ~fiameless electric range thatmiddotcleansits own ovenmiddot

Make 8 clean break~ with the past4

Why spend ~ours stooping scrubbing and scouring to clean your oven Why not grad- uate to a modern flarve1ess range bullbull with anoven that cleans itself electrically Its so

easy to use Set the controls and-zingo The oven cleans Itself (And drip pans) All you dois whisk awaya IIttie pOwder

- YOUll notice toothat a flamelessmiddot range keeps your kitchen clean cool a~d ~omshyfortable And because electric cookmg IS so automatic YOUll cook with pleasure So see

yOur appliance dealer about aflameless elecshy

See Yo~r Appliance Dealer or

FAll RIVER ~l~CTRIC LIGHT COMPANY

o

mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 23 196816 I

Mafttl[p)Dsellt $50 Raymond L W Benoit

$5BTANJrlllONY Jos~ph A Tully William J

$300 OLearY Mr ampMrs Alfred Baty ltlJbades McGowan Mr amp Mrs Fred Harney

$100 Mr amp Mrs Michael C ODonshyaarence G Verdi nell Mr amp Mrs ThomaS P Per~ lIugene F Phelan kins Mr amp Mrs John Kozlowski

$15 mosampry Altar Society

$66 Buzzard$ B~y I

iusan A McGowan ST MAJuiAR]ampTWilliam Keane

$SOshy$55 A Friendllohn P Delaney

$6$40 lIlr amp Mrs Thomas Pina

~h G Perry $25$35

Mr amp Mrs Edwin PaytonlInmothy Manning )l amp Mrs John KarlJfudge E C Horrocks J~

$30 Mr amp Mrs Edwin N Rose Wareham Lodge of Elks 15044bullbull Clayton King

Mr amp Mrs David Fannon$~

Mr amp Mrs John OCOnnellJames Downey Romeo Bedarql William Delaneyhnes H Gifford Mary M Chad Mr amp Mrs James Lopes

Wick George Smith Jr Antone Mr amp Mrs Louis Fougereshy-es Edmund Perry $25 Mr amp Mrs Armand Bedard

Mr amp Mrs Michael DelIsMark H McIntyre Teree JeminaBlossom Joseph Farley Robert Mr amp Mrs William BennettGIngras Real Breton Mr amp MrsLouis Eacobaoct

Jobn Tarvis Francis ODri9shyu Holy Nam~ Society Paull Glennon Joseph Zychowicz Central -VUlageIIaomas Renahan Richard SmiUll

ST JOHN THE BAPTIBJl

~50 bullNorth Dighton Mr amp Mrs John DeNadal

ST JOSEPH nolt Rev John P Hogan$156

IlR Vincent de Paul $75 Dr Peter F Piccinini$50

$25amp11 Name Society Florence I Bessette MrSt Josephs Womens Guild

$35 Mrs John J Ardagh Jr llim Raymond Williamsbull amp Mrs Joseph MWTaJ

Me amp Mrs Daniel TebreiN$30 J Jl)r amp Mrs William AcIamI Mr amp Mrs Robert Albanese

o Iohn W Perreira$5 Ch(ltham

Mr amp Mrs Joseph C Amarat 1lIJr amp Mrs Edward M Berobe HOLY ~EJI)EIEMEamp

bullbull amp Mrs Arthur A Ennes Mr $101 A Mm William Johnson Rose Pi Assqc of the SacredHea~ Mello $lOet

Mr amp Mrs Harold Mendoza Mr amp Mrs Robert Han lIffr amp Mrs Bruce Murph) Mr Col amp Mrs John McCa~ bull Mrs Robert Secatore $50

Mrs James Bell Jr St Vincent de Paul Sodeq Mr amp Mrs John J Cavanaup

IIMMACULATE CONCBPJIl[ON $30 $DOO A- Friend

Ambonymous $2-5 $a Chatham Trust Co Mr af

Anonymous MrS E Joseph Geller Dr~ amp MIlII Robert Harned A Friend (~)

Anonymous $75

Mr amp Mrs William Kent Mr amp Mrs Paul reF~vre Mr lIi$it

- Mrs~ Richard Sylva Mr amp MmHelen P Derby Patrick SullivanMr amp Mn Aibert Giordano

A Friend Mr amp Mrs Frank Dresseli Mr amp Mrs Philip S1iel]oA Friend Mr amp Mrs James Griffin shyAnonymous Mr amp Mrs Frank Wing _ImmaCU1ate Conception MenliI

Club $4G North Attleboro

Mr amp Mrs Raymond ~rgerotl SACRED HEART$35

Mr amp Mrs William Condoo $200 $5 Rev JOuter Lussier

Mr amp Mrs William Buchtman $30 Caesar Cardoza Mr amp Mrs RoT Mr amp MrsJeorge Merewe Howard Immaculate Conception $~ Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Joseph A Jette

Mr amp Mrs Co George Knapp $25 McCarthy Coal Co Mrs Fredshy Mr amp Mrs Paul Dion Mrbull elick H Murphy A Friend Mrs Frederick Fortin LionelL

Martineau Mr amp Mrs~ Philippe Rainville amp Florence

Mr amp Mrs George Beaulieu Sl lWAllUf A Friend

STMA-ElY$50 $150Mr amp Mrs Michael Murphy

Nelson GulskiMr amp Mrs Jose FernandesSIl $75$30 Rev Armando A- AnnunziabMr amp Mrs Thomas J Bryanamp

$50 Eva Morowski

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John HaugMr amp Mrs Roland Roberge Mr amp Mrs John StanfordDavid amp Martha Rocha M Veronica Reilly

Mary Cronin George Yefh Mildred Leary A ~riend

BreWSlfreli $4G Dr amp Mrs Domenie BalJiIe

OUR LADY OF TlIIE CAn $35 o $100 Dr amp Mrs Kenneth AtwiIl lllisBionaries of La saleUe jnr amp Mm JosepiL Dona

MONSIGNOR VI[lELSB

Heads Bishop$ Task force

WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr Aloysius J Welsh of Newark N J a recognized authority in race relations and social aclion work has been named to head the Urban Task Force estabshylished by the U S bishops

Bishop Joseph L Bernardin general secretary of the U S Catholic Conference who anshynounced the monsignors apshypointment said the task force was calhd for by the U S blsbshy

ops at theirmiddot April meeting in SL Louis in their statement on the mational racial crisis The bishshy

ops directed the task foree be established by the USCC Social[ Action Department

In this work he will cooperaW with MsgI George G Higgins director and Father John MeshyCartty assistallt director of the Social Action Department the bishop said

$30 Mr amp Mrs Frederick ThOIpG middotMr amp Mrs Clement Sbarolll

$26 Mr amp Mrs Andtew Boisvert Gertrude Cassi~y

Elizabeth Sheals $25

Mr amp Mrs Daniel J Cava- naugh Mr amp Mrs Raymond Bl~hard Mr~ amp Mrs Robert Brunelli A Friend

Mr amp Mrs Robert Gilmore Mrs James P Reynolds Mr amp Mrs John Donleymiddot Mr amp Mm James Battersby Mr Mn Jlohn bullCollins

Virginia G Robinson

AttRehoro BOLY GHOST

$150 Dr amp Mm LoneJglUl

~110 Mr amp Mm John CapoWglo

$50 Holy Ghost St Vineellllt cle Pail

$35 Mr amp Mra Joseph BJOdeur

$25 Mr amp Mrs Malcolm ~

Mr~ amp Mrs Harry Dowdall Mr amp Mrs RObert Geddes Mr~ I Mrs Frank Pistolese

ST JOlIN $200

In memory of Dn7 hwlbaDcI JIoseph F ODonn~

$100 Mr amp Mrs Raym9nd ENmlIlilll Anonymous Donor Inmemory of GabriGll lYaBltllloshy

alone bull $75 -

Rev Edwarcl A Ra~

Mr amp Mrs John P I4e $50

MaryL Wilhelm Mr amp Mrs J G WaJEll Jlr Mr amp Mrs Franclll Bo Mr Joseph ODonnell1 ~ amp Mrs Ernest ~

$30 m=teanor Robinqmiddot Alice~

ST JOSEPH $25

Counseil Jeanne DAre No 263

ST MARK $50 ~

Edward J Connors Jr $25

William J Roche Jr Joseph Dias Mrs Michael J Croke

ST MARY $50

Holy Name Society of St Mary Knights of Columbus Seekonk

Council Mrs Leland B Smith

$35 Mr amp Mrs Donald Blake

$~O ~r amp Mrs Henry E Woodcome st Marys Womeno Guild

$25 Mr amp Mrs Frank Padykula

Mr amp Mrs Russell J Sumner ST THERESA

$50 Mr amp Mrs Donald Boardman Mr amp Mrs George LeBeau

$30 William Cauley amp Family Mr amp Mrs George Boyd

0 $25 Mr amp Mrs RobeIt Generenl Mr amp MrsRobert St mlaiN

Taunton -HOLY ROSAILY

$30 Mr amp Mrs Russen Woodward stanley Radwansld

$25 Children of Mary Sodality Richard Januse

SACRED HEARi

$50 Mr amp Mrs Joseph S llosamp Mr amp Mrs Vincent BrimleF

$35 Mr amp MnJ Robert MeClellaml

_ S2i Walter Waltman Mr amp Mm

atephen Crosby The ~ Mr amp MrtI William Vaillan-

OOurt Mr amp Mrs Michael Barber

Mrs Margaret Rose llrtr~ bull II Frederick Reams

o

81 JAMES

$U Armand Desautels Tremblay Moving Iii 8tonlge

00mpany

STMABY $100

Dr~ Charles HoYt $60

GeOrge Dion Jr $51

Mr~ amp Mrs Kenneth $50

Mm A Hoffman Dr Normand ~ Mr amp M1lil J McNilmaN ar Dr John Fenton Mr amp Mrs Kicban sm

$36 ~ B Grant

~O Dr EdmWlld Fitzgerald D4niel A J Doyle

$U

Richard Barrington BIizabeCIa dIt Margaret Brady Mr - Mm kmea Bumtl Dr CarsiDbre e-- IlUOCi -Robert J mn JamesD hcige

Mr amp Mra Llocel IaImDee ftlomas Hoye Merrill lliaynard Jmelen amp Catherine McCariIll7

Alice McKenna Ruth MeshyJUona Susan McKenna II

Plan To B~ild

- See Us About ~

lotyCost Financing

WAuREHAM SAVltfGS BANK

WorehaftI falmouth cr J-3800 II 1-3000

Mrs James McMorrow Franeb Mulholland

Mary Mulholland Ma~ Neenan Joseph ODonnell Eveshylyn Rice Agnes amp Joseph Rose

Mrs Joseph Rowley Robert Sullivan J Roger Torme1 Charles H fripp Rita Baker

Mrs James Bennett William Carney John Gonzals James Holmes Mary E McNamara

Dr Thomas~OBrien Cbarleo OConnell Mr amp Mrs Edwarcll OGara Mr amp Mrs John 00 _ Ilfearne MlJI amp Mrs Edward OKeefe

1he Ralph Reckard Famil1 Cecelia F lfi Mary C Sheerin

ST PAUL $150

St Vincent de Paul st Pauh Taunton 0

$100 Rev Cornelius~ltYNem

$50 Mr amp Mrs Edward Roster

$24 Mr amp Mrs John Medas Jr

$25 Mrs Catherine Campbell Mr

amp Mrs Chester Jackman Mr c1i Mrs Richard Silva Mr amp Mrs Leo Leroux Mr Mrs John Steen

Mr amp Mrs Donald Emond Mr Be Mrs Gordon Seekel Mr amp Mrs Charles Welch Mr MllIl Paul Silva

New Bedford HOLY NAME

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John Hallonm Mr amp Mrs Jacob Teser

ST CASIMIR $150

Beltr cutnir Kwiatkowski $109

Atto~ Ferdinand Sowa $25

Mr amp Mrs Joseph FoUrnier The Poczatek Family Mramp M Antbony Rijo Jr Mr Mrs Stanle Scbkk Eve White

I

ST BYACINTB $100 -

Mr Mrs George Vigeallltl $50

st Vincent de Paul ConferenCe Gf Hyacinth Parisb

Tum to Page Seventeen

CONRAD SEGUIN BODY COMPANY

Aluminum or Steel 944 County Seet

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2-6618

w H RILEY amp SON Inc

CITIES SERVICE IDISTRIBUTORS-

0 Gasoline Fuel and Ra~ge

OILS OIL BURNERS

for Prompt Delivery amp hoy amp Night ~ice

8 IE BOIlER BURNER UNITS

80tItecI G48 Service

61 OOItANNET Sf TAUNTON

AJdeb DfO - No- Attleboro

TountoIamp

(l

SUMY pons Nuns (l)ffi) AifrMdl~$o

Re$M~~e~o trMture D~[freg~UDrru~ WASHINGTON (NC)-Resulto

of a survey of all United States nuns reveals a high ooceptance of post-Vatican II changes anell an eagerness robecome morrc involved in the inner city and poverty apostolates

The B1UVey conducted bythe Conference of Major Superiors of Women dlJring 1966 was the first extensive attempt to assess resources and attitudes of reli shygious communicenties c1 women and their memberll in the United States

The JPecific coal of the surshyvey was to assess the resources and determine 1ampIe responses that Religious are making and ean make to the invitation 13shysued in Vatican Us Decree on the Renewal of Religious ~e

More than 135000 Sisters parshyticipated in the survey respondshying to 649 questionnaire items covering religious beliefs atti shytudes toward change edu~shy

tional background present ocshycupation and future plans comshymunity life and proposals for future ohange

Results were processed by 00 Sister-sociologists across the country with the use of comshyputers

llleason for lIAlavnng The survey showed 1827 oil

the 175000 U S Sisters-107 per cent-left religious life durshying 1966 Of those Sisters only 869 had taken final vows In an interview with the NC News Servicemiddota spokesman for the Conference of Major Superiors of Women (CMSW) said most Sisters who have remained feel that a major reason for the inshy

ltereased number of Sisters leavshymg religious life is an increased ~penness to the idea within the lfcligious community

She said that the increased fucus on personal development has caused many Sisters to see that they are not suited to the religious life and that they will find areater personal fulfillment elsewhere

Statistics on be division of labor among U S Sisters show 72 per cent are teachers eight per cent are involved in health work five per cent in catechetshyill~ and missionary work lmd tbr~ per cenmiddott in welfare work

Seventy per cent of the teachshyem ore in elementary school work 195 per cent in high school education and 68 per

eent teach at the college level Of those involved in health care 18 per cent in health administration and 62 per cent in direct care jobs

lEnter New lFienlll1s The survey showed Sisters

have a strong desire to become involved in adult education inshyner city work pre-school teachshying and other s~ial work and to have greater contact with their local community Nuns expressed eagnerness to enter fieldc where few Sisters are now working In 1966 13 per cent ot U S Sisters were engaged in adult education 82 pel cent in speshycial education 31 per cent in poverty work and 06 per cent in migrant education The surshyvey indicafes that there will be a dramatic change in these figures in the next few years

Father Considine Leaves PC$tr Continued fC0m Page One

man of the U S Bishops Comshymittee for Latin America

Bishop Bernardin prai~ed the work of Father Considine in the Latin America Bureau noting

iota progress under his direction since its inauguration in 1960

It has been a labor of love for Father Considine he saici whose long standing interest in the people of Latin America and of other developing areaa is well known

Maryknon Father Considine will return

to his writing and teaching asshymgnments at Maryknoll Ossinshy

lng N Y where he had served as publications director before becoming director of the IAiltin

America Bureau He holds editorial and advishy

lOry posts with several internashytional organizations and servell DS a member of the Council OIl

Foreign Relations He was amp

member of the National Advishysory Council of the Peace Corps from 1961 to 1966 He also founded and directed Fides Inshyternational Service in Rome an Information and research unit of

the Holy See He was born Oct 9 1897 C1shy

1-

~ATIlGR CONSIDINE

da1ned in 1923 and received II

licentiate in sacred theology from the Catholic University of America in 1924 He has reshyceived honorary degrees from Fordham University Manhatshytsnville St John University St Benedicts Atchison and is the author of 10 books on Latin America Asia and Africa and hall edited several others

L9ng-Range

Father Considine Sllid that he IlIaW the Latin America Bureau as set for the proseution ~ tl

vigorous nation-wide program 10 serve our Latin American eonfreres for the next- generashytion through the year 2000 -and into ~ 21st century He felt lIlllch 11 long-range view was necessarJ because at stake are important socio-religious adshyVDnces among hundreds of milshyHons cd people Latin Americas leaders need time for these advances

Be pointed out thatsome of the best Church leadership tbroughout the Catholic world today is found in Latin AmershyICD In turn he noted our U S bi~hops are quietly acceptshying international responsibiliti~s

as never before Father Considine said that the

program of the U S Bishops Committee for Latin Americn ~ablishes the heavy day-to-day work of the Latin America Bureau

Jgtersonnel Father Considine said that

llIODle 60 per cent of all U S apOstolic personnel overseas throughout the world works in Latin America with more Ulan 600 Latin American parishes served by U S priests Major Superiors of women ha~e 2500 Sisters in Latin America PAVLA has put more than 800 laymen there for three-year terms and U S bishops hnv~

more than 300 priests working in Latin America Annual fundshying for Latin Amerietl by U S Catholics ~~ $1f) millioll

SJJREET SCENE This was a busy street scene in the nations capital at the encampment of the Poor Peoples Campaign near the Washington monument More than 100~OOO- protestors are expected to be in Washington for Memorial Day NC Photo

OUlll lLAIDY OlF ll1HI1amp

ASS1lJMJgtJlJlON $26

Clara Rose amp Family $25

Mr amp-Mrs Jose F Cruz St Martin de Porres G~

Mi CARMEL $100

In memory of Mr amp Mrs J~ ilino Simoes

Rev Antonio P Pinto middotCM $75

Rev Azitonio P Pinto em $60

Mary i Ltuiz $50

Mr amp lVIrs Albino daSilv8 1IIt Carmel Womans Club

$30 Manuel Bettencourt Mr amp Mrs Kenneth lltinu

John Rodrigues $26

Olivia M Luiz $25

Cecelia Bettencourt CbildYeli of Mary Mt Carmel ~ouft

Units James Perry Mr amp lnl Manuel G Souza Jr

Mr amp Mrs Arthur Caetano Mr amp Mrs Charles Frate Mramp Mrs Lauran Silva

OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HE]P

~26

Mrs Amelia E Bariteau $25

Dr amp Mrs Francis Green

OURLADY OFPU~GATOB~ l)1I00

In memory of Alex J Ka1He from Cltpe Coo Sportswear ~

lnc Fairhaven Lumber Co

$30 Atty George R Morad euroJ

Atty ~e E Morad $25

Josephine David 1bl mlE1lllllOllY of George A EI-Hillow Mr ampgt Mra ~rge JThomas Mr amp IIIlm Hykel G Simon

ST KIlldAN nSO

Rev WilMeT J Boekley

U~~ amp Wmeentde PaW ~

~ iWa1 1kntley

$2S AlmgeAo OH1feira

SAClllIampDlHlJEAlltT $25

Alexander Caruso

c S11 JAMES

$55 rulllbull amp lVIrs Francis O Quinn

$50 lilred Kelley

$40 William OMalley

~1 A Friend

$3~

Mr amp Mrs Jr Hugh Barry $25

Mr amp Mrs Andrew ONeil Mr 8 Mrs Robert Arnett

ST JOSEPH

$450 sa Josephs Church Societies

$70 Mr amp Mrs Maurice Dansereau

1130 II Mr amp Mrs Luigi Fiano lk Fmniy

125 Mr amp Mrs Thomas Weaver MI amp Mm Maurice Lamonshy

tagne Mrbull Mrs Raymond Rondel1

ST TBERIESA $100

Eugene Lemieux

Sturtevant 6 Hook lEst 1897

Bude~s Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New ~dforcJ

996-5661

THE ANCHOR- ~ 7 lfhuvs May 23 1968

~regreg [copy~G~ ~O~

Oa1l ~MOO~ []M~Orru NEWARK (NC)-A charge (l(

apparent ~racial discriminatiom in the assignment of tenants 00 public housing here is Oontainoo in s report issued by the New Jersey Advisory Committee 00 the U S Commission em CiWl Rights

It said the Newark Housing Authority follows a policy ef permitting people applying fOlr placement in public housin~ projects to choose the project tm whieh they want to live

lit said this policy has ~

llributed to the segregation Cl1I public housing and recomshymended that t1he policy 00 abandoned in favor of first-come first-serVed basis

The report noted that Q01l1li vast housing projects nre locatell in Newarks Central Ward-tho scene of widespread noting D year ago and of two massiv~ firo disasters this spring-and tll~

they are more thanSO Negf~ ~ccupied

It further charged that them Js U a disparity in maintenanceo between the predominantly N~

gro and the rgtredominantly whi~

projects a complaint lIiTegNgt leadership has frequently medea

It termed living conditiom b the Central Ward projects opshypressive and that the proj~cto

are JIOor)y designed llt recomshymeld~d that additionaI ~ev areas for young children ~Gl

meeting places for odww ~ teenagers be provided

Higher ~arnings

ON YOUR SAVINGS Per Annum

I W Ask abow

INVESTMEIlaquo

SAVINGS

CERTIFICATES

$IlFm - Savings insu~ed safe IIlyJ liII ClEerny of the US Government

IlVAILABIU1Y - No notice VCllIirfpound Your funds available when ooedea

Slllil by MAtL - We pr~e5S pt~ ood pay postage both ways

Assets over $41ooo0llC

FIRST fEDERAL SaYings and Loan Associatio1ll

of F~L~ RIVER shy~---__-------------~~~~ First Federal saYIngs bull Loan At ~

1 Borth Main St Fall llliTe1 Ibu ~ ~ Ii 02722 P1Imle 674-4001 ~ ~ ~ke llpplicatlOll oJ phone t1 fOOl wldl ~ o ~ o 0 IlllIivithllll Aceoullt 0 Jont Ac4cwot f)

PIlllse Cl3len II SllVings llCCOUCt blcelaquol

o eAomelamp) = ~ 0 ~ Address 0 ~ l 0 clleck In the amount of e--- ~ ~ 0 ~ _~___~~~_~uuJ

SPECIAL RATES FOR Schoo~ Outings and Picnics

amfACi MANAGERI - UNCOLN PARK 999-6984 636-2744

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs May 23196~

The Parish Parade OUR LADY OF ANGELS SACRED HEART WALL RIVER NORTH ATTLEBORO

Altar bOys willsponsor a cake The CCD program will be lJ81e Sunday May 26 following canonically established Friday Iill1 Masses June 21 the feast of the Sacred

Masses today the feast of the Heart The program will include Ascerision will be at 7 and 9 a 730 evening Mass followed AM and -1215 4 5 and 7 PM by proclamation and reception Confessions will be heard be- of CCD members and a social ~re each Mass hour

The Summer Mass schedule CCD students in grades 6 to will begin Sunday June 2 with 12 will attend a folk Mass and Masses from 6 to noon on the sing-out at La Salefte Shrine hour Monday night May 27 Tnose

Monday May 27 through Fri- participating will leave the ooy May 31 there will be church school yard at 645 and will be services at 7 each evening The returned at 930 living rosary will be sponsored Confirmation ceremonies will by the Holy Rosary Sodality be ~ld at 730 Sunday night Monday night the Council of May 26 Catholic Women on Tuesday ther societies on Wednesday and Thlusday and the Children New Bedford ~ M~~ on lfrIday

ST MARY HOLY NAME $25iALL RIVER Mr amp Mrs Roger Goyette

Contemporary music will acshy The Shea Family company the 1115 Mass Sunday Mrs Vivian Wegrzyniakmorning May 26

New CYO officers are Robert ST LAWRENCE amplois president Paul Durin $200 rice-president Polly Rockett Dr amp Mrs Stanley Koczera eecretary-treasurer A Friend

$125 OUR LADY OF FATIMA Dr amp Mrs Robert Srnan sWANSEA $106

The Womens Guild will hold William E King Its annual penny sale at 730 $100

Monday night May 27 in the Dr amp Mrs William Walsh ehurch hall on Gardners Neck $75 lRoad Rev William F OConnell

A Penny Sale will be held Dr amp Mrs James Bolton MondaYMay 27 at 730 in the $60 dlurch hall A Friend

$50 IMMACULATE CONClEPlIION Teremiddotsa Ruth amp John HarneyNEW BEDFORD Victor T Kondi

Parisnioners will celebrate John L Powell rthe feast of Santo Ohristo this Loretta Lamarre Sunday with a roast beef dinner $45 served from noon to 2 with Mrs Mary B Wheatoil

tickets available at the door $40 lRefreshments and entertainment Mr amp Mrs John Connor will be on the afternoon and Mr amp Mrs Thomas J Longevening program $35

A procession and auction will Mr amp Mrs James M Kearneyfollow the dinner with various Mrmiddot amp Mrs Leo St Aubin Holy Name Society units parti shy $30 cipating in the procession Mr amp Mrs Albert Anderson

Mr amp Mrs Joseph Griffin OUR LADY OF V()T(RY Mr amp Mrs Walter L9veridgeeENTERVILLE Mr camp Mrs Myron Tripp

New officers of the Womens $28amptiild are Mrs John J Pendershy Patricia Connor ~st pre~ident MrS James Murshy $26 phy and Mrs John McBarron Mr amp Mrs Thomas SullivanVoice-president Mrs George Mr amp Mrs Charles BerryReale recording secretary Mrs $25 Richard Griffith treasurer Mr amp Mrs Robert Bedard

A Communion dinner at Mr amp Mrs Albert McMulleneummaquid Inn will follow Mr amp Mrs Theodore J CalnanlB30 Mass Monday night June Mr amp Mrs Alfred Couto Mr amproo Mrs Gilbert Noonan of Falshy Mrs Manuel Guerreira Josephmouth will speak Reservations P Mullen should be made with Mrs Edshy Agnes Proctor Mr amp Misward Welch or Mrs- Stephen Joseph Porter Mr amp MrsOBrien Jr by Thursday June 6 James Ryan Mr amp Mrs Paul

saunders ST THERESA Mr amp Mrs Merton WalkerSOUTH ATTLEBORO Mr amp Mrs John F SullivanMiss Patricia Makin of the

Diocesan CCD Board spoke at the annual Communion breakshy Fall River fast of the Confraternity of

ST MARYS CATHEDRALChristian Mothers Fourteen $50 new members were received at

Gertrude OLoughlinthe monthly meeting arid new officers were installed by Rev $26

In memory of Caroline CasellaGerard J Chabot moderator $25They include Mrs Patricia Helen Burns Mr amp MrsBiziak president Mrs Georshy

George Johnston Corky Rowgette Vachon vice-president Club Rits OLaughlin FrancisMrs Kathy Lamarre treasurer amp Lena MoranMrs Dolores Leedham and Mrs

Mr amp Mrs Carlton GastallBeverly Sousa secretaries Mrs Raymond Reynolds

~CULATE CONC~ON BLESSED SACRAMENTlAUNTON $200A Spring Social and D~nce Rev Herve Jalbert

for the benefit of the church $50sponsored by the Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Michael Felixand the St Vincent de Paul Soshy $36ciety will be held Friday May Mr amp Mrs Richard Hamel24 from 8 to 12 at Lewis Lodge $30Winthrop Street Route 44 A W Root Beer StandTaunton Refreshments will be served Tickets are $200 per lIIIOLY CROSS person and wiU be available at $50 the door Holy Rosary Sodality

lt

PATRIARCH His Holishyness Vazken I of the Armeshynian (Monophysite) Chu~h which comprises five-milli~n communicants in the Soviet Union Near and Far East and the Americas is visiting in the US He paid a visit to the National Shrine of the

Immaculate Conception whilein the nations capital NC Photo

NOTRE DAME $40

The Anne-Marie MasSe fami17 $35

Conrad N Desmarais $25

Norman J A Belanger Rose D Perron

HOLY ROSARY $30

The DePaola Family $25

Mrs Philomena Germane

~CULATE CONCEPTION $50

A Frie~d $40

Mrs Diolinda Wilson $26

In memory of Charlotte DJicholson

$25 Holy Name Society Knights

of the Altar A Friend MlU7 Whitehead John R Burgess In memory of Daniel R Be

Manuel R Pimental Joseph Francoeur

SACRED HEART $l)O ()

~ Katherine D Adams $75

Mr amp Mrs William J Sullivan $5~

Margaret Morriss M~ry V amp Alice C HarrlngtoD Frederick B McD9nald

$31 Frances Mmiddot Cummings Mary C Cummings

$30 Mr amp Mrs John J HarrlngtOil

$28 Florence M Sullivan

$25 Vincent DAndrea Edward

Leary Mr ~ MrsN J Meyer Mary Louise OSullivan John J Sullivan middotMargaret F Lowney

ST MICHAEL $25

Manuel Rogers amp Sons At~

Manuel M Rezendes Henry Leshytendre ~eonardo Cabeceiras

Gerald Mulrooney A Friend edf Catholic Charities

ST ANNE ft JI08ZIII $30

Mrs Rhea Saurette 101at Vincent de Paul ConferenceIrene Theroux leapt amp Mrs Joseph J OCoDshy$26 nellThe Gauthier Family $25

Mr amp Mrs Reginald lerive

A Friend

Belshy $50

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J OCo nell k

$30 St rosephs Mens Club

ST ANTH()NY $25 OF THE DESERT Mr amp Mrs John L Mercer

$100 Mr amp Mrs Daniel W OCoDoshyChor Bishop Joseph Eid nell Dr amp Mrs James J Sabra

$25 SANTO CHRiSTO Rev Kenneth A Michael Mrs August Badway $50

ST ANTHONY OF PADUA $125

Rev Josephmiddot M Ferreira $100

Atty amp Mrs Milton R Silva

StVincent de Paul Society $30

Rev Ernesto R Borges $26

Mr amp Mrs Alfred 1 Cam~ $25

$50 Franco Family Singersmiddot

$25 Mrs Sofia Pacheco Antonio T Cabral

Mary amp Beatrice Costa~ SilD

CnristO Credit Union Manuel Medeiros Laureano Silva

AFriendFrank B Olivei

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Have you ever wished you had a son a priest Now you can hlilve a priest of your own-and ahare forever In all the good he does _ _ Throughout the Near East this month grateful bishops ara ordainlng new priests trained by people like youbullbullbullbull Their own families are toe poor to support them In training but good catholics In America adopted these semIshynarians encouraged them all the way to ordinashytionbullbullbullbull Insome Inspiring cases this support was given at personal sacrifice How can youbegln7 Write to us now Well ~end you the name of ~ young seminarian who needs you and he will write to you Make the payments for his training to suit your convenlence ($850 a month or $100 a year or the total $600 all at once) Join your sacrifices to his and at every Sacrifice of the Mass he will always remember who made It possible

4

Native Sisters In our 18 developingcountries are teaching children of the poor preparing them for First Communion giving medical care to leplrs cal)cer sufferers the aging A SisterS training Ialts two years costs $1250 a month $150 a year or $300 altogetherbullbullbullbull Well send you the name of a Sister you can train as soon as we receive your first payment She will pray for you and write toyou

n An9 day now you may receive a letter contalnn the Holy Fathers appeal for the forgotten Arab refugees-l4 million people without a country bullbullbull most of them destitute bullbullbull more thari half of them childrenbullbullbullbull By trelnlng these children foi middotfuture selfsufflcel]cy we can help brln peace and new selfmiddothelp to the Holy Land atlll divided by warbullbullbullbull But why walt for your mal Hunger cant walt Neither can peace Send your amplIft now in any amount ($500 $200 $100 $75 $50 $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 $2 $1) and the Holy Fathercan put It to work right away Qril1 $10 wlllleed family for a monthl -----~-~---~~---~-IlNCL08ID PLllAIl PIND $_ c_O~__ rFOR _

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MSGR JOHN ClI NOLAN Natlonal5ecretary Write CATHOLIO NIlAR EAST WeLFARE Assoo ~30 Madson Avenue New York NY OOU telephonel 212vtJkon 6middot5840

CATHaLiD

19 DiJoridrrien Ere State r ourlitei

SChoelbOY leag~~Wmrn~regr~ Stii~Pretty Mu~h sampu [j)(Q)Mbt

By PETIm BARJrEK Nmon BitIh ~h

The gehooboy ba8ebaD mmpaignis cllNimatieaDy near- Inlaquo the climax of another spirited seasoo With approxishymately a week of competitioo Nllllaining oontlmdmg teams Me stmggling to keep their pennanf oopes alive while Wtling for the right to rep-JIe8eDt their ll e s pee t i v e leaguesin the nnand-eomin

-y- shy

Btate tournament The Eastshyem Massachusetts ehampionahip

baseball tournamen+ ClIffiMftl-~

tine of the wurney is tiPoDOOred bythe

II a II sac h u~_ lt Iietts Secondary

SChool Princishypals Association bull Par tie i p 8 t _ ing schools have bElen divided i IIl tot h r e e d3ses - A B and C---llccord- Peter iDg to leagues Blrtek r

and comparable independent teams Action tn all three clasampe3 starts Saturday June L

In addition to the three divishyidon3 the baseball tourney amp1shyem radically JIrom the popular

Two Spots for Both BCl (IDnd Marry Five Bristol County League Howard Ferguson which teams

teams Gre still in contention for will represent the circuit in the tourney play ebampionship event

At this writing Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Stang SpaltamJ of Qartmouth who hold a lllim ene-game edge over their rivals are a solid choice to annex one of the two berths to be filled bi BCL teams The second spot 18 un literally up for grabs

Bishop Feehan High of Attieshyboro which led the circuit untll last week Durfee High of Fan River Attleboro and Taunton lire in close pursuit middotof Stang hoping tomiddot overcome the Sparshytans or at least lInish in the league runner-up berth Both the first and second place finshyishers will8utomatically qualify

If either fim OX second place II decided by Monday May 21 league officials w~ have to DOUty the tournament Director

No~tons Lancers in Need cf Help I h e Narragansett league Class B - Southem

whkh got a head start on the its Iud Old Colony champ ft NaITlIlshyv er area Clrcu conc es gansett runner-upleague play today First place

middot Somerset travels to New Bed- Narragansett champ ~ Olcll ford to meet Holy Family High Colony runner-up Case High of Swansea entell-middotmiddot South Shore champ VB Hockshytains Dighton-Rehoboth West- omock runner-up port hoss Msgr Prevost High Hockomock cpamp vs South

middotof Fall River and Dima]l Voce- ShQre runner-up tional nlso of Fall River will 0I Am f N rth E stobe t Se k Iver es 0 0 a n a e o~k

Entering the final week of ac-middot middot tion Somerset and seekonk are in the top two spots in tbe 8tanding They loom the more likely to corral Class B tourney berths But DightOn-Rehoboth Case and Westwrt trail the sec ODd place club by oIl1yone game If the race ends in II tie ]league officials wlll have ample time to schedule play-off games before the tourney deadline

Pairings for Class Bare

Selecting Union PITTSBURGH (NC)-Twentyshy

five maintenance workers at Duquesne University here in Pennsylvania have left their jobs pending a detell1llnation as to which union will represent the workers The remaining 115 members of the maintenance erew lIlre not involved in the atrike which was called by the 2li who are represented by the tJmted Electrical WorkersUnion

Although it occurs infrequentshyly a team does not have to win Its league to represent its league in tourney eompetition

The Bristol County league champion is slated to play the

bull Bay State League runner-up in first round action with the Bay State champs taking on the County runner-up The winners would then meet in second round play

Pairings for Class A are Class A - Southem

Suburban champ w Middleshy8llX runnerup

Middlesex champ ft Suburshyban runner-up Bay state ehamp VB Bristol runner-up

Bristol champ V8 Bay sta~ runnerup

-Tech lxlsketban competition lllll order to qualifyfor the Tech a team mt1BSt win 70 per cent cd its games but onlythe leagu~ champions ond runner-ups M~ eligible ~r playmiddotiImiddotbasebalL

In both Class A andClass B iitOtalof i6 teams will qualify 1lt7middotmiddotmiddotJiY

for the diamond elimination event~ E~~ Will pai1i~ipate in

the nortlHln division and eight in the southern bracllet The winners in each bracket will meet in the Eastern- Massacilushy

llletts fi~ Preliminary games will be played on June 1 4 and 6 The finals are scheduloo June 8

Class C competition will coIi-BiEt of eight clubs in only one division Titlists in seven smallshyDChooI le1gues and one indeshypendent selected by the tournashy

ment coJiunittee Will comprise the field fur this tliil-d group

and Mansfield 1m the Hockoshymock circuit appear to be out of the running this season

Fo~ Class C schools Its Winmiddot or youre out Only the league champions will play in the championships The winner of the Capeway Conference will meet the Cape and Vineyard champ in opening round play Dennis-YarDlQuth and Sandshywich are the likely opponents

The only other school located within the confines of the diocshyesan territorial limits that has an outside ~hance of qualifying for the tournament is Norton of the Tri-Valley Conference The Lancers however will need some outside help if they are to overcome league leading Millis The Tri-Valley champs will take on the Dual County League champions Defending Class C champ Ashland again leading the Dual Co~nty is heavily favored to repeat both in league ond state competition

NOT A BALL-ITS GUM Yem might get the idea that a pitched ban is lodged in the mask of this young Vancouver BC catcher but it isnt a ball This young ma is trying to prove he is just as efficient behillld the plate as he is at blowing bubble gum NC ~middothoto

Stresses Inter~cicdmiddotmiddotPartnership As Solution to Racial Problem

CLEVELAND (NC) - A Nashy world would be better off lr tional ASsociation for Advanceshy iou hadnt gotten involved Jm

ment of Colored People official asserted here interracial part shynership is the key to oolution of the racial problem but it cannot be a partnership dom inated by either race

Dr John A Morrell NAACP assistant nat ion a 1 director speaking at the Cleveland Cathshyltnlic Interracial Councils annual Interracial Justice Awards banshyquet said the nation today is aj an unprecedented crossroads but the interracial way is the democratic part to justice

He spoke in place of Roy Wishydns NAACP national~ director who was with the U S delega- tion at the United Nations con vocation on human rights lin Tehran Iran -

Angry Voices There are angry Negro voiees

raised in protest because develshyopment of opportunity in recent years does not apply to twoshythirds of the Negro population he saidmiddot The kind of jobs they are capable of filling are vanshyishing from the economy he added

But if a fruitful partnership is to continue between the white and Negro the burden of know- ing the truth about Negro hisshytory must be borne by white as well as Negro Dr Morsell said

Vie are all fighting a bitter legacy of generations White people have to know where they stand and why Once you assume the burden of work toward interracial justice you assume the responsibilities be continued

If you are not going to ~

sume them then you and fhe

the first place Informed PariDership

Dr Morsell said a mere sPirit of commitment is not enough to

survive over the hard going Work must be based on a part shynership that is informed intelshyligent understanding and resil shyient he said

The interracial awards were presented to Father Edwan Camille assistant Catholic Charshyities director here and Thom811 C Westropp president of Womshyens Federal Savings and Loan Association

Westropp was cited for his efforts towards opening the

doors of banking and credit 1m the Cleveland area to all ciUshyzens regardless of race creed 011

color while Father CarniDe was cited for his leadership as director of Project Peace (~

irner-city diocesan organizati~ working with the poor mostly Negroes) and for his work as co-chairman of the first tri-faith Greater Cleveland Conference on Religion and Race

ELECTRICAl -Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

SS lPlE1rIEllt amp JgtAIDlj

$103 Womens Club Rose E Sullivan

$50 Joseph P Conaty

$35 Belen M amp William J

De7 $33

Mr amp Mrs James F McMahcm $25

Mrs Margaret Daly amp Mary John Dolan ~illiam Daley amp Mary Esther Mr amp Mrs Stanley M -laniek

~50 In memory of MrsMarga~

W Pow~rs RodneY S DeCecco

$26 Mr amp Mrs John Soula

$25 Edward Healey Mr amp Mrs Michael McCartbiY Mr amp Mrs James Crosson Mrs Gertrude Lomas Mr amp Mrs Norman GagnOOl

ST JOHN TEE BAPTlIS11

$30 St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ampt Jean Baptiste $25

Mr amp Mrs Ovila Caron Henri Demers

In memory of Mr amp lVlrm bullWilliam Sheehan

Open to An PORTLAND (NC)-The seeshy

ond annual Catholic youth conshyvention of the Portland Diocese has opened the convention to all Catholic students of the dioshycese in order to spread the agtOlgto tolate of youth to youth Thll

)faine convention has comprised only students who have takes themiddot youth leadership trainlJnl1 courses

Dont Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH

DO faJse teeth drop slip or wobblo when you talk eat laugh or sneeze Dont be annoyed and embarr1lEsetll lkllh hanl11caps FASTEETH Bamp

e (non-acid) powder to SPr1n~Ikle on your plates keeps false teetb more firmly set Gives confident feel~ Ing Of security and added comfort No gummy gooey taste or feellncr Dentures that 6t are essential to health see your dentist regulorly oet FASTEETH at alll1rug countemJ

o

WYman 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD MASS

IfIIfJltk del1WM

S H~~uO~ Oil

SAVE MONEY 0 OUROILHEATI bull eatt

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

Iritai~ If S)crap SuPPITreg~~5n Acts Of Re~(j[jmlt~oml

LONDON (NC)-It looks as if Britain is at long last glOing to stop suppressing the monasteries-officially that 0

Legal experts sifting through lenturies of forgotten laws clutshyooling the records have found (hat the Suppression of Reli shygious Houses Acts of 1535 and 0039 have never been repealed

They are among 155 statutes weeded out from the statute IJ)ooks between 1239 and 1705middot lmd now to be definitively leshy~aled by a special act of Par-Iliament

These two acts enforced the eosure and pillaging of Catholic monasteries friaries and other religious houses throughout the WINS nsc Chaplain

eountry following King Henry (Captain) Angelo J LitekyVIIIs break with Rome in 1534

assigned to the 199th InfanshyJhey brought vast fortunes On goods property and mog of try Brigade in Vietnam has ell land to the kings favorites been awarded the Distinshyoome of whose families have reshy guished Service Cross forWned their wealth to this day extraordinary heroism SevshyIgnored in Practice

Of course the laws against erely wounded when Viet me Roman Catholic Church Cong ambushed a US infanshyIhave long ago been shelved and try company Ohaplain Lit shyIgnored in practice The reli shy eky braved flying bullets toous houses are back probably

rescue and minister tomore numerous than before iIome have even reoccupied the WQunded and dying meR 0ld sites they hadmiddot before the lReformation

Another notable measure ~ewlfk ~[p)regID Gingled out for repeal is the 1loleration Act of 1688 This act W51f)$ ~WIfltdl although in itself it did not help

NEW YORK (NC)-The Adshy~he Catholics marked the end of

vocate weekly newspaper of1lhe Protestant Reformation and the Newark Archdiocese wont1he beginning of religious tolershythe first-place Silver Medalation in Britain Awarti for weekly newspapersIt allowed freedom of worship in the annual public serviceClgt Protestant Trinitarian Nonshycompetition sponsored by theoonformists provided theiT New York chapter of the Pubiicmeetings were opento the pubshy

Relations Society of AmericaIlk it did not relieve the existing The award was for a five-part

fenaWes of those days against analysis ttl the ills besetting the ~atholics other breakaway Newark public school system lhcnestants or Jews but it was )he analysis was written by a hisberic beginning It has been Advocate news editor Ed Grant ltJeseribed as the Great Oharter and was an examination into ~ religious freedom and the one of the areas of dissatisfacshy~umph ofc9mmon ~ense tion which led to widespread

rioting in Newark last Summer

The series ran lri the newsshylJays Help for Poor paper last september and Octoshy

lPeCice First ~eeds ber The Public Rellitlons SocishyMIAMI (NC)-The Catholic ety award - silver medals are (lihurch in this nation today awarded in each of five cateshy

gories-are given for the mostauast address itself to the presshynoteworthy contributions bullbull 0 toiloing needs of the poor and dis-

~vantaged as well as the better public ~derstanding of ltJnICial issue of peace says the _ community problems in the New

4Tchbishop of Miami York metropolitan area Archbishop Coleman F Calshy New s p a per 8 magazines 0011 following announcement of broadcasting an d television middotGte establishment of the ecclesshy media in the New York-New iastical province of Miami and Jersey-Connecti~ut metropolitan tMs appointment as its first area are eligible for the awards l)rehbishop stressed that the (fhurch must be concerned with ibe problems of the time in Retired ArttlhJboshop S)Vhich we exist Gets College lHlonorThe g~eatest problems at present are the problems of the DUBUQUE ( NC) - Retired disadvantaged the poor and Archbishop Edward D Howard Utase who are in need and of of Portland Ore has been named oourse peace he smiddotaid for Loras Colleges 1968 John

It is more difficult for us to Fitzgerald Kennedy Award The LiOlve in any real way the prob- prelate is a former president of iems that are our concern until the college we have a measure of peace The citation and gold medal And it is the prayer of all of us annual award honoring an out Chat peace will be established as standing Amercian will be preshyiluickly as possible on an honorshy sen ted to the archbishop at the able basis o college commencement cereshy

monies June 2 Camp Directory Archbishop Howard 90 a nashy

Nltlw available from the Nashy ti ve of Cresco Iowa and a Loras lItonal Catholic Camping Assn alumnus was ordained to the ~ 131~ Massachusetts Ave priesthood in 1906middot He became lM- W Washington D C 20005 president of the college in 1921 Is the 1968 Directory of Catholic In 1924 he was consecrated to ~mps which lists all known serve as auxiliary bishop of DavshyearriPs in the U S giving acshy enport He became archbishop of Civities charges dates open and Portland in 1926 and retired in lIbailing addresses 1966

National CYOPlans LeadershipTraining shyImpa~t to Aid Priests Adult Admiddotvisors

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tbe through the introduction of BaWmore June 23-28 ehicagoNational Catholic Youth Organshy leadership methodology which July 1-5 Boston July 14-19 ization Federation will launch a facilitates maximum involveshy Sen Antonio July 28-Aug 3 training program in June called ment 00 the local level and Denver Aug 11-16 and San Impaot be help priests and hence maximum commitment JFaoancisoo Aug 25-30 adults 00 work effectively with The National CYO Federation Dr Donald Ebalt a professhyteenagers in a leisure time proshy will sponsor six sessiOns this lIlional trainbig eonsul1lant of gram summer to train diocesan CYO Washington D c win diiecl

The program was designed in staffs m 1lhe use of the newmiddot ead11ab cooperation with Leadership program lhey win )e held m A pilot Jtudy of the effectiveshyResources Inc a firm _of beshy DeBS of Impact on a group of havior scientists -rolulbteers from the NewarlkAddress Graduates

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishy archdiocese was held at the SOUTH BEND (HC) -Mel-rector of the Youth Department Benedictine Retreat House ill

Jdte-rite Patriarcib Maximoo VUnited States Catholic Confershy jNewton N J ence in announcing ttie new Kakimof Antioch and Dr Ilhirtymiddot persons representashyprogram said tives of youth adult advisorsJames A Perkins of Cornell

The goal 01 Impact is 00 help and priest moderators met withUniversity will be speakers atthe priests who are moderators representattives of the CYO

the 123rd annual cOnW~ncementof CYO the ad~lt advisors and Federation staff and a member youth participating in CYO toshy exerci~ Sundly June 2 at Of Leadership rResources Inc ward maximumpersonal growth Notrlte Dame University 110 assess and to evaluate 1mpaltL

(Cathedral Camp-Resident and Day Camp for Boys

O~ Lady of the L_ke Day Camp fOr Girls

Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON LONG POND ROUTE 18 EAST FREETOWN MAS~

~ RESIDENT CAMP 49th Season June 30 thru August 24 - a Week Season

Diocesan seminar-ians - College Students amp Teachers Under direction StaH of a Diocesan Priest

Saili~g swimming water skiing horseback riding riflery archeryPrograni hiking overnight camping trips ~rts amp crafts Indian crafts camp crafts athletic (team amp individual) competition and inter-camp cOmpetition professional tutorial service available

Private beach large luxurious camphouse dining hall modernfacilities~ washrooms arts and crafts buildings camp store and office first aid and infirmary beautiful chapel overnight and weekend accomodashytions for parents

S WEEK PIERIOD $325 - 4 W~K PERIOD $165 - 2 weEK PERIOD $85

Cathedra~ Day Camp t=or Boys Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period

JULY W- AUGUST 23 Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period fEES INCLUDIE Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Horseback Riding Weekly Cook~Outs amp Milk Daily without Added Cost

--~----------------------------------------Our Lady of the Lake bay Camp For Girls

JULY l _ AUGUST 23 Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period

FEES INCLUD~Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Ilorseback Riding Weekly Cook-Outsmiddot Milk Daily without Added Cost

o

For further information write to

REV WALlER A 5ULLlVANDiredor PO Box 63 - East Freetown Mass 02717

Page 5: 05.23.68

5 Neames Book on Lourdes Differs From AII~ Ofthef~

By ~~ Rev MSgTbull John S Kennedy

Alan Neames The Happenings at Lourdes (Simon and chuster 630 Fiftili Ave New York NY 10020 $695) roncludes with an apocryphal story about Pope John XXm RiG Holiness according to the story had as luncheon guests during the oouneil two 00Jrshy

dinals desirous of a new docshytrinal definition of the PllVshyOegeg of our Lady and a theshyologian To all three he put the llIuestion middotCan you tell me why the Church in ~ liturgy so oflen prays the IIIrords Pray for llIG 0 holy Mother of God One carshydinal answered Because Boli shyliIleIS Mary is IIU - powertul IIrith God The eco n d said Because your IBlGlinesa illustrious predecesshy110m have decreed so

The theologians reply was So that we may be made worthy of the promlsea of ltChrist The Pope declared the llbeoIOgians anSW0l1 tn be the dGht one _

Mr Neame is ll Catholic He lIIdi ted the Old Testament secshylion of The Jerusalem Bible Svidently he has long been fasshyaoated by Lourdes has visited laquobe shrine often He has gone ~ly into the backgiound of lb9t region of France and of Bernadettes town in particular

Now he has written a b90k ltifferent from any other of the ~ns or scores which have ~It with Lourdes

Homely Trutll llt is a critical work but not

I1IlnIercritkal It attempts to illOnsider th~ phenomenon of Itourdes objectively It rejects lientimentality and superstition Aithougb it is idiosyncratic its ~l effect is to suggest the reality of supernatural intervenshyUOn both in the apparitions and ~ the cures

Much familiar ground lB oovshyltaed by Mr Neame He goes antltraquo the history ~ Bernashydettes family and summarizes ~[ own brief history before the ltPParitions (she was then 14) An trace of pietistic glamor is Illemoved The homely trinth is rkly set oul

Whell it comes to the apparishyns Mr Neame givCfl us a dear account of the location of 8he grotto its appearance its connection with the town In treating the apparitions themshylves he is succinct sticlting _ essentials avoiding exelamashyQIon

He cooly states and analyzes nat happened at the grotto What happened to the town eg ebe interrogations to which mernadette was subjected

The effect far from being III

clebunking is conviction that oomething humanly unaccountshyole did occur -

Acote lJgtuflfellences Mr Nearne is well aware that

IDtlny alleged Marian apparishytions have occurred Indeed the oountrr roundabout Loui-des was dotted with the scenes of tAch before Bernadettes time aut he well brings out the acute amd deeply significsnt differshy~ which mam off the Lwrdes story from all others

The words attri-bUted to Mary ~ Bernadette ate extremely 1iNI as against elaborate messhyooges said to have been delivshytUed elsewhere They are neither prophetic (in the sense of foreshyWling dire happenings) nor political

She makes DO two-edged fllDbiguous promises ampbe ~

no oontingent perspectives of IA golden age to corne She is anshyeKistentialist a Madonna for a

demythologized world propos- ing nothing but repentance and blind faith

Appeal to individual Or as he puts it in another

place No word Qf the temporal power from her of the sover- eigty of the Pope of the righw ol the Holy See or even of the rights of the Church itself No word of condemnation for the modern world or the secu1aJr state

Only the appeal to the indishyvidual Go and kiss the ground in penance for sinners $ ~) $ drink at the spring and wash in It shyactions symbolizing two fundashymental obligations to love onea neighbor and to sanctify one- self

Obviously Mr Neame seen Lourdes as very pertinent to the contempor~ry Church and the contemporary world Its meaning he finds expounded and concretely applied by Vatshyioan n This interpretation is 1I think unprecedented and should make us see Lourdes in a new way not eclipsed but Ilhiningmiddot out with fresh force

MatWr of ~

That it should have swviVed unimpaired he believes to be astounding He details the conshytroversies and themiddot vicissitudeu which have beset it There waS a kind of feud between the local clergy and the religious es~

cially assigned to the shrin~ llsect

this ~eveloped Also there Wwl

ID()re than one effort to involve Lourdes in politics

Mr Neame goes into the matshy~r of cures thlHr number tM standards (progressively toughshyer) ror judging their authenshyticity Curiously middothe regrets the exclusion of neurotics from conshy8ide~ation as genuinely curedl

The crYing need of our day be says is middotthe miracle that heals the disordered mind the unreconciled personality the ~otionally disturbed the tem- pennentally unstable These are the very cures to claim not the ones to set aside

Help sought GivcllIl This jolting book contains a

plethora of incidental infonnashytion about Lourdes the local peoples attitude toward the grotto (they are aware of it all Parisians are of the Eiffel Towshyer) the origins of the dialect which Bernadette spoke the number of visitors (about three

million a year) and the numshyber of postcards sent by them (about ~ven and a half million a year) the peculiar story of the Cagot people throug~ whose segregated quarter Bel1shynadette ran on one occasion even Bemadettes diet This Qften astonishing miscellany iD well woven into the text

The story with which thill not-ice began and the boOKcloses makes the point that Maryg help is sought and given whether ordinarily or as lilt Lourdes extraordinarily that middotwe may so live as to be worthmiddot of the promises of Christ A critical point

Accepts Invitaftion YJ[ENljA (NC) - FranziskUllJ

Cardinal Koenig of Vienna hlllSl accepted an invitation by Pampshytriarch Vasgen I of the Armenishyan-Gregorian Church in the So-shyviet Union to visJlt tIlat Church oocters ther~

FAnIER JOYCE 8 3

Name Fr JoyceBe President

BOSTON (NC) -Father W Seavey Joyce SJ 54 has been named president of Boston College to succeed Father Michshyael P Walsh SJ

Father Joyce has served atil chairman 00 the colleges deshypartment of economics dean of the college of businesS adminisshytration and since 1966 as viceshypresident of community affairs Acti ve in Boston civic affairs

Father Joyce began in 1953 the Booton Citizens Seminars at the college served from 1963 to 1968 as president of the Boston MetroshyJiolitan Area Planning Council and from 1963 to 1967 as chairshyman of the Boston Citizens Adshyvisory Committee on Community Development

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 231968

Praises Dedication of COB1vention To Memory of Martin Luther King

BALTIMORE (NC) - Lawshyrence Cardinal Shehan hailed the decision of the Baltimore Archdiocesan Holy Name Union to dedicate its 57th annual conshyvention to the memory of Dr Martin Luther King and stressed the obligation of Chrisshytians to work for better relashytions between the races Th~ oommunity can be made

worthwhile only if it is united Cardinal Shehan told several hundred delegates here H~ said that insofar as the community is divided by prejudice disshycrimination and hatred itmiddot ill impossible- for the Church to fulfill its mission

The cardinal said Catholics have an obligation to tgke the spirit of Christ into the com- munity

The obligations of Christians as individuals in this respect are inescapable he said

The cardinal observed that the Church is INlSsing through difficult times

We need a laity that is well-middot informed well-educated and completely dedicated to Christ and to Christs Church

He added that the mission of yenCnewal within the Church can be accomplished only if there is renewal within individuals Cardinal Shehan said this must be accompanied by a strengthshyening of love for Christ and Christs Church

Reject Resolution Nothing oan be accomshy

plished he slllid unless we

Now available 10 members of

have complete confidence that God is within the Church

The delegates rejected a resshyolution that would have called for a change in the name of the Holy Name Society

During a banquet in Balti shymores Civic Center the deleshygates heard a leading Canadian Catholic layman call for greater service to the poor

Rom Maione executive direcshytor of the Canadian Catholic Organization for Development and Peace said that Christians are not allowed to live any longer in solitude but must inshystead pour ourselves out into the world

He said that we are either going to grow in love for one another or were going to grow in hate

New York Teachers To Study Judaism

NEW YORK (NC)-Teachem in the New York Arahdiocesaan schools will take 11 five-pan course on Judaism and Jews mI literature next Fall

The course will consist of five one-hour programs for closed circuit television prepared by Jewish scholars and theologituW and taped by the television stushydios of the New York Archdioshycese The course is sponsored by the New York archdiocese and the Anti-Defamation League ltri BNai Brith

KNIGHTS of COLUMBUS of MASSACHUSETTS

H44114I t~AI~II41~

VIA TRANS INTERNATIONAL AIAlINES~ corllcotbd D~ TIIree daylin

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TIl ctaye In

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I

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~ River-TJiurs May 23 196amp Oversleeping

Riglkll Traditional spiritual writers advise those who are strivshy

llng for perfection to make an e~amina~ion of conscience ~ch day to check their spiritual condition of soul to measure themselves and their actions against th~ comm~nd-

ments and counsels Some wag called this period-You cant be right

A~hbishop Cooke of New York must feel that way He sent a letter to all priests of that archdiocese aking their lIreCOmmendations for diocesan offices And immediately one reaction from the New York Senate of Priests was that he had gone outside the established advisory groups namely apparently the Senate

And if the Archbishop h~d asked the Senate for JeC0Inshy

mendations some individuals would have stood up and proclaimed loudly that this was an example of referring a matter to an organization and bypassing the individual

The ans~er of course in this post-conciliar age is to consult all to broaden the base of consultation ~ widely as possible And then the Archbishop must fulfill his responshy8ibiJity and make decisions and choose men who will earry on the work of God in an effective and pastoral way

Even then there will be criticism But the riame of the ame~does seem to be-You oant be right

Here is another i~stance af where there must always be a posi-tive attitude toward what is being done Critieism

surely has its place--but only in the context of praise for what is being done and as a further proposal to bolster the forward thrust that is taking place Then it is positive and

~ ueative - euro th Church is to assist the Bish~ and the other clergy in servicemiddotm00QInG to GOds holy people The deashyWider Vision con is a man of prayer since he

A significant meeting -took place in Chi~ago the fi18t Revbull John Ff Moore St Josephs Taunton of this week representatives from priestsmiddot groups and

middot tf II th t to form a natIon~1 fed- lA MA MEdSena es rom a over e counry bull ltU poundQ

tion Of priestiS organization TheDi0ce8eOfall~RiVerwas C rime and the Indiyiilutrlepresented ~

It i~ unfortunate however that in middotsOme Publie]ty Alarmed Cmiddotmiddottmiddot emiddotmiddotnrymiddot aS FearfiI eomingout of Chicago one speaker in Particular uSed the tired old pre-eouncil language of pOUties instead of the bull Cmiddot 5 pastoral language Of this modem middotageHe spoke of the At Home cis on ty tret

clearly the office of the diao federation as a manifestation ofmiddotuderi1ltgtcraeymiddot entering into During the pas-tfour months over 2000 more citi~ns~onate It is tbe duty of fie the life of the church - -6 ~h Co alth l~ ht from ther 1 1 nn ndeacon to the extent that he h8lll

91 Ii IS mmonwe u~ve 80u~ ~ JVCoiW -bullbull been authotized by eompeteDi

If there is anything that the Couneflpointed out it is permission to carry small arms-such as pIstols ~authorityto administer baptisii that the Church is not a politicai grouping and 8hould~ volvers Thousands more have made the sale of riflefl a~ 8Olemnly to be custodian and be seen in the forms and language ()f poliiics To d9thiB is very profitalble business The ~ dispenser of the -Eucharist

to take a narrow nationalisti~viewpointand to inssentirely the fact that the Church is eatholi~madelip oot only of fifty million Americans but some several hundredmiUiorts of other nationalities

What this national organization will do is to bring about among priests more of a sense of national and indeed world-wie awareness and responsibility toward the Church whose servants they are toward all peoples all over the world whose salvation they are pledged to seek

Their cooperation and advice will certainly be sought and accepted by the National Conference of Bishops who are pledged with if anything even more pointedness and responsibility to the saJ11e high~urPoses

But the national federation willbe ill-served if Speakers talk about it it) the language of a Political party or aPolit shyicalsystem The vision must be a wider- arid ~adeeper One than this

rheANCIIOR lIlC1~L NEWSPAPEROF THE DIOCESE OF FALL piVER Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Dioces~ of Fall Ri~er bull 410 Highland Avenu~

Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connoy~ DDPhDbull

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER ~

It Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev johnmiddot P Driscollmiddot MANAGING EDITOR

H~gh J Goldenmiddot

for the loss of private prOperty bring Viaticwn to the dying bull questionoow must be asked ValUed atmore than two binioD read thesacred~rpture touMi

Why are private citizens seeking to protect them- aelves in such a manner

Why musthomes ~ protected by priwte weapons The answer of Course is fear

Private citizens of this and every state in the Union certainshyly are well aware of the rising tide of crime In the last two yearsin this country there were two victims of serious crime per 100 Persons an -increase of more than 12 per cent over 1965 and a 50 per cent increase over 1960 And during the same period over 80000 armed robberies were reported

Robberies burglaries larshycenies and auto thefts accounted

fied person now is no longer interested in police work

This rapfd iricrease in crime together with the corresponding factor of ineffectual public ac tion has now underminded the trust and confidence of the pri shyvate individual I

He now fears that the state can no longer give him the pro- teetion he needs as a citizerr The results can be seen in the

increased sale of weapons to privatemiddotpersons The citizen can nolonger walk after dark in man) sectors of OW IIIbancomshy

dollars faithful to inlfiruct and exhod With this rapid increase m

the crime rate there has also been aTapid decrease in effec-

tivemiddot public oontrol of crime This is due 10 many factors Perhaps the most insidious fact

rests in the extreme liberalizashytion of the law

It seems under present jurisshyprudence the law favors the criminal factor and fails to proshyteet the true innocent

Hand-in-hand with this great tr~nd to protect the so-called rights of the criminal goes the rather ineffective police methshyods that have been imWsed upon our local protectors of the

public

Imbalance of Scales of Justice

The modem policeman soon munities his home is nOW-tIM becoJl1ell discouraged and irus- target of financial Security bat Uate9 by the intrigues and the dope addictmustJ)OSSeSlj subtle maneuvers of the law his very lifemiddot now dePends 011shyHe ends -up by Saying ~wbats his own skill and abilities

the use As a result the quali- Indeed this is a tragic utua- tion

The formation of a private vigilante ariny in thiseOUDtry

defeats the total concept of thisshyunion In a way it is more iJeshystrpctive than any force of criminal element to the Amershy

ican ideal If we are to have anymiddot solution to this problem the re- sponsible forces of law and order must begin to completely reevaluate their role in CIW society

The cancer of crim~ together

Ordination Continued from Page One

eharist they were alSo ordereal to evangelize and baptize ~ this sense they were minist~

who shared intimately in f3nj priesthood of the Bishop

The word diaconate comEQ from the greek word diaxonilllJl which etymologically meaoo SERVICE The deacons office means service to the Church 4) ministerial service to Go~ people The deacon was ordered to minister to the sick the pooa and the afflicted Since by ordishynation he is fUled with ~ Spirithe is ordered to baptiza (introduce the Spirit into tOO lives of new Christians) By ()Iloo

bull dination he is a dispenser of tb6 Holy Eucharist and a ministell of the Word of God He shares embryonically maybe but stR9 he really shares in the sacraa mental powers of Holy Orders (the power to baptize to preaCll and to handle the Eucharist)

Minister Since Vatican II the impoJlioo bull

tance of the diaconate has beeli restored We hear even of tbe

possible restoration of a pe manent married diaconate FOI a long time the diaconate W81

just another step a vital OM yes but merely another step 1101 ordination to priesthood TOO diaconate was always considered to be a major order howev~ history made it to be sort ad unimportant and unhea~d of blv Gods people

The deacon Is a minister eI the Church His role in the local

has already received (in the ord~r of subdiaconate) thO Churchs delegation to pray the daily the Divine Office to be

ai PrayeJ The d~acon is ~

just a glorified Mass server iii the tniest sense of this expree sion he is a minister of Jesu Christ theSpeonlelemiddotdlliough rrlest

t The - ConstUidfon on --

Church has spelled out veq

the people to preside at ~ woShip and prayer Of ~ faithful to administer sacrampshymental and to officiate atf n~rals and burial services (art 29) In the ordination rite one III made a deacon by the Bishop laying on ot hands through thJ8 imposition of hands the deacoA receives a share in the Bishopll mission which is this ministrp to Gods people The deacoa takes on the duty of the minisshytry which was described a~ove

because he is co-missioned the Bishop to do so On June first Bishop Conn

ly will ordain eight men o the diocese to this office MCy remember these deacons in_ prayers that they might beshycame men full of faith filledwi~ th~breath of Gods spi generoUs servants Qf tbii Church and faithfu(witIi~

of gods beat Love for lIisholy peOple iIi the loCal ChurcD Fall~River 0 bull

unless society as a whole begu to wake up and act as a colleoo tive unit Liberty is nOt license mil justice is not self righteousneMo

middotAs this criminal elEfment beshycomes organized so too theeIshyfective control of crime

becoine a community effort JIIi single person can effect tile changes that must be undse taken but each man bound gether in a common effort

with the disease of individuality yet save tbiI 8hip ol natkmll will destroimiddot our Dational b0d7 p~

Clergy Ap~ntments AHect 16 eontinued from Page One Aft$ Portugal on Jan 29 1933 ~e newly ordained prie3b the son of Julio F llJld Blandina

tfust assigned are (Ferreira) da Sllvnmiddot -Rev Edwlllrd Eo Correia ~ After preliminary studies at

ur Lady of Vic1lol)7 Church the Seminario de S Jose FelshyCenterville 1Ueiras Portugal Father da

Rev Edmund JJ mtzgerald b Silva entered the CongregatioQ lJoly Name Church Fall River c2 the Missions (Vincentians)

Rev George E Harrison to 81 Imd studied at the Seminario de ~seph Church Taunton _ S V~cento de Paulo Limpiaf

Rev William J Hurley w ~( sanmiddottander and the Seminario Stanislaus Church Fall Rive1 ~ 818 Teresinha Felgueiras

Rev Comelius l Kiley ta Si JPIortugal seph Church JiaU River Ordained a priest OD July 19

Rev Robert A McGowan w Jl959 he returned to the semlshyCnrpus Christl Church sand-ll1ary to serve as instructor and

middot~ch m 1964 as seminary rector On Rev Donald 11 Messier to St Nov 1 1966 he was appointed

8hn the Baptist Church Fall sssistant at Mt Cannel Church niver New Bedf~rd

Rev Kevin F Tripp to Nqtro Jliltllneli lllitellneTIll Dame University fur Swprner Rev Edward Joseph Mitchell

middot c1Iudieampmiddot ronmiddot of William and Anne 17on~1i lLo~eg (Grace) Mitchell was born iml

One of six children Rev Wall Rivermiddot Jan 21 1932 EdushyIDhomas C Lopes assistant Bit ~ated in Fall River publie St Elizabeth Church Fall River schools Father Mitchell attendshynras born at Oak Bluffs on Aug ed Prevost High SChool Fall 14 1938 the son of Constantine River before stu~Ying at St ood Viola (Authier) Lopes Charles Se~inary- CatonsYille

After elementary and second- Md StMary ~eminary Baltishycry schooling on Marthas Vine- more Md and NOiIth Americali JBITSlHIO]S CONGlRAT1UlLAIlE U1UJBilLARJrAN Prior to the Mass of Thanksgiving Ofd yoard he studied ampt St~ ThoIIias College Rome fered by Bishop Connolly in the Sacred Heart Ohurch in honor of the priestly golden jUJ ampminary Bloomfield Conn Ordained a priest (lID Decla bilee of Rt Rev Felix S Cltildspastoremeritus three Bishops congratulate the jubil2lacrnd 51t Tohn Seminary Blrighton lQ5~ the Fall River priest rian Bishop Gerrard Bishop Gorman of DaU8I8 Te~as preacher Msgr Childs Bishop Ordained ) priem on FebmiddotlS served as assistant pastor aJt

Connolly who celebra-ted th~ lVlase1965 Father middotLopes has_ served Sacred Heart Church Taunton Gl assistant EitI Stmiddot EHzahetb and Sacred Heart Church Fall

Ohurch Fall middotRivermiddot since ord- lRiver before returning to

rultion l7atbeli mB~ ~ tou~~for~ S~~di~a Atm~OU~~~ ~ ~terf(llmthmiddotThe~gy ~ rnJS~0t((l[jj~h~ mev Ernest E Blais assistant Law

crt st Louis de France SWan- Since his return from Rome ~ rL l1f IJ ~ J1I 0 JI II fC A-- c2a was born May 26 1918 Am lTllIther Mitchell has served as ~~lfl]lli tr[(8 1m(Qj ~QW Ii lteS5 lJ sectl1ro1f ~Dlflm

middot Pawtucket R r the SOllll of assistant at Holy Name Churclilp BALTIMORE (NC) _ 1middotLa-__ is1 n Hi ~ rl L Doll of Maryland have aspects as well as their theologa ~ry (Bouchard) Bla anellthe Q ver rence Cardinal Shehanmiddotmiddot0f-i3i1lti- Jointly announced the openlng I ddtmiddot I d I ~e Edgar Blais i lFatllner Moll~ lea an oc nna eve opment

After schooling in Pawtucket I Ordained May 20 1i6f Rev more ati~ Epis~opalBis~o~Har- of an Ecumenical Evening lyenJIe~t Great NeOO middotn 1 Father B8ls prepared fur lJ~mes Harold Morse son of School of Theology for all qual- The institute represents a new

ifiedifhe priesthood at the seminarieo George and Grace (Prendergast) Arthur Flerrimingto mention candiates of any faith in idea in theological education ~ the Oblates 0 Mary Immmiddotacu- orse ~as bom - Rumford the Baltimore area M t h bUl -- ~ only a few of the Coalitions Th tt t h h os senunanes ave eeiilAn

~e Ordained to flhe priesth-- m I on April ~ 1939 After bull e IDS I U e w IC opens ill planning moves to secular unishyuvu founding fathers-strikes me asmiddot S t b U be ted t

on June 25 194A he servedmiddotM studving at St Mary School ep em er Wl AOca a t d 11 t th missionary in __ Cayes Hal 1t1f1rside R I ~d St Ra~ael being rather sophomoric and St Marys Roman Catholic verSI les an 00 eges momiddot e

Ugt JltWv~ strangely ou~ of character for a Semi h d 11 t seminary environment bull lIDtil appointed 00 middotSt Lou- ~- Pawtucket R I he oontmued nary ere an WI gran Jiather John Thlrkell iS shy paper which professes and gen- t _ d doc gtUmasFrance Swansea on Sept lllt Stbull Thomas SeminaryBloom_ er 0 11 an or 0 dean of the institute and shytgt erally lldheres to reasonably hil h d E lIm t ~ 52middot bull ed Conn and St ohn Semi- p osop y egrees nro en R d C S h M

poundJ JU A ampI high standards of editorial fair- 1 Iso be everen tep an ann anPIlther _ Brighton He has served Wlu a open to students not An r t f E 1 ~

llDvuoe - Lad th neas anq courtesy ireeKinga degreemiddot g Ican pnes rom ng an bull Rev Dm-a A Lamiddot-middotie - as asSistantmiddotat OW y of e 0 f associate dean

tuU v C on use Issu~ The facwtyof 18 is compOsed IS

Ief Herineneoil6e and Dena Assumption atbedral Fan Tlrdly whether Wlttingly or ofprofessors from St Marys In announcing the institutes ~ (Ouelette) Lavoiewas hom mgtmiddotv~rsince otdiXlati9J1 1 oot NCR was playmg games Johns Hopkins Un i v e r lJ i t y opening Cardinal Shehall middotmiddotmiddotmiddotftIl River OnmiddotJjm 1 i930 ~liumiddot4Fa~~~ wthilyDbers when forth~ Goucher College Baltimore He- pOnted out that up to nowthere A gradua~ of~t Ma~ea llev ~~~as Ill4W~ O~~ I~1ltwe~k in arqwi~susPi-brew College Loyola College has been no institution in the middot r8choo1 Fall Diver Flltber La- lllS~t ~ ~ James Church eiously contrasted the interim MountmiddotSt A Con d Baltimore arcbdiocese equipped middot vole studied at ~~PttOIllmiddot middotN~wBeiifordmiddotwasbomOctmiddot30middot sumof$25 thousand granted to1

the unlversii pe~r~aa to give special courses in the Prep Ilrtd COllege WoIeeSter 1934 in Taunton Ute son ofmiddotmiddotmiddot themiddotmiddot SoCialmiddot Action middotDepartmentmiddot field of religious education

middot where he obtained a BA Siun_Mlilirice OJeii ~ the 1a~ of the USCatholicmiddotConferencemiddot ~~y will teachco~ses in the He said -that he thought the middot mi cum 13ude Afterattetidfni1Marguerite (Dineen)OJ)ea for a~istra~ionexp~nses with ~aJor ~ofld ~~lglOns fro~ ~v- institute would meet a very

Ifhe Grand SeriUnaire hi Mon- His elementary and secondary the sum ofmiddot$22 million allocated era pomts of VIew and will an- great need in preparing college ibeaI Oanadahe was ordatned education was pUrSuedat Im-by tbeblshops oil an emergencymiddot aIyze ~he beliefs of the R~)Jnan gr-aduates to work in various Ia priest at the Cathedral ~Fan D8culate ConceptionSChoollmd basis to the Catholic University ~llliCI fhUrch ~eProtestant types ~ religious educationand

bull B1ver oil April 25 1959 Magr Coyle High School Taun- of America 1 81 s am Jud8lsm snd the in other apostolic work

I

iather Lavoie haa served as middotton His seminary fonnation was These two figures are com-middot ~~ons o~ the Far East middot IlSlfistant at st Miehael Church obtained at Our Lady of Provi- p1etely unrelated to one another and ~~studY the onglns

OCean Grove st fosepb dence Seminary Warwick Neck The editors of NCR must know rl ~eyelopment Cf Church Attleboro and sinee R][ Stonehill College North -and in fact explicitlystated themiddot ~arl~i reli~on8 and win hn 1962 at Notre Dame de Easton and st John Seminary in the course of their May 8 ed- examme e r SOCial and ethical lLourdes Fall River Brighton itorial-thlilt the tolal amount of

Father Martins Ordained III prie~ by Bishop Church money which will be Irotestant Chaplain Son of Joao and Rita CandIlda eonnollyon Jan 30 1960 Father allocated to inner city projects DETROIT (NC)-Dr Gene B

EFerreira) Martins Rev Jooo ODea has served as assistant at throughout the United states Montague an Episcopalian clershylOiprilKlo Martins was bom ~ st James Church New Bedford will undltlubtedly far exceed the gyman has been named first S Sebastiao Tenelra Azores since ordination figure of $22 million Protestant chaplain of the on Aug 11 1991 lf they wanted to argue that Jesuit~perated University of

Edltcmteltl in public schoohl b t PI even at l1hat the Church win Detroit Father Malcolm Carron ehe~ he entered the Seminario

p

middotres Y erOGJnS an notmiddot be meetings its obligatIons SJ president bas announced ltIe Angnn lierceita Azores R Cmiddotmiddot~ A middottmiddot they were perfectly free to de I

middot where he was ordained a Priest ace lrISOil cion liO but in my opinion they elIlIWIlIilIIllIlIlIlHIIIIIIWlllIlJlmnllllillllllll~ on April 10 1955 CINCINNATI (NC) -Presby shouldnt have confused the is- El DRY CLEANING El

i on Dec 13 1955 Father Mal1- - terians of this area p~dged~ SUe by dragging Catholic Uni- sect d sect Ilhs came to serve as assistant_m~t the racial risis with mversitys stepped-up budget into El an -El

at St Antbony Of Padua Churcln rllrograrrt of education and action the discussion as ~ rect herring sect fUR STORAGE sect m Fall River I1n~ ten years nclld~ng the est~li~~en~f1f fa Touch of ~greement sect DERMODY sectI

Qilter at St Anthony ChUrch n~w k1[~~ of congr~ga~lpn focus- ][n conclusion I must lillY that -El - El lElast Falmouth eli SPfCif~lIl~Yon ~acIa~ ~cltm- Xfull~ agree with the final par- sectCLEANERS sect

Father da Silva lt~iat~on agraph in NCR~s criticism Qf the El El ~ Vincentian Priest Rev Joa- Leaders of the Unimiddot~ed PJe~by- bishop~ progrm The trouble sect 34-441 CohannetStreet sect

CjU1m Ferreira Fernandes ella ~rians of the Cincm~~ti area with attackin~ racism is that sect TaUfl~on 822-616n sectm

Silva was bom in Vila dft9 said the new coDgmiddotrega~lonwould all the attackers themselvoes == - == ~X~ for perhaps three Qr four ~ffer from a touch of the dis- iiIIllIIllIIlIlIlIIllIIllIllIlIIllIIlIlIllHlIIlIIllIllllllllllllilii

~ellrs and WOUld CkawUgeth- ease and that alltheirpro-middotmiddotmiddot--__---11

Want Sta~p~ ltin ~ nucllS of comernedper-graIIlli could be better middot B1EFORE YOU Ffhe Siste~ of St Francis of ~Qs ~romexistiDg ~on~re~qyen()ns ~9W true-not 0nlY of ptpm- BUY -1ll

~egany jl Y express thankD I ~embers of the new CODgr~ga- inent ecclesiastics but presumshytn Ancho readers for sending ti~ wJUch will hlven~ build- ably of lllthe rest ofus as well PARK

them ca~celled ~lffiPS f9r for- mgQt its own will te ~~~ to inclJdiog I must lssme- the MOT0 IS eign missiol$ an4 ask th~t sup ~~ a ~covenant inQicaPng editors of even our most lib-I middot~ft continu~ dlUing tqe ~tmi- ther fuU com~itmel)ttoracial eral Citholic p~riodicals

Der months T~ei~ add~ss is St reconciliation and pledging We arelll in thisthjng to- OLDSMOBilE )ilichael~Stamp ~ureat st~~lf t4me and ~urcesf()r onegether and wea11 ~aveoUii OlUsmobile-Peugot-RenCiuit

bull ~~I~~be~hsiMo~pfh9~4llc- fJijyeir odQ(r the ex9centc~we ~rlt cut QUt ~ llil That13 fo 67 Middle Street Falrhavenmiddotmiddot PRY N1l ~ h~ ~ co~r~gati(lo t j ~ _

CENTER Paint and Wallpaper

Dupont Paint cor Middlo Stiiii 422 Acush Ave

Campampt New Bedford PARKING ~ Rear of Store

Tbe Best

~orrw~Ho Tr~pp SHEET METAl

Jl 1lESER Prop fftESIDENTIAl

iNDUSTRIAl COMME~pAU

253 e~all St New iampldf1d 993-3222

- ~ANCHORl)ioceseofFa RiYer-JIlh~Moy 23 l9cS8

---------------------------shy

~~Says Therre -Arr~ N~ lomnits b T ChrrD~llDcopyHru ~reg~~ITi)~D~D~DifY

~ lffiiY JBa]baJla Ward

l ihe amptarting point Pol judging our-role in the world Us ro lrnow where we are-Ohristians living in the wealthy West a white minority making up about 20 per cent of the worlds peoples and enjoying 80 per cent of the worlds ~me But this is only a ~nning a raw statement If fact And as we know Ilhwts rarely present themshyrelves without a oontext They (ilODle to us in a dense package IOf assumptions ond e~periences

1lake such a ~t as that Mr Brown worth a IlDillion dollars gives nothing to iltirs Smith This Is a fact JIlul- iliPlied a thoushysand times over by all the BroWns who do IiWthing for all ~ Smiths But suppose Mrs Smith is his widowed older sisshyter Iho rovingly brought himmiddot 1ilP as a boy Then the fact of ibis indifference becomes a comshypletely different fact because ~ eoJ1text has changed

Sense e(1 ltDomtext Most of the facts of our oonshy

temporary scene require this oonse of context They do not eome to us neat and bare And ~e first thing that has to be lJ8id about us as Christians is presumably that our context of presuppositions and oommitshyment is somewhat different ilrom that of anyone else

The Gospels are full of the lldea that the Christian angle of

o vision cannot be simply intershyehangeable with the secular or

worldly point of view Leaven makes bread rise because it is differenj Salt gives a taste beshyeause it is not identical with the 2ood Light shines in darkness because light and dark a~e disshyiWlguishable

All these images of the Chrisshy(gan community imply being other different set apart but at the same time guiding inshyGPiring changing ald entering into the whole sum of human ~xistence We are different but our aim is communion We are lteall~ to a vocation but the vocation is unity How is this fundameintal context of Chrisshyiian living to be interpreted in rtbe modern age

Personal Fortune Let us look at two widely

occepted reactions to modern facts and see how they square with the Christian vision The first concerns personal fortune On balance in the landli where the bulk of Christians live the White wealthy post-Christian oocieties of the North AtIantic~ North America Bribin Westshyern Europe - the basic notion about income is to increase it iIIJld about wealth to accumulate to

In general a familys standshyIIllds of living its ciaims on reshylIOurces and its expectations of ilun an~ comfort gO up in step

Institute Participant yeniss Marjorie A MorinNortb

Westport a faculty member at ~cred Hearts Academy Fan Ri~er bas been named as one cent 44 ~igh ~ool bi~19gy teachshy~rs frorn18 states to participate iln a Summer institute on recent bigh school biology curriculum ~evelopments at Wells College Aurora N Y The institute will be in session from June 30 through Julyen S

with bigher earnings One can find it hard to make both ends meet and be resentful of taxes at $6000 a year $12000 a year $24000 a year $48000 0 year ~d so on up - in fact since

taxes rise with income COlIlshy

plairits can be higher as wealth increases even though expendishytures now oover two houses and three cars

Christian teaching in stark contrast reminds us that the higher the income the greater the responsibility The final counsel of perfection was given to the dcb young man sell

all you have and give to the poor- Short of this evengelical extreme the wealthy must not satisfy their oWllJlising supershyfluities at the expense of the basic needs of others 11 they dothey will enter eternity as easshyily as a ca~el through the eye of a needle-not a wholly reasshysuring analogy for our Western societies who bave never had it so good

NQ lLfimfits A secHid pre-suppositionmiddot~

eontempolary society is that chapel z Mount St Mary Con- f te li d d or en rmg re glon an was n obligatIOns an responsibilities vent and a dInner f~r Csters t fr ti A ~ 031 teacher and principal at manyop a on ers man ofdifshyt ferent national I y or citizenship f al 18 no arm ooncern of ours The Gospel approach IS whollydifferent All must)be fed even-shythe least of the little ones All must be clothed and sheltered Even if th th dtch is

e ~an In e 1 a Jew and his rescuer a Samarshyillan their traditional enmity must make no diHerence~ The centurions son is cured even if he is in modern terms a hated

SJl8TER MJIJRlAM RSM o

former DiocesoD1l Supervisor Completes 50 Years As ~eiigiolUJs Sis~er of Mercy

Fifty years in religious life Katherine -ONeil retired prinshycipal of the Aldrich School inwill be marked Sunday by SisshyFall River Both are memberster Miriam RSM former eleshyof Holy Name parish Fall Rivermentary school supervisor in

the Fall River Diocesan systemON II St Louis JgtarishRev Pa trick el supennshy

tendent of schools will cele- Sister Miriam is a native of brate a Mass of Thanksgiving St Louis parish Fall River She at 1045 Sunday morning in the was a public school teacher beshy

and the JubIlanans ~~edIate~m Diocesan schools before beingfaml 11 f II I Y WI () ow appointed a supervisor in 1941

A reception will be held after together with Sister FeIicitadi f t S

e nner or V1S~ mg Isers RSM The two Mercy Sisters ~d a seoond recepti~n fr served as supervisors under

fnends and former p~pl1s WIll the late Rev Edward J Gorman take place from 2 to 5 m Mt Sl ana under Father ONeill pres-Mary Academy library ent superintendent of schools Bec~~vingguests wit~ the until their retirement in 1966

jubllanan WIll be her Sls~ers Since that time they have M~ James Conlin retIred tutored and aided students with prmcIpal of the Mason Barney reading problems at Mt Sl

imperialist There is neither School Swansea and lIfiss Mary COnvent Jew nor Gentile bond nor free ~ bullr

in the a)l-enoompassing gener~ J ~

=~~k~~ ~P-9morL13~J of our prayer Thy Kingdom

40~s eolumn will therefOe try over the coming months to give not only the facts about our strange new world round which the astronaut strolls in 90 minutes It will try tosug gest the oontext without which Christian judgment and re- sponse are hardly possible For if we judge only as secular cit shyizens will the salt keep its taste May it not be fit only to be thrown down the drain

~ L ~ IIrencn lIovor Priests Holding O~her Jobs

PARIS (NC)-A recent surshyvey indicates that Frenchmen are in favor of priests working at n~n-priestly jobs and being marned _

The editor-in-chief will 1roW~D1DXNG GOWNS rm afraid Im overworking the

word romantic in describing the fashions this season but with such-anabundance of frills and tiny waists it seems the only fitting adjective Nowhere does the word crop up with shym 0 r e meaning than when one is trying to convey the imshypression given by the fashions iQr the 68 bride Bridal gownsfor late Sumshymer and early Fall weddings are now being shown and snapped up dewy-eyed brides-to-be

by

~ a survey ~nducted by the Gone are the outlandish 1ent SocIety FrancaJse dEnquetes eire th par ~ndage (SOFRES) 00 Per sses e weIrd IDllll des~gns centCIf those questioned both ~ tte h~v~~ ~ere dSlgnS Catholics and non-Catholics re- Ig wIg ts e Pia~ f~W garded it as normal for a priest ~aso~s als are as n l~

1Q praclice a lleCUiar profession wedding g~wns ~ tor so many and 51 per cent said that work degthther fUlootfitBkmiddot ~lS slelas0ben but by priests in a f~ri or 011amp ey 1ftgt especlay auti shyconstruction JOb is ood ~ in thlS dre~ of dresses One

very g lovely princess design by Ven because that ereates an exchange b - rio1-1- ~ ~ be tb Ch as nerrow s pear

bullween e Ulch and the dli -- fimiddotmiddot 10 workers 0 nIng gure- rIDIng seven out~ 10 persons 81lIr- Bi~h~uette ~Cthe~ by Frmk

veyed favored -marriage for ~zzo for Pandora ~as an Ehzashypriests ~because that would per- bethan aJr to it WIth its lov~ly mit them to better understand 1Jff of OhantIllr lace ~ndmg family problems and difficul- bI~h around the neckline and ties And 25 per cent of those _spIlling d~wn the sleeves surveyed are convinced that Fur-Trimmecll GoWlm

soon~r or l~ter women will be If youre planning an elegant ordaIned prleStamp wedding m the late Fall ~

Alois Schardt a Bavarian tele- early Winter and money is no vision n~ws editor Dr HeE-oobject Mirra has designed a mann Abs of the Deutsche Bank gown with a bodice and sleeores of broadtail cuffed around the wrist and neckline with white mink The price-a mere $800 the price of a good living room oouch but then you could al shyways sit on old orange crates and admire your stunning wed ding pictures

Even the bridal hairdo is as hearts and flowers as Elizabeth Barrett Browiling Curls fall over shoulders peek out from under mantillas and veils and are even caught back in kershychief headpieces If your own

hair refuses to wave never mind curl order some stick-on curls ahead oftime to keep the romantic air

By BOme unexplained miracle all brides are b~autiful but this year the designers are giving the miracle workers a boost in JOWDS that spell romance

New Bedfordilea Elect Officers

The slate of officers el~ to serve for the 1968-69 year d the Catholic Womans Club clil New Bedford are Mn Thomas P Barry president Miss Jean

A McGinnis first vice-p~ dent Mrs Raymond M Atw~ second vice-presisient Mrs ViiDo cent L Hughes recording s~

retary Mrs Maurice A Hurl~ corresponding secretary lViM Charles D Phelan treasureJl Registrars named for ~ coming year are Mrs Ricbam A Parsons Mrs Norman amp Sylvia Mrs Albert J LamolZgt reux Mrs William A Horai Mrs Robert A Vermette lIhe Henry J Fanning Jr Mrs Joseph N Joseph Mlamp3 Dorothy A Curry and lIlra Roland F Mathieu will $erve mJ mrectors

Nome Laymon Official Of Catholic Schoois

MEMPHIS (NC)-Bishop JO seph A Durick apostolic adJ ministrator of the NashVille dl ocese has confirmed the apshypointment of William G Ho~

as administrative assistant tIlll Msgr John A Elliott dioce~ superintendent of schools

In his new Post Hoyt wild serve as coordinator for prCF grams that receive local and federal aid to private schoolBp in addition to general assistance in the overall responsibilities 001 the school board and supeJlgto visors

There are 18 Catholic blgili schools with 5892 students ancll 53 elementary schools with 15

405 students in the Nashvl1lG diocese which comprises the

entire state of Tennessee

Pro~estants to SerVe 0111 Catholic Paperr

BONN (NC)-Protestanf jOllDD nalists will serve on the editoshyrial staff of a new German nashytional Catholic weekly aimed at readers on a high intellectual level which will begin publbshy

-ction in September - Most of the 20 editors wh

will be selected fqr the weeklys staff will be drawn from the ranks of the secular daily press

has been elected director of the papers board of trustees

A total of $4000000 has been raised from among the Well0 Ge~an dioceses to finance the establishment of the paper Wgt be named Publik Stockwill ~ issued

~fiDDY Dining IN YHE

JOILRY WHAlLER -ANID--

SPOUTER INN RESTAURANTS

Always Free Parking

New Bedford Hotel

NASON Oil COMPANY

Our Heating 7 Perry Avenue

Oils Malee Taunton Mass Warm FrienJs 822-2282

Dailymiddot Aittention Necessary To ~[f~Dceate We~~~

1B1y 1J~JlDill alii wnJillYJil ~~

The ~ are on their way and 11 lreems that half r our time i1l spent digging them out ~ the garden No matter haw much time we Gpomd on them they have a way of reappearing within Q few days ad 1l1Inless we really live them OUattention they ean take over a garden middotin lW time Beginning gardenem

bull WOO approaeh gardemng casshyaally or em weekends are often ~helmed by these unwel-CIOme pests ond soon give up the Ilbip Our suggestion is that M)

minutes II day B sufficient to keep even big gardens weeded fithe gardener will get out into Illie garden every day This maw mean nomiddot mOIre than a short trip BIound the garden to look mt Ole plants and to pull out a few ~ds encountered on the weJr

Few llilmtJtes Dadlly

We usually keep a small wamshyms hoeohandy by the back door and as we PlVPare to go to worlx take a short walk in the garden hoe in hand to see what is new The result is that we spend flw minutes or so in the garden beshytore setting out for work in the morning 10 minutes at lunch and ap~roximately 10 minutea before dinner after the working day is over which incidentally il a good time to ioosen up ~

t1ore tearing the kids heads oIif llDr all the misdeeds of the day

The point is that weeding u

attitudes t2lat vtll shape their future are beginning now and IllS theU friends and relatives wish them well they pray that each couple will enjoy the graces and happiness that come from a good Christian marriage with Christ in the home

Ad~ Atmosphere Often a wedding gift can add

to the atmosphere of a Christian home One such gift is a plaque that hangs in our den On it are these words

Sacrifice s usually difficult and irksome only

Love can make ~ easy and perfect love can make it a

Joy I couldnt think of a better

motto with which to begin 0 marriage or one that becomes

more significant through sleepshyless nights with sick babies frustrating job problems or the everpresent money worries Qlat asually plague young couples

A handsome cross a richlY llIustrated b~ble a handsome religious Gtatue or plaque are eccellent gifts to begin a Chrisshy

11 th h t Uan couple on the road to Il we as many 0 er cores mus ~ done on n day-today buis cmd cannot be left for weekendll because there are so many other tmportant things that have to be ltilone then

The grass has to be cut a new lInge put on a door there is a ball game to watch a ride 00 take a tree to be pruned etc Cll of which ore time-eonsuming _ lIIllU necessary With the weather we have been exPeriencing al -te th d~n~ e ~ weedmg gives ll3 middot Iln oPprtunity to g~t a hWe ~h lUI 11 commodity whiclill middot D3ems t0 be gettmg scarcer fa 001 industrial live~ and ehance to commune With Nature een at the wrong end of n

lim tle Kltcbellllmiddot

Did you know that during a wedding ceremony the groom places the ring on the finger of Ule bride because the circlemiddot of gold symbolizes the love and devotion that from this moment on will have no end This is but lti)ne of the many traditions that lJlave come down through the years and now are an accepted ~rt of the Cana celebration

Another must for a wedding dJ the wedding cake that fur eenturies has signified breakshymg of bread in kinship as it Is ll1anded out to friends and relashyves Even the veil that graces tlle l)ead of the beautiful bride b a custom that has come into llUes~nt time from the days when the brides stood under eanopies to show that they were IIDlder the protection of the glOOrp

All these ancientgt traditions give a Uttle added meaning to lYle Cana feast and the sacred acrainent of matrimony but ltWen more significant are the rostoms and traditions that the 1l1Jride and groom will carry into rife as a f~ly Many of the

polsh Mmiddotsommiddot

n ill ~ilI CHiCAGO (NC)-First copies

of the Polish vernacular altar

gful C th li lif Let meanm a 0 c e someone else buy the sheets a~d and ~asters ma~e your pft one Wlt~ eve~las~lDg mea~ll~g

If ou re 1hinking of givmg ~ bridal shower in the n~ar future perbaP you w0llld hke to serve a Bndal Puddmg

Bridal Pudding 2 envelopes unflavored gelatiJm

cup cold water b ili t

llff If cup deghte wa er egg W I StI- ~_

74 aspoon - cup suglllr

q h cups eavy cream (ilDrgetth diet)

1 teapoon vamplilla 1 flaked tcup coconu 1) Soften the gelatin in the k

cup cold watermiddot and then pour the 1fJ cup ofboiling water over the gelatin mixture and stir unntil dissolved Cool

2) Beat the egg whites until foam slowly add the salt and sugar and continue beating unshytil stiff peaks are formed

3) Fold the gelatin into the stiff whites

4) Beat the heavy cream until stiff and add the vanilla Fold the cream into the whites and gelatin mixture

5) Rub the bottom and sides cf an eight-inch spring form pan with butter and sprinkle the bottom with lh cup of the coconut Pour in the cream mixshyture Sprinkle with the remainshying coconut -ltld chill at least four hours or overnight Upshymold and serve with s1rawshyberries and the following rum sauce

lltum Sauce 6 egg yolks (see we didnt

want them to go to waste) 1 cup sugarmiddot

04 cup dark 111m cognac or kirsch

1) Beat the yolks until lemon colored and slightly thickened

2) Gradually beat in the Dugar

Stir in half the rum and cook in tOp of a double boiler over boiling water stirring constantshy131 until the sauce coats a woodshy

THE ANCHORshy

lHIONOR MOTHER lPlilElRRE Mother Pierre Marie of St Annes Hospital Fan River left meets Mrs Joseph Giblin Mrs Richard Donovan and Mrs Eugene Dionne all members of The Friends of St Annes on bhe occasion of the groups honoring the sister in reCognition of her reshyception of the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice Medal from Pope Paul

Aim Is Unity INIUlDil leads New )errsey Periodic White Walkerrs

Se~king to Ascertain Needs of Negroes ENGLEWOOD (NC)-Led by We are trying to find out

a Sister from St Cecilias High what the needs are she said School a group of white resi- We realized that we would dents have been making peri- look liketourists going through odic informal walking toWfl but you have to begin someshythrough the predominantly Ne- where gro Fourth Ward to meet the One result of the middotwalks was people living there

The walks inaugurated by Sister Robert Jean are made in mn effort to break down barriere fllll an area where rioting took place last Summer

Gif~~ Contfnued from Page Four

lNJlf~ihlmiddotAuBehCJH) $750

Jeweled Cross Co Inc $225

Attleboro Particular Council St Vincent de Paul

$200 Society of St Vincent de PaW

St Mary Conference $150

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J Wright bull $75 No Attleboro Catholic Womshy

0ns Club $50

Dr Eugene Leco St Anne Sodality Sacred

Heart Church $40

Edward N Cook Plate Co Inc $35middot

Albert Morawski $30

CYD-Sacred Heart Church $25

Frank M Miller amp Son Inc No Attleboromiddot Coal Co y H Blackington amp Co Inc

II neighborhood meeting at which white and black people discussed the visits and the posshysibility of further involvement in the needs of the Fourth Ward community------------

Universal Roofing amp Sheet Metal Co

Alden Corrugated Container Corp

Mass Trucking Corp New Bedford Hotel Macedo Pharmacy

$51 Building Materials Inc

$5 Sacred Heart Home

Daughters of Isabella Hyacinth Circle No 71

A Friend Damien Council K of C Harbor Beach Club amp Lounge Laurans-Standard Grocery Co

Inc $35

Glemi-on Roofing Co $30

Browne Pharmacy Inc $25

Browne Pharmacy A Friend Local No 168 UAW AFL-CIO Cape Cod Fabrics Philip J

Kane Inc Lions Club of New Bedford

Duplicating Equipment amp Supshyply Atty Jack London New Bedford Catholic Guild for the Blind Sharkeys Tire amp Rubber Comiddot

Tum oto Page Ten

Thurs May 23 1968

AJumna Rece~ves

Tdn~ty Award WASHINGTON (NC)-Doroshy

thea F Sullivan social worker and alumna of Trinity College here was presented the 1968 Julie Billiart medal at the schools Spring honors convocashytion

The annual award established in 1961 in honor of the foundress of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur who conduct the colshylege honors an alumna whose life exemplifies Blessed Julie Billiarts educational objectives -the formation of strong womshyen of faith devoted to God and neighbor living dedicated and fruitful lives

Miss Sullivan a member of the Trinity class of 1926 had been an associate professor at the Catholic University of Americas School of Social Sershyvice since 1941 She has been project director of the South Florida Neighborhood Youth Corps in Miami since 1966

She has been active in a numshyber of youth and welfare organshyizations has contributed articles to numerous periodicals and edited several books

Form Sisterrs 0 Coull1ld~

~Dil HawOJii Diocese HONOLULU (NC)-A Sisshy

ters council ill being formed here with the approval of Bishshyou John J Scanlan of Honoshylulu The council is composed of any Sisters in the diocese who desire to affiliate herself with the organizations objecshytives

The projected aims of the council are to serve as a chanshynei of communication among Religious communities and to the bishop the priests senate shylay senate other religious groups to serve as a source of unity and strength among Reshyligious to foster a closer c0shy

operation among clergy Reshyligious and laity and to be [1

means of coordinating the works of the apostolate after studying the religious educational socishyal economic and ecumenical needs of the diocese

Mfiltie P~Mmbnrwg amp HealltDOI~ (Oe Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Master Plumber 702i1

JOSEPH RAPOSA JR $06 ~O MAUIN $1ltlEfEii

lraaD rlovell 675a74~

SCHOOl MaonteilCllnCe SIlJlPPUO~

$WIEIE~IERS - $OA~$

IOlISUINJIr~CijANIIsect IrU~1E E)IliINGUUSIHIEIl$

DAHill COo nS86 IPUlRCHIASE SIlRIEIETI

NEW I8lEll)fO~1Ol

~9lJ-lJ7~6

~IIII11IJ1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I11I1I11I1I11I11II11I1I1I1I1I1I1I1IJ1I1I1I1I11I11I11I1I1I11I11UIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIII1111I11I

1 ~ESADAV~ lIIli~ls for use at Mass in Polish Coo en spoQn Do not boil Remove ltihurches and institutions in this from the heat and stir in the country have been received ~y remaining rum John Cardinal Cody of Ohicago In answer to - a letter from II member of the Consilium far Mrs Mogardo of Falmouth the Cbe implementation of the Con- amount of all-purpose cream 10 IJtitution Oll the Sacred Liturgy the Creme de Menthe Squares IUN~~A~m M ~58 icIIf the Second Vatican COIDlcil is one pint iillllllJllIlIIlIlIIlIIlIlIlIlIIlIIlIlIlIlIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIlJlIlIlIIlIIllUlIIlIIlIlIlIlIlIIlIIUIIUlIIlIlIlIlIlIUlIlIUIIUIIIIII~I~

I

THE ANCHORTDi~c~se of Foil River-Thurs May 23 1968 indiana Prelate ~ i l bull - 10 Heads NCEACrawford Electrical Co DrSpecial Gifts Morris Feresten Dr Frank L mAiN FRANCISCO r(NC) shy

Collins Mr amp Mrsmiddot John P Bish()p Raymorid J GellagMrContinued from Page Nine Dwyer of Lafayette Ind was ~le~ted

Attleboromiddot Hub Clothing Bristol ~it- president general Of the Nashyting Mills Inc Dixon Burial tionlll1 Catholic Educational Asshy$150

sociation at the final meeting ofVauit Shelburne Shirt Co IncBarry J Boardman Ins Agency $125 the asSoclation~8 6Mb Mnuat

Almeida Electric Co August Elmer C Slater

convention hereraquoIlr amp Mrs James G Heagney He succeeds Bishop ErnestBadwey amp Sons Joseph A Parks$100 Primeau of Manchester N HMrs Mar-y Courtis Dr amp MrsL G Balfour Co

who rervOO as president general Norman pSadler Brothers Inc for three yearsBedford House ConvalescentShields Inc A native of Cleveland BishopHomeInc Dr Sanford I Udis$60 Gallagher was ordained in 1939llI Joseph Madowsky HarveyAtherton Furniture Co~ and served as a Navy chaplainProbber Inc $50 during World War n He w~s

Demers Brothers narned bishop of Lafayette inM S Company 1965 following service as secreshy[P[(D$Iroreg$ $40

tary of the National ConferenceAttleboro Printing amp Embosshy of Catholic Charities

olng Co Inc ~WltWI7il$~ltW Speaker at the election sesshy$35 sion was U S Commissioner ofIOUlIt lLADY IOlF lFAllDMIAReynolds amp Markman In~ $25 Education Harold Howe who

$27 said that Catholic schools willMr amp Mrs Ralph A GuerrieroLeedham Hardware be especially guilty if they doMr amp Mrs Peter J Hoss lFlIt ADlIt][AN OJFM lFlIt lFAJlUAN OJFM $25 not act to solve the crisis of

Attleboro Sun Publishing Co ST IDOMIllN][C ghetto educationmiddotlnc Connelly Gold Stamping $25 Christianity is supposed toCo MacDonald Moving amp Storshy ~[j1Jil~O$ltC[(il$ t[ Our tLC1~ls ~hauraquocetiMr amp Mrs Thomas Paiva offer something more the age Co Marathon Company Mr amp Mrs Thomas C Murphy commissioner told the 6000

Plastic Craft Novelty Co Ob$erve $iver Priestiy Jubilees delegates at the final sessionSTLOUIS OF FRANCE On May 26th the 9 AM Retreat House Pittsfield N 11 ~Let us be fools for Christs

Fall Ri~er $50 MlIss will be conceleprated where _ he served as Retreat sake said St Paul middotWe Ladies of St Ailne raquoy the Franciscan Friars at Our Director and Master~ badly need highminded visionshy

$1200 Holy Name Society Ladys Chapel New Bedford Four years later _1964 Fr aries who can help the poorestFan River Electric Light Co st Vincent de Paul Sooi~ eonmiemoratingthe Silver Ju Fabian was transfe~red to Our of our children see a new dream $1000 $26 bilee of the ordination of) Fr Ladys Ohapel New ~d~()rd and faShion a better reality FOO

FirestoneRubbe~ amp Latex ~ Mr amp Mrs Herman Lamppoin4e Fabian F Joyce OFM and Fr where he has served to the pres- ournations sake Catholic edushy $600 I~ k Adrian F Donachie OFM ent time He is ViCar of the cationmust jointhe rest of edshy

~all R~~er GasCQllpanYj Fr Fabian is a native of Franciscan CommuIlity Father ucation to give them a neW $500 Vineyard iavenc Watertown He is an alumll~sof is well known thr~ughout the botizon

lVlr amp Mrs Henry ~ Feitelberl Boston College High SChool and area as a preacher for the St Mooney amp Co Inc middotUT AUGUSTINE

0Boston College He entered the Jude Novena devotions on$300 FIRST COMMUNION- $46L50 Franciscans of Holy - Nilme Thursdayat the chapel andtbeRev JosephF ODonnell ResidentSofCatholic MemoJillJ Province with headquarters in radio Apostolate

~o~e I $50 ~ PORTRAITSNew Yo~k City in 1937~ - Fr Addlln F Donachie Of~ $300 Mrs James Boyle He was ordained at the Na- is a native of Glasgow Scotland IN LIVING COLOUR

St Augustines GuildCitizens Savings Bank iional Shrine of the Immaculate and was brought up in NewSt Augustines Holy NameFR Five Cent Savings Bank Conception Washington D C York Oity H~ entered ~t $200 St Augustines St Vincent de May 29 1943 His first assign- Joseph s SeraphIcSeminary Jtl Anderson-Little Co inc lPaul Society ment was to St EIizabeths 1932 in preparatIon for the A -Friend $30 - T)enver middotColo from Franciscan Priesthood

$150 Mr amp Mrs William Figueiredo 1944 to Hi58 He was received into the

PR Peoples Cooperative Bank Mr amp Mrs Francis Metell _ Pastor and Supe- Order in 1937 and was ordained $135 $25 rior of the Church and Monas- six years later on May 29 1943

Herve Lagasse Cmdr amp Mrs Daniel Burgo tery in Denver in 1951 and at the National Shrine of the $125 Frank Coutinho Mr amp Mrs served in this capacity for Immaculate Conception Washshy

Cliff Nursing Homes Michael Fonte) Mr- amp Mr~ Eushy seven years ington D C His priestly Hfe$120 gene Frieh Mrs John Hughes In 1958 he was stationed at has been in New York Coloshy

J O Neill Supply Co Marthas Vineyard National St Bonaventure Retreat House rado Connecticut NewHampshy $101 Bank Rep amp Mrs Benjamin C Paterson N J for a period of shire and finally- stationed in ~ Fall River Shopping Ce~nter Mayhew Jr Mr amp Mrs Boleslaw two years giving laymens re- Our Ladys Chapel since 1956Associates Nickowal Mrs Dean Swift 11 treats and days of recollection Fr Adrian came with the origishy $100 Mr amp Mrs Frederick Thifault to the clergy He was then nal group of Franciscans ~o staff

Norbut Mfg Co Inc transferred to St Anthonys- Our Ladys Chapel THE FINEST QU~LITYSullivans of Fall River dk Wareham Hyannis IS WORTH THE PLEASANT

H P Hood amp Sons Inc ST PATRICK Famed Church -Gift SHORT DRIVE TO THE I bull Borden amp Remington Co $50

AREAS LEADING STUDIOr Louis Hand Inc middotMr amp Mrs Thomas Choate To Mission SocietY William T Manning Colnt Mr amp Mrs middotWilliam McLaugbshy BOSJO~ (NC) B~stons

j OPEN SUNDAYS Radio Station WALE I lin famed St Stephens church hasbull Dring Communion Seasonbeen - turned over by Richard

Dr amp Mrs Americo Almeida ~ W Hurley Co Cardinal Cushing to the Misshy $75 $30

Walter A Fur-man Co $45

8io~ary society ot St James ~ BRIDAL PORTRAITS Beetlemiddot Plastics Albert- Guerzoni the Apostle 311d Deluxe Quality Candicts Fall River Lodge No 118 BPO $21 famous for RESERVE YOUR DATE EARLY - The edifice _a short distance E~~ Mrs Am~lia JJaptiste _ from the home of Paul Revere

St- vincent de Paul Salvage - $25 and other Revolutionary War ~rve as QUALITyand EvANS STUDIOS

JBureau Nlr amp I([rs Franci~Murp~y shrines will head- St Patricks Wofuens Guild Miamp Mrs Julius ]~abbitt -I quarters for the society which 18 MAIN STTAUNTON middotCall Rivermiddot Mr amp ~rs JsephNorris the ~ardinal founded to do mis- SERVI(E Tet 822-1181

sect(6nwork in Latin AmericaProvidence Pile Fabric Corp $50 St Stephens church was deshy

Robert L Germaine Inc o o

Atty amp Mrs JohriJ Harringshy OUR LADY OF LOURDF8 whose works also include tne ton $5 Massachusettsmiddot State House It

Simons Supply Co Inc Massasoit Hills Trailer Iark was first used as a CongregashyThe J L amp R Cohen Foundashy Inc

siglled by Charles BlJlfltJch

tienal church but with the influx ~ion of Catholics during the inlmishy

Nira WarehOUse Mart Inc West Harwich gration of the early 1800s it was $45 purchased by the Boston arch-

Drobyski Wallpaper Co HOLY TRINITY diocese $60 In 1964 Cardinal Cushing$40

Dr Harry Cooperstein Mr amp Mrs Theodore F Berg spent more than $1000000 W haus restore the building$30

Ashton Funeral Home $50 Magonis Ferry Landing Mr amp Mrs Manley E Boyce Priests COll1ference

$25 $26 STEUBENVILLE (NC) ~ A Atty Kenneth Sullivan Mr Captain William House group of priests here has fOJmed

- Mrs Lewis Morley Hathaway - $25 -- a CQnference of Steubenville ~nelal Service Cook Bord(l1 ~oha Gillahan Mr amp Mrs Priests to create a general

Co Dr Harry Levine Joseph lttiltpetteMr ampMrsJohn ~pirii of priestly fraterJ~iiy and l)rDa~id P~Iill Tyrells Mar- E Ke~ly ~r Mrs yen~j~ Cor- - professionalism Msgr 0

t Cascaltle Drug CoProfes- ra~o HarQJd~RmiddotMcK~nna ~Tolin A Cymbor pastor ()fStgt Qff~rincllid~SPeciaIILinlie9n~n~ $3 w~rf~ 0( ~ I~al ph~i-rnacy hr havills Mrs R R~ SmalI AnthonYThete~esect Church Piney F6rk

-- middote~rHolvitZampHorvitz Ryan MrampMr~_-JQnljMul- wasnamedtempotary chairman Ride TicketsFor additional details or reservatic5nsmiddot call Mrmiddot Conrad Feriamiddot at (4Ql) RE 14kgtOO collectl lC

High Point Fording Box Corp llnsMr-ampmiddotMrsAllgterf Daven- and chosen to repiesimt the _ ~ ~

A RossEvetett Motors port Mramp Mrs Frank Ball group at the initialmiddot meeting in

-uline Te~tile Co Eagle Mr amp Mrs John W- Anderson Chicago May 21 of the National ine Co Mr amp Mrs Paul Carney Federation of Priests coun(iMI

bull

~~ 1

Q I gt~ j

1tj _-_000 e

Comiddot

~ ~-

JUST OfF ROUTE 117

POINTmiddotRO~-_

SpecialSchool Outinils GjoupOffer $3 per Stuitentmiddot

father OWcopy) Sons Are OEd~glfDregd

BELMONT (NC) - Three members of the Habiger family -two sons and their fathershyare completing studies for the priesthood and will be ordained as Benedictine priests on June M

The lllabigers have prepared Jlor ~e priesthood at Belmont Abbey here They will be Qrshydained by Abbot Thomas Halmiddott shyman at St Benedicts Abbey in Atchinson Kans

John Habiger joined his two sons at Belmont Abbey after the death of his wife Mildred in December 1963 He said he did this because my wife and I just had an understanding that the survivor would give his or her life to the Lord

Before deciding to enter the priesthood Habiger had worked as a sales manager fOl a deep freeze home locker distlibutor

lHE ANCHORshy~urs May 23 1968

_ bull

II

Britista Cot1toIicI Suppolt New Bilt To Ovtlow Bios~

LONDON (NO) ~ 0aitJh0 ~ BeneFally appearr to be ~Ving strong BUPPOOt to the govemme~ controvemial new biJl 110 outlaw racial dls- crimination in Britain

Tile Catholie press glQ~~e bin Its blessing with some quBll shy iDeations Several Catholic anti shyaovermnent politicKms howshyweI have voiced oppositionshynot em principle they eblim but oocause they fear some sections of the bHl eould IIIggravate rather ampan mollify existing racism here by producing II privileged black and colored minority

The Race Relations Biil Which Is backed by the present Labor government and can reashysunably be expected to become law this Summer fs intended to i

strengthen existing legislation in this matter in view of the big rise in the number of Negro and colored (Indian Pakistani and as a labor pool manager for and West Indian) immigrants in the United States Air ForceFATHER AND SONS TO BE ORDAINED A father and his two sons will bethe past few years

Fellls Takeover m-d~ined June 14 to the priesthood at St Benedicts Abbey Church Artchi8on Kansas Nearly 2000 dock workers FoUo~ing the death of his wife five years ago John Paul Habiger (center) entereq the MethodlidsAdopt

quit work to delllonstrate BenedIctines joining his sons in the seminary Their nam~8 im religion are Father J~hJ) Project E~uaiityWJainst the bill and to sboW Igrlatius Habiger OSB (center) Father MatthewH~riy Habiger~ OSB (left) andsupport for the view o~ bullCon~ DALLAS (NC)-The ll-milshy2ervative party me~ber Eno~b F~thet Benedict John HabigeJrp OSW NC Photo li~)Il-member United Methodist ~

PPwell that Britain has too Church-formed by a merger l(Ilany elgtlQred immigranUi $50 $50 of the Methodist Church and

Powell had called for 8 vir WestpolIt Almon L Turner Holy Name Society the Evangelical United Brethshy tual halt to the entry of dependshy Thomas M Ross ren-has ill effect adoptedST GEORGE ST PATRICK~nts of colored immigrants and $45 Project Equality throughoutmiddot ~he$25 $250i for measures to encourage the United States Mr amp Mrsmiddotmiddot Leonard Langlois RobertE Eastman Re~ Tames F McDermottliepatriation of the immigrants The 1400 delegates to WleEveline Magnant Claire Magshy $25 $200 bull OtherWise he said black people QUldrennial General Confershynjllt Mr amp Mrs Roland McGee Dr Frederick G Doran ~ lDr amp Mrs Roger E Cadieuxwill take over whole areas ence adopted a resolution inMr amp Mrs Arthur Perry Landgraf Felix P Kaladin $125 Dnd I3cial violence will follow which the new church endorsesMr amp Mrs Donald Pittman Thomas W Whalen Thepnaa Mrs David M KilroyPowell was later ousted from Project Equality and recomshyMr amp Mrs Jacob Strunk Calisto Raymond P Paine $40his position in the shadow cab- mends cooperation both throup

Richard J McNally inet---the leadership that would participation and financial su~SandwichWoods Hole $30assume power if the Conservashy pori on the part of all United Fernand C E AuclairtiVe6 won control of the governshy CORPUS CHRISTI Methodist Ann u a 1 (regional)llT JOSI~IH Dr Thomas Clarkment - by Conservative party Conferences local churches 10shy$300 $350 John T ~mith

0leader Edward Heath who eal or national institutiomlPaul McCusker Rev William F Morristermed Powells speech racist $26 agencies or organizations$150 $100 William MoranAbstain From Voting Friends of Megansett Mr amp Mrs William Carr The resolution presen ted to

The House of Commons apshy $100 $50 $25 the Conference by the Methodshy

Leo A Bond Mrs Leonard Nproved the bill in principal ist ~neral Board of Christian lOr amp Mrs George Christman Mr amp Mrs Lawrence Perrault313-209 and sent it to commitshy Bilooeau Mr amp Mrs Francis Jr Social Concerns called Project$75 Dr amp Mrs J Minihan lKilgrew Mrs James E Sullivantee for additional study before Equality a responsible consist shyMrs Claudia Pendergast Mr amp Mrs Peter Becker Jrit is presented for fi nal passage Mrs Frank Souza Joseph Tin- ent ethical practical effective$50 Mi amp Mrs Robert KennedyTwenty-five Consenatives abshy Mr amp Mrs Cornelius Hickey Mother Cabrini Circle D of j

sley and positive means whereby the stained from the voting rather Sll ll~OMAS MORE United Methodist Church andMr amp Mrs John McCue Norman McEnaneythan fullow the palty line and $50 other churches can SUppOImiddott fail1Mr amp Mrs Emil Tietje $40vote against the bill Atty amp Mrs Richard N LaSalle employment practices intbe$35 Mr amp Mrs Francis CarpengerAlthough the British in the $2~ United StatesSt Josephs Womens Guild $35past two centuries have govshy In memory of Mr Y J Archshy $30 bull Mr amp Mrs Raymond Doucetteerned a large proportion of the 11mbeaultMr ampmiddotmiddotMrs ElmeiHallett $26 Oppose Cuts worlds black and colored $25 Mrs Charles Russell peoples it is a new thing for ~25 Mrs Margaretmiddot Harris Mr ampbull this country to have such peopie

Mrs Paul La Prade Thomas middotC H Berube MD Mr amp Mrsequal in law moving in by the Rooney Mr amp Mrs Charles Sefshy Joseph Silvia William J Dalton thousands and competing com

mereially and socially with ton Mr amp Mrs JG$eph Sylvia James W Blunt John Hart whites G Stanley Johnson Mr amp Mrs

Fred Comings Mrs Helen ClarkeThe new bill is aimed at outshy Oak Bluffs Mr amp Mrs George PereiraMYIllawing racial discrimination in

SACRraquo IIEAlltT Harry Walkerjobs housing hotels insurance and similar fields The most $125 The Percy Family Mrs Kay

Mr amp Mrs H~l1ry ~orey radical anti - discriminatioJ1 ~iggins ~ yenrsRalph Emerson measure ever Ploposed for Brit shy $100 yenrll Edith chamberlin Mr I

aIn it was introduced by the Reliable Market-In memory Mrs MIchael Cornick Mr amp yenrs of deceased loved ones govelllment of Prime Miliister Ernest Forni Jr

Harold Wilson not so much to $50 MI amp Mrs Shurtleff Mry deal with present circuinstances Mrs Corinne Fournier Ralph Jameson Mr amp Mrs Clemshyas with the future when the $30 mey Mr amp Mrs James Hamlen

A Friendproblem could become more Mr amp lVIIs Charles McHugh acute $25 Mr amp Mrs William Ward Mr

A Friend In memory of Mr amp amp Mrs Charles Pizzottimiddot Mr amp

Diocese Convenes Mrs Antone G Camacho Mr amp Mrs Charles Parks Frances Silva Mrs Thomas DeMont Mrs Rose

First Lay Congress M Peardon A Friend Seekonk BATON ROUGE (NC)The A Friend

first lay congress of the Baton Mr amp Mrs James L Kenney MT CARMELmiddot Rouge diocese convened at the $100 Catholic Lifc Center herc Ostellville St Vincent de Paul Society

More than 600 lay people repshy $50 OUR LADY 0 THEresellting the 12 civil paJishes Knights of Columbus

(~ounties) comprising the Loushy ASSUMPTION Mr amp Mrs Edwnrd McCrystal isiana diocese had the opportu- $50middot $25

nity middotto participate in matters The McKeon Family ToI11enS Guild Mr amp Mrs affecting diocesan finances the $25 Wilfred Blanchette middotMrbullamp Mrs

feasibility of continuingmiddotCath_ Mr ~ Mrs WiUiamHerron Edward Chal)~ler Mr amp Mrs Ciq education apart from the Manu~IJlendricks Jr HOlyName pu~gtlicschool systein the Ray ham ~9ci~ty Mr amp MrsE McPhillips Churchs il)VOlvcmcnt in social SJmiddotANNmiddot action admiriistrative middotstrllemiddot $90 Somerset

tures of themiddot Church and the Rev Thomas F Neilan ST JOHN OF GOD nymans place in diocesan 00shy $75 $150 ministratioa Cirino Dominic P amp Family Dr Americo B AlUehbl

SACRAMENTO (NC) ~ TheJSouth Dart~outh beads of Catholic charitable ST MARY agencies throughout CaliforniD

$125 have joined in opposing 00- Dr amp Mrs Paul E Corley 1~mptsof government to reduce

$50 public spending at the expense Dr ampmiddotMrs Victor Almeida of ihe needy and poor

$30 Mr 1 MrsWilliam Hines

]25 Mi amp Mrs Armand Borgesmiddot Mr amp Mrs Charles Nunes

Mr amp Mrs joseph MOlliz Jr The Johnson Family Dr amp Mr~ Archibald Senesac

Nantucket Sll MARY

OUR LADY OF THE ISLE $36

James E Worth $15

Grace Henry

9ffering You ~ SavingsPIQnsmiddot

lHlome Financingmiddot

WARFJI~~ (O-OP~RATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mass

Telephone 0 295-2400 flllnb-llv-Mall Servlu AYllIIIllII

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Check These Banking Services

bull Savings Bank life Insurance lleaDhtate Loans bull Chri~tmas and Vacation Clube

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bull 5 CO~Yl1lient Locaiios bull - - middott

middotNEW BEDFORD INSTITUTImiddotONmiddot tor SAVINGSmiddot

12 -tAE ANCHOR-Diocesa ofFoti Rive~Thurs May 23 1968 l

$copylDfrTht ~$frml 1NJcopy1iU0il Wreg$U9gt[J1 JIl[OlLY CROSS OUIlt LADY OlF GIltACIE

$101 $50 Mr amp Mrs Donald L BergerOlll Rev Rene R Levesque

$100 $25Joseph P Kairys

Mr amp Mrs Orner Duqu~tte$50 Jennie E Overton Mr amp Mrs James R Jones SOWltrlm YIiUililOuii1mDr amp Mrs Thomas Berry Jr Mr amp Mrs John Pilz middotST pros X Mr amp Mrs Robert J Dray $150 John J Smith John F Martin Dr amp Mrs R Earl McLoud $100

$40 Anonymous 1IL F Bergeron $54l

$35 Philip J Hart Frank Ready Ano~ymous (2)

$30 $25 Dr amp Mrs Herbert L Evereti Edward P Hayes John J CarshyLouis Lyne amp Theodore Larishy roll Thomas P McDonough

mere Dorothy Schoonmaker Denis d Brophy Mary Geist Douglas Eo ~

$25 VampJl John Crawford Mr amp Mrs David Gomes M

ampMrs Leo R Schleicher Mr amp Mrs M J Hegarty Thomas F 1fltID01iJil~~ Gentile Mr amp Mrs EdwardlllL Slr JJOSEIPIHILoveday

Mr amp Mrs Robert E Coffey ~150

li$r Francis Welch Mr amp Mrs A Friend Leo F Sullivan Mr amp Mrs Robshy $40

Mr amp Mrs John Aiello I3ehleicher ltUt Downey Mr amp Mrs John E

Mr amp Mrs Gerald Tache $35

Mr amp M~ Arthur LeclairEast FaBmoutlh $30

ST ANTHONY VictormiddotL Brunette $275 Mrs Simonne Fisher

St Vincelllt de Paul Confer- Mr amp Mrs Edwin J Marmk ace Mr amp Mrs William A Olishy

voeira Mr amp Mrs Enos Days $21)

William Bartlett Mr amp Mrs Gerard Benoit Mr amp Mrs Nicholas F Tangshy

~y $25

Mrs Margaret Virgin Alice Bourassa Alexander Perri llIIllll lllli Braley Jr Dr amp Mrs Jell shyorne Brault

Cecile A Daley Mr amp Mra John I)ias Jr Mrs Mary P Gage Mr amp Mrs Ernest RLashysectesse Edward McGrath

Mr amp Mrs Leonard deMeshydeiros Mr amp Mrs Roland L Despres Mrs Irene FitzGeralcll Mr amp Mrs Edward Fitzsimshymons Mary Gogghi

Edmond Goulet Margaret Manghan Joseph C Mello Mrs Carmen Muldoon Mr amp Mrs Paul Murray

Margaret Nickerson Mra Edythe Rankin Mr amp_Mra Frank J Rezendes George Vishyveiros Mr amp Mrs JosephSevigny

Sli MAIlty

$81 St Vincent de Paul Society

$25 Sacred Hearts Association Raymond Dlugosinski Mr amp Mrs Manuel Allua amp

Nancy Mr amp Mrs Antone Costa J1l Mr amp Mrs John A Wojcik

SACRED IHIEARlr $25

St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ST IPATRRCK $iOO

Mr amp Mrs William BrennlUll $75

Anonymous $50

Mr amp Mrs Francis J Flynn Atty amp Mrs Edward Farrell

$30 Mr amp Mrs Albert W Lawrence

bull Major ampMrs Lawrence Uch-shymanowicz

$25 Mrmiddot amp Mrs Edward C Wen Jr John Keohane

Mr~ amp MrS JosephCardeIre Mr amp Mrs Melvin Dolan

Mrmiddotamp Mrs Walter Buguey Mr amp Mrs Robert Costa Mr amp Mrs John Kelliher John Lynch

Mr amp Mrs Thomas Magwre Mr amp Mrs Kenneth Paige

$30 lt $leo~ IJ=1J yltID Uilliil 0$ lllr amp MrsEdward McCarthJ7 lievbull~ 17 ~

Slr FRANCIS XAVlrEllt $2S st ~o Womeno CI~

Holy Name Society COO $450 Mramp RlIra Lee Kingsb~St Vincent de Paul Society $25 Mr amp lVlro Leo Parente

$300 Capitell Mr amp Mrs Richard Dr amp Mrs ~p Sibilll

Charles H McGrath Joan

Mr amp Mrs Larry Newman Sproul lllr amp Mrs Thomas ~$100 Loughlin Mr amp Mrs William Mr amp Mm GeorgeM~Doane Beale amp Ames E Donovan Mr amp lVlm Joseph FalDtoo

$50 Mr amp Mrs Harry SylvesterMr amp Mrs Frank J Dolan Mr amp Mrs Charles Flynn lltlr $25

A Friend Mrs Rockina CaftDoMr amp Mrs Irving Morrissey amp Mrs~ Marshall Field Mr amp amp Family Mr amp Mrs JOQD KmampJ R ~eyburn Mrs Robertmiddot Ryan Vetorlno Mr amp MrS Victor Narciso Mr IIMr amp Mrs John Hart Bros Ipc Fruitland

Scudder amp Taylor Oil Inc CarreiM Florist Mrs John Kinsley Dr amp Mrs Francis ONeil Ilflr amp Moo Wllliam ~

Captains Table Mr lie Mrs John Currivan Mr Bishop Tyler General Assem- McznsfieRdl Mrs Alfred Kuplast Mrs ~

My garet Jordan Mrs Grace Duma Charles J Ardito 8l MARY Mr amp Mrs Fred Taylor Josepla

$ltamp0 $150 E Donovan Jmiddotr Mr amp Mramp W tel Alfieri Catholic Youth Organization st VinceJntt de Paul Society

shy-

SENDYOUR GnJFT TO bull i l j middotcrmiddotmiddot

The Rig Rever~ Edward TO~MeiJramiddot The IUght Reverehd RiJYlIWnd T CQnsidiRf lVallonarpfreclor Olt Diocesiul Di~ecto i

366 Fifth Avenue 368 North MalnSteet f(eWYork New Yo~k ioooi Fall River Massachuseits027l0 -

1iWJlE ADDRESS

THE sectOClllETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH ~ shy

I

~~ IiUrge Negro La Guidonce Boord ~n K~s~ Cety

KANSAS CJIIIY (NC~-A five-paltish cooperative illl

ner city ministry guided by a Negro lay board has been proposed os a way o~ bridging the gap betWeen the white Catholic CI1urch and the Negro community here in Misouri

A six-person committee headshyed by MrsThelma Work will identify the nee~ of the lComshymunity-Catholic or not-and to propose a structure fur meetshying those needs I

The action came as the result

of a meeting of the Catholie

V ~

Clergy Conference on Inner Oity bullneeds

Father James Lock chairman cited charges of the Black Cathshyolic ClergyCaucus in Detroit in conjunction with the IImnual meeting of the Catholic Clergy Conference on the Interracial Apostolate The Black Caucus statement said the Catholic Church in the United States 1s gtrimarily a white racist insti shytution which is rapidly dying in the black community and to which the black community no longer looks to with hope

On~ Out f li5 The Caucus recommended fha~ Harrison the Bishop Rev William J Hurley Rev DonaiiIll

white priests become supportshy E Messier Rear Rev Cornelu8 F Kiley Rey Robert A ers and learners listening tc McGowan Rev Edmund J Fitzgerald Rev Kevin F TrippNegroes to find out what tbeir lheir assignment~ are Olll page twoneeds are

The Kansas City-St Joseph diocese bas no Negro diocesan priests Ttrore~ DS~th~ Aoee Sl1m~PO rfif~ifflg tedera~ Jb ~~~

We are trying to start the wheels rolling for some kind of

~umlp~JrlMeFrot Nleereg~~rJ fr CmbCBi OW~iff1ychurch structure through which the black people of our diocese can voice opinions and partici shy WASHINGTON (lTC)-SPokesshy ment of public policy ~t Jlorth oommunity-based Social services esnie cultural values of ~hliv

pate in decision making said men for Protestant Catholic and in the Full Employment Act (l(f to meet Human and community country they said are sucll Father Lock Jewish organizations h a V e 1946 which provides for useshy needs Recipients of rondo that work becomes the basis by

backed federal legislation which ful employment opportunities should not conduct sectarian which a persons worth tnFather Dan Howe declared~

We have set up programB would provide one million jobs for all those able willing and programs judged A job not only tends ie i10r the nations unemployed seeking to work n determine an individuals acshygeared to Catholics in our parshy While they acknowledged that

ceptance by society but it alsish whom we have formed rn Their support was given in The Acts emphasis on education passage of this legislation would affects ones attitude abolll~the white mentality Since cl testimony before the House Seshy and training Training s1Mgtuld be no wre-all for the ills ci oneselfbest we are having contact lect Subcommittee on Iabor be open-ended so that the posshy poverty in America the spokesshy

with only about 2000 people out Studies have shown that unshywhi~ is holding hearings on sibility of permanent full-time men said that any attempt to of the 50000 in our area we the Guaranteed Employment employment beyond fIDe presshy combat poverty must provide employed persons have a ve~

can presume that the activities Act of 1968 ent situation is a reality Trainshy meaningful jobs low level of self-esteem anell we have structed as being our that this attitude tends to pro-ing programs of this ~Testifying were Father JohnChristian program of service do vide a self-fulfilling prophesrshould include basic educationMcCarthy assistant director ofnot reflect or reach black thinkshy MO~~U[ij] ~lW] ~O~S since it then becomes more dif~counseling and opportunities tothe Social Action Departmenting ficult to find or hold a joblearn about appearance manshy

E~GJHlll O]RDAllNJEID FOR IllmCJESJE Bishop Qgtnnolly m-dained eight deacons ro the priesthood for service in the Diocese 21t ceremonies oonducted at St Marys Cathedral Fall River Front Rev Edward E Correia Rev George Eo

We need a board of black of the U S Catholic Confershy OrJi1 AA~jjo Foreg[uGagement of income health IImdence Dr Grover Bagby of thelaymen to tell us what the pe0shy NEW YORK (NC)-Answershyother factors affecting personalDepartment of Social Justice ofple want to help change the well-being and development fog an appeal from the Ceylonthe National Council oftone to establish priorities government now fighting a mashyChurches and Rabbi Richard GFather Howe noted there are lWven fl Sellf-lEs~(()nim laria epidemic threatening 16Hirsch director of the Religiousapproximately 9000 Negro million persons the catholicAction Center of the Union of Involvement of private nonshyCatholics on the books but Medical Mission Board nere sentAmencan Hebrew Congrega- profit organizations Such Oll shynot necessarily active in Kansas by air Ifreight 364000 anti-mashytions - ganizations they said will c0shyCity out of a total Negro popu- laria tablets to Colombo Ceyshyoperate with the development ~lation of about 130000 They specifically suppoit4d lons seaport-capital The shipshyHe said that although the three provisions in the bill ment valued at $10746 conshy

structure of the lay board is yet Creation of an Office of Guarshy (cll)f AdldJrell$$ sisted of tablets for both ooults ro be determined it is the conshy anteed Employnient Opportushy and ~hildren sensus of 20 priests and laity at 1r~~regy Meefrolilregnity l8 a eontinued develop Earlier the CMMB respondingthe meeting that at least half

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-Theshythe lay members would be un- oro a plea for help from Indoneshyology must revolutionize it shyder 25 since the young people ~1JJlhJreg~ WODil$ [Q)~f sian authorities shipped 220shyself John Cogley former reshyare the thought-leaders in the 520 anti-malaria tablets ~aluedligion editor of the New Yorkblack community ~ial ~fit1hvllsW Times told the national convenshy at $7306

NeCeSS31lY ApPll03Cln SCOTCH PLAINS (NC) shytion of the College Theology so-A Negro lawyer Leonara BrotherHarold Woods a teacher The Catholic Medical Mission ciety IN the University m- SainHughes told the meeting at Union Catholic High School Board for 40 years has beenmiddot IfmiddotranciscoOne thlng is clear The clos- here in New Jersey has won a oonducting a worldwide mercy

Ing of any Catholic institution months delay to contest lim Cogley DOW a staff member cl program shipping medicines or cut-back in the inner-city order to report to his New York the Center for the Study m Deshy drugs bandages and various says one thing to Negroes We draft board for induction into mocratic Institutions Santa Barshy other hospital supplies and dont want you to be CathoUcs ~e Airmed Fo~ equipment to some 1000 misshybara Cal and editor of the Censhy

Father Vince~t Lovett dir~ BrOther B8rold la member of ter magazine tlgtld delegates that sion hospitals 4000 dispensaries tor of the new Diocesan Social theology must lead- rather than and clinics in developingAction office saidmiddot middotthe Marist BrotheJS had been eoUJlltriesfollow usemiddotits treasureS ratheT It seems to me we a- 4o_1krecJassified ll-A and Cllldered to than hoard them Liberatemiddot it shying about setting up something after rewmfug biB draft eard 011 self from its own prison ~ c0nshylike II couotywith II state goy- April 19 as a protem agaiDst the formity fear imd be dead Dbshyernment - a regional ministry U4o- actionism of th~ pastwithin tile diocese Be said the war VBallam

S~aking on The image off

WI report for Induction em April M

approach seems not so much lim The 22-year-old teachers ease ideal as lh necessitymiddot bas been taken up by the Amer-o Man as Citizenmiddot Cogley said

iean CDvil Uberties Union that the change in the religlO1Ul Which ealled middottbeboardll action mans self-image and the change

Silent Meditation in reclassifying him ~ new in the image of politleal man are TRENJON ~NC)-A bID pr0shy height of wegality Tbe ACLU not unrealated The image of a

viding for a period of silent said Brother Harolds religious free man redeemed from every meditation each day by students status had not collmged since he form of spiritual servitude and attending public schools was WIlI3 originally classified ~D subjugation he said b triumphshyintroduced in the New Jersey and that he hGd DOt ilrlterfered ing over the old image of eccleshyState Legislature by Assembly with the ndministratlon of the sia9Ucal man-a passive creature Speaker Albert B Smitlll 3eleet1ve ~ BWolltem eOOject ~ the Will ca ~thero

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THE At~~C~_ 15 Th M 231968 urs ~y World Communication Day CtmMG(f~ A~V[JK~$ObsecteWGR1CCe on S~ndl~w O[fi) ~copy~o~ A~fDcopy[jf)

WASHINGION (NC)-In response to an appeal by NEW ORLEANS (NC)-ArchshyPope Paul VI to the universal Ohurch the Church in the bishop PhHip M Hannan asshyUnited States will observe the second World Communicashy serted here As far as I am tions Day on Sunday May 26 The National Conference of concerned segregation in the

Church is dead We are past the Catholic Bishops awroved time for statements Now is thefor Motion Pictures and Bishoplast November the observshy time for actionClarence J Issenmann of Cleveshynnc of World Communicashy Tile archQishop of New Orshy

tions Day in this country on USCC Press Department land episcopal chairman of the

leans told delegates at an diocesan and parish levels ampnd archdiocesan conference on st) shy

members of the U S Bishops cial action I assure you we are going forwardCommittee for Social Commu- Senate Rev1ltews

nications have sent to individ- He outlined programs fe ual Ordinaries throughout the Continued from Page One beMer education for adequate country a cOpy of the Prayer lains to be assigned on a funmiddot housing and for recognition of of the Faithful for that Sunday time basis and that the needs the inherent digni ty of all men and a ooP1 of the Holy ~athers of the sick were being adequateshy The Church is exerting itll message issued earlier this ly met under the present arshy influence in every way to assistmonth ran~ement the poorest he said If we

It is recommended that the 3 Recommendations on salshy follow Christ we must begillilobservance in this country ary adjustments Taken into aeshy with the pOor even if thishave both religious and non- count _by Bishop in his direcshy means asking others to wait 0religious aspects The former tives for Aug I 1967 little longerwould highlight a Mass with 4 Meetings open to all clergy Anyone can live poor the

appropriate sermon in the 00- Bishop approved archbishop said The key thingthedral or some convenient 5 Extension of Synod prepshy is dignity This does not mean church to which executives aration time Bishop approved that this dignity is recognized Wld employes of communica- 6 Secretary to be Treasurer by a dole or a handout or eveD tions media would be specially and Senate budget Bishop apshy preferential treatment We are invited proved confusing issues when we talk

The non-religious asp e c t 7 ChOice of other Prayers of of dignity as if it can be bought would feature news conferences the Faithful Bishop approved or paid for he said articles in the press and radio 8 Referral of matters to Passhy - I am totally for equal oppollaand TV interviews and proshy tunity in jobs and for adequate

housing not just open housincgrams toral Council Bishop approved

In his message to the Church 9 Creation of Clergy Person-In human dignity everyone hasPope Paul invited Catholics to Del Board Bishop approved an equal right to education anell

consider the significance of 1() Clergy retirement policy to culture he declaredthe changes that are taking with Bishop accepting ormiddot not

AWARDS CEREMONIES At the annual Awards Day for hospital personnel at St Annes Hospital Fall River Manuel Benevides 38 years of service receives his award while Bertha Janson 42 years of service awaits her presshyentation from trustees Harold K Hudner left and Arthui Guimond right

place in this field (communica- according to diocesan ll1eed tions) under our very eyes and Bishop approved to ponder the serious responsi- 11 In-service training tor bJlities that theSe imply for one newly-ordained priests Bishop and all approved

Clamor forAttentlo~ 12 Various diocesan diredors Until recently the Holy to recommend men for middotpart shy

Father pointed out many did time or full-time further study not have anything more to Btim- Bishojgtmiddot approved 1IIate their inflection than vague 13 Full participation by memories of what they learned Catholics in middotYMCAyWCA ot school or in the family and programs Bishop aPlgtrov~ What they beard in their envi- 14 Rotation among religious ronment eomniunities of their represen-

Now however with the echo Uitives on Senate Bishop ap- r the press motion pictures proved radio and television clamoring 15 Clergy to recommend men lor attention new h~riZons oPenJor episcopacy Bishop applloved wide before them llIndmiddot they are 16 Lay Personnel pension ttuned to the throbbing life of plan study Bishop approved the ~niverse

Who will not rejoice at this 17 Adjustmentin diocesan progress Do we not 1111 see in assessments Bishop approved It a roadmiddotdestined by Providence 18 Clergy retirement study for the advance of themiddot whole Bishop approved of mankind There is room for 19 Bishop announced through all hopes if man learns to mas- Senate exchange of facultieS ter these techniques but every- between Diocese of Fall River thing can be lost if he shirks his and Providence responsibilities Various commfttees have made

Members of the bishops com- studies to implement some of mittee signing the letter to the these considerations Ordinaries included Auxiliarymiddot Senate representatives have Bishop Gerald V McDevitt of participated on a regional and Philadelphia episcopal moder- national basis regarding a nashyator of the United States Catb- tional organization of priests olic Conference Bureau of In- and its constitution and activity formation Bishop John A Donshyovan of Toledo episcopal chairshyman of the National Catholic Cursillo for Men Office for Radio and Television Bishop Christopher J Weldon Starts Tonightshyof Springfield episcopai chairshy

A mens ~ursillo win ~ginman of the Bishops qo~ttee tonight at La Salette C~nter of Christian Livingmiddot At~leboro Dishy

Delegate Recives rectors will be William Barnes of Marion and Rev GilesHonorary Degree Genest middotMS of the center

HONOLULU (NC) ~ Archshy Allmiddot eursillistas are invited to bishop Luigi RaimondiApostolicmiddotmiddot the firstmiddot anniversary of ultleya Delegate in the Unikld States middotmeetingsmiddotin the Fall River area baS received an honorary deshy at 745 Wednesday night May laquoree froIn Charninade College 29 at Sacred Hearts Academy here the only Catholic eollege Prospect Street Fall River A lID the state of Hawaii concelebrated Mass will be folshy In an Dterview with the Hashy lowed by a song session social

waUmiddotCatholic Herald ArehlSishop bour and refreshments Baimondi ~pressed tolerance Ul1reya meetings are schedshylor student activism in the Unishy uled in Attleboro oat Jettes ted States middotIltating Students Funeral Home Friday May 11 8ft adive everywhere Youth Monday May 27 Monday June ill UyiDg find its WBY aoc1 2 Friday June 14 and FridayecJar patterns of tbougbt IlBd June 21 eetioD e DOt lIS set asin pre A eursillo for W4)men is scbedshy paerationfl Cbolees were 1IIed for August and further inshy

-e fiSHthen tbin ~ tit formation is obtainable inla ~ -e LeSalleUe Centerbull --

You Live Better Electrically

trlc range bullbullbull with Iln ingenious oven that cleans Itself Make 8 clean break with the past bullbullbull and graduate to another appliance

that adds to the Joy of Total Electric Uvlng

Graduate to a ~fiameless electric range thatmiddotcleansits own ovenmiddot

Make 8 clean break~ with the past4

Why spend ~ours stooping scrubbing and scouring to clean your oven Why not grad- uate to a modern flarve1ess range bullbull with anoven that cleans itself electrically Its so

easy to use Set the controls and-zingo The oven cleans Itself (And drip pans) All you dois whisk awaya IIttie pOwder

- YOUll notice toothat a flamelessmiddot range keeps your kitchen clean cool a~d ~omshyfortable And because electric cookmg IS so automatic YOUll cook with pleasure So see

yOur appliance dealer about aflameless elecshy

See Yo~r Appliance Dealer or

FAll RIVER ~l~CTRIC LIGHT COMPANY

o

mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 23 196816 I

Mafttl[p)Dsellt $50 Raymond L W Benoit

$5BTANJrlllONY Jos~ph A Tully William J

$300 OLearY Mr ampMrs Alfred Baty ltlJbades McGowan Mr amp Mrs Fred Harney

$100 Mr amp Mrs Michael C ODonshyaarence G Verdi nell Mr amp Mrs ThomaS P Per~ lIugene F Phelan kins Mr amp Mrs John Kozlowski

$15 mosampry Altar Society

$66 Buzzard$ B~y I

iusan A McGowan ST MAJuiAR]ampTWilliam Keane

$SOshy$55 A Friendllohn P Delaney

$6$40 lIlr amp Mrs Thomas Pina

~h G Perry $25$35

Mr amp Mrs Edwin PaytonlInmothy Manning )l amp Mrs John KarlJfudge E C Horrocks J~

$30 Mr amp Mrs Edwin N Rose Wareham Lodge of Elks 15044bullbull Clayton King

Mr amp Mrs David Fannon$~

Mr amp Mrs John OCOnnellJames Downey Romeo Bedarql William Delaneyhnes H Gifford Mary M Chad Mr amp Mrs James Lopes

Wick George Smith Jr Antone Mr amp Mrs Louis Fougereshy-es Edmund Perry $25 Mr amp Mrs Armand Bedard

Mr amp Mrs Michael DelIsMark H McIntyre Teree JeminaBlossom Joseph Farley Robert Mr amp Mrs William BennettGIngras Real Breton Mr amp MrsLouis Eacobaoct

Jobn Tarvis Francis ODri9shyu Holy Nam~ Society Paull Glennon Joseph Zychowicz Central -VUlageIIaomas Renahan Richard SmiUll

ST JOHN THE BAPTIBJl

~50 bullNorth Dighton Mr amp Mrs John DeNadal

ST JOSEPH nolt Rev John P Hogan$156

IlR Vincent de Paul $75 Dr Peter F Piccinini$50

$25amp11 Name Society Florence I Bessette MrSt Josephs Womens Guild

$35 Mrs John J Ardagh Jr llim Raymond Williamsbull amp Mrs Joseph MWTaJ

Me amp Mrs Daniel TebreiN$30 J Jl)r amp Mrs William AcIamI Mr amp Mrs Robert Albanese

o Iohn W Perreira$5 Ch(ltham

Mr amp Mrs Joseph C Amarat 1lIJr amp Mrs Edward M Berobe HOLY ~EJI)EIEMEamp

bullbull amp Mrs Arthur A Ennes Mr $101 A Mm William Johnson Rose Pi Assqc of the SacredHea~ Mello $lOet

Mr amp Mrs Harold Mendoza Mr amp Mrs Robert Han lIffr amp Mrs Bruce Murph) Mr Col amp Mrs John McCa~ bull Mrs Robert Secatore $50

Mrs James Bell Jr St Vincent de Paul Sodeq Mr amp Mrs John J Cavanaup

IIMMACULATE CONCBPJIl[ON $30 $DOO A- Friend

Ambonymous $2-5 $a Chatham Trust Co Mr af

Anonymous MrS E Joseph Geller Dr~ amp MIlII Robert Harned A Friend (~)

Anonymous $75

Mr amp Mrs William Kent Mr amp Mrs Paul reF~vre Mr lIi$it

- Mrs~ Richard Sylva Mr amp MmHelen P Derby Patrick SullivanMr amp Mn Aibert Giordano

A Friend Mr amp Mrs Frank Dresseli Mr amp Mrs Philip S1iel]oA Friend Mr amp Mrs James Griffin shyAnonymous Mr amp Mrs Frank Wing _ImmaCU1ate Conception MenliI

Club $4G North Attleboro

Mr amp Mrs Raymond ~rgerotl SACRED HEART$35

Mr amp Mrs William Condoo $200 $5 Rev JOuter Lussier

Mr amp Mrs William Buchtman $30 Caesar Cardoza Mr amp Mrs RoT Mr amp MrsJeorge Merewe Howard Immaculate Conception $~ Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Joseph A Jette

Mr amp Mrs Co George Knapp $25 McCarthy Coal Co Mrs Fredshy Mr amp Mrs Paul Dion Mrbull elick H Murphy A Friend Mrs Frederick Fortin LionelL

Martineau Mr amp Mrs~ Philippe Rainville amp Florence

Mr amp Mrs George Beaulieu Sl lWAllUf A Friend

STMA-ElY$50 $150Mr amp Mrs Michael Murphy

Nelson GulskiMr amp Mrs Jose FernandesSIl $75$30 Rev Armando A- AnnunziabMr amp Mrs Thomas J Bryanamp

$50 Eva Morowski

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John HaugMr amp Mrs Roland Roberge Mr amp Mrs John StanfordDavid amp Martha Rocha M Veronica Reilly

Mary Cronin George Yefh Mildred Leary A ~riend

BreWSlfreli $4G Dr amp Mrs Domenie BalJiIe

OUR LADY OF TlIIE CAn $35 o $100 Dr amp Mrs Kenneth AtwiIl lllisBionaries of La saleUe jnr amp Mm JosepiL Dona

MONSIGNOR VI[lELSB

Heads Bishop$ Task force

WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr Aloysius J Welsh of Newark N J a recognized authority in race relations and social aclion work has been named to head the Urban Task Force estabshylished by the U S bishops

Bishop Joseph L Bernardin general secretary of the U S Catholic Conference who anshynounced the monsignors apshypointment said the task force was calhd for by the U S blsbshy

ops at theirmiddot April meeting in SL Louis in their statement on the mational racial crisis The bishshy

ops directed the task foree be established by the USCC Social[ Action Department

In this work he will cooperaW with MsgI George G Higgins director and Father John MeshyCartty assistallt director of the Social Action Department the bishop said

$30 Mr amp Mrs Frederick ThOIpG middotMr amp Mrs Clement Sbarolll

$26 Mr amp Mrs Andtew Boisvert Gertrude Cassi~y

Elizabeth Sheals $25

Mr amp Mrs Daniel J Cava- naugh Mr amp Mrs Raymond Bl~hard Mr~ amp Mrs Robert Brunelli A Friend

Mr amp Mrs Robert Gilmore Mrs James P Reynolds Mr amp Mrs John Donleymiddot Mr amp Mm James Battersby Mr Mn Jlohn bullCollins

Virginia G Robinson

AttRehoro BOLY GHOST

$150 Dr amp Mm LoneJglUl

~110 Mr amp Mm John CapoWglo

$50 Holy Ghost St Vineellllt cle Pail

$35 Mr amp Mra Joseph BJOdeur

$25 Mr amp Mrs Malcolm ~

Mr~ amp Mrs Harry Dowdall Mr amp Mrs RObert Geddes Mr~ I Mrs Frank Pistolese

ST JOlIN $200

In memory of Dn7 hwlbaDcI JIoseph F ODonn~

$100 Mr amp Mrs Raym9nd ENmlIlilll Anonymous Donor Inmemory of GabriGll lYaBltllloshy

alone bull $75 -

Rev Edwarcl A Ra~

Mr amp Mrs John P I4e $50

MaryL Wilhelm Mr amp Mrs J G WaJEll Jlr Mr amp Mrs Franclll Bo Mr Joseph ODonnell1 ~ amp Mrs Ernest ~

$30 m=teanor Robinqmiddot Alice~

ST JOSEPH $25

Counseil Jeanne DAre No 263

ST MARK $50 ~

Edward J Connors Jr $25

William J Roche Jr Joseph Dias Mrs Michael J Croke

ST MARY $50

Holy Name Society of St Mary Knights of Columbus Seekonk

Council Mrs Leland B Smith

$35 Mr amp Mrs Donald Blake

$~O ~r amp Mrs Henry E Woodcome st Marys Womeno Guild

$25 Mr amp Mrs Frank Padykula

Mr amp Mrs Russell J Sumner ST THERESA

$50 Mr amp Mrs Donald Boardman Mr amp Mrs George LeBeau

$30 William Cauley amp Family Mr amp Mrs George Boyd

0 $25 Mr amp Mrs RobeIt Generenl Mr amp MrsRobert St mlaiN

Taunton -HOLY ROSAILY

$30 Mr amp Mrs Russen Woodward stanley Radwansld

$25 Children of Mary Sodality Richard Januse

SACRED HEARi

$50 Mr amp Mrs Joseph S llosamp Mr amp Mrs Vincent BrimleF

$35 Mr amp MnJ Robert MeClellaml

_ S2i Walter Waltman Mr amp Mm

atephen Crosby The ~ Mr amp MrtI William Vaillan-

OOurt Mr amp Mrs Michael Barber

Mrs Margaret Rose llrtr~ bull II Frederick Reams

o

81 JAMES

$U Armand Desautels Tremblay Moving Iii 8tonlge

00mpany

STMABY $100

Dr~ Charles HoYt $60

GeOrge Dion Jr $51

Mr~ amp Mrs Kenneth $50

Mm A Hoffman Dr Normand ~ Mr amp M1lil J McNilmaN ar Dr John Fenton Mr amp Mrs Kicban sm

$36 ~ B Grant

~O Dr EdmWlld Fitzgerald D4niel A J Doyle

$U

Richard Barrington BIizabeCIa dIt Margaret Brady Mr - Mm kmea Bumtl Dr CarsiDbre e-- IlUOCi -Robert J mn JamesD hcige

Mr amp Mra Llocel IaImDee ftlomas Hoye Merrill lliaynard Jmelen amp Catherine McCariIll7

Alice McKenna Ruth MeshyJUona Susan McKenna II

Plan To B~ild

- See Us About ~

lotyCost Financing

WAuREHAM SAVltfGS BANK

WorehaftI falmouth cr J-3800 II 1-3000

Mrs James McMorrow Franeb Mulholland

Mary Mulholland Ma~ Neenan Joseph ODonnell Eveshylyn Rice Agnes amp Joseph Rose

Mrs Joseph Rowley Robert Sullivan J Roger Torme1 Charles H fripp Rita Baker

Mrs James Bennett William Carney John Gonzals James Holmes Mary E McNamara

Dr Thomas~OBrien Cbarleo OConnell Mr amp Mrs Edwarcll OGara Mr amp Mrs John 00 _ Ilfearne MlJI amp Mrs Edward OKeefe

1he Ralph Reckard Famil1 Cecelia F lfi Mary C Sheerin

ST PAUL $150

St Vincent de Paul st Pauh Taunton 0

$100 Rev Cornelius~ltYNem

$50 Mr amp Mrs Edward Roster

$24 Mr amp Mrs John Medas Jr

$25 Mrs Catherine Campbell Mr

amp Mrs Chester Jackman Mr c1i Mrs Richard Silva Mr amp Mrs Leo Leroux Mr Mrs John Steen

Mr amp Mrs Donald Emond Mr Be Mrs Gordon Seekel Mr amp Mrs Charles Welch Mr MllIl Paul Silva

New Bedford HOLY NAME

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John Hallonm Mr amp Mrs Jacob Teser

ST CASIMIR $150

Beltr cutnir Kwiatkowski $109

Atto~ Ferdinand Sowa $25

Mr amp Mrs Joseph FoUrnier The Poczatek Family Mramp M Antbony Rijo Jr Mr Mrs Stanle Scbkk Eve White

I

ST BYACINTB $100 -

Mr Mrs George Vigeallltl $50

st Vincent de Paul ConferenCe Gf Hyacinth Parisb

Tum to Page Seventeen

CONRAD SEGUIN BODY COMPANY

Aluminum or Steel 944 County Seet

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2-6618

w H RILEY amp SON Inc

CITIES SERVICE IDISTRIBUTORS-

0 Gasoline Fuel and Ra~ge

OILS OIL BURNERS

for Prompt Delivery amp hoy amp Night ~ice

8 IE BOIlER BURNER UNITS

80tItecI G48 Service

61 OOItANNET Sf TAUNTON

AJdeb DfO - No- Attleboro

TountoIamp

(l

SUMY pons Nuns (l)ffi) AifrMdl~$o

Re$M~~e~o trMture D~[freg~UDrru~ WASHINGTON (NC)-Resulto

of a survey of all United States nuns reveals a high ooceptance of post-Vatican II changes anell an eagerness robecome morrc involved in the inner city and poverty apostolates

The B1UVey conducted bythe Conference of Major Superiors of Women dlJring 1966 was the first extensive attempt to assess resources and attitudes of reli shygious communicenties c1 women and their memberll in the United States

The JPecific coal of the surshyvey was to assess the resources and determine 1ampIe responses that Religious are making and ean make to the invitation 13shysued in Vatican Us Decree on the Renewal of Religious ~e

More than 135000 Sisters parshyticipated in the survey respondshying to 649 questionnaire items covering religious beliefs atti shytudes toward change edu~shy

tional background present ocshycupation and future plans comshymunity life and proposals for future ohange

Results were processed by 00 Sister-sociologists across the country with the use of comshyputers

llleason for lIAlavnng The survey showed 1827 oil

the 175000 U S Sisters-107 per cent-left religious life durshying 1966 Of those Sisters only 869 had taken final vows In an interview with the NC News Servicemiddota spokesman for the Conference of Major Superiors of Women (CMSW) said most Sisters who have remained feel that a major reason for the inshy

ltereased number of Sisters leavshymg religious life is an increased ~penness to the idea within the lfcligious community

She said that the increased fucus on personal development has caused many Sisters to see that they are not suited to the religious life and that they will find areater personal fulfillment elsewhere

Statistics on be division of labor among U S Sisters show 72 per cent are teachers eight per cent are involved in health work five per cent in catechetshyill~ and missionary work lmd tbr~ per cenmiddott in welfare work

Seventy per cent of the teachshyem ore in elementary school work 195 per cent in high school education and 68 per

eent teach at the college level Of those involved in health care 18 per cent in health administration and 62 per cent in direct care jobs

lEnter New lFienlll1s The survey showed Sisters

have a strong desire to become involved in adult education inshyner city work pre-school teachshying and other s~ial work and to have greater contact with their local community Nuns expressed eagnerness to enter fieldc where few Sisters are now working In 1966 13 per cent ot U S Sisters were engaged in adult education 82 pel cent in speshycial education 31 per cent in poverty work and 06 per cent in migrant education The surshyvey indicafes that there will be a dramatic change in these figures in the next few years

Father Considine Leaves PC$tr Continued fC0m Page One

man of the U S Bishops Comshymittee for Latin America

Bishop Bernardin prai~ed the work of Father Considine in the Latin America Bureau noting

iota progress under his direction since its inauguration in 1960

It has been a labor of love for Father Considine he saici whose long standing interest in the people of Latin America and of other developing areaa is well known

Maryknon Father Considine will return

to his writing and teaching asshymgnments at Maryknoll Ossinshy

lng N Y where he had served as publications director before becoming director of the IAiltin

America Bureau He holds editorial and advishy

lOry posts with several internashytional organizations and servell DS a member of the Council OIl

Foreign Relations He was amp

member of the National Advishysory Council of the Peace Corps from 1961 to 1966 He also founded and directed Fides Inshyternational Service in Rome an Information and research unit of

the Holy See He was born Oct 9 1897 C1shy

1-

~ATIlGR CONSIDINE

da1ned in 1923 and received II

licentiate in sacred theology from the Catholic University of America in 1924 He has reshyceived honorary degrees from Fordham University Manhatshytsnville St John University St Benedicts Atchison and is the author of 10 books on Latin America Asia and Africa and hall edited several others

L9ng-Range

Father Considine Sllid that he IlIaW the Latin America Bureau as set for the proseution ~ tl

vigorous nation-wide program 10 serve our Latin American eonfreres for the next- generashytion through the year 2000 -and into ~ 21st century He felt lIlllch 11 long-range view was necessarJ because at stake are important socio-religious adshyVDnces among hundreds of milshyHons cd people Latin Americas leaders need time for these advances

Be pointed out thatsome of the best Church leadership tbroughout the Catholic world today is found in Latin AmershyICD In turn he noted our U S bi~hops are quietly acceptshying international responsibiliti~s

as never before Father Considine said that the

program of the U S Bishops Committee for Latin Americn ~ablishes the heavy day-to-day work of the Latin America Bureau

Jgtersonnel Father Considine said that

llIODle 60 per cent of all U S apOstolic personnel overseas throughout the world works in Latin America with more Ulan 600 Latin American parishes served by U S priests Major Superiors of women ha~e 2500 Sisters in Latin America PAVLA has put more than 800 laymen there for three-year terms and U S bishops hnv~

more than 300 priests working in Latin America Annual fundshying for Latin Amerietl by U S Catholics ~~ $1f) millioll

SJJREET SCENE This was a busy street scene in the nations capital at the encampment of the Poor Peoples Campaign near the Washington monument More than 100~OOO- protestors are expected to be in Washington for Memorial Day NC Photo

OUlll lLAIDY OlF ll1HI1amp

ASS1lJMJgtJlJlON $26

Clara Rose amp Family $25

Mr amp-Mrs Jose F Cruz St Martin de Porres G~

Mi CARMEL $100

In memory of Mr amp Mrs J~ ilino Simoes

Rev Antonio P Pinto middotCM $75

Rev Azitonio P Pinto em $60

Mary i Ltuiz $50

Mr amp lVIrs Albino daSilv8 1IIt Carmel Womans Club

$30 Manuel Bettencourt Mr amp Mrs Kenneth lltinu

John Rodrigues $26

Olivia M Luiz $25

Cecelia Bettencourt CbildYeli of Mary Mt Carmel ~ouft

Units James Perry Mr amp lnl Manuel G Souza Jr

Mr amp Mrs Arthur Caetano Mr amp Mrs Charles Frate Mramp Mrs Lauran Silva

OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HE]P

~26

Mrs Amelia E Bariteau $25

Dr amp Mrs Francis Green

OURLADY OFPU~GATOB~ l)1I00

In memory of Alex J Ka1He from Cltpe Coo Sportswear ~

lnc Fairhaven Lumber Co

$30 Atty George R Morad euroJ

Atty ~e E Morad $25

Josephine David 1bl mlE1lllllOllY of George A EI-Hillow Mr ampgt Mra ~rge JThomas Mr amp IIIlm Hykel G Simon

ST KIlldAN nSO

Rev WilMeT J Boekley

U~~ amp Wmeentde PaW ~

~ iWa1 1kntley

$2S AlmgeAo OH1feira

SAClllIampDlHlJEAlltT $25

Alexander Caruso

c S11 JAMES

$55 rulllbull amp lVIrs Francis O Quinn

$50 lilred Kelley

$40 William OMalley

~1 A Friend

$3~

Mr amp Mrs Jr Hugh Barry $25

Mr amp Mrs Andrew ONeil Mr 8 Mrs Robert Arnett

ST JOSEPH

$450 sa Josephs Church Societies

$70 Mr amp Mrs Maurice Dansereau

1130 II Mr amp Mrs Luigi Fiano lk Fmniy

125 Mr amp Mrs Thomas Weaver MI amp Mm Maurice Lamonshy

tagne Mrbull Mrs Raymond Rondel1

ST TBERIESA $100

Eugene Lemieux

Sturtevant 6 Hook lEst 1897

Bude~s Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New ~dforcJ

996-5661

THE ANCHOR- ~ 7 lfhuvs May 23 1968

~regreg [copy~G~ ~O~

Oa1l ~MOO~ []M~Orru NEWARK (NC)-A charge (l(

apparent ~racial discriminatiom in the assignment of tenants 00 public housing here is Oontainoo in s report issued by the New Jersey Advisory Committee 00 the U S Commission em CiWl Rights

It said the Newark Housing Authority follows a policy ef permitting people applying fOlr placement in public housin~ projects to choose the project tm whieh they want to live

lit said this policy has ~

llributed to the segregation Cl1I public housing and recomshymended that t1he policy 00 abandoned in favor of first-come first-serVed basis

The report noted that Q01l1li vast housing projects nre locatell in Newarks Central Ward-tho scene of widespread noting D year ago and of two massiv~ firo disasters this spring-and tll~

they are more thanSO Negf~ ~ccupied

It further charged that them Js U a disparity in maintenanceo between the predominantly N~

gro and the rgtredominantly whi~

projects a complaint lIiTegNgt leadership has frequently medea

It termed living conditiom b the Central Ward projects opshypressive and that the proj~cto

are JIOor)y designed llt recomshymeld~d that additionaI ~ev areas for young children ~Gl

meeting places for odww ~ teenagers be provided

Higher ~arnings

ON YOUR SAVINGS Per Annum

I W Ask abow

INVESTMEIlaquo

SAVINGS

CERTIFICATES

$IlFm - Savings insu~ed safe IIlyJ liII ClEerny of the US Government

IlVAILABIU1Y - No notice VCllIirfpound Your funds available when ooedea

Slllil by MAtL - We pr~e5S pt~ ood pay postage both ways

Assets over $41ooo0llC

FIRST fEDERAL SaYings and Loan Associatio1ll

of F~L~ RIVER shy~---__-------------~~~~ First Federal saYIngs bull Loan At ~

1 Borth Main St Fall llliTe1 Ibu ~ ~ Ii 02722 P1Imle 674-4001 ~ ~ ~ke llpplicatlOll oJ phone t1 fOOl wldl ~ o ~ o 0 IlllIivithllll Aceoullt 0 Jont Ac4cwot f)

PIlllse Cl3len II SllVings llCCOUCt blcelaquol

o eAomelamp) = ~ 0 ~ Address 0 ~ l 0 clleck In the amount of e--- ~ ~ 0 ~ _~___~~~_~uuJ

SPECIAL RATES FOR Schoo~ Outings and Picnics

amfACi MANAGERI - UNCOLN PARK 999-6984 636-2744

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs May 23196~

The Parish Parade OUR LADY OF ANGELS SACRED HEART WALL RIVER NORTH ATTLEBORO

Altar bOys willsponsor a cake The CCD program will be lJ81e Sunday May 26 following canonically established Friday Iill1 Masses June 21 the feast of the Sacred

Masses today the feast of the Heart The program will include Ascerision will be at 7 and 9 a 730 evening Mass followed AM and -1215 4 5 and 7 PM by proclamation and reception Confessions will be heard be- of CCD members and a social ~re each Mass hour

The Summer Mass schedule CCD students in grades 6 to will begin Sunday June 2 with 12 will attend a folk Mass and Masses from 6 to noon on the sing-out at La Salefte Shrine hour Monday night May 27 Tnose

Monday May 27 through Fri- participating will leave the ooy May 31 there will be church school yard at 645 and will be services at 7 each evening The returned at 930 living rosary will be sponsored Confirmation ceremonies will by the Holy Rosary Sodality be ~ld at 730 Sunday night Monday night the Council of May 26 Catholic Women on Tuesday ther societies on Wednesday and Thlusday and the Children New Bedford ~ M~~ on lfrIday

ST MARY HOLY NAME $25iALL RIVER Mr amp Mrs Roger Goyette

Contemporary music will acshy The Shea Family company the 1115 Mass Sunday Mrs Vivian Wegrzyniakmorning May 26

New CYO officers are Robert ST LAWRENCE amplois president Paul Durin $200 rice-president Polly Rockett Dr amp Mrs Stanley Koczera eecretary-treasurer A Friend

$125 OUR LADY OF FATIMA Dr amp Mrs Robert Srnan sWANSEA $106

The Womens Guild will hold William E King Its annual penny sale at 730 $100

Monday night May 27 in the Dr amp Mrs William Walsh ehurch hall on Gardners Neck $75 lRoad Rev William F OConnell

A Penny Sale will be held Dr amp Mrs James Bolton MondaYMay 27 at 730 in the $60 dlurch hall A Friend

$50 IMMACULATE CONClEPlIION Teremiddotsa Ruth amp John HarneyNEW BEDFORD Victor T Kondi

Parisnioners will celebrate John L Powell rthe feast of Santo Ohristo this Loretta Lamarre Sunday with a roast beef dinner $45 served from noon to 2 with Mrs Mary B Wheatoil

tickets available at the door $40 lRefreshments and entertainment Mr amp Mrs John Connor will be on the afternoon and Mr amp Mrs Thomas J Longevening program $35

A procession and auction will Mr amp Mrs James M Kearneyfollow the dinner with various Mrmiddot amp Mrs Leo St Aubin Holy Name Society units parti shy $30 cipating in the procession Mr amp Mrs Albert Anderson

Mr amp Mrs Joseph Griffin OUR LADY OF V()T(RY Mr amp Mrs Walter L9veridgeeENTERVILLE Mr camp Mrs Myron Tripp

New officers of the Womens $28amptiild are Mrs John J Pendershy Patricia Connor ~st pre~ident MrS James Murshy $26 phy and Mrs John McBarron Mr amp Mrs Thomas SullivanVoice-president Mrs George Mr amp Mrs Charles BerryReale recording secretary Mrs $25 Richard Griffith treasurer Mr amp Mrs Robert Bedard

A Communion dinner at Mr amp Mrs Albert McMulleneummaquid Inn will follow Mr amp Mrs Theodore J CalnanlB30 Mass Monday night June Mr amp Mrs Alfred Couto Mr amproo Mrs Gilbert Noonan of Falshy Mrs Manuel Guerreira Josephmouth will speak Reservations P Mullen should be made with Mrs Edshy Agnes Proctor Mr amp Misward Welch or Mrs- Stephen Joseph Porter Mr amp MrsOBrien Jr by Thursday June 6 James Ryan Mr amp Mrs Paul

saunders ST THERESA Mr amp Mrs Merton WalkerSOUTH ATTLEBORO Mr amp Mrs John F SullivanMiss Patricia Makin of the

Diocesan CCD Board spoke at the annual Communion breakshy Fall River fast of the Confraternity of

ST MARYS CATHEDRALChristian Mothers Fourteen $50 new members were received at

Gertrude OLoughlinthe monthly meeting arid new officers were installed by Rev $26

In memory of Caroline CasellaGerard J Chabot moderator $25They include Mrs Patricia Helen Burns Mr amp MrsBiziak president Mrs Georshy

George Johnston Corky Rowgette Vachon vice-president Club Rits OLaughlin FrancisMrs Kathy Lamarre treasurer amp Lena MoranMrs Dolores Leedham and Mrs

Mr amp Mrs Carlton GastallBeverly Sousa secretaries Mrs Raymond Reynolds

~CULATE CONC~ON BLESSED SACRAMENTlAUNTON $200A Spring Social and D~nce Rev Herve Jalbert

for the benefit of the church $50sponsored by the Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Michael Felixand the St Vincent de Paul Soshy $36ciety will be held Friday May Mr amp Mrs Richard Hamel24 from 8 to 12 at Lewis Lodge $30Winthrop Street Route 44 A W Root Beer StandTaunton Refreshments will be served Tickets are $200 per lIIIOLY CROSS person and wiU be available at $50 the door Holy Rosary Sodality

lt

PATRIARCH His Holishyness Vazken I of the Armeshynian (Monophysite) Chu~h which comprises five-milli~n communicants in the Soviet Union Near and Far East and the Americas is visiting in the US He paid a visit to the National Shrine of the

Immaculate Conception whilein the nations capital NC Photo

NOTRE DAME $40

The Anne-Marie MasSe fami17 $35

Conrad N Desmarais $25

Norman J A Belanger Rose D Perron

HOLY ROSARY $30

The DePaola Family $25

Mrs Philomena Germane

~CULATE CONCEPTION $50

A Frie~d $40

Mrs Diolinda Wilson $26

In memory of Charlotte DJicholson

$25 Holy Name Society Knights

of the Altar A Friend MlU7 Whitehead John R Burgess In memory of Daniel R Be

Manuel R Pimental Joseph Francoeur

SACRED HEART $l)O ()

~ Katherine D Adams $75

Mr amp Mrs William J Sullivan $5~

Margaret Morriss M~ry V amp Alice C HarrlngtoD Frederick B McD9nald

$31 Frances Mmiddot Cummings Mary C Cummings

$30 Mr amp Mrs John J HarrlngtOil

$28 Florence M Sullivan

$25 Vincent DAndrea Edward

Leary Mr ~ MrsN J Meyer Mary Louise OSullivan John J Sullivan middotMargaret F Lowney

ST MICHAEL $25

Manuel Rogers amp Sons At~

Manuel M Rezendes Henry Leshytendre ~eonardo Cabeceiras

Gerald Mulrooney A Friend edf Catholic Charities

ST ANNE ft JI08ZIII $30

Mrs Rhea Saurette 101at Vincent de Paul ConferenceIrene Theroux leapt amp Mrs Joseph J OCoDshy$26 nellThe Gauthier Family $25

Mr amp Mrs Reginald lerive

A Friend

Belshy $50

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J OCo nell k

$30 St rosephs Mens Club

ST ANTH()NY $25 OF THE DESERT Mr amp Mrs John L Mercer

$100 Mr amp Mrs Daniel W OCoDoshyChor Bishop Joseph Eid nell Dr amp Mrs James J Sabra

$25 SANTO CHRiSTO Rev Kenneth A Michael Mrs August Badway $50

ST ANTHONY OF PADUA $125

Rev Josephmiddot M Ferreira $100

Atty amp Mrs Milton R Silva

StVincent de Paul Society $30

Rev Ernesto R Borges $26

Mr amp Mrs Alfred 1 Cam~ $25

$50 Franco Family Singersmiddot

$25 Mrs Sofia Pacheco Antonio T Cabral

Mary amp Beatrice Costa~ SilD

CnristO Credit Union Manuel Medeiros Laureano Silva

AFriendFrank B Olivei

YDUR SONTHE PRIEST

HI HOLY PATHERS MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL DMURDH

A FUTURE

PRIEST NEEDS

bull SOMEONES HELP

TRAiN ASfSTER

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return couponwith your

offering

Have you ever wished you had a son a priest Now you can hlilve a priest of your own-and ahare forever In all the good he does _ _ Throughout the Near East this month grateful bishops ara ordainlng new priests trained by people like youbullbullbullbull Their own families are toe poor to support them In training but good catholics In America adopted these semIshynarians encouraged them all the way to ordinashytionbullbullbullbull Insome Inspiring cases this support was given at personal sacrifice How can youbegln7 Write to us now Well ~end you the name of ~ young seminarian who needs you and he will write to you Make the payments for his training to suit your convenlence ($850 a month or $100 a year or the total $600 all at once) Join your sacrifices to his and at every Sacrifice of the Mass he will always remember who made It possible

4

Native Sisters In our 18 developingcountries are teaching children of the poor preparing them for First Communion giving medical care to leplrs cal)cer sufferers the aging A SisterS training Ialts two years costs $1250 a month $150 a year or $300 altogetherbullbullbullbull Well send you the name of a Sister you can train as soon as we receive your first payment She will pray for you and write toyou

n An9 day now you may receive a letter contalnn the Holy Fathers appeal for the forgotten Arab refugees-l4 million people without a country bullbullbull most of them destitute bullbullbull more thari half of them childrenbullbullbullbull By trelnlng these children foi middotfuture selfsufflcel]cy we can help brln peace and new selfmiddothelp to the Holy Land atlll divided by warbullbullbullbull But why walt for your mal Hunger cant walt Neither can peace Send your amplIft now in any amount ($500 $200 $100 $75 $50 $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 $2 $1) and the Holy Fathercan put It to work right away Qril1 $10 wlllleed family for a monthl -----~-~---~~---~-IlNCL08ID PLllAIl PIND $_ c_O~__ rFOR _

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MSGR JOHN ClI NOLAN Natlonal5ecretary Write CATHOLIO NIlAR EAST WeLFARE Assoo ~30 Madson Avenue New York NY OOU telephonel 212vtJkon 6middot5840

CATHaLiD

19 DiJoridrrien Ere State r ourlitei

SChoelbOY leag~~Wmrn~regr~ Stii~Pretty Mu~h sampu [j)(Q)Mbt

By PETIm BARJrEK Nmon BitIh ~h

The gehooboy ba8ebaD mmpaignis cllNimatieaDy near- Inlaquo the climax of another spirited seasoo With approxishymately a week of competitioo Nllllaining oontlmdmg teams Me stmggling to keep their pennanf oopes alive while Wtling for the right to rep-JIe8eDt their ll e s pee t i v e leaguesin the nnand-eomin

-y- shy

Btate tournament The Eastshyem Massachusetts ehampionahip

baseball tournamen+ ClIffiMftl-~

tine of the wurney is tiPoDOOred bythe

II a II sac h u~_ lt Iietts Secondary

SChool Princishypals Association bull Par tie i p 8 t _ ing schools have bElen divided i IIl tot h r e e d3ses - A B and C---llccord- Peter iDg to leagues Blrtek r

and comparable independent teams Action tn all three clasampe3 starts Saturday June L

In addition to the three divishyidon3 the baseball tourney amp1shyem radically JIrom the popular

Two Spots for Both BCl (IDnd Marry Five Bristol County League Howard Ferguson which teams

teams Gre still in contention for will represent the circuit in the tourney play ebampionship event

At this writing Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Stang SpaltamJ of Qartmouth who hold a lllim ene-game edge over their rivals are a solid choice to annex one of the two berths to be filled bi BCL teams The second spot 18 un literally up for grabs

Bishop Feehan High of Attieshyboro which led the circuit untll last week Durfee High of Fan River Attleboro and Taunton lire in close pursuit middotof Stang hoping tomiddot overcome the Sparshytans or at least lInish in the league runner-up berth Both the first and second place finshyishers will8utomatically qualify

If either fim OX second place II decided by Monday May 21 league officials w~ have to DOUty the tournament Director

No~tons Lancers in Need cf Help I h e Narragansett league Class B - Southem

whkh got a head start on the its Iud Old Colony champ ft NaITlIlshyv er area Clrcu conc es gansett runner-upleague play today First place

middot Somerset travels to New Bed- Narragansett champ ~ Olcll ford to meet Holy Family High Colony runner-up Case High of Swansea entell-middotmiddot South Shore champ VB Hockshytains Dighton-Rehoboth West- omock runner-up port hoss Msgr Prevost High Hockomock cpamp vs South

middotof Fall River and Dima]l Voce- ShQre runner-up tional nlso of Fall River will 0I Am f N rth E stobe t Se k Iver es 0 0 a n a e o~k

Entering the final week of ac-middot middot tion Somerset and seekonk are in the top two spots in tbe 8tanding They loom the more likely to corral Class B tourney berths But DightOn-Rehoboth Case and Westwrt trail the sec ODd place club by oIl1yone game If the race ends in II tie ]league officials wlll have ample time to schedule play-off games before the tourney deadline

Pairings for Class Bare

Selecting Union PITTSBURGH (NC)-Twentyshy

five maintenance workers at Duquesne University here in Pennsylvania have left their jobs pending a detell1llnation as to which union will represent the workers The remaining 115 members of the maintenance erew lIlre not involved in the atrike which was called by the 2li who are represented by the tJmted Electrical WorkersUnion

Although it occurs infrequentshyly a team does not have to win Its league to represent its league in tourney eompetition

The Bristol County league champion is slated to play the

bull Bay State League runner-up in first round action with the Bay State champs taking on the County runner-up The winners would then meet in second round play

Pairings for Class A are Class A - Southem

Suburban champ w Middleshy8llX runnerup

Middlesex champ ft Suburshyban runner-up Bay state ehamp VB Bristol runner-up

Bristol champ V8 Bay sta~ runnerup

-Tech lxlsketban competition lllll order to qualifyfor the Tech a team mt1BSt win 70 per cent cd its games but onlythe leagu~ champions ond runner-ups M~ eligible ~r playmiddotiImiddotbasebalL

In both Class A andClass B iitOtalof i6 teams will qualify 1lt7middotmiddotmiddotJiY

for the diamond elimination event~ E~~ Will pai1i~ipate in

the nortlHln division and eight in the southern bracllet The winners in each bracket will meet in the Eastern- Massacilushy

llletts fi~ Preliminary games will be played on June 1 4 and 6 The finals are scheduloo June 8

Class C competition will coIi-BiEt of eight clubs in only one division Titlists in seven smallshyDChooI le1gues and one indeshypendent selected by the tournashy

ment coJiunittee Will comprise the field fur this tliil-d group

and Mansfield 1m the Hockoshymock circuit appear to be out of the running this season

Fo~ Class C schools Its Winmiddot or youre out Only the league champions will play in the championships The winner of the Capeway Conference will meet the Cape and Vineyard champ in opening round play Dennis-YarDlQuth and Sandshywich are the likely opponents

The only other school located within the confines of the diocshyesan territorial limits that has an outside ~hance of qualifying for the tournament is Norton of the Tri-Valley Conference The Lancers however will need some outside help if they are to overcome league leading Millis The Tri-Valley champs will take on the Dual County League champions Defending Class C champ Ashland again leading the Dual Co~nty is heavily favored to repeat both in league ond state competition

NOT A BALL-ITS GUM Yem might get the idea that a pitched ban is lodged in the mask of this young Vancouver BC catcher but it isnt a ball This young ma is trying to prove he is just as efficient behillld the plate as he is at blowing bubble gum NC ~middothoto

Stresses Inter~cicdmiddotmiddotPartnership As Solution to Racial Problem

CLEVELAND (NC) - A Nashy world would be better off lr tional ASsociation for Advanceshy iou hadnt gotten involved Jm

ment of Colored People official asserted here interracial part shynership is the key to oolution of the racial problem but it cannot be a partnership dom inated by either race

Dr John A Morrell NAACP assistant nat ion a 1 director speaking at the Cleveland Cathshyltnlic Interracial Councils annual Interracial Justice Awards banshyquet said the nation today is aj an unprecedented crossroads but the interracial way is the democratic part to justice

He spoke in place of Roy Wishydns NAACP national~ director who was with the U S delega- tion at the United Nations con vocation on human rights lin Tehran Iran -

Angry Voices There are angry Negro voiees

raised in protest because develshyopment of opportunity in recent years does not apply to twoshythirds of the Negro population he saidmiddot The kind of jobs they are capable of filling are vanshyishing from the economy he added

But if a fruitful partnership is to continue between the white and Negro the burden of know- ing the truth about Negro hisshytory must be borne by white as well as Negro Dr Morsell said

Vie are all fighting a bitter legacy of generations White people have to know where they stand and why Once you assume the burden of work toward interracial justice you assume the responsibilities be continued

If you are not going to ~

sume them then you and fhe

the first place Informed PariDership

Dr Morsell said a mere sPirit of commitment is not enough to

survive over the hard going Work must be based on a part shynership that is informed intelshyligent understanding and resil shyient he said

The interracial awards were presented to Father Edwan Camille assistant Catholic Charshyities director here and Thom811 C Westropp president of Womshyens Federal Savings and Loan Association

Westropp was cited for his efforts towards opening the

doors of banking and credit 1m the Cleveland area to all ciUshyzens regardless of race creed 011

color while Father CarniDe was cited for his leadership as director of Project Peace (~

irner-city diocesan organizati~ working with the poor mostly Negroes) and for his work as co-chairman of the first tri-faith Greater Cleveland Conference on Religion and Race

ELECTRICAl -Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

SS lPlE1rIEllt amp JgtAIDlj

$103 Womens Club Rose E Sullivan

$50 Joseph P Conaty

$35 Belen M amp William J

De7 $33

Mr amp Mrs James F McMahcm $25

Mrs Margaret Daly amp Mary John Dolan ~illiam Daley amp Mary Esther Mr amp Mrs Stanley M -laniek

~50 In memory of MrsMarga~

W Pow~rs RodneY S DeCecco

$26 Mr amp Mrs John Soula

$25 Edward Healey Mr amp Mrs Michael McCartbiY Mr amp Mrs James Crosson Mrs Gertrude Lomas Mr amp Mrs Norman GagnOOl

ST JOHN TEE BAPTlIS11

$30 St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ampt Jean Baptiste $25

Mr amp Mrs Ovila Caron Henri Demers

In memory of Mr amp lVlrm bullWilliam Sheehan

Open to An PORTLAND (NC)-The seeshy

ond annual Catholic youth conshyvention of the Portland Diocese has opened the convention to all Catholic students of the dioshycese in order to spread the agtOlgto tolate of youth to youth Thll

)faine convention has comprised only students who have takes themiddot youth leadership trainlJnl1 courses

Dont Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH

DO faJse teeth drop slip or wobblo when you talk eat laugh or sneeze Dont be annoyed and embarr1lEsetll lkllh hanl11caps FASTEETH Bamp

e (non-acid) powder to SPr1n~Ikle on your plates keeps false teetb more firmly set Gives confident feel~ Ing Of security and added comfort No gummy gooey taste or feellncr Dentures that 6t are essential to health see your dentist regulorly oet FASTEETH at alll1rug countemJ

o

WYman 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD MASS

IfIIfJltk del1WM

S H~~uO~ Oil

SAVE MONEY 0 OUROILHEATI bull eatt

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

Iritai~ If S)crap SuPPITreg~~5n Acts Of Re~(j[jmlt~oml

LONDON (NC)-It looks as if Britain is at long last glOing to stop suppressing the monasteries-officially that 0

Legal experts sifting through lenturies of forgotten laws clutshyooling the records have found (hat the Suppression of Reli shygious Houses Acts of 1535 and 0039 have never been repealed

They are among 155 statutes weeded out from the statute IJ)ooks between 1239 and 1705middot lmd now to be definitively leshy~aled by a special act of Par-Iliament

These two acts enforced the eosure and pillaging of Catholic monasteries friaries and other religious houses throughout the WINS nsc Chaplain

eountry following King Henry (Captain) Angelo J LitekyVIIIs break with Rome in 1534

assigned to the 199th InfanshyJhey brought vast fortunes On goods property and mog of try Brigade in Vietnam has ell land to the kings favorites been awarded the Distinshyoome of whose families have reshy guished Service Cross forWned their wealth to this day extraordinary heroism SevshyIgnored in Practice

Of course the laws against erely wounded when Viet me Roman Catholic Church Cong ambushed a US infanshyIhave long ago been shelved and try company Ohaplain Lit shyIgnored in practice The reli shy eky braved flying bullets toous houses are back probably

rescue and minister tomore numerous than before iIome have even reoccupied the WQunded and dying meR 0ld sites they hadmiddot before the lReformation

Another notable measure ~ewlfk ~[p)regID Gingled out for repeal is the 1loleration Act of 1688 This act W51f)$ ~WIfltdl although in itself it did not help

NEW YORK (NC)-The Adshy~he Catholics marked the end of

vocate weekly newspaper of1lhe Protestant Reformation and the Newark Archdiocese wont1he beginning of religious tolershythe first-place Silver Medalation in Britain Awarti for weekly newspapersIt allowed freedom of worship in the annual public serviceClgt Protestant Trinitarian Nonshycompetition sponsored by theoonformists provided theiT New York chapter of the Pubiicmeetings were opento the pubshy

Relations Society of AmericaIlk it did not relieve the existing The award was for a five-part

fenaWes of those days against analysis ttl the ills besetting the ~atholics other breakaway Newark public school system lhcnestants or Jews but it was )he analysis was written by a hisberic beginning It has been Advocate news editor Ed Grant ltJeseribed as the Great Oharter and was an examination into ~ religious freedom and the one of the areas of dissatisfacshy~umph ofc9mmon ~ense tion which led to widespread

rioting in Newark last Summer

The series ran lri the newsshylJays Help for Poor paper last september and Octoshy

lPeCice First ~eeds ber The Public Rellitlons SocishyMIAMI (NC)-The Catholic ety award - silver medals are (lihurch in this nation today awarded in each of five cateshy

gories-are given for the mostauast address itself to the presshynoteworthy contributions bullbull 0 toiloing needs of the poor and dis-

~vantaged as well as the better public ~derstanding of ltJnICial issue of peace says the _ community problems in the New

4Tchbishop of Miami York metropolitan area Archbishop Coleman F Calshy New s p a per 8 magazines 0011 following announcement of broadcasting an d television middotGte establishment of the ecclesshy media in the New York-New iastical province of Miami and Jersey-Connecti~ut metropolitan tMs appointment as its first area are eligible for the awards l)rehbishop stressed that the (fhurch must be concerned with ibe problems of the time in Retired ArttlhJboshop S)Vhich we exist Gets College lHlonorThe g~eatest problems at present are the problems of the DUBUQUE ( NC) - Retired disadvantaged the poor and Archbishop Edward D Howard Utase who are in need and of of Portland Ore has been named oourse peace he smiddotaid for Loras Colleges 1968 John

It is more difficult for us to Fitzgerald Kennedy Award The LiOlve in any real way the prob- prelate is a former president of iems that are our concern until the college we have a measure of peace The citation and gold medal And it is the prayer of all of us annual award honoring an out Chat peace will be established as standing Amercian will be preshyiluickly as possible on an honorshy sen ted to the archbishop at the able basis o college commencement cereshy

monies June 2 Camp Directory Archbishop Howard 90 a nashy

Nltlw available from the Nashy ti ve of Cresco Iowa and a Loras lItonal Catholic Camping Assn alumnus was ordained to the ~ 131~ Massachusetts Ave priesthood in 1906middot He became lM- W Washington D C 20005 president of the college in 1921 Is the 1968 Directory of Catholic In 1924 he was consecrated to ~mps which lists all known serve as auxiliary bishop of DavshyearriPs in the U S giving acshy enport He became archbishop of Civities charges dates open and Portland in 1926 and retired in lIbailing addresses 1966

National CYOPlans LeadershipTraining shyImpa~t to Aid Priests Adult Admiddotvisors

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tbe through the introduction of BaWmore June 23-28 ehicagoNational Catholic Youth Organshy leadership methodology which July 1-5 Boston July 14-19 ization Federation will launch a facilitates maximum involveshy Sen Antonio July 28-Aug 3 training program in June called ment 00 the local level and Denver Aug 11-16 and San Impaot be help priests and hence maximum commitment JFaoancisoo Aug 25-30 adults 00 work effectively with The National CYO Federation Dr Donald Ebalt a professhyteenagers in a leisure time proshy will sponsor six sessiOns this lIlional trainbig eonsul1lant of gram summer to train diocesan CYO Washington D c win diiecl

The program was designed in staffs m 1lhe use of the newmiddot ead11ab cooperation with Leadership program lhey win )e held m A pilot Jtudy of the effectiveshyResources Inc a firm _of beshy DeBS of Impact on a group of havior scientists -rolulbteers from the NewarlkAddress Graduates

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishy archdiocese was held at the SOUTH BEND (HC) -Mel-rector of the Youth Department Benedictine Retreat House ill

Jdte-rite Patriarcib Maximoo VUnited States Catholic Confershy jNewton N J ence in announcing ttie new Kakimof Antioch and Dr Ilhirtymiddot persons representashyprogram said tives of youth adult advisorsJames A Perkins of Cornell

The goal 01 Impact is 00 help and priest moderators met withUniversity will be speakers atthe priests who are moderators representattives of the CYO

the 123rd annual cOnW~ncementof CYO the ad~lt advisors and Federation staff and a member youth participating in CYO toshy exerci~ Sundly June 2 at Of Leadership rResources Inc ward maximumpersonal growth Notrlte Dame University 110 assess and to evaluate 1mpaltL

(Cathedral Camp-Resident and Day Camp for Boys

O~ Lady of the L_ke Day Camp fOr Girls

Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON LONG POND ROUTE 18 EAST FREETOWN MAS~

~ RESIDENT CAMP 49th Season June 30 thru August 24 - a Week Season

Diocesan seminar-ians - College Students amp Teachers Under direction StaH of a Diocesan Priest

Saili~g swimming water skiing horseback riding riflery archeryPrograni hiking overnight camping trips ~rts amp crafts Indian crafts camp crafts athletic (team amp individual) competition and inter-camp cOmpetition professional tutorial service available

Private beach large luxurious camphouse dining hall modernfacilities~ washrooms arts and crafts buildings camp store and office first aid and infirmary beautiful chapel overnight and weekend accomodashytions for parents

S WEEK PIERIOD $325 - 4 W~K PERIOD $165 - 2 weEK PERIOD $85

Cathedra~ Day Camp t=or Boys Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period

JULY W- AUGUST 23 Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period fEES INCLUDIE Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Horseback Riding Weekly Cook~Outs amp Milk Daily without Added Cost

--~----------------------------------------Our Lady of the Lake bay Camp For Girls

JULY l _ AUGUST 23 Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period

FEES INCLUD~Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Ilorseback Riding Weekly Cook-Outsmiddot Milk Daily without Added Cost

o

For further information write to

REV WALlER A 5ULLlVANDiredor PO Box 63 - East Freetown Mass 02717

Page 6: 05.23.68

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of F~ River-TJiurs May 23 196amp Oversleeping

Riglkll Traditional spiritual writers advise those who are strivshy

llng for perfection to make an e~amina~ion of conscience ~ch day to check their spiritual condition of soul to measure themselves and their actions against th~ comm~nd-

ments and counsels Some wag called this period-You cant be right

A~hbishop Cooke of New York must feel that way He sent a letter to all priests of that archdiocese aking their lIreCOmmendations for diocesan offices And immediately one reaction from the New York Senate of Priests was that he had gone outside the established advisory groups namely apparently the Senate

And if the Archbishop h~d asked the Senate for JeC0Inshy

mendations some individuals would have stood up and proclaimed loudly that this was an example of referring a matter to an organization and bypassing the individual

The ans~er of course in this post-conciliar age is to consult all to broaden the base of consultation ~ widely as possible And then the Archbishop must fulfill his responshy8ibiJity and make decisions and choose men who will earry on the work of God in an effective and pastoral way

Even then there will be criticism But the riame of the ame~does seem to be-You oant be right

Here is another i~stance af where there must always be a posi-tive attitude toward what is being done Critieism

surely has its place--but only in the context of praise for what is being done and as a further proposal to bolster the forward thrust that is taking place Then it is positive and

~ ueative - euro th Church is to assist the Bish~ and the other clergy in servicemiddotm00QInG to GOds holy people The deashyWider Vision con is a man of prayer since he

A significant meeting -took place in Chi~ago the fi18t Revbull John Ff Moore St Josephs Taunton of this week representatives from priestsmiddot groups and

middot tf II th t to form a natIon~1 fed- lA MA MEdSena es rom a over e counry bull ltU poundQ

tion Of priestiS organization TheDi0ce8eOfall~RiVerwas C rime and the Indiyiilutrlepresented ~

It i~ unfortunate however that in middotsOme Publie]ty Alarmed Cmiddotmiddottmiddot emiddotmiddotnrymiddot aS FearfiI eomingout of Chicago one speaker in Particular uSed the tired old pre-eouncil language of pOUties instead of the bull Cmiddot 5 pastoral language Of this modem middotageHe spoke of the At Home cis on ty tret

clearly the office of the diao federation as a manifestation ofmiddotuderi1ltgtcraeymiddot entering into During the pas-tfour months over 2000 more citi~ns~onate It is tbe duty of fie the life of the church - -6 ~h Co alth l~ ht from ther 1 1 nn ndeacon to the extent that he h8lll

91 Ii IS mmonwe u~ve 80u~ ~ JVCoiW -bullbull been authotized by eompeteDi

If there is anything that the Couneflpointed out it is permission to carry small arms-such as pIstols ~authorityto administer baptisii that the Church is not a politicai grouping and 8hould~ volvers Thousands more have made the sale of riflefl a~ 8Olemnly to be custodian and be seen in the forms and language ()f poliiics To d9thiB is very profitalble business The ~ dispenser of the -Eucharist

to take a narrow nationalisti~viewpointand to inssentirely the fact that the Church is eatholi~madelip oot only of fifty million Americans but some several hundredmiUiorts of other nationalities

What this national organization will do is to bring about among priests more of a sense of national and indeed world-wie awareness and responsibility toward the Church whose servants they are toward all peoples all over the world whose salvation they are pledged to seek

Their cooperation and advice will certainly be sought and accepted by the National Conference of Bishops who are pledged with if anything even more pointedness and responsibility to the saJ11e high~urPoses

But the national federation willbe ill-served if Speakers talk about it it) the language of a Political party or aPolit shyicalsystem The vision must be a wider- arid ~adeeper One than this

rheANCIIOR lIlC1~L NEWSPAPEROF THE DIOCESE OF FALL piVER Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Dioces~ of Fall Ri~er bull 410 Highland Avenu~

Fall River Mass 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev James L Connoy~ DDPhDbull

GENERAL MANAGER ASST GENERAL MANAGER ~

It Rev Daniel F Shalloo MA Rev johnmiddot P Driscollmiddot MANAGING EDITOR

H~gh J Goldenmiddot

for the loss of private prOperty bring Viaticwn to the dying bull questionoow must be asked ValUed atmore than two binioD read thesacred~rpture touMi

Why are private citizens seeking to protect them- aelves in such a manner

Why musthomes ~ protected by priwte weapons The answer of Course is fear

Private citizens of this and every state in the Union certainshyly are well aware of the rising tide of crime In the last two yearsin this country there were two victims of serious crime per 100 Persons an -increase of more than 12 per cent over 1965 and a 50 per cent increase over 1960 And during the same period over 80000 armed robberies were reported

Robberies burglaries larshycenies and auto thefts accounted

fied person now is no longer interested in police work

This rapfd iricrease in crime together with the corresponding factor of ineffectual public ac tion has now underminded the trust and confidence of the pri shyvate individual I

He now fears that the state can no longer give him the pro- teetion he needs as a citizerr The results can be seen in the

increased sale of weapons to privatemiddotpersons The citizen can nolonger walk after dark in man) sectors of OW IIIbancomshy

dollars faithful to inlfiruct and exhod With this rapid increase m

the crime rate there has also been aTapid decrease in effec-

tivemiddot public oontrol of crime This is due 10 many factors Perhaps the most insidious fact

rests in the extreme liberalizashytion of the law

It seems under present jurisshyprudence the law favors the criminal factor and fails to proshyteet the true innocent

Hand-in-hand with this great tr~nd to protect the so-called rights of the criminal goes the rather ineffective police methshyods that have been imWsed upon our local protectors of the

public

Imbalance of Scales of Justice

The modem policeman soon munities his home is nOW-tIM becoJl1ell discouraged and irus- target of financial Security bat Uate9 by the intrigues and the dope addictmustJ)OSSeSlj subtle maneuvers of the law his very lifemiddot now dePends 011shyHe ends -up by Saying ~wbats his own skill and abilities

the use As a result the quali- Indeed this is a tragic utua- tion

The formation of a private vigilante ariny in thiseOUDtry

defeats the total concept of thisshyunion In a way it is more iJeshystrpctive than any force of criminal element to the Amershy

ican ideal If we are to have anymiddot solution to this problem the re- sponsible forces of law and order must begin to completely reevaluate their role in CIW society

The cancer of crim~ together

Ordination Continued from Page One

eharist they were alSo ordereal to evangelize and baptize ~ this sense they were minist~

who shared intimately in f3nj priesthood of the Bishop

The word diaconate comEQ from the greek word diaxonilllJl which etymologically meaoo SERVICE The deacons office means service to the Church 4) ministerial service to Go~ people The deacon was ordered to minister to the sick the pooa and the afflicted Since by ordishynation he is fUled with ~ Spirithe is ordered to baptiza (introduce the Spirit into tOO lives of new Christians) By ()Iloo

bull dination he is a dispenser of tb6 Holy Eucharist and a ministell of the Word of God He shares embryonically maybe but stR9 he really shares in the sacraa mental powers of Holy Orders (the power to baptize to preaCll and to handle the Eucharist)

Minister Since Vatican II the impoJlioo bull

tance of the diaconate has beeli restored We hear even of tbe

possible restoration of a pe manent married diaconate FOI a long time the diaconate W81

just another step a vital OM yes but merely another step 1101 ordination to priesthood TOO diaconate was always considered to be a major order howev~ history made it to be sort ad unimportant and unhea~d of blv Gods people

The deacon Is a minister eI the Church His role in the local

has already received (in the ord~r of subdiaconate) thO Churchs delegation to pray the daily the Divine Office to be

ai PrayeJ The d~acon is ~

just a glorified Mass server iii the tniest sense of this expree sion he is a minister of Jesu Christ theSpeonlelemiddotdlliough rrlest

t The - ConstUidfon on --

Church has spelled out veq

the people to preside at ~ woShip and prayer Of ~ faithful to administer sacrampshymental and to officiate atf n~rals and burial services (art 29) In the ordination rite one III made a deacon by the Bishop laying on ot hands through thJ8 imposition of hands the deacoA receives a share in the Bishopll mission which is this ministrp to Gods people The deacoa takes on the duty of the minisshytry which was described a~ove

because he is co-missioned the Bishop to do so On June first Bishop Conn

ly will ordain eight men o the diocese to this office MCy remember these deacons in_ prayers that they might beshycame men full of faith filledwi~ th~breath of Gods spi generoUs servants Qf tbii Church and faithfu(witIi~

of gods beat Love for lIisholy peOple iIi the loCal ChurcD Fall~River 0 bull

unless society as a whole begu to wake up and act as a colleoo tive unit Liberty is nOt license mil justice is not self righteousneMo

middotAs this criminal elEfment beshycomes organized so too theeIshyfective control of crime

becoine a community effort JIIi single person can effect tile changes that must be undse taken but each man bound gether in a common effort

with the disease of individuality yet save tbiI 8hip ol natkmll will destroimiddot our Dational b0d7 p~

Clergy Ap~ntments AHect 16 eontinued from Page One Aft$ Portugal on Jan 29 1933 ~e newly ordained prie3b the son of Julio F llJld Blandina

tfust assigned are (Ferreira) da Sllvnmiddot -Rev Edwlllrd Eo Correia ~ After preliminary studies at

ur Lady of Vic1lol)7 Church the Seminario de S Jose FelshyCenterville 1Ueiras Portugal Father da

Rev Edmund JJ mtzgerald b Silva entered the CongregatioQ lJoly Name Church Fall River c2 the Missions (Vincentians)

Rev George E Harrison to 81 Imd studied at the Seminario de ~seph Church Taunton _ S V~cento de Paulo Limpiaf

Rev William J Hurley w ~( sanmiddottander and the Seminario Stanislaus Church Fall Rive1 ~ 818 Teresinha Felgueiras

Rev Comelius l Kiley ta Si JPIortugal seph Church JiaU River Ordained a priest OD July 19

Rev Robert A McGowan w Jl959 he returned to the semlshyCnrpus Christl Church sand-ll1ary to serve as instructor and

middot~ch m 1964 as seminary rector On Rev Donald 11 Messier to St Nov 1 1966 he was appointed

8hn the Baptist Church Fall sssistant at Mt Cannel Church niver New Bedf~rd

Rev Kevin F Tripp to Nqtro Jliltllneli lllitellneTIll Dame University fur Swprner Rev Edward Joseph Mitchell

middot c1Iudieampmiddot ronmiddot of William and Anne 17on~1i lLo~eg (Grace) Mitchell was born iml

One of six children Rev Wall Rivermiddot Jan 21 1932 EdushyIDhomas C Lopes assistant Bit ~ated in Fall River publie St Elizabeth Church Fall River schools Father Mitchell attendshynras born at Oak Bluffs on Aug ed Prevost High SChool Fall 14 1938 the son of Constantine River before stu~Ying at St ood Viola (Authier) Lopes Charles Se~inary- CatonsYille

After elementary and second- Md StMary ~eminary Baltishycry schooling on Marthas Vine- more Md and NOiIth Americali JBITSlHIO]S CONGlRAT1UlLAIlE U1UJBilLARJrAN Prior to the Mass of Thanksgiving Ofd yoard he studied ampt St~ ThoIIias College Rome fered by Bishop Connolly in the Sacred Heart Ohurch in honor of the priestly golden jUJ ampminary Bloomfield Conn Ordained a priest (lID Decla bilee of Rt Rev Felix S Cltildspastoremeritus three Bishops congratulate the jubil2lacrnd 51t Tohn Seminary Blrighton lQ5~ the Fall River priest rian Bishop Gerrard Bishop Gorman of DaU8I8 Te~as preacher Msgr Childs Bishop Ordained ) priem on FebmiddotlS served as assistant pastor aJt

Connolly who celebra-ted th~ lVlase1965 Father middotLopes has_ served Sacred Heart Church Taunton Gl assistant EitI Stmiddot EHzahetb and Sacred Heart Church Fall

Ohurch Fall middotRivermiddot since ord- lRiver before returning to

rultion l7atbeli mB~ ~ tou~~for~ S~~di~a Atm~OU~~~ ~ ~terf(llmthmiddotThe~gy ~ rnJS~0t((l[jj~h~ mev Ernest E Blais assistant Law

crt st Louis de France SWan- Since his return from Rome ~ rL l1f IJ ~ J1I 0 JI II fC A-- c2a was born May 26 1918 Am lTllIther Mitchell has served as ~~lfl]lli tr[(8 1m(Qj ~QW Ii lteS5 lJ sectl1ro1f ~Dlflm

middot Pawtucket R r the SOllll of assistant at Holy Name Churclilp BALTIMORE (NC) _ 1middotLa-__ is1 n Hi ~ rl L Doll of Maryland have aspects as well as their theologa ~ry (Bouchard) Bla anellthe Q ver rence Cardinal Shehanmiddotmiddot0f-i3i1lti- Jointly announced the openlng I ddtmiddot I d I ~e Edgar Blais i lFatllner Moll~ lea an oc nna eve opment

After schooling in Pawtucket I Ordained May 20 1i6f Rev more ati~ Epis~opalBis~o~Har- of an Ecumenical Evening lyenJIe~t Great NeOO middotn 1 Father B8ls prepared fur lJ~mes Harold Morse son of School of Theology for all qual- The institute represents a new

ifiedifhe priesthood at the seminarieo George and Grace (Prendergast) Arthur Flerrimingto mention candiates of any faith in idea in theological education ~ the Oblates 0 Mary Immmiddotacu- orse ~as bom - Rumford the Baltimore area M t h bUl -- ~ only a few of the Coalitions Th tt t h h os senunanes ave eeiilAn

~e Ordained to flhe priesth-- m I on April ~ 1939 After bull e IDS I U e w IC opens ill planning moves to secular unishyuvu founding fathers-strikes me asmiddot S t b U be ted t

on June 25 194A he servedmiddotM studving at St Mary School ep em er Wl AOca a t d 11 t th missionary in __ Cayes Hal 1t1f1rside R I ~d St Ra~ael being rather sophomoric and St Marys Roman Catholic verSI les an 00 eges momiddot e

Ugt JltWv~ strangely ou~ of character for a Semi h d 11 t seminary environment bull lIDtil appointed 00 middotSt Lou- ~- Pawtucket R I he oontmued nary ere an WI gran Jiather John Thlrkell iS shy paper which professes and gen- t _ d doc gtUmasFrance Swansea on Sept lllt Stbull Thomas SeminaryBloom_ er 0 11 an or 0 dean of the institute and shytgt erally lldheres to reasonably hil h d E lIm t ~ 52middot bull ed Conn and St ohn Semi- p osop y egrees nro en R d C S h M

poundJ JU A ampI high standards of editorial fair- 1 Iso be everen tep an ann anPIlther _ Brighton He has served Wlu a open to students not An r t f E 1 ~

llDvuoe - Lad th neas anq courtesy ireeKinga degreemiddot g Ican pnes rom ng an bull Rev Dm-a A Lamiddot-middotie - as asSistantmiddotat OW y of e 0 f associate dean

tuU v C on use Issu~ The facwtyof 18 is compOsed IS

Ief Herineneoil6e and Dena Assumption atbedral Fan Tlrdly whether Wlttingly or ofprofessors from St Marys In announcing the institutes ~ (Ouelette) Lavoiewas hom mgtmiddotv~rsince otdiXlati9J1 1 oot NCR was playmg games Johns Hopkins Un i v e r lJ i t y opening Cardinal Shehall middotmiddotmiddotmiddotftIl River OnmiddotJjm 1 i930 ~liumiddot4Fa~~~ wthilyDbers when forth~ Goucher College Baltimore He- pOnted out that up to nowthere A gradua~ of~t Ma~ea llev ~~~as Ill4W~ O~~ I~1ltwe~k in arqwi~susPi-brew College Loyola College has been no institution in the middot r8choo1 Fall Diver Flltber La- lllS~t ~ ~ James Church eiously contrasted the interim MountmiddotSt A Con d Baltimore arcbdiocese equipped middot vole studied at ~~PttOIllmiddot middotN~wBeiifordmiddotwasbomOctmiddot30middot sumof$25 thousand granted to1

the unlversii pe~r~aa to give special courses in the Prep Ilrtd COllege WoIeeSter 1934 in Taunton Ute son ofmiddotmiddotmiddot themiddotmiddot SoCialmiddot Action middotDepartmentmiddot field of religious education

middot where he obtained a BA Siun_Mlilirice OJeii ~ the 1a~ of the USCatholicmiddotConferencemiddot ~~y will teachco~ses in the He said -that he thought the middot mi cum 13ude Afterattetidfni1Marguerite (Dineen)OJ)ea for a~istra~ionexp~nses with ~aJor ~ofld ~~lglOns fro~ ~v- institute would meet a very

Ifhe Grand SeriUnaire hi Mon- His elementary and secondary the sum ofmiddot$22 million allocated era pomts of VIew and will an- great need in preparing college ibeaI Oanadahe was ordatned education was pUrSuedat Im-by tbeblshops oil an emergencymiddot aIyze ~he beliefs of the R~)Jnan gr-aduates to work in various Ia priest at the Cathedral ~Fan D8culate ConceptionSChoollmd basis to the Catholic University ~llliCI fhUrch ~eProtestant types ~ religious educationand

bull B1ver oil April 25 1959 Magr Coyle High School Taun- of America 1 81 s am Jud8lsm snd the in other apostolic work

I

iather Lavoie haa served as middotton His seminary fonnation was These two figures are com-middot ~~ons o~ the Far East middot IlSlfistant at st Miehael Church obtained at Our Lady of Provi- p1etely unrelated to one another and ~~studY the onglns

OCean Grove st fosepb dence Seminary Warwick Neck The editors of NCR must know rl ~eyelopment Cf Church Attleboro and sinee R][ Stonehill College North -and in fact explicitlystated themiddot ~arl~i reli~on8 and win hn 1962 at Notre Dame de Easton and st John Seminary in the course of their May 8 ed- examme e r SOCial and ethical lLourdes Fall River Brighton itorial-thlilt the tolal amount of

Father Martins Ordained III prie~ by Bishop Church money which will be Irotestant Chaplain Son of Joao and Rita CandIlda eonnollyon Jan 30 1960 Father allocated to inner city projects DETROIT (NC)-Dr Gene B

EFerreira) Martins Rev Jooo ODea has served as assistant at throughout the United states Montague an Episcopalian clershylOiprilKlo Martins was bom ~ st James Church New Bedford will undltlubtedly far exceed the gyman has been named first S Sebastiao Tenelra Azores since ordination figure of $22 million Protestant chaplain of the on Aug 11 1991 lf they wanted to argue that Jesuit~perated University of

Edltcmteltl in public schoohl b t PI even at l1hat the Church win Detroit Father Malcolm Carron ehe~ he entered the Seminario

p

middotres Y erOGJnS an notmiddot be meetings its obligatIons SJ president bas announced ltIe Angnn lierceita Azores R Cmiddotmiddot~ A middottmiddot they were perfectly free to de I

middot where he was ordained a Priest ace lrISOil cion liO but in my opinion they elIlIWIlIilIIllIlIlIlHIIIIIIWlllIlJlmnllllillllllll~ on April 10 1955 CINCINNATI (NC) -Presby shouldnt have confused the is- El DRY CLEANING El

i on Dec 13 1955 Father Mal1- - terians of this area p~dged~ SUe by dragging Catholic Uni- sect d sect Ilhs came to serve as assistant_m~t the racial risis with mversitys stepped-up budget into El an -El

at St Antbony Of Padua Churcln rllrograrrt of education and action the discussion as ~ rect herring sect fUR STORAGE sect m Fall River I1n~ ten years nclld~ng the est~li~~en~f1f fa Touch of ~greement sect DERMODY sectI

Qilter at St Anthony ChUrch n~w k1[~~ of congr~ga~lpn focus- ][n conclusion I must lillY that -El - El lElast Falmouth eli SPfCif~lIl~Yon ~acIa~ ~cltm- Xfull~ agree with the final par- sectCLEANERS sect

Father da Silva lt~iat~on agraph in NCR~s criticism Qf the El El ~ Vincentian Priest Rev Joa- Leaders of the Unimiddot~ed PJe~by- bishop~ progrm The trouble sect 34-441 CohannetStreet sect

CjU1m Ferreira Fernandes ella ~rians of the Cincm~~ti area with attackin~ racism is that sect TaUfl~on 822-616n sectm

Silva was bom in Vila dft9 said the new coDgmiddotrega~lonwould all the attackers themselvoes == - == ~X~ for perhaps three Qr four ~ffer from a touch of the dis- iiIIllIIllIIlIlIlIIllIIllIllIlIIllIIlIlIllHlIIlIIllIllllllllllllilii

~ellrs and WOUld CkawUgeth- ease and that alltheirpro-middotmiddotmiddot--__---11

Want Sta~p~ ltin ~ nucllS of comernedper-graIIlli could be better middot B1EFORE YOU Ffhe Siste~ of St Francis of ~Qs ~romexistiDg ~on~re~qyen()ns ~9W true-not 0nlY of ptpm- BUY -1ll

~egany jl Y express thankD I ~embers of the new CODgr~ga- inent ecclesiastics but presumshytn Ancho readers for sending ti~ wJUch will hlven~ build- ably of lllthe rest ofus as well PARK

them ca~celled ~lffiPS f9r for- mgQt its own will te ~~~ to inclJdiog I must lssme- the MOT0 IS eign missiol$ an4 ask th~t sup ~~ a ~covenant inQicaPng editors of even our most lib-I middot~ft continu~ dlUing tqe ~tmi- ther fuU com~itmel)ttoracial eral Citholic p~riodicals

Der months T~ei~ add~ss is St reconciliation and pledging We arelll in thisthjng to- OLDSMOBilE )ilichael~Stamp ~ureat st~~lf t4me and ~urcesf()r onegether and wea11 ~aveoUii OlUsmobile-Peugot-RenCiuit

bull ~~I~~be~hsiMo~pfh9~4llc- fJijyeir odQ(r the ex9centc~we ~rlt cut QUt ~ llil That13 fo 67 Middle Street Falrhavenmiddotmiddot PRY N1l ~ h~ ~ co~r~gati(lo t j ~ _

CENTER Paint and Wallpaper

Dupont Paint cor Middlo Stiiii 422 Acush Ave

Campampt New Bedford PARKING ~ Rear of Store

Tbe Best

~orrw~Ho Tr~pp SHEET METAl

Jl 1lESER Prop fftESIDENTIAl

iNDUSTRIAl COMME~pAU

253 e~all St New iampldf1d 993-3222

- ~ANCHORl)ioceseofFa RiYer-JIlh~Moy 23 l9cS8

---------------------------shy

~~Says Therre -Arr~ N~ lomnits b T ChrrD~llDcopyHru ~reg~~ITi)~D~D~DifY

~ lffiiY JBa]baJla Ward

l ihe amptarting point Pol judging our-role in the world Us ro lrnow where we are-Ohristians living in the wealthy West a white minority making up about 20 per cent of the worlds peoples and enjoying 80 per cent of the worlds ~me But this is only a ~nning a raw statement If fact And as we know Ilhwts rarely present themshyrelves without a oontext They (ilODle to us in a dense package IOf assumptions ond e~periences

1lake such a ~t as that Mr Brown worth a IlDillion dollars gives nothing to iltirs Smith This Is a fact JIlul- iliPlied a thoushysand times over by all the BroWns who do IiWthing for all ~ Smiths But suppose Mrs Smith is his widowed older sisshyter Iho rovingly brought himmiddot 1ilP as a boy Then the fact of ibis indifference becomes a comshypletely different fact because ~ eoJ1text has changed

Sense e(1 ltDomtext Most of the facts of our oonshy

temporary scene require this oonse of context They do not eome to us neat and bare And ~e first thing that has to be lJ8id about us as Christians is presumably that our context of presuppositions and oommitshyment is somewhat different ilrom that of anyone else

The Gospels are full of the lldea that the Christian angle of

o vision cannot be simply intershyehangeable with the secular or

worldly point of view Leaven makes bread rise because it is differenj Salt gives a taste beshyeause it is not identical with the 2ood Light shines in darkness because light and dark a~e disshyiWlguishable

All these images of the Chrisshy(gan community imply being other different set apart but at the same time guiding inshyGPiring changing ald entering into the whole sum of human ~xistence We are different but our aim is communion We are lteall~ to a vocation but the vocation is unity How is this fundameintal context of Chrisshyiian living to be interpreted in rtbe modern age

Personal Fortune Let us look at two widely

occepted reactions to modern facts and see how they square with the Christian vision The first concerns personal fortune On balance in the landli where the bulk of Christians live the White wealthy post-Christian oocieties of the North AtIantic~ North America Bribin Westshyern Europe - the basic notion about income is to increase it iIIJld about wealth to accumulate to

In general a familys standshyIIllds of living its ciaims on reshylIOurces and its expectations of ilun an~ comfort gO up in step

Institute Participant yeniss Marjorie A MorinNortb

Westport a faculty member at ~cred Hearts Academy Fan Ri~er bas been named as one cent 44 ~igh ~ool bi~19gy teachshy~rs frorn18 states to participate iln a Summer institute on recent bigh school biology curriculum ~evelopments at Wells College Aurora N Y The institute will be in session from June 30 through Julyen S

with bigher earnings One can find it hard to make both ends meet and be resentful of taxes at $6000 a year $12000 a year $24000 a year $48000 0 year ~d so on up - in fact since

taxes rise with income COlIlshy

plairits can be higher as wealth increases even though expendishytures now oover two houses and three cars

Christian teaching in stark contrast reminds us that the higher the income the greater the responsibility The final counsel of perfection was given to the dcb young man sell

all you have and give to the poor- Short of this evengelical extreme the wealthy must not satisfy their oWllJlising supershyfluities at the expense of the basic needs of others 11 they dothey will enter eternity as easshyily as a ca~el through the eye of a needle-not a wholly reasshysuring analogy for our Western societies who bave never had it so good

NQ lLfimfits A secHid pre-suppositionmiddot~

eontempolary society is that chapel z Mount St Mary Con- f te li d d or en rmg re glon an was n obligatIOns an responsibilities vent and a dInner f~r Csters t fr ti A ~ 031 teacher and principal at manyop a on ers man ofdifshyt ferent national I y or citizenship f al 18 no arm ooncern of ours The Gospel approach IS whollydifferent All must)be fed even-shythe least of the little ones All must be clothed and sheltered Even if th th dtch is

e ~an In e 1 a Jew and his rescuer a Samarshyillan their traditional enmity must make no diHerence~ The centurions son is cured even if he is in modern terms a hated

SJl8TER MJIJRlAM RSM o

former DiocesoD1l Supervisor Completes 50 Years As ~eiigiolUJs Sis~er of Mercy

Fifty years in religious life Katherine -ONeil retired prinshycipal of the Aldrich School inwill be marked Sunday by SisshyFall River Both are memberster Miriam RSM former eleshyof Holy Name parish Fall Rivermentary school supervisor in

the Fall River Diocesan systemON II St Louis JgtarishRev Pa trick el supennshy

tendent of schools will cele- Sister Miriam is a native of brate a Mass of Thanksgiving St Louis parish Fall River She at 1045 Sunday morning in the was a public school teacher beshy

and the JubIlanans ~~edIate~m Diocesan schools before beingfaml 11 f II I Y WI () ow appointed a supervisor in 1941

A reception will be held after together with Sister FeIicitadi f t S

e nner or V1S~ mg Isers RSM The two Mercy Sisters ~d a seoond recepti~n fr served as supervisors under

fnends and former p~pl1s WIll the late Rev Edward J Gorman take place from 2 to 5 m Mt Sl ana under Father ONeill pres-Mary Academy library ent superintendent of schools Bec~~vingguests wit~ the until their retirement in 1966

jubllanan WIll be her Sls~ers Since that time they have M~ James Conlin retIred tutored and aided students with prmcIpal of the Mason Barney reading problems at Mt Sl

imperialist There is neither School Swansea and lIfiss Mary COnvent Jew nor Gentile bond nor free ~ bullr

in the a)l-enoompassing gener~ J ~

=~~k~~ ~P-9morL13~J of our prayer Thy Kingdom

40~s eolumn will therefOe try over the coming months to give not only the facts about our strange new world round which the astronaut strolls in 90 minutes It will try tosug gest the oontext without which Christian judgment and re- sponse are hardly possible For if we judge only as secular cit shyizens will the salt keep its taste May it not be fit only to be thrown down the drain

~ L ~ IIrencn lIovor Priests Holding O~her Jobs

PARIS (NC)-A recent surshyvey indicates that Frenchmen are in favor of priests working at n~n-priestly jobs and being marned _

The editor-in-chief will 1roW~D1DXNG GOWNS rm afraid Im overworking the

word romantic in describing the fashions this season but with such-anabundance of frills and tiny waists it seems the only fitting adjective Nowhere does the word crop up with shym 0 r e meaning than when one is trying to convey the imshypression given by the fashions iQr the 68 bride Bridal gownsfor late Sumshymer and early Fall weddings are now being shown and snapped up dewy-eyed brides-to-be

by

~ a survey ~nducted by the Gone are the outlandish 1ent SocIety FrancaJse dEnquetes eire th par ~ndage (SOFRES) 00 Per sses e weIrd IDllll des~gns centCIf those questioned both ~ tte h~v~~ ~ere dSlgnS Catholics and non-Catholics re- Ig wIg ts e Pia~ f~W garded it as normal for a priest ~aso~s als are as n l~

1Q praclice a lleCUiar profession wedding g~wns ~ tor so many and 51 per cent said that work degthther fUlootfitBkmiddot ~lS slelas0ben but by priests in a f~ri or 011amp ey 1ftgt especlay auti shyconstruction JOb is ood ~ in thlS dre~ of dresses One

very g lovely princess design by Ven because that ereates an exchange b - rio1-1- ~ ~ be tb Ch as nerrow s pear

bullween e Ulch and the dli -- fimiddotmiddot 10 workers 0 nIng gure- rIDIng seven out~ 10 persons 81lIr- Bi~h~uette ~Cthe~ by Frmk

veyed favored -marriage for ~zzo for Pandora ~as an Ehzashypriests ~because that would per- bethan aJr to it WIth its lov~ly mit them to better understand 1Jff of OhantIllr lace ~ndmg family problems and difficul- bI~h around the neckline and ties And 25 per cent of those _spIlling d~wn the sleeves surveyed are convinced that Fur-Trimmecll GoWlm

soon~r or l~ter women will be If youre planning an elegant ordaIned prleStamp wedding m the late Fall ~

Alois Schardt a Bavarian tele- early Winter and money is no vision n~ws editor Dr HeE-oobject Mirra has designed a mann Abs of the Deutsche Bank gown with a bodice and sleeores of broadtail cuffed around the wrist and neckline with white mink The price-a mere $800 the price of a good living room oouch but then you could al shyways sit on old orange crates and admire your stunning wed ding pictures

Even the bridal hairdo is as hearts and flowers as Elizabeth Barrett Browiling Curls fall over shoulders peek out from under mantillas and veils and are even caught back in kershychief headpieces If your own

hair refuses to wave never mind curl order some stick-on curls ahead oftime to keep the romantic air

By BOme unexplained miracle all brides are b~autiful but this year the designers are giving the miracle workers a boost in JOWDS that spell romance

New Bedfordilea Elect Officers

The slate of officers el~ to serve for the 1968-69 year d the Catholic Womans Club clil New Bedford are Mn Thomas P Barry president Miss Jean

A McGinnis first vice-p~ dent Mrs Raymond M Atw~ second vice-presisient Mrs ViiDo cent L Hughes recording s~

retary Mrs Maurice A Hurl~ corresponding secretary lViM Charles D Phelan treasureJl Registrars named for ~ coming year are Mrs Ricbam A Parsons Mrs Norman amp Sylvia Mrs Albert J LamolZgt reux Mrs William A Horai Mrs Robert A Vermette lIhe Henry J Fanning Jr Mrs Joseph N Joseph Mlamp3 Dorothy A Curry and lIlra Roland F Mathieu will $erve mJ mrectors

Nome Laymon Official Of Catholic Schoois

MEMPHIS (NC)-Bishop JO seph A Durick apostolic adJ ministrator of the NashVille dl ocese has confirmed the apshypointment of William G Ho~

as administrative assistant tIlll Msgr John A Elliott dioce~ superintendent of schools

In his new Post Hoyt wild serve as coordinator for prCF grams that receive local and federal aid to private schoolBp in addition to general assistance in the overall responsibilities 001 the school board and supeJlgto visors

There are 18 Catholic blgili schools with 5892 students ancll 53 elementary schools with 15

405 students in the Nashvl1lG diocese which comprises the

entire state of Tennessee

Pro~estants to SerVe 0111 Catholic Paperr

BONN (NC)-Protestanf jOllDD nalists will serve on the editoshyrial staff of a new German nashytional Catholic weekly aimed at readers on a high intellectual level which will begin publbshy

-ction in September - Most of the 20 editors wh

will be selected fqr the weeklys staff will be drawn from the ranks of the secular daily press

has been elected director of the papers board of trustees

A total of $4000000 has been raised from among the Well0 Ge~an dioceses to finance the establishment of the paper Wgt be named Publik Stockwill ~ issued

~fiDDY Dining IN YHE

JOILRY WHAlLER -ANID--

SPOUTER INN RESTAURANTS

Always Free Parking

New Bedford Hotel

NASON Oil COMPANY

Our Heating 7 Perry Avenue

Oils Malee Taunton Mass Warm FrienJs 822-2282

Dailymiddot Aittention Necessary To ~[f~Dceate We~~~

1B1y 1J~JlDill alii wnJillYJil ~~

The ~ are on their way and 11 lreems that half r our time i1l spent digging them out ~ the garden No matter haw much time we Gpomd on them they have a way of reappearing within Q few days ad 1l1Inless we really live them OUattention they ean take over a garden middotin lW time Beginning gardenem

bull WOO approaeh gardemng casshyaally or em weekends are often ~helmed by these unwel-CIOme pests ond soon give up the Ilbip Our suggestion is that M)

minutes II day B sufficient to keep even big gardens weeded fithe gardener will get out into Illie garden every day This maw mean nomiddot mOIre than a short trip BIound the garden to look mt Ole plants and to pull out a few ~ds encountered on the weJr

Few llilmtJtes Dadlly

We usually keep a small wamshyms hoeohandy by the back door and as we PlVPare to go to worlx take a short walk in the garden hoe in hand to see what is new The result is that we spend flw minutes or so in the garden beshytore setting out for work in the morning 10 minutes at lunch and ap~roximately 10 minutea before dinner after the working day is over which incidentally il a good time to ioosen up ~

t1ore tearing the kids heads oIif llDr all the misdeeds of the day

The point is that weeding u

attitudes t2lat vtll shape their future are beginning now and IllS theU friends and relatives wish them well they pray that each couple will enjoy the graces and happiness that come from a good Christian marriage with Christ in the home

Ad~ Atmosphere Often a wedding gift can add

to the atmosphere of a Christian home One such gift is a plaque that hangs in our den On it are these words

Sacrifice s usually difficult and irksome only

Love can make ~ easy and perfect love can make it a

Joy I couldnt think of a better

motto with which to begin 0 marriage or one that becomes

more significant through sleepshyless nights with sick babies frustrating job problems or the everpresent money worries Qlat asually plague young couples

A handsome cross a richlY llIustrated b~ble a handsome religious Gtatue or plaque are eccellent gifts to begin a Chrisshy

11 th h t Uan couple on the road to Il we as many 0 er cores mus ~ done on n day-today buis cmd cannot be left for weekendll because there are so many other tmportant things that have to be ltilone then

The grass has to be cut a new lInge put on a door there is a ball game to watch a ride 00 take a tree to be pruned etc Cll of which ore time-eonsuming _ lIIllU necessary With the weather we have been exPeriencing al -te th d~n~ e ~ weedmg gives ll3 middot Iln oPprtunity to g~t a hWe ~h lUI 11 commodity whiclill middot D3ems t0 be gettmg scarcer fa 001 industrial live~ and ehance to commune With Nature een at the wrong end of n

lim tle Kltcbellllmiddot

Did you know that during a wedding ceremony the groom places the ring on the finger of Ule bride because the circlemiddot of gold symbolizes the love and devotion that from this moment on will have no end This is but lti)ne of the many traditions that lJlave come down through the years and now are an accepted ~rt of the Cana celebration

Another must for a wedding dJ the wedding cake that fur eenturies has signified breakshymg of bread in kinship as it Is ll1anded out to friends and relashyves Even the veil that graces tlle l)ead of the beautiful bride b a custom that has come into llUes~nt time from the days when the brides stood under eanopies to show that they were IIDlder the protection of the glOOrp

All these ancientgt traditions give a Uttle added meaning to lYle Cana feast and the sacred acrainent of matrimony but ltWen more significant are the rostoms and traditions that the 1l1Jride and groom will carry into rife as a f~ly Many of the

polsh Mmiddotsommiddot

n ill ~ilI CHiCAGO (NC)-First copies

of the Polish vernacular altar

gful C th li lif Let meanm a 0 c e someone else buy the sheets a~d and ~asters ma~e your pft one Wlt~ eve~las~lDg mea~ll~g

If ou re 1hinking of givmg ~ bridal shower in the n~ar future perbaP you w0llld hke to serve a Bndal Puddmg

Bridal Pudding 2 envelopes unflavored gelatiJm

cup cold water b ili t

llff If cup deghte wa er egg W I StI- ~_

74 aspoon - cup suglllr

q h cups eavy cream (ilDrgetth diet)

1 teapoon vamplilla 1 flaked tcup coconu 1) Soften the gelatin in the k

cup cold watermiddot and then pour the 1fJ cup ofboiling water over the gelatin mixture and stir unntil dissolved Cool

2) Beat the egg whites until foam slowly add the salt and sugar and continue beating unshytil stiff peaks are formed

3) Fold the gelatin into the stiff whites

4) Beat the heavy cream until stiff and add the vanilla Fold the cream into the whites and gelatin mixture

5) Rub the bottom and sides cf an eight-inch spring form pan with butter and sprinkle the bottom with lh cup of the coconut Pour in the cream mixshyture Sprinkle with the remainshying coconut -ltld chill at least four hours or overnight Upshymold and serve with s1rawshyberries and the following rum sauce

lltum Sauce 6 egg yolks (see we didnt

want them to go to waste) 1 cup sugarmiddot

04 cup dark 111m cognac or kirsch

1) Beat the yolks until lemon colored and slightly thickened

2) Gradually beat in the Dugar

Stir in half the rum and cook in tOp of a double boiler over boiling water stirring constantshy131 until the sauce coats a woodshy

THE ANCHORshy

lHIONOR MOTHER lPlilElRRE Mother Pierre Marie of St Annes Hospital Fan River left meets Mrs Joseph Giblin Mrs Richard Donovan and Mrs Eugene Dionne all members of The Friends of St Annes on bhe occasion of the groups honoring the sister in reCognition of her reshyception of the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice Medal from Pope Paul

Aim Is Unity INIUlDil leads New )errsey Periodic White Walkerrs

Se~king to Ascertain Needs of Negroes ENGLEWOOD (NC)-Led by We are trying to find out

a Sister from St Cecilias High what the needs are she said School a group of white resi- We realized that we would dents have been making peri- look liketourists going through odic informal walking toWfl but you have to begin someshythrough the predominantly Ne- where gro Fourth Ward to meet the One result of the middotwalks was people living there

The walks inaugurated by Sister Robert Jean are made in mn effort to break down barriere fllll an area where rioting took place last Summer

Gif~~ Contfnued from Page Four

lNJlf~ihlmiddotAuBehCJH) $750

Jeweled Cross Co Inc $225

Attleboro Particular Council St Vincent de Paul

$200 Society of St Vincent de PaW

St Mary Conference $150

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J Wright bull $75 No Attleboro Catholic Womshy

0ns Club $50

Dr Eugene Leco St Anne Sodality Sacred

Heart Church $40

Edward N Cook Plate Co Inc $35middot

Albert Morawski $30

CYD-Sacred Heart Church $25

Frank M Miller amp Son Inc No Attleboromiddot Coal Co y H Blackington amp Co Inc

II neighborhood meeting at which white and black people discussed the visits and the posshysibility of further involvement in the needs of the Fourth Ward community------------

Universal Roofing amp Sheet Metal Co

Alden Corrugated Container Corp

Mass Trucking Corp New Bedford Hotel Macedo Pharmacy

$51 Building Materials Inc

$5 Sacred Heart Home

Daughters of Isabella Hyacinth Circle No 71

A Friend Damien Council K of C Harbor Beach Club amp Lounge Laurans-Standard Grocery Co

Inc $35

Glemi-on Roofing Co $30

Browne Pharmacy Inc $25

Browne Pharmacy A Friend Local No 168 UAW AFL-CIO Cape Cod Fabrics Philip J

Kane Inc Lions Club of New Bedford

Duplicating Equipment amp Supshyply Atty Jack London New Bedford Catholic Guild for the Blind Sharkeys Tire amp Rubber Comiddot

Tum oto Page Ten

Thurs May 23 1968

AJumna Rece~ves

Tdn~ty Award WASHINGTON (NC)-Doroshy

thea F Sullivan social worker and alumna of Trinity College here was presented the 1968 Julie Billiart medal at the schools Spring honors convocashytion

The annual award established in 1961 in honor of the foundress of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur who conduct the colshylege honors an alumna whose life exemplifies Blessed Julie Billiarts educational objectives -the formation of strong womshyen of faith devoted to God and neighbor living dedicated and fruitful lives

Miss Sullivan a member of the Trinity class of 1926 had been an associate professor at the Catholic University of Americas School of Social Sershyvice since 1941 She has been project director of the South Florida Neighborhood Youth Corps in Miami since 1966

She has been active in a numshyber of youth and welfare organshyizations has contributed articles to numerous periodicals and edited several books

Form Sisterrs 0 Coull1ld~

~Dil HawOJii Diocese HONOLULU (NC)-A Sisshy

ters council ill being formed here with the approval of Bishshyou John J Scanlan of Honoshylulu The council is composed of any Sisters in the diocese who desire to affiliate herself with the organizations objecshytives

The projected aims of the council are to serve as a chanshynei of communication among Religious communities and to the bishop the priests senate shylay senate other religious groups to serve as a source of unity and strength among Reshyligious to foster a closer c0shy

operation among clergy Reshyligious and laity and to be [1

means of coordinating the works of the apostolate after studying the religious educational socishyal economic and ecumenical needs of the diocese

Mfiltie P~Mmbnrwg amp HealltDOI~ (Oe Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Master Plumber 702i1

JOSEPH RAPOSA JR $06 ~O MAUIN $1ltlEfEii

lraaD rlovell 675a74~

SCHOOl MaonteilCllnCe SIlJlPPUO~

$WIEIE~IERS - $OA~$

IOlISUINJIr~CijANIIsect IrU~1E E)IliINGUUSIHIEIl$

DAHill COo nS86 IPUlRCHIASE SIlRIEIETI

NEW I8lEll)fO~1Ol

~9lJ-lJ7~6

~IIII11IJ1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I11I1I11I1I11I11II11I1I1I1I1I1I1I1IJ1I1I1I1I11I11I11I1I1I11I11UIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIII1111I11I

1 ~ESADAV~ lIIli~ls for use at Mass in Polish Coo en spoQn Do not boil Remove ltihurches and institutions in this from the heat and stir in the country have been received ~y remaining rum John Cardinal Cody of Ohicago In answer to - a letter from II member of the Consilium far Mrs Mogardo of Falmouth the Cbe implementation of the Con- amount of all-purpose cream 10 IJtitution Oll the Sacred Liturgy the Creme de Menthe Squares IUN~~A~m M ~58 icIIf the Second Vatican COIDlcil is one pint iillllllJllIlIIlIlIIlIIlIlIlIlIIlIIlIlIlIlIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIlJlIlIlIIlIIllUlIIlIIlIlIlIlIlIIlIIUIIUlIIlIlIlIlIlIUlIlIUIIUIIIIII~I~

I

THE ANCHORTDi~c~se of Foil River-Thurs May 23 1968 indiana Prelate ~ i l bull - 10 Heads NCEACrawford Electrical Co DrSpecial Gifts Morris Feresten Dr Frank L mAiN FRANCISCO r(NC) shy

Collins Mr amp Mrsmiddot John P Bish()p Raymorid J GellagMrContinued from Page Nine Dwyer of Lafayette Ind was ~le~ted

Attleboromiddot Hub Clothing Bristol ~it- president general Of the Nashyting Mills Inc Dixon Burial tionlll1 Catholic Educational Asshy$150

sociation at the final meeting ofVauit Shelburne Shirt Co IncBarry J Boardman Ins Agency $125 the asSoclation~8 6Mb Mnuat

Almeida Electric Co August Elmer C Slater

convention hereraquoIlr amp Mrs James G Heagney He succeeds Bishop ErnestBadwey amp Sons Joseph A Parks$100 Primeau of Manchester N HMrs Mar-y Courtis Dr amp MrsL G Balfour Co

who rervOO as president general Norman pSadler Brothers Inc for three yearsBedford House ConvalescentShields Inc A native of Cleveland BishopHomeInc Dr Sanford I Udis$60 Gallagher was ordained in 1939llI Joseph Madowsky HarveyAtherton Furniture Co~ and served as a Navy chaplainProbber Inc $50 during World War n He w~s

Demers Brothers narned bishop of Lafayette inM S Company 1965 following service as secreshy[P[(D$Iroreg$ $40

tary of the National ConferenceAttleboro Printing amp Embosshy of Catholic Charities

olng Co Inc ~WltWI7il$~ltW Speaker at the election sesshy$35 sion was U S Commissioner ofIOUlIt lLADY IOlF lFAllDMIAReynolds amp Markman In~ $25 Education Harold Howe who

$27 said that Catholic schools willMr amp Mrs Ralph A GuerrieroLeedham Hardware be especially guilty if they doMr amp Mrs Peter J Hoss lFlIt ADlIt][AN OJFM lFlIt lFAJlUAN OJFM $25 not act to solve the crisis of

Attleboro Sun Publishing Co ST IDOMIllN][C ghetto educationmiddotlnc Connelly Gold Stamping $25 Christianity is supposed toCo MacDonald Moving amp Storshy ~[j1Jil~O$ltC[(il$ t[ Our tLC1~ls ~hauraquocetiMr amp Mrs Thomas Paiva offer something more the age Co Marathon Company Mr amp Mrs Thomas C Murphy commissioner told the 6000

Plastic Craft Novelty Co Ob$erve $iver Priestiy Jubilees delegates at the final sessionSTLOUIS OF FRANCE On May 26th the 9 AM Retreat House Pittsfield N 11 ~Let us be fools for Christs

Fall Ri~er $50 MlIss will be conceleprated where _ he served as Retreat sake said St Paul middotWe Ladies of St Ailne raquoy the Franciscan Friars at Our Director and Master~ badly need highminded visionshy

$1200 Holy Name Society Ladys Chapel New Bedford Four years later _1964 Fr aries who can help the poorestFan River Electric Light Co st Vincent de Paul Sooi~ eonmiemoratingthe Silver Ju Fabian was transfe~red to Our of our children see a new dream $1000 $26 bilee of the ordination of) Fr Ladys Ohapel New ~d~()rd and faShion a better reality FOO

FirestoneRubbe~ amp Latex ~ Mr amp Mrs Herman Lamppoin4e Fabian F Joyce OFM and Fr where he has served to the pres- ournations sake Catholic edushy $600 I~ k Adrian F Donachie OFM ent time He is ViCar of the cationmust jointhe rest of edshy

~all R~~er GasCQllpanYj Fr Fabian is a native of Franciscan CommuIlity Father ucation to give them a neW $500 Vineyard iavenc Watertown He is an alumll~sof is well known thr~ughout the botizon

lVlr amp Mrs Henry ~ Feitelberl Boston College High SChool and area as a preacher for the St Mooney amp Co Inc middotUT AUGUSTINE

0Boston College He entered the Jude Novena devotions on$300 FIRST COMMUNION- $46L50 Franciscans of Holy - Nilme Thursdayat the chapel andtbeRev JosephF ODonnell ResidentSofCatholic MemoJillJ Province with headquarters in radio Apostolate

~o~e I $50 ~ PORTRAITSNew Yo~k City in 1937~ - Fr Addlln F Donachie Of~ $300 Mrs James Boyle He was ordained at the Na- is a native of Glasgow Scotland IN LIVING COLOUR

St Augustines GuildCitizens Savings Bank iional Shrine of the Immaculate and was brought up in NewSt Augustines Holy NameFR Five Cent Savings Bank Conception Washington D C York Oity H~ entered ~t $200 St Augustines St Vincent de May 29 1943 His first assign- Joseph s SeraphIcSeminary Jtl Anderson-Little Co inc lPaul Society ment was to St EIizabeths 1932 in preparatIon for the A -Friend $30 - T)enver middotColo from Franciscan Priesthood

$150 Mr amp Mrs William Figueiredo 1944 to Hi58 He was received into the

PR Peoples Cooperative Bank Mr amp Mrs Francis Metell _ Pastor and Supe- Order in 1937 and was ordained $135 $25 rior of the Church and Monas- six years later on May 29 1943

Herve Lagasse Cmdr amp Mrs Daniel Burgo tery in Denver in 1951 and at the National Shrine of the $125 Frank Coutinho Mr amp Mrs served in this capacity for Immaculate Conception Washshy

Cliff Nursing Homes Michael Fonte) Mr- amp Mr~ Eushy seven years ington D C His priestly Hfe$120 gene Frieh Mrs John Hughes In 1958 he was stationed at has been in New York Coloshy

J O Neill Supply Co Marthas Vineyard National St Bonaventure Retreat House rado Connecticut NewHampshy $101 Bank Rep amp Mrs Benjamin C Paterson N J for a period of shire and finally- stationed in ~ Fall River Shopping Ce~nter Mayhew Jr Mr amp Mrs Boleslaw two years giving laymens re- Our Ladys Chapel since 1956Associates Nickowal Mrs Dean Swift 11 treats and days of recollection Fr Adrian came with the origishy $100 Mr amp Mrs Frederick Thifault to the clergy He was then nal group of Franciscans ~o staff

Norbut Mfg Co Inc transferred to St Anthonys- Our Ladys Chapel THE FINEST QU~LITYSullivans of Fall River dk Wareham Hyannis IS WORTH THE PLEASANT

H P Hood amp Sons Inc ST PATRICK Famed Church -Gift SHORT DRIVE TO THE I bull Borden amp Remington Co $50

AREAS LEADING STUDIOr Louis Hand Inc middotMr amp Mrs Thomas Choate To Mission SocietY William T Manning Colnt Mr amp Mrs middotWilliam McLaugbshy BOSJO~ (NC) B~stons

j OPEN SUNDAYS Radio Station WALE I lin famed St Stephens church hasbull Dring Communion Seasonbeen - turned over by Richard

Dr amp Mrs Americo Almeida ~ W Hurley Co Cardinal Cushing to the Misshy $75 $30

Walter A Fur-man Co $45

8io~ary society ot St James ~ BRIDAL PORTRAITS Beetlemiddot Plastics Albert- Guerzoni the Apostle 311d Deluxe Quality Candicts Fall River Lodge No 118 BPO $21 famous for RESERVE YOUR DATE EARLY - The edifice _a short distance E~~ Mrs Am~lia JJaptiste _ from the home of Paul Revere

St- vincent de Paul Salvage - $25 and other Revolutionary War ~rve as QUALITyand EvANS STUDIOS

JBureau Nlr amp I([rs Franci~Murp~y shrines will head- St Patricks Wofuens Guild Miamp Mrs Julius ]~abbitt -I quarters for the society which 18 MAIN STTAUNTON middotCall Rivermiddot Mr amp ~rs JsephNorris the ~ardinal founded to do mis- SERVI(E Tet 822-1181

sect(6nwork in Latin AmericaProvidence Pile Fabric Corp $50 St Stephens church was deshy

Robert L Germaine Inc o o

Atty amp Mrs JohriJ Harringshy OUR LADY OF LOURDF8 whose works also include tne ton $5 Massachusettsmiddot State House It

Simons Supply Co Inc Massasoit Hills Trailer Iark was first used as a CongregashyThe J L amp R Cohen Foundashy Inc

siglled by Charles BlJlfltJch

tienal church but with the influx ~ion of Catholics during the inlmishy

Nira WarehOUse Mart Inc West Harwich gration of the early 1800s it was $45 purchased by the Boston arch-

Drobyski Wallpaper Co HOLY TRINITY diocese $60 In 1964 Cardinal Cushing$40

Dr Harry Cooperstein Mr amp Mrs Theodore F Berg spent more than $1000000 W haus restore the building$30

Ashton Funeral Home $50 Magonis Ferry Landing Mr amp Mrs Manley E Boyce Priests COll1ference

$25 $26 STEUBENVILLE (NC) ~ A Atty Kenneth Sullivan Mr Captain William House group of priests here has fOJmed

- Mrs Lewis Morley Hathaway - $25 -- a CQnference of Steubenville ~nelal Service Cook Bord(l1 ~oha Gillahan Mr amp Mrs Priests to create a general

Co Dr Harry Levine Joseph lttiltpetteMr ampMrsJohn ~pirii of priestly fraterJ~iiy and l)rDa~id P~Iill Tyrells Mar- E Ke~ly ~r Mrs yen~j~ Cor- - professionalism Msgr 0

t Cascaltle Drug CoProfes- ra~o HarQJd~RmiddotMcK~nna ~Tolin A Cymbor pastor ()fStgt Qff~rincllid~SPeciaIILinlie9n~n~ $3 w~rf~ 0( ~ I~al ph~i-rnacy hr havills Mrs R R~ SmalI AnthonYThete~esect Church Piney F6rk

-- middote~rHolvitZampHorvitz Ryan MrampMr~_-JQnljMul- wasnamedtempotary chairman Ride TicketsFor additional details or reservatic5nsmiddot call Mrmiddot Conrad Feriamiddot at (4Ql) RE 14kgtOO collectl lC

High Point Fording Box Corp llnsMr-ampmiddotMrsAllgterf Daven- and chosen to repiesimt the _ ~ ~

A RossEvetett Motors port Mramp Mrs Frank Ball group at the initialmiddot meeting in

-uline Te~tile Co Eagle Mr amp Mrs John W- Anderson Chicago May 21 of the National ine Co Mr amp Mrs Paul Carney Federation of Priests coun(iMI

bull

~~ 1

Q I gt~ j

1tj _-_000 e

Comiddot

~ ~-

JUST OfF ROUTE 117

POINTmiddotRO~-_

SpecialSchool Outinils GjoupOffer $3 per Stuitentmiddot

father OWcopy) Sons Are OEd~glfDregd

BELMONT (NC) - Three members of the Habiger family -two sons and their fathershyare completing studies for the priesthood and will be ordained as Benedictine priests on June M

The lllabigers have prepared Jlor ~e priesthood at Belmont Abbey here They will be Qrshydained by Abbot Thomas Halmiddott shyman at St Benedicts Abbey in Atchinson Kans

John Habiger joined his two sons at Belmont Abbey after the death of his wife Mildred in December 1963 He said he did this because my wife and I just had an understanding that the survivor would give his or her life to the Lord

Before deciding to enter the priesthood Habiger had worked as a sales manager fOl a deep freeze home locker distlibutor

lHE ANCHORshy~urs May 23 1968

_ bull

II

Britista Cot1toIicI Suppolt New Bilt To Ovtlow Bios~

LONDON (NO) ~ 0aitJh0 ~ BeneFally appearr to be ~Ving strong BUPPOOt to the govemme~ controvemial new biJl 110 outlaw racial dls- crimination in Britain

Tile Catholie press glQ~~e bin Its blessing with some quBll shy iDeations Several Catholic anti shyaovermnent politicKms howshyweI have voiced oppositionshynot em principle they eblim but oocause they fear some sections of the bHl eould IIIggravate rather ampan mollify existing racism here by producing II privileged black and colored minority

The Race Relations Biil Which Is backed by the present Labor government and can reashysunably be expected to become law this Summer fs intended to i

strengthen existing legislation in this matter in view of the big rise in the number of Negro and colored (Indian Pakistani and as a labor pool manager for and West Indian) immigrants in the United States Air ForceFATHER AND SONS TO BE ORDAINED A father and his two sons will bethe past few years

Fellls Takeover m-d~ined June 14 to the priesthood at St Benedicts Abbey Church Artchi8on Kansas Nearly 2000 dock workers FoUo~ing the death of his wife five years ago John Paul Habiger (center) entereq the MethodlidsAdopt

quit work to delllonstrate BenedIctines joining his sons in the seminary Their nam~8 im religion are Father J~hJ) Project E~uaiityWJainst the bill and to sboW Igrlatius Habiger OSB (center) Father MatthewH~riy Habiger~ OSB (left) andsupport for the view o~ bullCon~ DALLAS (NC)-The ll-milshy2ervative party me~ber Eno~b F~thet Benedict John HabigeJrp OSW NC Photo li~)Il-member United Methodist ~

PPwell that Britain has too Church-formed by a merger l(Ilany elgtlQred immigranUi $50 $50 of the Methodist Church and

Powell had called for 8 vir WestpolIt Almon L Turner Holy Name Society the Evangelical United Brethshy tual halt to the entry of dependshy Thomas M Ross ren-has ill effect adoptedST GEORGE ST PATRICK~nts of colored immigrants and $45 Project Equality throughoutmiddot ~he$25 $250i for measures to encourage the United States Mr amp Mrsmiddotmiddot Leonard Langlois RobertE Eastman Re~ Tames F McDermottliepatriation of the immigrants The 1400 delegates to WleEveline Magnant Claire Magshy $25 $200 bull OtherWise he said black people QUldrennial General Confershynjllt Mr amp Mrs Roland McGee Dr Frederick G Doran ~ lDr amp Mrs Roger E Cadieuxwill take over whole areas ence adopted a resolution inMr amp Mrs Arthur Perry Landgraf Felix P Kaladin $125 Dnd I3cial violence will follow which the new church endorsesMr amp Mrs Donald Pittman Thomas W Whalen Thepnaa Mrs David M KilroyPowell was later ousted from Project Equality and recomshyMr amp Mrs Jacob Strunk Calisto Raymond P Paine $40his position in the shadow cab- mends cooperation both throup

Richard J McNally inet---the leadership that would participation and financial su~SandwichWoods Hole $30assume power if the Conservashy pori on the part of all United Fernand C E AuclairtiVe6 won control of the governshy CORPUS CHRISTI Methodist Ann u a 1 (regional)llT JOSI~IH Dr Thomas Clarkment - by Conservative party Conferences local churches 10shy$300 $350 John T ~mith

0leader Edward Heath who eal or national institutiomlPaul McCusker Rev William F Morristermed Powells speech racist $26 agencies or organizations$150 $100 William MoranAbstain From Voting Friends of Megansett Mr amp Mrs William Carr The resolution presen ted to

The House of Commons apshy $100 $50 $25 the Conference by the Methodshy

Leo A Bond Mrs Leonard Nproved the bill in principal ist ~neral Board of Christian lOr amp Mrs George Christman Mr amp Mrs Lawrence Perrault313-209 and sent it to commitshy Bilooeau Mr amp Mrs Francis Jr Social Concerns called Project$75 Dr amp Mrs J Minihan lKilgrew Mrs James E Sullivantee for additional study before Equality a responsible consist shyMrs Claudia Pendergast Mr amp Mrs Peter Becker Jrit is presented for fi nal passage Mrs Frank Souza Joseph Tin- ent ethical practical effective$50 Mi amp Mrs Robert KennedyTwenty-five Consenatives abshy Mr amp Mrs Cornelius Hickey Mother Cabrini Circle D of j

sley and positive means whereby the stained from the voting rather Sll ll~OMAS MORE United Methodist Church andMr amp Mrs John McCue Norman McEnaneythan fullow the palty line and $50 other churches can SUppOImiddott fail1Mr amp Mrs Emil Tietje $40vote against the bill Atty amp Mrs Richard N LaSalle employment practices intbe$35 Mr amp Mrs Francis CarpengerAlthough the British in the $2~ United StatesSt Josephs Womens Guild $35past two centuries have govshy In memory of Mr Y J Archshy $30 bull Mr amp Mrs Raymond Doucetteerned a large proportion of the 11mbeaultMr ampmiddotmiddotMrs ElmeiHallett $26 Oppose Cuts worlds black and colored $25 Mrs Charles Russell peoples it is a new thing for ~25 Mrs Margaretmiddot Harris Mr ampbull this country to have such peopie

Mrs Paul La Prade Thomas middotC H Berube MD Mr amp Mrsequal in law moving in by the Rooney Mr amp Mrs Charles Sefshy Joseph Silvia William J Dalton thousands and competing com

mereially and socially with ton Mr amp Mrs JG$eph Sylvia James W Blunt John Hart whites G Stanley Johnson Mr amp Mrs

Fred Comings Mrs Helen ClarkeThe new bill is aimed at outshy Oak Bluffs Mr amp Mrs George PereiraMYIllawing racial discrimination in

SACRraquo IIEAlltT Harry Walkerjobs housing hotels insurance and similar fields The most $125 The Percy Family Mrs Kay

Mr amp Mrs H~l1ry ~orey radical anti - discriminatioJ1 ~iggins ~ yenrsRalph Emerson measure ever Ploposed for Brit shy $100 yenrll Edith chamberlin Mr I

aIn it was introduced by the Reliable Market-In memory Mrs MIchael Cornick Mr amp yenrs of deceased loved ones govelllment of Prime Miliister Ernest Forni Jr

Harold Wilson not so much to $50 MI amp Mrs Shurtleff Mry deal with present circuinstances Mrs Corinne Fournier Ralph Jameson Mr amp Mrs Clemshyas with the future when the $30 mey Mr amp Mrs James Hamlen

A Friendproblem could become more Mr amp lVIIs Charles McHugh acute $25 Mr amp Mrs William Ward Mr

A Friend In memory of Mr amp amp Mrs Charles Pizzottimiddot Mr amp

Diocese Convenes Mrs Antone G Camacho Mr amp Mrs Charles Parks Frances Silva Mrs Thomas DeMont Mrs Rose

First Lay Congress M Peardon A Friend Seekonk BATON ROUGE (NC)The A Friend

first lay congress of the Baton Mr amp Mrs James L Kenney MT CARMELmiddot Rouge diocese convened at the $100 Catholic Lifc Center herc Ostellville St Vincent de Paul Society

More than 600 lay people repshy $50 OUR LADY 0 THEresellting the 12 civil paJishes Knights of Columbus

(~ounties) comprising the Loushy ASSUMPTION Mr amp Mrs Edwnrd McCrystal isiana diocese had the opportu- $50middot $25

nity middotto participate in matters The McKeon Family ToI11enS Guild Mr amp Mrs affecting diocesan finances the $25 Wilfred Blanchette middotMrbullamp Mrs

feasibility of continuingmiddotCath_ Mr ~ Mrs WiUiamHerron Edward Chal)~ler Mr amp Mrs Ciq education apart from the Manu~IJlendricks Jr HOlyName pu~gtlicschool systein the Ray ham ~9ci~ty Mr amp MrsE McPhillips Churchs il)VOlvcmcnt in social SJmiddotANNmiddot action admiriistrative middotstrllemiddot $90 Somerset

tures of themiddot Church and the Rev Thomas F Neilan ST JOHN OF GOD nymans place in diocesan 00shy $75 $150 ministratioa Cirino Dominic P amp Family Dr Americo B AlUehbl

SACRAMENTO (NC) ~ TheJSouth Dart~outh beads of Catholic charitable ST MARY agencies throughout CaliforniD

$125 have joined in opposing 00- Dr amp Mrs Paul E Corley 1~mptsof government to reduce

$50 public spending at the expense Dr ampmiddotMrs Victor Almeida of ihe needy and poor

$30 Mr 1 MrsWilliam Hines

]25 Mi amp Mrs Armand Borgesmiddot Mr amp Mrs Charles Nunes

Mr amp Mrs joseph MOlliz Jr The Johnson Family Dr amp Mr~ Archibald Senesac

Nantucket Sll MARY

OUR LADY OF THE ISLE $36

James E Worth $15

Grace Henry

9ffering You ~ SavingsPIQnsmiddot

lHlome Financingmiddot

WARFJI~~ (O-OP~RATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mass

Telephone 0 295-2400 flllnb-llv-Mall Servlu AYllIIIllII

Q

Check These Banking Services

bull Savings Bank life Insurance lleaDhtate Loans bull Chri~tmas and Vacation Clube

bull Savings Accoumiddotmiddot -

bull 5 CO~Yl1lient Locaiios bull - - middott

middotNEW BEDFORD INSTITUTImiddotONmiddot tor SAVINGSmiddot

12 -tAE ANCHOR-Diocesa ofFoti Rive~Thurs May 23 1968 l

$copylDfrTht ~$frml 1NJcopy1iU0il Wreg$U9gt[J1 JIl[OlLY CROSS OUIlt LADY OlF GIltACIE

$101 $50 Mr amp Mrs Donald L BergerOlll Rev Rene R Levesque

$100 $25Joseph P Kairys

Mr amp Mrs Orner Duqu~tte$50 Jennie E Overton Mr amp Mrs James R Jones SOWltrlm YIiUililOuii1mDr amp Mrs Thomas Berry Jr Mr amp Mrs John Pilz middotST pros X Mr amp Mrs Robert J Dray $150 John J Smith John F Martin Dr amp Mrs R Earl McLoud $100

$40 Anonymous 1IL F Bergeron $54l

$35 Philip J Hart Frank Ready Ano~ymous (2)

$30 $25 Dr amp Mrs Herbert L Evereti Edward P Hayes John J CarshyLouis Lyne amp Theodore Larishy roll Thomas P McDonough

mere Dorothy Schoonmaker Denis d Brophy Mary Geist Douglas Eo ~

$25 VampJl John Crawford Mr amp Mrs David Gomes M

ampMrs Leo R Schleicher Mr amp Mrs M J Hegarty Thomas F 1fltID01iJil~~ Gentile Mr amp Mrs EdwardlllL Slr JJOSEIPIHILoveday

Mr amp Mrs Robert E Coffey ~150

li$r Francis Welch Mr amp Mrs A Friend Leo F Sullivan Mr amp Mrs Robshy $40

Mr amp Mrs John Aiello I3ehleicher ltUt Downey Mr amp Mrs John E

Mr amp Mrs Gerald Tache $35

Mr amp M~ Arthur LeclairEast FaBmoutlh $30

ST ANTHONY VictormiddotL Brunette $275 Mrs Simonne Fisher

St Vincelllt de Paul Confer- Mr amp Mrs Edwin J Marmk ace Mr amp Mrs William A Olishy

voeira Mr amp Mrs Enos Days $21)

William Bartlett Mr amp Mrs Gerard Benoit Mr amp Mrs Nicholas F Tangshy

~y $25

Mrs Margaret Virgin Alice Bourassa Alexander Perri llIIllll lllli Braley Jr Dr amp Mrs Jell shyorne Brault

Cecile A Daley Mr amp Mra John I)ias Jr Mrs Mary P Gage Mr amp Mrs Ernest RLashysectesse Edward McGrath

Mr amp Mrs Leonard deMeshydeiros Mr amp Mrs Roland L Despres Mrs Irene FitzGeralcll Mr amp Mrs Edward Fitzsimshymons Mary Gogghi

Edmond Goulet Margaret Manghan Joseph C Mello Mrs Carmen Muldoon Mr amp Mrs Paul Murray

Margaret Nickerson Mra Edythe Rankin Mr amp_Mra Frank J Rezendes George Vishyveiros Mr amp Mrs JosephSevigny

Sli MAIlty

$81 St Vincent de Paul Society

$25 Sacred Hearts Association Raymond Dlugosinski Mr amp Mrs Manuel Allua amp

Nancy Mr amp Mrs Antone Costa J1l Mr amp Mrs John A Wojcik

SACRED IHIEARlr $25

St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ST IPATRRCK $iOO

Mr amp Mrs William BrennlUll $75

Anonymous $50

Mr amp Mrs Francis J Flynn Atty amp Mrs Edward Farrell

$30 Mr amp Mrs Albert W Lawrence

bull Major ampMrs Lawrence Uch-shymanowicz

$25 Mrmiddot amp Mrs Edward C Wen Jr John Keohane

Mr~ amp MrS JosephCardeIre Mr amp Mrs Melvin Dolan

Mrmiddotamp Mrs Walter Buguey Mr amp Mrs Robert Costa Mr amp Mrs John Kelliher John Lynch

Mr amp Mrs Thomas Magwre Mr amp Mrs Kenneth Paige

$30 lt $leo~ IJ=1J yltID Uilliil 0$ lllr amp MrsEdward McCarthJ7 lievbull~ 17 ~

Slr FRANCIS XAVlrEllt $2S st ~o Womeno CI~

Holy Name Society COO $450 Mramp RlIra Lee Kingsb~St Vincent de Paul Society $25 Mr amp lVlro Leo Parente

$300 Capitell Mr amp Mrs Richard Dr amp Mrs ~p Sibilll

Charles H McGrath Joan

Mr amp Mrs Larry Newman Sproul lllr amp Mrs Thomas ~$100 Loughlin Mr amp Mrs William Mr amp Mm GeorgeM~Doane Beale amp Ames E Donovan Mr amp lVlm Joseph FalDtoo

$50 Mr amp Mrs Harry SylvesterMr amp Mrs Frank J Dolan Mr amp Mrs Charles Flynn lltlr $25

A Friend Mrs Rockina CaftDoMr amp Mrs Irving Morrissey amp Mrs~ Marshall Field Mr amp amp Family Mr amp Mrs JOQD KmampJ R ~eyburn Mrs Robertmiddot Ryan Vetorlno Mr amp MrS Victor Narciso Mr IIMr amp Mrs John Hart Bros Ipc Fruitland

Scudder amp Taylor Oil Inc CarreiM Florist Mrs John Kinsley Dr amp Mrs Francis ONeil Ilflr amp Moo Wllliam ~

Captains Table Mr lie Mrs John Currivan Mr Bishop Tyler General Assem- McznsfieRdl Mrs Alfred Kuplast Mrs ~

My garet Jordan Mrs Grace Duma Charles J Ardito 8l MARY Mr amp Mrs Fred Taylor Josepla

$ltamp0 $150 E Donovan Jmiddotr Mr amp Mramp W tel Alfieri Catholic Youth Organization st VinceJntt de Paul Society

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SENDYOUR GnJFT TO bull i l j middotcrmiddotmiddot

The Rig Rever~ Edward TO~MeiJramiddot The IUght Reverehd RiJYlIWnd T CQnsidiRf lVallonarpfreclor Olt Diocesiul Di~ecto i

366 Fifth Avenue 368 North MalnSteet f(eWYork New Yo~k ioooi Fall River Massachuseits027l0 -

1iWJlE ADDRESS

THE sectOClllETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH ~ shy

I

~~ IiUrge Negro La Guidonce Boord ~n K~s~ Cety

KANSAS CJIIIY (NC~-A five-paltish cooperative illl

ner city ministry guided by a Negro lay board has been proposed os a way o~ bridging the gap betWeen the white Catholic CI1urch and the Negro community here in Misouri

A six-person committee headshyed by MrsThelma Work will identify the nee~ of the lComshymunity-Catholic or not-and to propose a structure fur meetshying those needs I

The action came as the result

of a meeting of the Catholie

V ~

Clergy Conference on Inner Oity bullneeds

Father James Lock chairman cited charges of the Black Cathshyolic ClergyCaucus in Detroit in conjunction with the IImnual meeting of the Catholic Clergy Conference on the Interracial Apostolate The Black Caucus statement said the Catholic Church in the United States 1s gtrimarily a white racist insti shytution which is rapidly dying in the black community and to which the black community no longer looks to with hope

On~ Out f li5 The Caucus recommended fha~ Harrison the Bishop Rev William J Hurley Rev DonaiiIll

white priests become supportshy E Messier Rear Rev Cornelu8 F Kiley Rey Robert A ers and learners listening tc McGowan Rev Edmund J Fitzgerald Rev Kevin F TrippNegroes to find out what tbeir lheir assignment~ are Olll page twoneeds are

The Kansas City-St Joseph diocese bas no Negro diocesan priests Ttrore~ DS~th~ Aoee Sl1m~PO rfif~ifflg tedera~ Jb ~~~

We are trying to start the wheels rolling for some kind of

~umlp~JrlMeFrot Nleereg~~rJ fr CmbCBi OW~iff1ychurch structure through which the black people of our diocese can voice opinions and partici shy WASHINGTON (lTC)-SPokesshy ment of public policy ~t Jlorth oommunity-based Social services esnie cultural values of ~hliv

pate in decision making said men for Protestant Catholic and in the Full Employment Act (l(f to meet Human and community country they said are sucll Father Lock Jewish organizations h a V e 1946 which provides for useshy needs Recipients of rondo that work becomes the basis by

backed federal legislation which ful employment opportunities should not conduct sectarian which a persons worth tnFather Dan Howe declared~

We have set up programB would provide one million jobs for all those able willing and programs judged A job not only tends ie i10r the nations unemployed seeking to work n determine an individuals acshygeared to Catholics in our parshy While they acknowledged that

ceptance by society but it alsish whom we have formed rn Their support was given in The Acts emphasis on education passage of this legislation would affects ones attitude abolll~the white mentality Since cl testimony before the House Seshy and training Training s1Mgtuld be no wre-all for the ills ci oneselfbest we are having contact lect Subcommittee on Iabor be open-ended so that the posshy poverty in America the spokesshy

with only about 2000 people out Studies have shown that unshywhi~ is holding hearings on sibility of permanent full-time men said that any attempt to of the 50000 in our area we the Guaranteed Employment employment beyond fIDe presshy combat poverty must provide employed persons have a ve~

can presume that the activities Act of 1968 ent situation is a reality Trainshy meaningful jobs low level of self-esteem anell we have structed as being our that this attitude tends to pro-ing programs of this ~Testifying were Father JohnChristian program of service do vide a self-fulfilling prophesrshould include basic educationMcCarthy assistant director ofnot reflect or reach black thinkshy MO~~U[ij] ~lW] ~O~S since it then becomes more dif~counseling and opportunities tothe Social Action Departmenting ficult to find or hold a joblearn about appearance manshy

E~GJHlll O]RDAllNJEID FOR IllmCJESJE Bishop Qgtnnolly m-dained eight deacons ro the priesthood for service in the Diocese 21t ceremonies oonducted at St Marys Cathedral Fall River Front Rev Edward E Correia Rev George Eo

We need a board of black of the U S Catholic Confershy OrJi1 AA~jjo Foreg[uGagement of income health IImdence Dr Grover Bagby of thelaymen to tell us what the pe0shy NEW YORK (NC)-Answershyother factors affecting personalDepartment of Social Justice ofple want to help change the well-being and development fog an appeal from the Ceylonthe National Council oftone to establish priorities government now fighting a mashyChurches and Rabbi Richard GFather Howe noted there are lWven fl Sellf-lEs~(()nim laria epidemic threatening 16Hirsch director of the Religiousapproximately 9000 Negro million persons the catholicAction Center of the Union of Involvement of private nonshyCatholics on the books but Medical Mission Board nere sentAmencan Hebrew Congrega- profit organizations Such Oll shynot necessarily active in Kansas by air Ifreight 364000 anti-mashytions - ganizations they said will c0shyCity out of a total Negro popu- laria tablets to Colombo Ceyshyoperate with the development ~lation of about 130000 They specifically suppoit4d lons seaport-capital The shipshyHe said that although the three provisions in the bill ment valued at $10746 conshy

structure of the lay board is yet Creation of an Office of Guarshy (cll)f AdldJrell$$ sisted of tablets for both ooults ro be determined it is the conshy anteed Employnient Opportushy and ~hildren sensus of 20 priests and laity at 1r~~regy Meefrolilregnity l8 a eontinued develop Earlier the CMMB respondingthe meeting that at least half

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-Theshythe lay members would be un- oro a plea for help from Indoneshyology must revolutionize it shyder 25 since the young people ~1JJlhJreg~ WODil$ [Q)~f sian authorities shipped 220shyself John Cogley former reshyare the thought-leaders in the 520 anti-malaria tablets ~aluedligion editor of the New Yorkblack community ~ial ~fit1hvllsW Times told the national convenshy at $7306

NeCeSS31lY ApPll03Cln SCOTCH PLAINS (NC) shytion of the College Theology so-A Negro lawyer Leonara BrotherHarold Woods a teacher The Catholic Medical Mission ciety IN the University m- SainHughes told the meeting at Union Catholic High School Board for 40 years has beenmiddot IfmiddotranciscoOne thlng is clear The clos- here in New Jersey has won a oonducting a worldwide mercy

Ing of any Catholic institution months delay to contest lim Cogley DOW a staff member cl program shipping medicines or cut-back in the inner-city order to report to his New York the Center for the Study m Deshy drugs bandages and various says one thing to Negroes We draft board for induction into mocratic Institutions Santa Barshy other hospital supplies and dont want you to be CathoUcs ~e Airmed Fo~ equipment to some 1000 misshybara Cal and editor of the Censhy

Father Vince~t Lovett dir~ BrOther B8rold la member of ter magazine tlgtld delegates that sion hospitals 4000 dispensaries tor of the new Diocesan Social theology must lead- rather than and clinics in developingAction office saidmiddot middotthe Marist BrotheJS had been eoUJlltriesfollow usemiddotits treasureS ratheT It seems to me we a- 4o_1krecJassified ll-A and Cllldered to than hoard them Liberatemiddot it shying about setting up something after rewmfug biB draft eard 011 self from its own prison ~ c0nshylike II couotywith II state goy- April 19 as a protem agaiDst the formity fear imd be dead Dbshyernment - a regional ministry U4o- actionism of th~ pastwithin tile diocese Be said the war VBallam

S~aking on The image off

WI report for Induction em April M

approach seems not so much lim The 22-year-old teachers ease ideal as lh necessitymiddot bas been taken up by the Amer-o Man as Citizenmiddot Cogley said

iean CDvil Uberties Union that the change in the religlO1Ul Which ealled middottbeboardll action mans self-image and the change

Silent Meditation in reclassifying him ~ new in the image of politleal man are TRENJON ~NC)-A bID pr0shy height of wegality Tbe ACLU not unrealated The image of a

viding for a period of silent said Brother Harolds religious free man redeemed from every meditation each day by students status had not collmged since he form of spiritual servitude and attending public schools was WIlI3 originally classified ~D subjugation he said b triumphshyintroduced in the New Jersey and that he hGd DOt ilrlterfered ing over the old image of eccleshyState Legislature by Assembly with the ndministratlon of the sia9Ucal man-a passive creature Speaker Albert B Smitlll 3eleet1ve ~ BWolltem eOOject ~ the Will ca ~thero

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THE At~~C~_ 15 Th M 231968 urs ~y World Communication Day CtmMG(f~ A~V[JK~$ObsecteWGR1CCe on S~ndl~w O[fi) ~copy~o~ A~fDcopy[jf)

WASHINGION (NC)-In response to an appeal by NEW ORLEANS (NC)-ArchshyPope Paul VI to the universal Ohurch the Church in the bishop PhHip M Hannan asshyUnited States will observe the second World Communicashy serted here As far as I am tions Day on Sunday May 26 The National Conference of concerned segregation in the

Church is dead We are past the Catholic Bishops awroved time for statements Now is thefor Motion Pictures and Bishoplast November the observshy time for actionClarence J Issenmann of Cleveshynnc of World Communicashy Tile archQishop of New Orshy

tions Day in this country on USCC Press Department land episcopal chairman of the

leans told delegates at an diocesan and parish levels ampnd archdiocesan conference on st) shy

members of the U S Bishops cial action I assure you we are going forwardCommittee for Social Commu- Senate Rev1ltews

nications have sent to individ- He outlined programs fe ual Ordinaries throughout the Continued from Page One beMer education for adequate country a cOpy of the Prayer lains to be assigned on a funmiddot housing and for recognition of of the Faithful for that Sunday time basis and that the needs the inherent digni ty of all men and a ooP1 of the Holy ~athers of the sick were being adequateshy The Church is exerting itll message issued earlier this ly met under the present arshy influence in every way to assistmonth ran~ement the poorest he said If we

It is recommended that the 3 Recommendations on salshy follow Christ we must begillilobservance in this country ary adjustments Taken into aeshy with the pOor even if thishave both religious and non- count _by Bishop in his direcshy means asking others to wait 0religious aspects The former tives for Aug I 1967 little longerwould highlight a Mass with 4 Meetings open to all clergy Anyone can live poor the

appropriate sermon in the 00- Bishop approved archbishop said The key thingthedral or some convenient 5 Extension of Synod prepshy is dignity This does not mean church to which executives aration time Bishop approved that this dignity is recognized Wld employes of communica- 6 Secretary to be Treasurer by a dole or a handout or eveD tions media would be specially and Senate budget Bishop apshy preferential treatment We are invited proved confusing issues when we talk

The non-religious asp e c t 7 ChOice of other Prayers of of dignity as if it can be bought would feature news conferences the Faithful Bishop approved or paid for he said articles in the press and radio 8 Referral of matters to Passhy - I am totally for equal oppollaand TV interviews and proshy tunity in jobs and for adequate

housing not just open housincgrams toral Council Bishop approved

In his message to the Church 9 Creation of Clergy Person-In human dignity everyone hasPope Paul invited Catholics to Del Board Bishop approved an equal right to education anell

consider the significance of 1() Clergy retirement policy to culture he declaredthe changes that are taking with Bishop accepting ormiddot not

AWARDS CEREMONIES At the annual Awards Day for hospital personnel at St Annes Hospital Fall River Manuel Benevides 38 years of service receives his award while Bertha Janson 42 years of service awaits her presshyentation from trustees Harold K Hudner left and Arthui Guimond right

place in this field (communica- according to diocesan ll1eed tions) under our very eyes and Bishop approved to ponder the serious responsi- 11 In-service training tor bJlities that theSe imply for one newly-ordained priests Bishop and all approved

Clamor forAttentlo~ 12 Various diocesan diredors Until recently the Holy to recommend men for middotpart shy

Father pointed out many did time or full-time further study not have anything more to Btim- Bishojgtmiddot approved 1IIate their inflection than vague 13 Full participation by memories of what they learned Catholics in middotYMCAyWCA ot school or in the family and programs Bishop aPlgtrov~ What they beard in their envi- 14 Rotation among religious ronment eomniunities of their represen-

Now however with the echo Uitives on Senate Bishop ap- r the press motion pictures proved radio and television clamoring 15 Clergy to recommend men lor attention new h~riZons oPenJor episcopacy Bishop applloved wide before them llIndmiddot they are 16 Lay Personnel pension ttuned to the throbbing life of plan study Bishop approved the ~niverse

Who will not rejoice at this 17 Adjustmentin diocesan progress Do we not 1111 see in assessments Bishop approved It a roadmiddotdestined by Providence 18 Clergy retirement study for the advance of themiddot whole Bishop approved of mankind There is room for 19 Bishop announced through all hopes if man learns to mas- Senate exchange of facultieS ter these techniques but every- between Diocese of Fall River thing can be lost if he shirks his and Providence responsibilities Various commfttees have made

Members of the bishops com- studies to implement some of mittee signing the letter to the these considerations Ordinaries included Auxiliarymiddot Senate representatives have Bishop Gerald V McDevitt of participated on a regional and Philadelphia episcopal moder- national basis regarding a nashyator of the United States Catb- tional organization of priests olic Conference Bureau of In- and its constitution and activity formation Bishop John A Donshyovan of Toledo episcopal chairshyman of the National Catholic Cursillo for Men Office for Radio and Television Bishop Christopher J Weldon Starts Tonightshyof Springfield episcopai chairshy

A mens ~ursillo win ~ginman of the Bishops qo~ttee tonight at La Salette C~nter of Christian Livingmiddot At~leboro Dishy

Delegate Recives rectors will be William Barnes of Marion and Rev GilesHonorary Degree Genest middotMS of the center

HONOLULU (NC) ~ Archshy Allmiddot eursillistas are invited to bishop Luigi RaimondiApostolicmiddotmiddot the firstmiddot anniversary of ultleya Delegate in the Unikld States middotmeetingsmiddotin the Fall River area baS received an honorary deshy at 745 Wednesday night May laquoree froIn Charninade College 29 at Sacred Hearts Academy here the only Catholic eollege Prospect Street Fall River A lID the state of Hawaii concelebrated Mass will be folshy In an Dterview with the Hashy lowed by a song session social

waUmiddotCatholic Herald ArehlSishop bour and refreshments Baimondi ~pressed tolerance Ul1reya meetings are schedshylor student activism in the Unishy uled in Attleboro oat Jettes ted States middotIltating Students Funeral Home Friday May 11 8ft adive everywhere Youth Monday May 27 Monday June ill UyiDg find its WBY aoc1 2 Friday June 14 and FridayecJar patterns of tbougbt IlBd June 21 eetioD e DOt lIS set asin pre A eursillo for W4)men is scbedshy paerationfl Cbolees were 1IIed for August and further inshy

-e fiSHthen tbin ~ tit formation is obtainable inla ~ -e LeSalleUe Centerbull --

You Live Better Electrically

trlc range bullbullbull with Iln ingenious oven that cleans Itself Make 8 clean break with the past bullbullbull and graduate to another appliance

that adds to the Joy of Total Electric Uvlng

Graduate to a ~fiameless electric range thatmiddotcleansits own ovenmiddot

Make 8 clean break~ with the past4

Why spend ~ours stooping scrubbing and scouring to clean your oven Why not grad- uate to a modern flarve1ess range bullbull with anoven that cleans itself electrically Its so

easy to use Set the controls and-zingo The oven cleans Itself (And drip pans) All you dois whisk awaya IIttie pOwder

- YOUll notice toothat a flamelessmiddot range keeps your kitchen clean cool a~d ~omshyfortable And because electric cookmg IS so automatic YOUll cook with pleasure So see

yOur appliance dealer about aflameless elecshy

See Yo~r Appliance Dealer or

FAll RIVER ~l~CTRIC LIGHT COMPANY

o

mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 23 196816 I

Mafttl[p)Dsellt $50 Raymond L W Benoit

$5BTANJrlllONY Jos~ph A Tully William J

$300 OLearY Mr ampMrs Alfred Baty ltlJbades McGowan Mr amp Mrs Fred Harney

$100 Mr amp Mrs Michael C ODonshyaarence G Verdi nell Mr amp Mrs ThomaS P Per~ lIugene F Phelan kins Mr amp Mrs John Kozlowski

$15 mosampry Altar Society

$66 Buzzard$ B~y I

iusan A McGowan ST MAJuiAR]ampTWilliam Keane

$SOshy$55 A Friendllohn P Delaney

$6$40 lIlr amp Mrs Thomas Pina

~h G Perry $25$35

Mr amp Mrs Edwin PaytonlInmothy Manning )l amp Mrs John KarlJfudge E C Horrocks J~

$30 Mr amp Mrs Edwin N Rose Wareham Lodge of Elks 15044bullbull Clayton King

Mr amp Mrs David Fannon$~

Mr amp Mrs John OCOnnellJames Downey Romeo Bedarql William Delaneyhnes H Gifford Mary M Chad Mr amp Mrs James Lopes

Wick George Smith Jr Antone Mr amp Mrs Louis Fougereshy-es Edmund Perry $25 Mr amp Mrs Armand Bedard

Mr amp Mrs Michael DelIsMark H McIntyre Teree JeminaBlossom Joseph Farley Robert Mr amp Mrs William BennettGIngras Real Breton Mr amp MrsLouis Eacobaoct

Jobn Tarvis Francis ODri9shyu Holy Nam~ Society Paull Glennon Joseph Zychowicz Central -VUlageIIaomas Renahan Richard SmiUll

ST JOHN THE BAPTIBJl

~50 bullNorth Dighton Mr amp Mrs John DeNadal

ST JOSEPH nolt Rev John P Hogan$156

IlR Vincent de Paul $75 Dr Peter F Piccinini$50

$25amp11 Name Society Florence I Bessette MrSt Josephs Womens Guild

$35 Mrs John J Ardagh Jr llim Raymond Williamsbull amp Mrs Joseph MWTaJ

Me amp Mrs Daniel TebreiN$30 J Jl)r amp Mrs William AcIamI Mr amp Mrs Robert Albanese

o Iohn W Perreira$5 Ch(ltham

Mr amp Mrs Joseph C Amarat 1lIJr amp Mrs Edward M Berobe HOLY ~EJI)EIEMEamp

bullbull amp Mrs Arthur A Ennes Mr $101 A Mm William Johnson Rose Pi Assqc of the SacredHea~ Mello $lOet

Mr amp Mrs Harold Mendoza Mr amp Mrs Robert Han lIffr amp Mrs Bruce Murph) Mr Col amp Mrs John McCa~ bull Mrs Robert Secatore $50

Mrs James Bell Jr St Vincent de Paul Sodeq Mr amp Mrs John J Cavanaup

IIMMACULATE CONCBPJIl[ON $30 $DOO A- Friend

Ambonymous $2-5 $a Chatham Trust Co Mr af

Anonymous MrS E Joseph Geller Dr~ amp MIlII Robert Harned A Friend (~)

Anonymous $75

Mr amp Mrs William Kent Mr amp Mrs Paul reF~vre Mr lIi$it

- Mrs~ Richard Sylva Mr amp MmHelen P Derby Patrick SullivanMr amp Mn Aibert Giordano

A Friend Mr amp Mrs Frank Dresseli Mr amp Mrs Philip S1iel]oA Friend Mr amp Mrs James Griffin shyAnonymous Mr amp Mrs Frank Wing _ImmaCU1ate Conception MenliI

Club $4G North Attleboro

Mr amp Mrs Raymond ~rgerotl SACRED HEART$35

Mr amp Mrs William Condoo $200 $5 Rev JOuter Lussier

Mr amp Mrs William Buchtman $30 Caesar Cardoza Mr amp Mrs RoT Mr amp MrsJeorge Merewe Howard Immaculate Conception $~ Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Joseph A Jette

Mr amp Mrs Co George Knapp $25 McCarthy Coal Co Mrs Fredshy Mr amp Mrs Paul Dion Mrbull elick H Murphy A Friend Mrs Frederick Fortin LionelL

Martineau Mr amp Mrs~ Philippe Rainville amp Florence

Mr amp Mrs George Beaulieu Sl lWAllUf A Friend

STMA-ElY$50 $150Mr amp Mrs Michael Murphy

Nelson GulskiMr amp Mrs Jose FernandesSIl $75$30 Rev Armando A- AnnunziabMr amp Mrs Thomas J Bryanamp

$50 Eva Morowski

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John HaugMr amp Mrs Roland Roberge Mr amp Mrs John StanfordDavid amp Martha Rocha M Veronica Reilly

Mary Cronin George Yefh Mildred Leary A ~riend

BreWSlfreli $4G Dr amp Mrs Domenie BalJiIe

OUR LADY OF TlIIE CAn $35 o $100 Dr amp Mrs Kenneth AtwiIl lllisBionaries of La saleUe jnr amp Mm JosepiL Dona

MONSIGNOR VI[lELSB

Heads Bishop$ Task force

WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr Aloysius J Welsh of Newark N J a recognized authority in race relations and social aclion work has been named to head the Urban Task Force estabshylished by the U S bishops

Bishop Joseph L Bernardin general secretary of the U S Catholic Conference who anshynounced the monsignors apshypointment said the task force was calhd for by the U S blsbshy

ops at theirmiddot April meeting in SL Louis in their statement on the mational racial crisis The bishshy

ops directed the task foree be established by the USCC Social[ Action Department

In this work he will cooperaW with MsgI George G Higgins director and Father John MeshyCartty assistallt director of the Social Action Department the bishop said

$30 Mr amp Mrs Frederick ThOIpG middotMr amp Mrs Clement Sbarolll

$26 Mr amp Mrs Andtew Boisvert Gertrude Cassi~y

Elizabeth Sheals $25

Mr amp Mrs Daniel J Cava- naugh Mr amp Mrs Raymond Bl~hard Mr~ amp Mrs Robert Brunelli A Friend

Mr amp Mrs Robert Gilmore Mrs James P Reynolds Mr amp Mrs John Donleymiddot Mr amp Mm James Battersby Mr Mn Jlohn bullCollins

Virginia G Robinson

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$150 Dr amp Mm LoneJglUl

~110 Mr amp Mm John CapoWglo

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$25 Mr amp Mrs Malcolm ~

Mr~ amp Mrs Harry Dowdall Mr amp Mrs RObert Geddes Mr~ I Mrs Frank Pistolese

ST JOlIN $200

In memory of Dn7 hwlbaDcI JIoseph F ODonn~

$100 Mr amp Mrs Raym9nd ENmlIlilll Anonymous Donor Inmemory of GabriGll lYaBltllloshy

alone bull $75 -

Rev Edwarcl A Ra~

Mr amp Mrs John P I4e $50

MaryL Wilhelm Mr amp Mrs J G WaJEll Jlr Mr amp Mrs Franclll Bo Mr Joseph ODonnell1 ~ amp Mrs Ernest ~

$30 m=teanor Robinqmiddot Alice~

ST JOSEPH $25

Counseil Jeanne DAre No 263

ST MARK $50 ~

Edward J Connors Jr $25

William J Roche Jr Joseph Dias Mrs Michael J Croke

ST MARY $50

Holy Name Society of St Mary Knights of Columbus Seekonk

Council Mrs Leland B Smith

$35 Mr amp Mrs Donald Blake

$~O ~r amp Mrs Henry E Woodcome st Marys Womeno Guild

$25 Mr amp Mrs Frank Padykula

Mr amp Mrs Russell J Sumner ST THERESA

$50 Mr amp Mrs Donald Boardman Mr amp Mrs George LeBeau

$30 William Cauley amp Family Mr amp Mrs George Boyd

0 $25 Mr amp Mrs RobeIt Generenl Mr amp MrsRobert St mlaiN

Taunton -HOLY ROSAILY

$30 Mr amp Mrs Russen Woodward stanley Radwansld

$25 Children of Mary Sodality Richard Januse

SACRED HEARi

$50 Mr amp Mrs Joseph S llosamp Mr amp Mrs Vincent BrimleF

$35 Mr amp MnJ Robert MeClellaml

_ S2i Walter Waltman Mr amp Mm

atephen Crosby The ~ Mr amp MrtI William Vaillan-

OOurt Mr amp Mrs Michael Barber

Mrs Margaret Rose llrtr~ bull II Frederick Reams

o

81 JAMES

$U Armand Desautels Tremblay Moving Iii 8tonlge

00mpany

STMABY $100

Dr~ Charles HoYt $60

GeOrge Dion Jr $51

Mr~ amp Mrs Kenneth $50

Mm A Hoffman Dr Normand ~ Mr amp M1lil J McNilmaN ar Dr John Fenton Mr amp Mrs Kicban sm

$36 ~ B Grant

~O Dr EdmWlld Fitzgerald D4niel A J Doyle

$U

Richard Barrington BIizabeCIa dIt Margaret Brady Mr - Mm kmea Bumtl Dr CarsiDbre e-- IlUOCi -Robert J mn JamesD hcige

Mr amp Mra Llocel IaImDee ftlomas Hoye Merrill lliaynard Jmelen amp Catherine McCariIll7

Alice McKenna Ruth MeshyJUona Susan McKenna II

Plan To B~ild

- See Us About ~

lotyCost Financing

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Mrs James McMorrow Franeb Mulholland

Mary Mulholland Ma~ Neenan Joseph ODonnell Eveshylyn Rice Agnes amp Joseph Rose

Mrs Joseph Rowley Robert Sullivan J Roger Torme1 Charles H fripp Rita Baker

Mrs James Bennett William Carney John Gonzals James Holmes Mary E McNamara

Dr Thomas~OBrien Cbarleo OConnell Mr amp Mrs Edwarcll OGara Mr amp Mrs John 00 _ Ilfearne MlJI amp Mrs Edward OKeefe

1he Ralph Reckard Famil1 Cecelia F lfi Mary C Sheerin

ST PAUL $150

St Vincent de Paul st Pauh Taunton 0

$100 Rev Cornelius~ltYNem

$50 Mr amp Mrs Edward Roster

$24 Mr amp Mrs John Medas Jr

$25 Mrs Catherine Campbell Mr

amp Mrs Chester Jackman Mr c1i Mrs Richard Silva Mr amp Mrs Leo Leroux Mr Mrs John Steen

Mr amp Mrs Donald Emond Mr Be Mrs Gordon Seekel Mr amp Mrs Charles Welch Mr MllIl Paul Silva

New Bedford HOLY NAME

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John Hallonm Mr amp Mrs Jacob Teser

ST CASIMIR $150

Beltr cutnir Kwiatkowski $109

Atto~ Ferdinand Sowa $25

Mr amp Mrs Joseph FoUrnier The Poczatek Family Mramp M Antbony Rijo Jr Mr Mrs Stanle Scbkk Eve White

I

ST BYACINTB $100 -

Mr Mrs George Vigeallltl $50

st Vincent de Paul ConferenCe Gf Hyacinth Parisb

Tum to Page Seventeen

CONRAD SEGUIN BODY COMPANY

Aluminum or Steel 944 County Seet

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2-6618

w H RILEY amp SON Inc

CITIES SERVICE IDISTRIBUTORS-

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for Prompt Delivery amp hoy amp Night ~ice

8 IE BOIlER BURNER UNITS

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61 OOItANNET Sf TAUNTON

AJdeb DfO - No- Attleboro

TountoIamp

(l

SUMY pons Nuns (l)ffi) AifrMdl~$o

Re$M~~e~o trMture D~[freg~UDrru~ WASHINGTON (NC)-Resulto

of a survey of all United States nuns reveals a high ooceptance of post-Vatican II changes anell an eagerness robecome morrc involved in the inner city and poverty apostolates

The B1UVey conducted bythe Conference of Major Superiors of Women dlJring 1966 was the first extensive attempt to assess resources and attitudes of reli shygious communicenties c1 women and their memberll in the United States

The JPecific coal of the surshyvey was to assess the resources and determine 1ampIe responses that Religious are making and ean make to the invitation 13shysued in Vatican Us Decree on the Renewal of Religious ~e

More than 135000 Sisters parshyticipated in the survey respondshying to 649 questionnaire items covering religious beliefs atti shytudes toward change edu~shy

tional background present ocshycupation and future plans comshymunity life and proposals for future ohange

Results were processed by 00 Sister-sociologists across the country with the use of comshyputers

llleason for lIAlavnng The survey showed 1827 oil

the 175000 U S Sisters-107 per cent-left religious life durshying 1966 Of those Sisters only 869 had taken final vows In an interview with the NC News Servicemiddota spokesman for the Conference of Major Superiors of Women (CMSW) said most Sisters who have remained feel that a major reason for the inshy

ltereased number of Sisters leavshymg religious life is an increased ~penness to the idea within the lfcligious community

She said that the increased fucus on personal development has caused many Sisters to see that they are not suited to the religious life and that they will find areater personal fulfillment elsewhere

Statistics on be division of labor among U S Sisters show 72 per cent are teachers eight per cent are involved in health work five per cent in catechetshyill~ and missionary work lmd tbr~ per cenmiddott in welfare work

Seventy per cent of the teachshyem ore in elementary school work 195 per cent in high school education and 68 per

eent teach at the college level Of those involved in health care 18 per cent in health administration and 62 per cent in direct care jobs

lEnter New lFienlll1s The survey showed Sisters

have a strong desire to become involved in adult education inshyner city work pre-school teachshying and other s~ial work and to have greater contact with their local community Nuns expressed eagnerness to enter fieldc where few Sisters are now working In 1966 13 per cent ot U S Sisters were engaged in adult education 82 pel cent in speshycial education 31 per cent in poverty work and 06 per cent in migrant education The surshyvey indicafes that there will be a dramatic change in these figures in the next few years

Father Considine Leaves PC$tr Continued fC0m Page One

man of the U S Bishops Comshymittee for Latin America

Bishop Bernardin prai~ed the work of Father Considine in the Latin America Bureau noting

iota progress under his direction since its inauguration in 1960

It has been a labor of love for Father Considine he saici whose long standing interest in the people of Latin America and of other developing areaa is well known

Maryknon Father Considine will return

to his writing and teaching asshymgnments at Maryknoll Ossinshy

lng N Y where he had served as publications director before becoming director of the IAiltin

America Bureau He holds editorial and advishy

lOry posts with several internashytional organizations and servell DS a member of the Council OIl

Foreign Relations He was amp

member of the National Advishysory Council of the Peace Corps from 1961 to 1966 He also founded and directed Fides Inshyternational Service in Rome an Information and research unit of

the Holy See He was born Oct 9 1897 C1shy

1-

~ATIlGR CONSIDINE

da1ned in 1923 and received II

licentiate in sacred theology from the Catholic University of America in 1924 He has reshyceived honorary degrees from Fordham University Manhatshytsnville St John University St Benedicts Atchison and is the author of 10 books on Latin America Asia and Africa and hall edited several others

L9ng-Range

Father Considine Sllid that he IlIaW the Latin America Bureau as set for the proseution ~ tl

vigorous nation-wide program 10 serve our Latin American eonfreres for the next- generashytion through the year 2000 -and into ~ 21st century He felt lIlllch 11 long-range view was necessarJ because at stake are important socio-religious adshyVDnces among hundreds of milshyHons cd people Latin Americas leaders need time for these advances

Be pointed out thatsome of the best Church leadership tbroughout the Catholic world today is found in Latin AmershyICD In turn he noted our U S bi~hops are quietly acceptshying international responsibiliti~s

as never before Father Considine said that the

program of the U S Bishops Committee for Latin Americn ~ablishes the heavy day-to-day work of the Latin America Bureau

Jgtersonnel Father Considine said that

llIODle 60 per cent of all U S apOstolic personnel overseas throughout the world works in Latin America with more Ulan 600 Latin American parishes served by U S priests Major Superiors of women ha~e 2500 Sisters in Latin America PAVLA has put more than 800 laymen there for three-year terms and U S bishops hnv~

more than 300 priests working in Latin America Annual fundshying for Latin Amerietl by U S Catholics ~~ $1f) millioll

SJJREET SCENE This was a busy street scene in the nations capital at the encampment of the Poor Peoples Campaign near the Washington monument More than 100~OOO- protestors are expected to be in Washington for Memorial Day NC Photo

OUlll lLAIDY OlF ll1HI1amp

ASS1lJMJgtJlJlON $26

Clara Rose amp Family $25

Mr amp-Mrs Jose F Cruz St Martin de Porres G~

Mi CARMEL $100

In memory of Mr amp Mrs J~ ilino Simoes

Rev Antonio P Pinto middotCM $75

Rev Azitonio P Pinto em $60

Mary i Ltuiz $50

Mr amp lVIrs Albino daSilv8 1IIt Carmel Womans Club

$30 Manuel Bettencourt Mr amp Mrs Kenneth lltinu

John Rodrigues $26

Olivia M Luiz $25

Cecelia Bettencourt CbildYeli of Mary Mt Carmel ~ouft

Units James Perry Mr amp lnl Manuel G Souza Jr

Mr amp Mrs Arthur Caetano Mr amp Mrs Charles Frate Mramp Mrs Lauran Silva

OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HE]P

~26

Mrs Amelia E Bariteau $25

Dr amp Mrs Francis Green

OURLADY OFPU~GATOB~ l)1I00

In memory of Alex J Ka1He from Cltpe Coo Sportswear ~

lnc Fairhaven Lumber Co

$30 Atty George R Morad euroJ

Atty ~e E Morad $25

Josephine David 1bl mlE1lllllOllY of George A EI-Hillow Mr ampgt Mra ~rge JThomas Mr amp IIIlm Hykel G Simon

ST KIlldAN nSO

Rev WilMeT J Boekley

U~~ amp Wmeentde PaW ~

~ iWa1 1kntley

$2S AlmgeAo OH1feira

SAClllIampDlHlJEAlltT $25

Alexander Caruso

c S11 JAMES

$55 rulllbull amp lVIrs Francis O Quinn

$50 lilred Kelley

$40 William OMalley

~1 A Friend

$3~

Mr amp Mrs Jr Hugh Barry $25

Mr amp Mrs Andrew ONeil Mr 8 Mrs Robert Arnett

ST JOSEPH

$450 sa Josephs Church Societies

$70 Mr amp Mrs Maurice Dansereau

1130 II Mr amp Mrs Luigi Fiano lk Fmniy

125 Mr amp Mrs Thomas Weaver MI amp Mm Maurice Lamonshy

tagne Mrbull Mrs Raymond Rondel1

ST TBERIESA $100

Eugene Lemieux

Sturtevant 6 Hook lEst 1897

Bude~s Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New ~dforcJ

996-5661

THE ANCHOR- ~ 7 lfhuvs May 23 1968

~regreg [copy~G~ ~O~

Oa1l ~MOO~ []M~Orru NEWARK (NC)-A charge (l(

apparent ~racial discriminatiom in the assignment of tenants 00 public housing here is Oontainoo in s report issued by the New Jersey Advisory Committee 00 the U S Commission em CiWl Rights

It said the Newark Housing Authority follows a policy ef permitting people applying fOlr placement in public housin~ projects to choose the project tm whieh they want to live

lit said this policy has ~

llributed to the segregation Cl1I public housing and recomshymended that t1he policy 00 abandoned in favor of first-come first-serVed basis

The report noted that Q01l1li vast housing projects nre locatell in Newarks Central Ward-tho scene of widespread noting D year ago and of two massiv~ firo disasters this spring-and tll~

they are more thanSO Negf~ ~ccupied

It further charged that them Js U a disparity in maintenanceo between the predominantly N~

gro and the rgtredominantly whi~

projects a complaint lIiTegNgt leadership has frequently medea

It termed living conditiom b the Central Ward projects opshypressive and that the proj~cto

are JIOor)y designed llt recomshymeld~d that additionaI ~ev areas for young children ~Gl

meeting places for odww ~ teenagers be provided

Higher ~arnings

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amfACi MANAGERI - UNCOLN PARK 999-6984 636-2744

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs May 23196~

The Parish Parade OUR LADY OF ANGELS SACRED HEART WALL RIVER NORTH ATTLEBORO

Altar bOys willsponsor a cake The CCD program will be lJ81e Sunday May 26 following canonically established Friday Iill1 Masses June 21 the feast of the Sacred

Masses today the feast of the Heart The program will include Ascerision will be at 7 and 9 a 730 evening Mass followed AM and -1215 4 5 and 7 PM by proclamation and reception Confessions will be heard be- of CCD members and a social ~re each Mass hour

The Summer Mass schedule CCD students in grades 6 to will begin Sunday June 2 with 12 will attend a folk Mass and Masses from 6 to noon on the sing-out at La Salefte Shrine hour Monday night May 27 Tnose

Monday May 27 through Fri- participating will leave the ooy May 31 there will be church school yard at 645 and will be services at 7 each evening The returned at 930 living rosary will be sponsored Confirmation ceremonies will by the Holy Rosary Sodality be ~ld at 730 Sunday night Monday night the Council of May 26 Catholic Women on Tuesday ther societies on Wednesday and Thlusday and the Children New Bedford ~ M~~ on lfrIday

ST MARY HOLY NAME $25iALL RIVER Mr amp Mrs Roger Goyette

Contemporary music will acshy The Shea Family company the 1115 Mass Sunday Mrs Vivian Wegrzyniakmorning May 26

New CYO officers are Robert ST LAWRENCE amplois president Paul Durin $200 rice-president Polly Rockett Dr amp Mrs Stanley Koczera eecretary-treasurer A Friend

$125 OUR LADY OF FATIMA Dr amp Mrs Robert Srnan sWANSEA $106

The Womens Guild will hold William E King Its annual penny sale at 730 $100

Monday night May 27 in the Dr amp Mrs William Walsh ehurch hall on Gardners Neck $75 lRoad Rev William F OConnell

A Penny Sale will be held Dr amp Mrs James Bolton MondaYMay 27 at 730 in the $60 dlurch hall A Friend

$50 IMMACULATE CONClEPlIION Teremiddotsa Ruth amp John HarneyNEW BEDFORD Victor T Kondi

Parisnioners will celebrate John L Powell rthe feast of Santo Ohristo this Loretta Lamarre Sunday with a roast beef dinner $45 served from noon to 2 with Mrs Mary B Wheatoil

tickets available at the door $40 lRefreshments and entertainment Mr amp Mrs John Connor will be on the afternoon and Mr amp Mrs Thomas J Longevening program $35

A procession and auction will Mr amp Mrs James M Kearneyfollow the dinner with various Mrmiddot amp Mrs Leo St Aubin Holy Name Society units parti shy $30 cipating in the procession Mr amp Mrs Albert Anderson

Mr amp Mrs Joseph Griffin OUR LADY OF V()T(RY Mr amp Mrs Walter L9veridgeeENTERVILLE Mr camp Mrs Myron Tripp

New officers of the Womens $28amptiild are Mrs John J Pendershy Patricia Connor ~st pre~ident MrS James Murshy $26 phy and Mrs John McBarron Mr amp Mrs Thomas SullivanVoice-president Mrs George Mr amp Mrs Charles BerryReale recording secretary Mrs $25 Richard Griffith treasurer Mr amp Mrs Robert Bedard

A Communion dinner at Mr amp Mrs Albert McMulleneummaquid Inn will follow Mr amp Mrs Theodore J CalnanlB30 Mass Monday night June Mr amp Mrs Alfred Couto Mr amproo Mrs Gilbert Noonan of Falshy Mrs Manuel Guerreira Josephmouth will speak Reservations P Mullen should be made with Mrs Edshy Agnes Proctor Mr amp Misward Welch or Mrs- Stephen Joseph Porter Mr amp MrsOBrien Jr by Thursday June 6 James Ryan Mr amp Mrs Paul

saunders ST THERESA Mr amp Mrs Merton WalkerSOUTH ATTLEBORO Mr amp Mrs John F SullivanMiss Patricia Makin of the

Diocesan CCD Board spoke at the annual Communion breakshy Fall River fast of the Confraternity of

ST MARYS CATHEDRALChristian Mothers Fourteen $50 new members were received at

Gertrude OLoughlinthe monthly meeting arid new officers were installed by Rev $26

In memory of Caroline CasellaGerard J Chabot moderator $25They include Mrs Patricia Helen Burns Mr amp MrsBiziak president Mrs Georshy

George Johnston Corky Rowgette Vachon vice-president Club Rits OLaughlin FrancisMrs Kathy Lamarre treasurer amp Lena MoranMrs Dolores Leedham and Mrs

Mr amp Mrs Carlton GastallBeverly Sousa secretaries Mrs Raymond Reynolds

~CULATE CONC~ON BLESSED SACRAMENTlAUNTON $200A Spring Social and D~nce Rev Herve Jalbert

for the benefit of the church $50sponsored by the Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Michael Felixand the St Vincent de Paul Soshy $36ciety will be held Friday May Mr amp Mrs Richard Hamel24 from 8 to 12 at Lewis Lodge $30Winthrop Street Route 44 A W Root Beer StandTaunton Refreshments will be served Tickets are $200 per lIIIOLY CROSS person and wiU be available at $50 the door Holy Rosary Sodality

lt

PATRIARCH His Holishyness Vazken I of the Armeshynian (Monophysite) Chu~h which comprises five-milli~n communicants in the Soviet Union Near and Far East and the Americas is visiting in the US He paid a visit to the National Shrine of the

Immaculate Conception whilein the nations capital NC Photo

NOTRE DAME $40

The Anne-Marie MasSe fami17 $35

Conrad N Desmarais $25

Norman J A Belanger Rose D Perron

HOLY ROSARY $30

The DePaola Family $25

Mrs Philomena Germane

~CULATE CONCEPTION $50

A Frie~d $40

Mrs Diolinda Wilson $26

In memory of Charlotte DJicholson

$25 Holy Name Society Knights

of the Altar A Friend MlU7 Whitehead John R Burgess In memory of Daniel R Be

Manuel R Pimental Joseph Francoeur

SACRED HEART $l)O ()

~ Katherine D Adams $75

Mr amp Mrs William J Sullivan $5~

Margaret Morriss M~ry V amp Alice C HarrlngtoD Frederick B McD9nald

$31 Frances Mmiddot Cummings Mary C Cummings

$30 Mr amp Mrs John J HarrlngtOil

$28 Florence M Sullivan

$25 Vincent DAndrea Edward

Leary Mr ~ MrsN J Meyer Mary Louise OSullivan John J Sullivan middotMargaret F Lowney

ST MICHAEL $25

Manuel Rogers amp Sons At~

Manuel M Rezendes Henry Leshytendre ~eonardo Cabeceiras

Gerald Mulrooney A Friend edf Catholic Charities

ST ANNE ft JI08ZIII $30

Mrs Rhea Saurette 101at Vincent de Paul ConferenceIrene Theroux leapt amp Mrs Joseph J OCoDshy$26 nellThe Gauthier Family $25

Mr amp Mrs Reginald lerive

A Friend

Belshy $50

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J OCo nell k

$30 St rosephs Mens Club

ST ANTH()NY $25 OF THE DESERT Mr amp Mrs John L Mercer

$100 Mr amp Mrs Daniel W OCoDoshyChor Bishop Joseph Eid nell Dr amp Mrs James J Sabra

$25 SANTO CHRiSTO Rev Kenneth A Michael Mrs August Badway $50

ST ANTHONY OF PADUA $125

Rev Josephmiddot M Ferreira $100

Atty amp Mrs Milton R Silva

StVincent de Paul Society $30

Rev Ernesto R Borges $26

Mr amp Mrs Alfred 1 Cam~ $25

$50 Franco Family Singersmiddot

$25 Mrs Sofia Pacheco Antonio T Cabral

Mary amp Beatrice Costa~ SilD

CnristO Credit Union Manuel Medeiros Laureano Silva

AFriendFrank B Olivei

YDUR SONTHE PRIEST

HI HOLY PATHERS MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL DMURDH

A FUTURE

PRIEST NEEDS

bull SOMEONES HELP

TRAiN ASfSTER

Tau

HUNGER CANT

WAIT

Deai MonBr~orNolam

Please

return couponwith your

offering

Have you ever wished you had a son a priest Now you can hlilve a priest of your own-and ahare forever In all the good he does _ _ Throughout the Near East this month grateful bishops ara ordainlng new priests trained by people like youbullbullbullbull Their own families are toe poor to support them In training but good catholics In America adopted these semIshynarians encouraged them all the way to ordinashytionbullbullbullbull Insome Inspiring cases this support was given at personal sacrifice How can youbegln7 Write to us now Well ~end you the name of ~ young seminarian who needs you and he will write to you Make the payments for his training to suit your convenlence ($850 a month or $100 a year or the total $600 all at once) Join your sacrifices to his and at every Sacrifice of the Mass he will always remember who made It possible

4

Native Sisters In our 18 developingcountries are teaching children of the poor preparing them for First Communion giving medical care to leplrs cal)cer sufferers the aging A SisterS training Ialts two years costs $1250 a month $150 a year or $300 altogetherbullbullbullbull Well send you the name of a Sister you can train as soon as we receive your first payment She will pray for you and write toyou

n An9 day now you may receive a letter contalnn the Holy Fathers appeal for the forgotten Arab refugees-l4 million people without a country bullbullbull most of them destitute bullbullbull more thari half of them childrenbullbullbullbull By trelnlng these children foi middotfuture selfsufflcel]cy we can help brln peace and new selfmiddothelp to the Holy Land atlll divided by warbullbullbullbull But why walt for your mal Hunger cant walt Neither can peace Send your amplIft now in any amount ($500 $200 $100 $75 $50 $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 $2 $1) and the Holy Fathercan put It to work right away Qril1 $10 wlllleed family for a monthl -----~-~---~~---~-IlNCL08ID PLllAIl PIND $_ c_O~__ rFOR _

NAMI ___~

8TRIU ~~=

OlTt ~_eTATIl_lrIp OODII-

NIAll lAST WIILFAAI ASSaDIATtOrlaquo

NEAR EAST MISSIONS J

MSGR JOHN ClI NOLAN Natlonal5ecretary Write CATHOLIO NIlAR EAST WeLFARE Assoo ~30 Madson Avenue New York NY OOU telephonel 212vtJkon 6middot5840

CATHaLiD

19 DiJoridrrien Ere State r ourlitei

SChoelbOY leag~~Wmrn~regr~ Stii~Pretty Mu~h sampu [j)(Q)Mbt

By PETIm BARJrEK Nmon BitIh ~h

The gehooboy ba8ebaD mmpaignis cllNimatieaDy near- Inlaquo the climax of another spirited seasoo With approxishymately a week of competitioo Nllllaining oontlmdmg teams Me stmggling to keep their pennanf oopes alive while Wtling for the right to rep-JIe8eDt their ll e s pee t i v e leaguesin the nnand-eomin

-y- shy

Btate tournament The Eastshyem Massachusetts ehampionahip

baseball tournamen+ ClIffiMftl-~

tine of the wurney is tiPoDOOred bythe

II a II sac h u~_ lt Iietts Secondary

SChool Princishypals Association bull Par tie i p 8 t _ ing schools have bElen divided i IIl tot h r e e d3ses - A B and C---llccord- Peter iDg to leagues Blrtek r

and comparable independent teams Action tn all three clasampe3 starts Saturday June L

In addition to the three divishyidon3 the baseball tourney amp1shyem radically JIrom the popular

Two Spots for Both BCl (IDnd Marry Five Bristol County League Howard Ferguson which teams

teams Gre still in contention for will represent the circuit in the tourney play ebampionship event

At this writing Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Stang SpaltamJ of Qartmouth who hold a lllim ene-game edge over their rivals are a solid choice to annex one of the two berths to be filled bi BCL teams The second spot 18 un literally up for grabs

Bishop Feehan High of Attieshyboro which led the circuit untll last week Durfee High of Fan River Attleboro and Taunton lire in close pursuit middotof Stang hoping tomiddot overcome the Sparshytans or at least lInish in the league runner-up berth Both the first and second place finshyishers will8utomatically qualify

If either fim OX second place II decided by Monday May 21 league officials w~ have to DOUty the tournament Director

No~tons Lancers in Need cf Help I h e Narragansett league Class B - Southem

whkh got a head start on the its Iud Old Colony champ ft NaITlIlshyv er area Clrcu conc es gansett runner-upleague play today First place

middot Somerset travels to New Bed- Narragansett champ ~ Olcll ford to meet Holy Family High Colony runner-up Case High of Swansea entell-middotmiddot South Shore champ VB Hockshytains Dighton-Rehoboth West- omock runner-up port hoss Msgr Prevost High Hockomock cpamp vs South

middotof Fall River and Dima]l Voce- ShQre runner-up tional nlso of Fall River will 0I Am f N rth E stobe t Se k Iver es 0 0 a n a e o~k

Entering the final week of ac-middot middot tion Somerset and seekonk are in the top two spots in tbe 8tanding They loom the more likely to corral Class B tourney berths But DightOn-Rehoboth Case and Westwrt trail the sec ODd place club by oIl1yone game If the race ends in II tie ]league officials wlll have ample time to schedule play-off games before the tourney deadline

Pairings for Class Bare

Selecting Union PITTSBURGH (NC)-Twentyshy

five maintenance workers at Duquesne University here in Pennsylvania have left their jobs pending a detell1llnation as to which union will represent the workers The remaining 115 members of the maintenance erew lIlre not involved in the atrike which was called by the 2li who are represented by the tJmted Electrical WorkersUnion

Although it occurs infrequentshyly a team does not have to win Its league to represent its league in tourney eompetition

The Bristol County league champion is slated to play the

bull Bay State League runner-up in first round action with the Bay State champs taking on the County runner-up The winners would then meet in second round play

Pairings for Class A are Class A - Southem

Suburban champ w Middleshy8llX runnerup

Middlesex champ ft Suburshyban runner-up Bay state ehamp VB Bristol runner-up

Bristol champ V8 Bay sta~ runnerup

-Tech lxlsketban competition lllll order to qualifyfor the Tech a team mt1BSt win 70 per cent cd its games but onlythe leagu~ champions ond runner-ups M~ eligible ~r playmiddotiImiddotbasebalL

In both Class A andClass B iitOtalof i6 teams will qualify 1lt7middotmiddotmiddotJiY

for the diamond elimination event~ E~~ Will pai1i~ipate in

the nortlHln division and eight in the southern bracllet The winners in each bracket will meet in the Eastern- Massacilushy

llletts fi~ Preliminary games will be played on June 1 4 and 6 The finals are scheduloo June 8

Class C competition will coIi-BiEt of eight clubs in only one division Titlists in seven smallshyDChooI le1gues and one indeshypendent selected by the tournashy

ment coJiunittee Will comprise the field fur this tliil-d group

and Mansfield 1m the Hockoshymock circuit appear to be out of the running this season

Fo~ Class C schools Its Winmiddot or youre out Only the league champions will play in the championships The winner of the Capeway Conference will meet the Cape and Vineyard champ in opening round play Dennis-YarDlQuth and Sandshywich are the likely opponents

The only other school located within the confines of the diocshyesan territorial limits that has an outside ~hance of qualifying for the tournament is Norton of the Tri-Valley Conference The Lancers however will need some outside help if they are to overcome league leading Millis The Tri-Valley champs will take on the Dual County League champions Defending Class C champ Ashland again leading the Dual Co~nty is heavily favored to repeat both in league ond state competition

NOT A BALL-ITS GUM Yem might get the idea that a pitched ban is lodged in the mask of this young Vancouver BC catcher but it isnt a ball This young ma is trying to prove he is just as efficient behillld the plate as he is at blowing bubble gum NC ~middothoto

Stresses Inter~cicdmiddotmiddotPartnership As Solution to Racial Problem

CLEVELAND (NC) - A Nashy world would be better off lr tional ASsociation for Advanceshy iou hadnt gotten involved Jm

ment of Colored People official asserted here interracial part shynership is the key to oolution of the racial problem but it cannot be a partnership dom inated by either race

Dr John A Morrell NAACP assistant nat ion a 1 director speaking at the Cleveland Cathshyltnlic Interracial Councils annual Interracial Justice Awards banshyquet said the nation today is aj an unprecedented crossroads but the interracial way is the democratic part to justice

He spoke in place of Roy Wishydns NAACP national~ director who was with the U S delega- tion at the United Nations con vocation on human rights lin Tehran Iran -

Angry Voices There are angry Negro voiees

raised in protest because develshyopment of opportunity in recent years does not apply to twoshythirds of the Negro population he saidmiddot The kind of jobs they are capable of filling are vanshyishing from the economy he added

But if a fruitful partnership is to continue between the white and Negro the burden of know- ing the truth about Negro hisshytory must be borne by white as well as Negro Dr Morsell said

Vie are all fighting a bitter legacy of generations White people have to know where they stand and why Once you assume the burden of work toward interracial justice you assume the responsibilities be continued

If you are not going to ~

sume them then you and fhe

the first place Informed PariDership

Dr Morsell said a mere sPirit of commitment is not enough to

survive over the hard going Work must be based on a part shynership that is informed intelshyligent understanding and resil shyient he said

The interracial awards were presented to Father Edwan Camille assistant Catholic Charshyities director here and Thom811 C Westropp president of Womshyens Federal Savings and Loan Association

Westropp was cited for his efforts towards opening the

doors of banking and credit 1m the Cleveland area to all ciUshyzens regardless of race creed 011

color while Father CarniDe was cited for his leadership as director of Project Peace (~

irner-city diocesan organizati~ working with the poor mostly Negroes) and for his work as co-chairman of the first tri-faith Greater Cleveland Conference on Religion and Race

ELECTRICAl -Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

SS lPlE1rIEllt amp JgtAIDlj

$103 Womens Club Rose E Sullivan

$50 Joseph P Conaty

$35 Belen M amp William J

De7 $33

Mr amp Mrs James F McMahcm $25

Mrs Margaret Daly amp Mary John Dolan ~illiam Daley amp Mary Esther Mr amp Mrs Stanley M -laniek

~50 In memory of MrsMarga~

W Pow~rs RodneY S DeCecco

$26 Mr amp Mrs John Soula

$25 Edward Healey Mr amp Mrs Michael McCartbiY Mr amp Mrs James Crosson Mrs Gertrude Lomas Mr amp Mrs Norman GagnOOl

ST JOHN TEE BAPTlIS11

$30 St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ampt Jean Baptiste $25

Mr amp Mrs Ovila Caron Henri Demers

In memory of Mr amp lVlrm bullWilliam Sheehan

Open to An PORTLAND (NC)-The seeshy

ond annual Catholic youth conshyvention of the Portland Diocese has opened the convention to all Catholic students of the dioshycese in order to spread the agtOlgto tolate of youth to youth Thll

)faine convention has comprised only students who have takes themiddot youth leadership trainlJnl1 courses

Dont Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH

DO faJse teeth drop slip or wobblo when you talk eat laugh or sneeze Dont be annoyed and embarr1lEsetll lkllh hanl11caps FASTEETH Bamp

e (non-acid) powder to SPr1n~Ikle on your plates keeps false teetb more firmly set Gives confident feel~ Ing Of security and added comfort No gummy gooey taste or feellncr Dentures that 6t are essential to health see your dentist regulorly oet FASTEETH at alll1rug countemJ

o

WYman 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD MASS

IfIIfJltk del1WM

S H~~uO~ Oil

SAVE MONEY 0 OUROILHEATI bull eatt

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

Iritai~ If S)crap SuPPITreg~~5n Acts Of Re~(j[jmlt~oml

LONDON (NC)-It looks as if Britain is at long last glOing to stop suppressing the monasteries-officially that 0

Legal experts sifting through lenturies of forgotten laws clutshyooling the records have found (hat the Suppression of Reli shygious Houses Acts of 1535 and 0039 have never been repealed

They are among 155 statutes weeded out from the statute IJ)ooks between 1239 and 1705middot lmd now to be definitively leshy~aled by a special act of Par-Iliament

These two acts enforced the eosure and pillaging of Catholic monasteries friaries and other religious houses throughout the WINS nsc Chaplain

eountry following King Henry (Captain) Angelo J LitekyVIIIs break with Rome in 1534

assigned to the 199th InfanshyJhey brought vast fortunes On goods property and mog of try Brigade in Vietnam has ell land to the kings favorites been awarded the Distinshyoome of whose families have reshy guished Service Cross forWned their wealth to this day extraordinary heroism SevshyIgnored in Practice

Of course the laws against erely wounded when Viet me Roman Catholic Church Cong ambushed a US infanshyIhave long ago been shelved and try company Ohaplain Lit shyIgnored in practice The reli shy eky braved flying bullets toous houses are back probably

rescue and minister tomore numerous than before iIome have even reoccupied the WQunded and dying meR 0ld sites they hadmiddot before the lReformation

Another notable measure ~ewlfk ~[p)regID Gingled out for repeal is the 1loleration Act of 1688 This act W51f)$ ~WIfltdl although in itself it did not help

NEW YORK (NC)-The Adshy~he Catholics marked the end of

vocate weekly newspaper of1lhe Protestant Reformation and the Newark Archdiocese wont1he beginning of religious tolershythe first-place Silver Medalation in Britain Awarti for weekly newspapersIt allowed freedom of worship in the annual public serviceClgt Protestant Trinitarian Nonshycompetition sponsored by theoonformists provided theiT New York chapter of the Pubiicmeetings were opento the pubshy

Relations Society of AmericaIlk it did not relieve the existing The award was for a five-part

fenaWes of those days against analysis ttl the ills besetting the ~atholics other breakaway Newark public school system lhcnestants or Jews but it was )he analysis was written by a hisberic beginning It has been Advocate news editor Ed Grant ltJeseribed as the Great Oharter and was an examination into ~ religious freedom and the one of the areas of dissatisfacshy~umph ofc9mmon ~ense tion which led to widespread

rioting in Newark last Summer

The series ran lri the newsshylJays Help for Poor paper last september and Octoshy

lPeCice First ~eeds ber The Public Rellitlons SocishyMIAMI (NC)-The Catholic ety award - silver medals are (lihurch in this nation today awarded in each of five cateshy

gories-are given for the mostauast address itself to the presshynoteworthy contributions bullbull 0 toiloing needs of the poor and dis-

~vantaged as well as the better public ~derstanding of ltJnICial issue of peace says the _ community problems in the New

4Tchbishop of Miami York metropolitan area Archbishop Coleman F Calshy New s p a per 8 magazines 0011 following announcement of broadcasting an d television middotGte establishment of the ecclesshy media in the New York-New iastical province of Miami and Jersey-Connecti~ut metropolitan tMs appointment as its first area are eligible for the awards l)rehbishop stressed that the (fhurch must be concerned with ibe problems of the time in Retired ArttlhJboshop S)Vhich we exist Gets College lHlonorThe g~eatest problems at present are the problems of the DUBUQUE ( NC) - Retired disadvantaged the poor and Archbishop Edward D Howard Utase who are in need and of of Portland Ore has been named oourse peace he smiddotaid for Loras Colleges 1968 John

It is more difficult for us to Fitzgerald Kennedy Award The LiOlve in any real way the prob- prelate is a former president of iems that are our concern until the college we have a measure of peace The citation and gold medal And it is the prayer of all of us annual award honoring an out Chat peace will be established as standing Amercian will be preshyiluickly as possible on an honorshy sen ted to the archbishop at the able basis o college commencement cereshy

monies June 2 Camp Directory Archbishop Howard 90 a nashy

Nltlw available from the Nashy ti ve of Cresco Iowa and a Loras lItonal Catholic Camping Assn alumnus was ordained to the ~ 131~ Massachusetts Ave priesthood in 1906middot He became lM- W Washington D C 20005 president of the college in 1921 Is the 1968 Directory of Catholic In 1924 he was consecrated to ~mps which lists all known serve as auxiliary bishop of DavshyearriPs in the U S giving acshy enport He became archbishop of Civities charges dates open and Portland in 1926 and retired in lIbailing addresses 1966

National CYOPlans LeadershipTraining shyImpa~t to Aid Priests Adult Admiddotvisors

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tbe through the introduction of BaWmore June 23-28 ehicagoNational Catholic Youth Organshy leadership methodology which July 1-5 Boston July 14-19 ization Federation will launch a facilitates maximum involveshy Sen Antonio July 28-Aug 3 training program in June called ment 00 the local level and Denver Aug 11-16 and San Impaot be help priests and hence maximum commitment JFaoancisoo Aug 25-30 adults 00 work effectively with The National CYO Federation Dr Donald Ebalt a professhyteenagers in a leisure time proshy will sponsor six sessiOns this lIlional trainbig eonsul1lant of gram summer to train diocesan CYO Washington D c win diiecl

The program was designed in staffs m 1lhe use of the newmiddot ead11ab cooperation with Leadership program lhey win )e held m A pilot Jtudy of the effectiveshyResources Inc a firm _of beshy DeBS of Impact on a group of havior scientists -rolulbteers from the NewarlkAddress Graduates

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishy archdiocese was held at the SOUTH BEND (HC) -Mel-rector of the Youth Department Benedictine Retreat House ill

Jdte-rite Patriarcib Maximoo VUnited States Catholic Confershy jNewton N J ence in announcing ttie new Kakimof Antioch and Dr Ilhirtymiddot persons representashyprogram said tives of youth adult advisorsJames A Perkins of Cornell

The goal 01 Impact is 00 help and priest moderators met withUniversity will be speakers atthe priests who are moderators representattives of the CYO

the 123rd annual cOnW~ncementof CYO the ad~lt advisors and Federation staff and a member youth participating in CYO toshy exerci~ Sundly June 2 at Of Leadership rResources Inc ward maximumpersonal growth Notrlte Dame University 110 assess and to evaluate 1mpaltL

(Cathedral Camp-Resident and Day Camp for Boys

O~ Lady of the L_ke Day Camp fOr Girls

Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON LONG POND ROUTE 18 EAST FREETOWN MAS~

~ RESIDENT CAMP 49th Season June 30 thru August 24 - a Week Season

Diocesan seminar-ians - College Students amp Teachers Under direction StaH of a Diocesan Priest

Saili~g swimming water skiing horseback riding riflery archeryPrograni hiking overnight camping trips ~rts amp crafts Indian crafts camp crafts athletic (team amp individual) competition and inter-camp cOmpetition professional tutorial service available

Private beach large luxurious camphouse dining hall modernfacilities~ washrooms arts and crafts buildings camp store and office first aid and infirmary beautiful chapel overnight and weekend accomodashytions for parents

S WEEK PIERIOD $325 - 4 W~K PERIOD $165 - 2 weEK PERIOD $85

Cathedra~ Day Camp t=or Boys Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period

JULY W- AUGUST 23 Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period fEES INCLUDIE Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Horseback Riding Weekly Cook~Outs amp Milk Daily without Added Cost

--~----------------------------------------Our Lady of the Lake bay Camp For Girls

JULY l _ AUGUST 23 Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period

FEES INCLUD~Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Ilorseback Riding Weekly Cook-Outsmiddot Milk Daily without Added Cost

o

For further information write to

REV WALlER A 5ULLlVANDiredor PO Box 63 - East Freetown Mass 02717

Page 7: 05.23.68

Clergy Ap~ntments AHect 16 eontinued from Page One Aft$ Portugal on Jan 29 1933 ~e newly ordained prie3b the son of Julio F llJld Blandina

tfust assigned are (Ferreira) da Sllvnmiddot -Rev Edwlllrd Eo Correia ~ After preliminary studies at

ur Lady of Vic1lol)7 Church the Seminario de S Jose FelshyCenterville 1Ueiras Portugal Father da

Rev Edmund JJ mtzgerald b Silva entered the CongregatioQ lJoly Name Church Fall River c2 the Missions (Vincentians)

Rev George E Harrison to 81 Imd studied at the Seminario de ~seph Church Taunton _ S V~cento de Paulo Limpiaf

Rev William J Hurley w ~( sanmiddottander and the Seminario Stanislaus Church Fall Rive1 ~ 818 Teresinha Felgueiras

Rev Comelius l Kiley ta Si JPIortugal seph Church JiaU River Ordained a priest OD July 19

Rev Robert A McGowan w Jl959 he returned to the semlshyCnrpus Christl Church sand-ll1ary to serve as instructor and

middot~ch m 1964 as seminary rector On Rev Donald 11 Messier to St Nov 1 1966 he was appointed

8hn the Baptist Church Fall sssistant at Mt Cannel Church niver New Bedf~rd

Rev Kevin F Tripp to Nqtro Jliltllneli lllitellneTIll Dame University fur Swprner Rev Edward Joseph Mitchell

middot c1Iudieampmiddot ronmiddot of William and Anne 17on~1i lLo~eg (Grace) Mitchell was born iml

One of six children Rev Wall Rivermiddot Jan 21 1932 EdushyIDhomas C Lopes assistant Bit ~ated in Fall River publie St Elizabeth Church Fall River schools Father Mitchell attendshynras born at Oak Bluffs on Aug ed Prevost High SChool Fall 14 1938 the son of Constantine River before stu~Ying at St ood Viola (Authier) Lopes Charles Se~inary- CatonsYille

After elementary and second- Md StMary ~eminary Baltishycry schooling on Marthas Vine- more Md and NOiIth Americali JBITSlHIO]S CONGlRAT1UlLAIlE U1UJBilLARJrAN Prior to the Mass of Thanksgiving Ofd yoard he studied ampt St~ ThoIIias College Rome fered by Bishop Connolly in the Sacred Heart Ohurch in honor of the priestly golden jUJ ampminary Bloomfield Conn Ordained a priest (lID Decla bilee of Rt Rev Felix S Cltildspastoremeritus three Bishops congratulate the jubil2lacrnd 51t Tohn Seminary Blrighton lQ5~ the Fall River priest rian Bishop Gerrard Bishop Gorman of DaU8I8 Te~as preacher Msgr Childs Bishop Ordained ) priem on FebmiddotlS served as assistant pastor aJt

Connolly who celebra-ted th~ lVlase1965 Father middotLopes has_ served Sacred Heart Church Taunton Gl assistant EitI Stmiddot EHzahetb and Sacred Heart Church Fall

Ohurch Fall middotRivermiddot since ord- lRiver before returning to

rultion l7atbeli mB~ ~ tou~~for~ S~~di~a Atm~OU~~~ ~ ~terf(llmthmiddotThe~gy ~ rnJS~0t((l[jj~h~ mev Ernest E Blais assistant Law

crt st Louis de France SWan- Since his return from Rome ~ rL l1f IJ ~ J1I 0 JI II fC A-- c2a was born May 26 1918 Am lTllIther Mitchell has served as ~~lfl]lli tr[(8 1m(Qj ~QW Ii lteS5 lJ sectl1ro1f ~Dlflm

middot Pawtucket R r the SOllll of assistant at Holy Name Churclilp BALTIMORE (NC) _ 1middotLa-__ is1 n Hi ~ rl L Doll of Maryland have aspects as well as their theologa ~ry (Bouchard) Bla anellthe Q ver rence Cardinal Shehanmiddotmiddot0f-i3i1lti- Jointly announced the openlng I ddtmiddot I d I ~e Edgar Blais i lFatllner Moll~ lea an oc nna eve opment

After schooling in Pawtucket I Ordained May 20 1i6f Rev more ati~ Epis~opalBis~o~Har- of an Ecumenical Evening lyenJIe~t Great NeOO middotn 1 Father B8ls prepared fur lJ~mes Harold Morse son of School of Theology for all qual- The institute represents a new

ifiedifhe priesthood at the seminarieo George and Grace (Prendergast) Arthur Flerrimingto mention candiates of any faith in idea in theological education ~ the Oblates 0 Mary Immmiddotacu- orse ~as bom - Rumford the Baltimore area M t h bUl -- ~ only a few of the Coalitions Th tt t h h os senunanes ave eeiilAn

~e Ordained to flhe priesth-- m I on April ~ 1939 After bull e IDS I U e w IC opens ill planning moves to secular unishyuvu founding fathers-strikes me asmiddot S t b U be ted t

on June 25 194A he servedmiddotM studving at St Mary School ep em er Wl AOca a t d 11 t th missionary in __ Cayes Hal 1t1f1rside R I ~d St Ra~ael being rather sophomoric and St Marys Roman Catholic verSI les an 00 eges momiddot e

Ugt JltWv~ strangely ou~ of character for a Semi h d 11 t seminary environment bull lIDtil appointed 00 middotSt Lou- ~- Pawtucket R I he oontmued nary ere an WI gran Jiather John Thlrkell iS shy paper which professes and gen- t _ d doc gtUmasFrance Swansea on Sept lllt Stbull Thomas SeminaryBloom_ er 0 11 an or 0 dean of the institute and shytgt erally lldheres to reasonably hil h d E lIm t ~ 52middot bull ed Conn and St ohn Semi- p osop y egrees nro en R d C S h M

poundJ JU A ampI high standards of editorial fair- 1 Iso be everen tep an ann anPIlther _ Brighton He has served Wlu a open to students not An r t f E 1 ~

llDvuoe - Lad th neas anq courtesy ireeKinga degreemiddot g Ican pnes rom ng an bull Rev Dm-a A Lamiddot-middotie - as asSistantmiddotat OW y of e 0 f associate dean

tuU v C on use Issu~ The facwtyof 18 is compOsed IS

Ief Herineneoil6e and Dena Assumption atbedral Fan Tlrdly whether Wlttingly or ofprofessors from St Marys In announcing the institutes ~ (Ouelette) Lavoiewas hom mgtmiddotv~rsince otdiXlati9J1 1 oot NCR was playmg games Johns Hopkins Un i v e r lJ i t y opening Cardinal Shehall middotmiddotmiddotmiddotftIl River OnmiddotJjm 1 i930 ~liumiddot4Fa~~~ wthilyDbers when forth~ Goucher College Baltimore He- pOnted out that up to nowthere A gradua~ of~t Ma~ea llev ~~~as Ill4W~ O~~ I~1ltwe~k in arqwi~susPi-brew College Loyola College has been no institution in the middot r8choo1 Fall Diver Flltber La- lllS~t ~ ~ James Church eiously contrasted the interim MountmiddotSt A Con d Baltimore arcbdiocese equipped middot vole studied at ~~PttOIllmiddot middotN~wBeiifordmiddotwasbomOctmiddot30middot sumof$25 thousand granted to1

the unlversii pe~r~aa to give special courses in the Prep Ilrtd COllege WoIeeSter 1934 in Taunton Ute son ofmiddotmiddotmiddot themiddotmiddot SoCialmiddot Action middotDepartmentmiddot field of religious education

middot where he obtained a BA Siun_Mlilirice OJeii ~ the 1a~ of the USCatholicmiddotConferencemiddot ~~y will teachco~ses in the He said -that he thought the middot mi cum 13ude Afterattetidfni1Marguerite (Dineen)OJ)ea for a~istra~ionexp~nses with ~aJor ~ofld ~~lglOns fro~ ~v- institute would meet a very

Ifhe Grand SeriUnaire hi Mon- His elementary and secondary the sum ofmiddot$22 million allocated era pomts of VIew and will an- great need in preparing college ibeaI Oanadahe was ordatned education was pUrSuedat Im-by tbeblshops oil an emergencymiddot aIyze ~he beliefs of the R~)Jnan gr-aduates to work in various Ia priest at the Cathedral ~Fan D8culate ConceptionSChoollmd basis to the Catholic University ~llliCI fhUrch ~eProtestant types ~ religious educationand

bull B1ver oil April 25 1959 Magr Coyle High School Taun- of America 1 81 s am Jud8lsm snd the in other apostolic work

I

iather Lavoie haa served as middotton His seminary fonnation was These two figures are com-middot ~~ons o~ the Far East middot IlSlfistant at st Miehael Church obtained at Our Lady of Provi- p1etely unrelated to one another and ~~studY the onglns

OCean Grove st fosepb dence Seminary Warwick Neck The editors of NCR must know rl ~eyelopment Cf Church Attleboro and sinee R][ Stonehill College North -and in fact explicitlystated themiddot ~arl~i reli~on8 and win hn 1962 at Notre Dame de Easton and st John Seminary in the course of their May 8 ed- examme e r SOCial and ethical lLourdes Fall River Brighton itorial-thlilt the tolal amount of

Father Martins Ordained III prie~ by Bishop Church money which will be Irotestant Chaplain Son of Joao and Rita CandIlda eonnollyon Jan 30 1960 Father allocated to inner city projects DETROIT (NC)-Dr Gene B

EFerreira) Martins Rev Jooo ODea has served as assistant at throughout the United states Montague an Episcopalian clershylOiprilKlo Martins was bom ~ st James Church New Bedford will undltlubtedly far exceed the gyman has been named first S Sebastiao Tenelra Azores since ordination figure of $22 million Protestant chaplain of the on Aug 11 1991 lf they wanted to argue that Jesuit~perated University of

Edltcmteltl in public schoohl b t PI even at l1hat the Church win Detroit Father Malcolm Carron ehe~ he entered the Seminario

p

middotres Y erOGJnS an notmiddot be meetings its obligatIons SJ president bas announced ltIe Angnn lierceita Azores R Cmiddotmiddot~ A middottmiddot they were perfectly free to de I

middot where he was ordained a Priest ace lrISOil cion liO but in my opinion they elIlIWIlIilIIllIlIlIlHIIIIIIWlllIlJlmnllllillllllll~ on April 10 1955 CINCINNATI (NC) -Presby shouldnt have confused the is- El DRY CLEANING El

i on Dec 13 1955 Father Mal1- - terians of this area p~dged~ SUe by dragging Catholic Uni- sect d sect Ilhs came to serve as assistant_m~t the racial risis with mversitys stepped-up budget into El an -El

at St Antbony Of Padua Churcln rllrograrrt of education and action the discussion as ~ rect herring sect fUR STORAGE sect m Fall River I1n~ ten years nclld~ng the est~li~~en~f1f fa Touch of ~greement sect DERMODY sectI

Qilter at St Anthony ChUrch n~w k1[~~ of congr~ga~lpn focus- ][n conclusion I must lillY that -El - El lElast Falmouth eli SPfCif~lIl~Yon ~acIa~ ~cltm- Xfull~ agree with the final par- sectCLEANERS sect

Father da Silva lt~iat~on agraph in NCR~s criticism Qf the El El ~ Vincentian Priest Rev Joa- Leaders of the Unimiddot~ed PJe~by- bishop~ progrm The trouble sect 34-441 CohannetStreet sect

CjU1m Ferreira Fernandes ella ~rians of the Cincm~~ti area with attackin~ racism is that sect TaUfl~on 822-616n sectm

Silva was bom in Vila dft9 said the new coDgmiddotrega~lonwould all the attackers themselvoes == - == ~X~ for perhaps three Qr four ~ffer from a touch of the dis- iiIIllIIllIIlIlIlIIllIIllIllIlIIllIIlIlIllHlIIlIIllIllllllllllllilii

~ellrs and WOUld CkawUgeth- ease and that alltheirpro-middotmiddotmiddot--__---11

Want Sta~p~ ltin ~ nucllS of comernedper-graIIlli could be better middot B1EFORE YOU Ffhe Siste~ of St Francis of ~Qs ~romexistiDg ~on~re~qyen()ns ~9W true-not 0nlY of ptpm- BUY -1ll

~egany jl Y express thankD I ~embers of the new CODgr~ga- inent ecclesiastics but presumshytn Ancho readers for sending ti~ wJUch will hlven~ build- ably of lllthe rest ofus as well PARK

them ca~celled ~lffiPS f9r for- mgQt its own will te ~~~ to inclJdiog I must lssme- the MOT0 IS eign missiol$ an4 ask th~t sup ~~ a ~covenant inQicaPng editors of even our most lib-I middot~ft continu~ dlUing tqe ~tmi- ther fuU com~itmel)ttoracial eral Citholic p~riodicals

Der months T~ei~ add~ss is St reconciliation and pledging We arelll in thisthjng to- OLDSMOBilE )ilichael~Stamp ~ureat st~~lf t4me and ~urcesf()r onegether and wea11 ~aveoUii OlUsmobile-Peugot-RenCiuit

bull ~~I~~be~hsiMo~pfh9~4llc- fJijyeir odQ(r the ex9centc~we ~rlt cut QUt ~ llil That13 fo 67 Middle Street Falrhavenmiddotmiddot PRY N1l ~ h~ ~ co~r~gati(lo t j ~ _

CENTER Paint and Wallpaper

Dupont Paint cor Middlo Stiiii 422 Acush Ave

Campampt New Bedford PARKING ~ Rear of Store

Tbe Best

~orrw~Ho Tr~pp SHEET METAl

Jl 1lESER Prop fftESIDENTIAl

iNDUSTRIAl COMME~pAU

253 e~all St New iampldf1d 993-3222

- ~ANCHORl)ioceseofFa RiYer-JIlh~Moy 23 l9cS8

---------------------------shy

~~Says Therre -Arr~ N~ lomnits b T ChrrD~llDcopyHru ~reg~~ITi)~D~D~DifY

~ lffiiY JBa]baJla Ward

l ihe amptarting point Pol judging our-role in the world Us ro lrnow where we are-Ohristians living in the wealthy West a white minority making up about 20 per cent of the worlds peoples and enjoying 80 per cent of the worlds ~me But this is only a ~nning a raw statement If fact And as we know Ilhwts rarely present themshyrelves without a oontext They (ilODle to us in a dense package IOf assumptions ond e~periences

1lake such a ~t as that Mr Brown worth a IlDillion dollars gives nothing to iltirs Smith This Is a fact JIlul- iliPlied a thoushysand times over by all the BroWns who do IiWthing for all ~ Smiths But suppose Mrs Smith is his widowed older sisshyter Iho rovingly brought himmiddot 1ilP as a boy Then the fact of ibis indifference becomes a comshypletely different fact because ~ eoJ1text has changed

Sense e(1 ltDomtext Most of the facts of our oonshy

temporary scene require this oonse of context They do not eome to us neat and bare And ~e first thing that has to be lJ8id about us as Christians is presumably that our context of presuppositions and oommitshyment is somewhat different ilrom that of anyone else

The Gospels are full of the lldea that the Christian angle of

o vision cannot be simply intershyehangeable with the secular or

worldly point of view Leaven makes bread rise because it is differenj Salt gives a taste beshyeause it is not identical with the 2ood Light shines in darkness because light and dark a~e disshyiWlguishable

All these images of the Chrisshy(gan community imply being other different set apart but at the same time guiding inshyGPiring changing ald entering into the whole sum of human ~xistence We are different but our aim is communion We are lteall~ to a vocation but the vocation is unity How is this fundameintal context of Chrisshyiian living to be interpreted in rtbe modern age

Personal Fortune Let us look at two widely

occepted reactions to modern facts and see how they square with the Christian vision The first concerns personal fortune On balance in the landli where the bulk of Christians live the White wealthy post-Christian oocieties of the North AtIantic~ North America Bribin Westshyern Europe - the basic notion about income is to increase it iIIJld about wealth to accumulate to

In general a familys standshyIIllds of living its ciaims on reshylIOurces and its expectations of ilun an~ comfort gO up in step

Institute Participant yeniss Marjorie A MorinNortb

Westport a faculty member at ~cred Hearts Academy Fan Ri~er bas been named as one cent 44 ~igh ~ool bi~19gy teachshy~rs frorn18 states to participate iln a Summer institute on recent bigh school biology curriculum ~evelopments at Wells College Aurora N Y The institute will be in session from June 30 through Julyen S

with bigher earnings One can find it hard to make both ends meet and be resentful of taxes at $6000 a year $12000 a year $24000 a year $48000 0 year ~d so on up - in fact since

taxes rise with income COlIlshy

plairits can be higher as wealth increases even though expendishytures now oover two houses and three cars

Christian teaching in stark contrast reminds us that the higher the income the greater the responsibility The final counsel of perfection was given to the dcb young man sell

all you have and give to the poor- Short of this evengelical extreme the wealthy must not satisfy their oWllJlising supershyfluities at the expense of the basic needs of others 11 they dothey will enter eternity as easshyily as a ca~el through the eye of a needle-not a wholly reasshysuring analogy for our Western societies who bave never had it so good

NQ lLfimfits A secHid pre-suppositionmiddot~

eontempolary society is that chapel z Mount St Mary Con- f te li d d or en rmg re glon an was n obligatIOns an responsibilities vent and a dInner f~r Csters t fr ti A ~ 031 teacher and principal at manyop a on ers man ofdifshyt ferent national I y or citizenship f al 18 no arm ooncern of ours The Gospel approach IS whollydifferent All must)be fed even-shythe least of the little ones All must be clothed and sheltered Even if th th dtch is

e ~an In e 1 a Jew and his rescuer a Samarshyillan their traditional enmity must make no diHerence~ The centurions son is cured even if he is in modern terms a hated

SJl8TER MJIJRlAM RSM o

former DiocesoD1l Supervisor Completes 50 Years As ~eiigiolUJs Sis~er of Mercy

Fifty years in religious life Katherine -ONeil retired prinshycipal of the Aldrich School inwill be marked Sunday by SisshyFall River Both are memberster Miriam RSM former eleshyof Holy Name parish Fall Rivermentary school supervisor in

the Fall River Diocesan systemON II St Louis JgtarishRev Pa trick el supennshy

tendent of schools will cele- Sister Miriam is a native of brate a Mass of Thanksgiving St Louis parish Fall River She at 1045 Sunday morning in the was a public school teacher beshy

and the JubIlanans ~~edIate~m Diocesan schools before beingfaml 11 f II I Y WI () ow appointed a supervisor in 1941

A reception will be held after together with Sister FeIicitadi f t S

e nner or V1S~ mg Isers RSM The two Mercy Sisters ~d a seoond recepti~n fr served as supervisors under

fnends and former p~pl1s WIll the late Rev Edward J Gorman take place from 2 to 5 m Mt Sl ana under Father ONeill pres-Mary Academy library ent superintendent of schools Bec~~vingguests wit~ the until their retirement in 1966

jubllanan WIll be her Sls~ers Since that time they have M~ James Conlin retIred tutored and aided students with prmcIpal of the Mason Barney reading problems at Mt Sl

imperialist There is neither School Swansea and lIfiss Mary COnvent Jew nor Gentile bond nor free ~ bullr

in the a)l-enoompassing gener~ J ~

=~~k~~ ~P-9morL13~J of our prayer Thy Kingdom

40~s eolumn will therefOe try over the coming months to give not only the facts about our strange new world round which the astronaut strolls in 90 minutes It will try tosug gest the oontext without which Christian judgment and re- sponse are hardly possible For if we judge only as secular cit shyizens will the salt keep its taste May it not be fit only to be thrown down the drain

~ L ~ IIrencn lIovor Priests Holding O~her Jobs

PARIS (NC)-A recent surshyvey indicates that Frenchmen are in favor of priests working at n~n-priestly jobs and being marned _

The editor-in-chief will 1roW~D1DXNG GOWNS rm afraid Im overworking the

word romantic in describing the fashions this season but with such-anabundance of frills and tiny waists it seems the only fitting adjective Nowhere does the word crop up with shym 0 r e meaning than when one is trying to convey the imshypression given by the fashions iQr the 68 bride Bridal gownsfor late Sumshymer and early Fall weddings are now being shown and snapped up dewy-eyed brides-to-be

by

~ a survey ~nducted by the Gone are the outlandish 1ent SocIety FrancaJse dEnquetes eire th par ~ndage (SOFRES) 00 Per sses e weIrd IDllll des~gns centCIf those questioned both ~ tte h~v~~ ~ere dSlgnS Catholics and non-Catholics re- Ig wIg ts e Pia~ f~W garded it as normal for a priest ~aso~s als are as n l~

1Q praclice a lleCUiar profession wedding g~wns ~ tor so many and 51 per cent said that work degthther fUlootfitBkmiddot ~lS slelas0ben but by priests in a f~ri or 011amp ey 1ftgt especlay auti shyconstruction JOb is ood ~ in thlS dre~ of dresses One

very g lovely princess design by Ven because that ereates an exchange b - rio1-1- ~ ~ be tb Ch as nerrow s pear

bullween e Ulch and the dli -- fimiddotmiddot 10 workers 0 nIng gure- rIDIng seven out~ 10 persons 81lIr- Bi~h~uette ~Cthe~ by Frmk

veyed favored -marriage for ~zzo for Pandora ~as an Ehzashypriests ~because that would per- bethan aJr to it WIth its lov~ly mit them to better understand 1Jff of OhantIllr lace ~ndmg family problems and difficul- bI~h around the neckline and ties And 25 per cent of those _spIlling d~wn the sleeves surveyed are convinced that Fur-Trimmecll GoWlm

soon~r or l~ter women will be If youre planning an elegant ordaIned prleStamp wedding m the late Fall ~

Alois Schardt a Bavarian tele- early Winter and money is no vision n~ws editor Dr HeE-oobject Mirra has designed a mann Abs of the Deutsche Bank gown with a bodice and sleeores of broadtail cuffed around the wrist and neckline with white mink The price-a mere $800 the price of a good living room oouch but then you could al shyways sit on old orange crates and admire your stunning wed ding pictures

Even the bridal hairdo is as hearts and flowers as Elizabeth Barrett Browiling Curls fall over shoulders peek out from under mantillas and veils and are even caught back in kershychief headpieces If your own

hair refuses to wave never mind curl order some stick-on curls ahead oftime to keep the romantic air

By BOme unexplained miracle all brides are b~autiful but this year the designers are giving the miracle workers a boost in JOWDS that spell romance

New Bedfordilea Elect Officers

The slate of officers el~ to serve for the 1968-69 year d the Catholic Womans Club clil New Bedford are Mn Thomas P Barry president Miss Jean

A McGinnis first vice-p~ dent Mrs Raymond M Atw~ second vice-presisient Mrs ViiDo cent L Hughes recording s~

retary Mrs Maurice A Hurl~ corresponding secretary lViM Charles D Phelan treasureJl Registrars named for ~ coming year are Mrs Ricbam A Parsons Mrs Norman amp Sylvia Mrs Albert J LamolZgt reux Mrs William A Horai Mrs Robert A Vermette lIhe Henry J Fanning Jr Mrs Joseph N Joseph Mlamp3 Dorothy A Curry and lIlra Roland F Mathieu will $erve mJ mrectors

Nome Laymon Official Of Catholic Schoois

MEMPHIS (NC)-Bishop JO seph A Durick apostolic adJ ministrator of the NashVille dl ocese has confirmed the apshypointment of William G Ho~

as administrative assistant tIlll Msgr John A Elliott dioce~ superintendent of schools

In his new Post Hoyt wild serve as coordinator for prCF grams that receive local and federal aid to private schoolBp in addition to general assistance in the overall responsibilities 001 the school board and supeJlgto visors

There are 18 Catholic blgili schools with 5892 students ancll 53 elementary schools with 15

405 students in the Nashvl1lG diocese which comprises the

entire state of Tennessee

Pro~estants to SerVe 0111 Catholic Paperr

BONN (NC)-Protestanf jOllDD nalists will serve on the editoshyrial staff of a new German nashytional Catholic weekly aimed at readers on a high intellectual level which will begin publbshy

-ction in September - Most of the 20 editors wh

will be selected fqr the weeklys staff will be drawn from the ranks of the secular daily press

has been elected director of the papers board of trustees

A total of $4000000 has been raised from among the Well0 Ge~an dioceses to finance the establishment of the paper Wgt be named Publik Stockwill ~ issued

~fiDDY Dining IN YHE

JOILRY WHAlLER -ANID--

SPOUTER INN RESTAURANTS

Always Free Parking

New Bedford Hotel

NASON Oil COMPANY

Our Heating 7 Perry Avenue

Oils Malee Taunton Mass Warm FrienJs 822-2282

Dailymiddot Aittention Necessary To ~[f~Dceate We~~~

1B1y 1J~JlDill alii wnJillYJil ~~

The ~ are on their way and 11 lreems that half r our time i1l spent digging them out ~ the garden No matter haw much time we Gpomd on them they have a way of reappearing within Q few days ad 1l1Inless we really live them OUattention they ean take over a garden middotin lW time Beginning gardenem

bull WOO approaeh gardemng casshyaally or em weekends are often ~helmed by these unwel-CIOme pests ond soon give up the Ilbip Our suggestion is that M)

minutes II day B sufficient to keep even big gardens weeded fithe gardener will get out into Illie garden every day This maw mean nomiddot mOIre than a short trip BIound the garden to look mt Ole plants and to pull out a few ~ds encountered on the weJr

Few llilmtJtes Dadlly

We usually keep a small wamshyms hoeohandy by the back door and as we PlVPare to go to worlx take a short walk in the garden hoe in hand to see what is new The result is that we spend flw minutes or so in the garden beshytore setting out for work in the morning 10 minutes at lunch and ap~roximately 10 minutea before dinner after the working day is over which incidentally il a good time to ioosen up ~

t1ore tearing the kids heads oIif llDr all the misdeeds of the day

The point is that weeding u

attitudes t2lat vtll shape their future are beginning now and IllS theU friends and relatives wish them well they pray that each couple will enjoy the graces and happiness that come from a good Christian marriage with Christ in the home

Ad~ Atmosphere Often a wedding gift can add

to the atmosphere of a Christian home One such gift is a plaque that hangs in our den On it are these words

Sacrifice s usually difficult and irksome only

Love can make ~ easy and perfect love can make it a

Joy I couldnt think of a better

motto with which to begin 0 marriage or one that becomes

more significant through sleepshyless nights with sick babies frustrating job problems or the everpresent money worries Qlat asually plague young couples

A handsome cross a richlY llIustrated b~ble a handsome religious Gtatue or plaque are eccellent gifts to begin a Chrisshy

11 th h t Uan couple on the road to Il we as many 0 er cores mus ~ done on n day-today buis cmd cannot be left for weekendll because there are so many other tmportant things that have to be ltilone then

The grass has to be cut a new lInge put on a door there is a ball game to watch a ride 00 take a tree to be pruned etc Cll of which ore time-eonsuming _ lIIllU necessary With the weather we have been exPeriencing al -te th d~n~ e ~ weedmg gives ll3 middot Iln oPprtunity to g~t a hWe ~h lUI 11 commodity whiclill middot D3ems t0 be gettmg scarcer fa 001 industrial live~ and ehance to commune With Nature een at the wrong end of n

lim tle Kltcbellllmiddot

Did you know that during a wedding ceremony the groom places the ring on the finger of Ule bride because the circlemiddot of gold symbolizes the love and devotion that from this moment on will have no end This is but lti)ne of the many traditions that lJlave come down through the years and now are an accepted ~rt of the Cana celebration

Another must for a wedding dJ the wedding cake that fur eenturies has signified breakshymg of bread in kinship as it Is ll1anded out to friends and relashyves Even the veil that graces tlle l)ead of the beautiful bride b a custom that has come into llUes~nt time from the days when the brides stood under eanopies to show that they were IIDlder the protection of the glOOrp

All these ancientgt traditions give a Uttle added meaning to lYle Cana feast and the sacred acrainent of matrimony but ltWen more significant are the rostoms and traditions that the 1l1Jride and groom will carry into rife as a f~ly Many of the

polsh Mmiddotsommiddot

n ill ~ilI CHiCAGO (NC)-First copies

of the Polish vernacular altar

gful C th li lif Let meanm a 0 c e someone else buy the sheets a~d and ~asters ma~e your pft one Wlt~ eve~las~lDg mea~ll~g

If ou re 1hinking of givmg ~ bridal shower in the n~ar future perbaP you w0llld hke to serve a Bndal Puddmg

Bridal Pudding 2 envelopes unflavored gelatiJm

cup cold water b ili t

llff If cup deghte wa er egg W I StI- ~_

74 aspoon - cup suglllr

q h cups eavy cream (ilDrgetth diet)

1 teapoon vamplilla 1 flaked tcup coconu 1) Soften the gelatin in the k

cup cold watermiddot and then pour the 1fJ cup ofboiling water over the gelatin mixture and stir unntil dissolved Cool

2) Beat the egg whites until foam slowly add the salt and sugar and continue beating unshytil stiff peaks are formed

3) Fold the gelatin into the stiff whites

4) Beat the heavy cream until stiff and add the vanilla Fold the cream into the whites and gelatin mixture

5) Rub the bottom and sides cf an eight-inch spring form pan with butter and sprinkle the bottom with lh cup of the coconut Pour in the cream mixshyture Sprinkle with the remainshying coconut -ltld chill at least four hours or overnight Upshymold and serve with s1rawshyberries and the following rum sauce

lltum Sauce 6 egg yolks (see we didnt

want them to go to waste) 1 cup sugarmiddot

04 cup dark 111m cognac or kirsch

1) Beat the yolks until lemon colored and slightly thickened

2) Gradually beat in the Dugar

Stir in half the rum and cook in tOp of a double boiler over boiling water stirring constantshy131 until the sauce coats a woodshy

THE ANCHORshy

lHIONOR MOTHER lPlilElRRE Mother Pierre Marie of St Annes Hospital Fan River left meets Mrs Joseph Giblin Mrs Richard Donovan and Mrs Eugene Dionne all members of The Friends of St Annes on bhe occasion of the groups honoring the sister in reCognition of her reshyception of the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice Medal from Pope Paul

Aim Is Unity INIUlDil leads New )errsey Periodic White Walkerrs

Se~king to Ascertain Needs of Negroes ENGLEWOOD (NC)-Led by We are trying to find out

a Sister from St Cecilias High what the needs are she said School a group of white resi- We realized that we would dents have been making peri- look liketourists going through odic informal walking toWfl but you have to begin someshythrough the predominantly Ne- where gro Fourth Ward to meet the One result of the middotwalks was people living there

The walks inaugurated by Sister Robert Jean are made in mn effort to break down barriere fllll an area where rioting took place last Summer

Gif~~ Contfnued from Page Four

lNJlf~ihlmiddotAuBehCJH) $750

Jeweled Cross Co Inc $225

Attleboro Particular Council St Vincent de Paul

$200 Society of St Vincent de PaW

St Mary Conference $150

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J Wright bull $75 No Attleboro Catholic Womshy

0ns Club $50

Dr Eugene Leco St Anne Sodality Sacred

Heart Church $40

Edward N Cook Plate Co Inc $35middot

Albert Morawski $30

CYD-Sacred Heart Church $25

Frank M Miller amp Son Inc No Attleboromiddot Coal Co y H Blackington amp Co Inc

II neighborhood meeting at which white and black people discussed the visits and the posshysibility of further involvement in the needs of the Fourth Ward community------------

Universal Roofing amp Sheet Metal Co

Alden Corrugated Container Corp

Mass Trucking Corp New Bedford Hotel Macedo Pharmacy

$51 Building Materials Inc

$5 Sacred Heart Home

Daughters of Isabella Hyacinth Circle No 71

A Friend Damien Council K of C Harbor Beach Club amp Lounge Laurans-Standard Grocery Co

Inc $35

Glemi-on Roofing Co $30

Browne Pharmacy Inc $25

Browne Pharmacy A Friend Local No 168 UAW AFL-CIO Cape Cod Fabrics Philip J

Kane Inc Lions Club of New Bedford

Duplicating Equipment amp Supshyply Atty Jack London New Bedford Catholic Guild for the Blind Sharkeys Tire amp Rubber Comiddot

Tum oto Page Ten

Thurs May 23 1968

AJumna Rece~ves

Tdn~ty Award WASHINGTON (NC)-Doroshy

thea F Sullivan social worker and alumna of Trinity College here was presented the 1968 Julie Billiart medal at the schools Spring honors convocashytion

The annual award established in 1961 in honor of the foundress of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur who conduct the colshylege honors an alumna whose life exemplifies Blessed Julie Billiarts educational objectives -the formation of strong womshyen of faith devoted to God and neighbor living dedicated and fruitful lives

Miss Sullivan a member of the Trinity class of 1926 had been an associate professor at the Catholic University of Americas School of Social Sershyvice since 1941 She has been project director of the South Florida Neighborhood Youth Corps in Miami since 1966

She has been active in a numshyber of youth and welfare organshyizations has contributed articles to numerous periodicals and edited several books

Form Sisterrs 0 Coull1ld~

~Dil HawOJii Diocese HONOLULU (NC)-A Sisshy

ters council ill being formed here with the approval of Bishshyou John J Scanlan of Honoshylulu The council is composed of any Sisters in the diocese who desire to affiliate herself with the organizations objecshytives

The projected aims of the council are to serve as a chanshynei of communication among Religious communities and to the bishop the priests senate shylay senate other religious groups to serve as a source of unity and strength among Reshyligious to foster a closer c0shy

operation among clergy Reshyligious and laity and to be [1

means of coordinating the works of the apostolate after studying the religious educational socishyal economic and ecumenical needs of the diocese

Mfiltie P~Mmbnrwg amp HealltDOI~ (Oe Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Master Plumber 702i1

JOSEPH RAPOSA JR $06 ~O MAUIN $1ltlEfEii

lraaD rlovell 675a74~

SCHOOl MaonteilCllnCe SIlJlPPUO~

$WIEIE~IERS - $OA~$

IOlISUINJIr~CijANIIsect IrU~1E E)IliINGUUSIHIEIl$

DAHill COo nS86 IPUlRCHIASE SIlRIEIETI

NEW I8lEll)fO~1Ol

~9lJ-lJ7~6

~IIII11IJ1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I11I1I11I1I11I11II11I1I1I1I1I1I1I1IJ1I1I1I1I11I11I11I1I1I11I11UIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIII1111I11I

1 ~ESADAV~ lIIli~ls for use at Mass in Polish Coo en spoQn Do not boil Remove ltihurches and institutions in this from the heat and stir in the country have been received ~y remaining rum John Cardinal Cody of Ohicago In answer to - a letter from II member of the Consilium far Mrs Mogardo of Falmouth the Cbe implementation of the Con- amount of all-purpose cream 10 IJtitution Oll the Sacred Liturgy the Creme de Menthe Squares IUN~~A~m M ~58 icIIf the Second Vatican COIDlcil is one pint iillllllJllIlIIlIlIIlIIlIlIlIlIIlIIlIlIlIlIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIlJlIlIlIIlIIllUlIIlIIlIlIlIlIlIIlIIUIIUlIIlIlIlIlIlIUlIlIUIIUIIIIII~I~

I

THE ANCHORTDi~c~se of Foil River-Thurs May 23 1968 indiana Prelate ~ i l bull - 10 Heads NCEACrawford Electrical Co DrSpecial Gifts Morris Feresten Dr Frank L mAiN FRANCISCO r(NC) shy

Collins Mr amp Mrsmiddot John P Bish()p Raymorid J GellagMrContinued from Page Nine Dwyer of Lafayette Ind was ~le~ted

Attleboromiddot Hub Clothing Bristol ~it- president general Of the Nashyting Mills Inc Dixon Burial tionlll1 Catholic Educational Asshy$150

sociation at the final meeting ofVauit Shelburne Shirt Co IncBarry J Boardman Ins Agency $125 the asSoclation~8 6Mb Mnuat

Almeida Electric Co August Elmer C Slater

convention hereraquoIlr amp Mrs James G Heagney He succeeds Bishop ErnestBadwey amp Sons Joseph A Parks$100 Primeau of Manchester N HMrs Mar-y Courtis Dr amp MrsL G Balfour Co

who rervOO as president general Norman pSadler Brothers Inc for three yearsBedford House ConvalescentShields Inc A native of Cleveland BishopHomeInc Dr Sanford I Udis$60 Gallagher was ordained in 1939llI Joseph Madowsky HarveyAtherton Furniture Co~ and served as a Navy chaplainProbber Inc $50 during World War n He w~s

Demers Brothers narned bishop of Lafayette inM S Company 1965 following service as secreshy[P[(D$Iroreg$ $40

tary of the National ConferenceAttleboro Printing amp Embosshy of Catholic Charities

olng Co Inc ~WltWI7il$~ltW Speaker at the election sesshy$35 sion was U S Commissioner ofIOUlIt lLADY IOlF lFAllDMIAReynolds amp Markman In~ $25 Education Harold Howe who

$27 said that Catholic schools willMr amp Mrs Ralph A GuerrieroLeedham Hardware be especially guilty if they doMr amp Mrs Peter J Hoss lFlIt ADlIt][AN OJFM lFlIt lFAJlUAN OJFM $25 not act to solve the crisis of

Attleboro Sun Publishing Co ST IDOMIllN][C ghetto educationmiddotlnc Connelly Gold Stamping $25 Christianity is supposed toCo MacDonald Moving amp Storshy ~[j1Jil~O$ltC[(il$ t[ Our tLC1~ls ~hauraquocetiMr amp Mrs Thomas Paiva offer something more the age Co Marathon Company Mr amp Mrs Thomas C Murphy commissioner told the 6000

Plastic Craft Novelty Co Ob$erve $iver Priestiy Jubilees delegates at the final sessionSTLOUIS OF FRANCE On May 26th the 9 AM Retreat House Pittsfield N 11 ~Let us be fools for Christs

Fall Ri~er $50 MlIss will be conceleprated where _ he served as Retreat sake said St Paul middotWe Ladies of St Ailne raquoy the Franciscan Friars at Our Director and Master~ badly need highminded visionshy

$1200 Holy Name Society Ladys Chapel New Bedford Four years later _1964 Fr aries who can help the poorestFan River Electric Light Co st Vincent de Paul Sooi~ eonmiemoratingthe Silver Ju Fabian was transfe~red to Our of our children see a new dream $1000 $26 bilee of the ordination of) Fr Ladys Ohapel New ~d~()rd and faShion a better reality FOO

FirestoneRubbe~ amp Latex ~ Mr amp Mrs Herman Lamppoin4e Fabian F Joyce OFM and Fr where he has served to the pres- ournations sake Catholic edushy $600 I~ k Adrian F Donachie OFM ent time He is ViCar of the cationmust jointhe rest of edshy

~all R~~er GasCQllpanYj Fr Fabian is a native of Franciscan CommuIlity Father ucation to give them a neW $500 Vineyard iavenc Watertown He is an alumll~sof is well known thr~ughout the botizon

lVlr amp Mrs Henry ~ Feitelberl Boston College High SChool and area as a preacher for the St Mooney amp Co Inc middotUT AUGUSTINE

0Boston College He entered the Jude Novena devotions on$300 FIRST COMMUNION- $46L50 Franciscans of Holy - Nilme Thursdayat the chapel andtbeRev JosephF ODonnell ResidentSofCatholic MemoJillJ Province with headquarters in radio Apostolate

~o~e I $50 ~ PORTRAITSNew Yo~k City in 1937~ - Fr Addlln F Donachie Of~ $300 Mrs James Boyle He was ordained at the Na- is a native of Glasgow Scotland IN LIVING COLOUR

St Augustines GuildCitizens Savings Bank iional Shrine of the Immaculate and was brought up in NewSt Augustines Holy NameFR Five Cent Savings Bank Conception Washington D C York Oity H~ entered ~t $200 St Augustines St Vincent de May 29 1943 His first assign- Joseph s SeraphIcSeminary Jtl Anderson-Little Co inc lPaul Society ment was to St EIizabeths 1932 in preparatIon for the A -Friend $30 - T)enver middotColo from Franciscan Priesthood

$150 Mr amp Mrs William Figueiredo 1944 to Hi58 He was received into the

PR Peoples Cooperative Bank Mr amp Mrs Francis Metell _ Pastor and Supe- Order in 1937 and was ordained $135 $25 rior of the Church and Monas- six years later on May 29 1943

Herve Lagasse Cmdr amp Mrs Daniel Burgo tery in Denver in 1951 and at the National Shrine of the $125 Frank Coutinho Mr amp Mrs served in this capacity for Immaculate Conception Washshy

Cliff Nursing Homes Michael Fonte) Mr- amp Mr~ Eushy seven years ington D C His priestly Hfe$120 gene Frieh Mrs John Hughes In 1958 he was stationed at has been in New York Coloshy

J O Neill Supply Co Marthas Vineyard National St Bonaventure Retreat House rado Connecticut NewHampshy $101 Bank Rep amp Mrs Benjamin C Paterson N J for a period of shire and finally- stationed in ~ Fall River Shopping Ce~nter Mayhew Jr Mr amp Mrs Boleslaw two years giving laymens re- Our Ladys Chapel since 1956Associates Nickowal Mrs Dean Swift 11 treats and days of recollection Fr Adrian came with the origishy $100 Mr amp Mrs Frederick Thifault to the clergy He was then nal group of Franciscans ~o staff

Norbut Mfg Co Inc transferred to St Anthonys- Our Ladys Chapel THE FINEST QU~LITYSullivans of Fall River dk Wareham Hyannis IS WORTH THE PLEASANT

H P Hood amp Sons Inc ST PATRICK Famed Church -Gift SHORT DRIVE TO THE I bull Borden amp Remington Co $50

AREAS LEADING STUDIOr Louis Hand Inc middotMr amp Mrs Thomas Choate To Mission SocietY William T Manning Colnt Mr amp Mrs middotWilliam McLaugbshy BOSJO~ (NC) B~stons

j OPEN SUNDAYS Radio Station WALE I lin famed St Stephens church hasbull Dring Communion Seasonbeen - turned over by Richard

Dr amp Mrs Americo Almeida ~ W Hurley Co Cardinal Cushing to the Misshy $75 $30

Walter A Fur-man Co $45

8io~ary society ot St James ~ BRIDAL PORTRAITS Beetlemiddot Plastics Albert- Guerzoni the Apostle 311d Deluxe Quality Candicts Fall River Lodge No 118 BPO $21 famous for RESERVE YOUR DATE EARLY - The edifice _a short distance E~~ Mrs Am~lia JJaptiste _ from the home of Paul Revere

St- vincent de Paul Salvage - $25 and other Revolutionary War ~rve as QUALITyand EvANS STUDIOS

JBureau Nlr amp I([rs Franci~Murp~y shrines will head- St Patricks Wofuens Guild Miamp Mrs Julius ]~abbitt -I quarters for the society which 18 MAIN STTAUNTON middotCall Rivermiddot Mr amp ~rs JsephNorris the ~ardinal founded to do mis- SERVI(E Tet 822-1181

sect(6nwork in Latin AmericaProvidence Pile Fabric Corp $50 St Stephens church was deshy

Robert L Germaine Inc o o

Atty amp Mrs JohriJ Harringshy OUR LADY OF LOURDF8 whose works also include tne ton $5 Massachusettsmiddot State House It

Simons Supply Co Inc Massasoit Hills Trailer Iark was first used as a CongregashyThe J L amp R Cohen Foundashy Inc

siglled by Charles BlJlfltJch

tienal church but with the influx ~ion of Catholics during the inlmishy

Nira WarehOUse Mart Inc West Harwich gration of the early 1800s it was $45 purchased by the Boston arch-

Drobyski Wallpaper Co HOLY TRINITY diocese $60 In 1964 Cardinal Cushing$40

Dr Harry Cooperstein Mr amp Mrs Theodore F Berg spent more than $1000000 W haus restore the building$30

Ashton Funeral Home $50 Magonis Ferry Landing Mr amp Mrs Manley E Boyce Priests COll1ference

$25 $26 STEUBENVILLE (NC) ~ A Atty Kenneth Sullivan Mr Captain William House group of priests here has fOJmed

- Mrs Lewis Morley Hathaway - $25 -- a CQnference of Steubenville ~nelal Service Cook Bord(l1 ~oha Gillahan Mr amp Mrs Priests to create a general

Co Dr Harry Levine Joseph lttiltpetteMr ampMrsJohn ~pirii of priestly fraterJ~iiy and l)rDa~id P~Iill Tyrells Mar- E Ke~ly ~r Mrs yen~j~ Cor- - professionalism Msgr 0

t Cascaltle Drug CoProfes- ra~o HarQJd~RmiddotMcK~nna ~Tolin A Cymbor pastor ()fStgt Qff~rincllid~SPeciaIILinlie9n~n~ $3 w~rf~ 0( ~ I~al ph~i-rnacy hr havills Mrs R R~ SmalI AnthonYThete~esect Church Piney F6rk

-- middote~rHolvitZampHorvitz Ryan MrampMr~_-JQnljMul- wasnamedtempotary chairman Ride TicketsFor additional details or reservatic5nsmiddot call Mrmiddot Conrad Feriamiddot at (4Ql) RE 14kgtOO collectl lC

High Point Fording Box Corp llnsMr-ampmiddotMrsAllgterf Daven- and chosen to repiesimt the _ ~ ~

A RossEvetett Motors port Mramp Mrs Frank Ball group at the initialmiddot meeting in

-uline Te~tile Co Eagle Mr amp Mrs John W- Anderson Chicago May 21 of the National ine Co Mr amp Mrs Paul Carney Federation of Priests coun(iMI

bull

~~ 1

Q I gt~ j

1tj _-_000 e

Comiddot

~ ~-

JUST OfF ROUTE 117

POINTmiddotRO~-_

SpecialSchool Outinils GjoupOffer $3 per Stuitentmiddot

father OWcopy) Sons Are OEd~glfDregd

BELMONT (NC) - Three members of the Habiger family -two sons and their fathershyare completing studies for the priesthood and will be ordained as Benedictine priests on June M

The lllabigers have prepared Jlor ~e priesthood at Belmont Abbey here They will be Qrshydained by Abbot Thomas Halmiddott shyman at St Benedicts Abbey in Atchinson Kans

John Habiger joined his two sons at Belmont Abbey after the death of his wife Mildred in December 1963 He said he did this because my wife and I just had an understanding that the survivor would give his or her life to the Lord

Before deciding to enter the priesthood Habiger had worked as a sales manager fOl a deep freeze home locker distlibutor

lHE ANCHORshy~urs May 23 1968

_ bull

II

Britista Cot1toIicI Suppolt New Bilt To Ovtlow Bios~

LONDON (NO) ~ 0aitJh0 ~ BeneFally appearr to be ~Ving strong BUPPOOt to the govemme~ controvemial new biJl 110 outlaw racial dls- crimination in Britain

Tile Catholie press glQ~~e bin Its blessing with some quBll shy iDeations Several Catholic anti shyaovermnent politicKms howshyweI have voiced oppositionshynot em principle they eblim but oocause they fear some sections of the bHl eould IIIggravate rather ampan mollify existing racism here by producing II privileged black and colored minority

The Race Relations Biil Which Is backed by the present Labor government and can reashysunably be expected to become law this Summer fs intended to i

strengthen existing legislation in this matter in view of the big rise in the number of Negro and colored (Indian Pakistani and as a labor pool manager for and West Indian) immigrants in the United States Air ForceFATHER AND SONS TO BE ORDAINED A father and his two sons will bethe past few years

Fellls Takeover m-d~ined June 14 to the priesthood at St Benedicts Abbey Church Artchi8on Kansas Nearly 2000 dock workers FoUo~ing the death of his wife five years ago John Paul Habiger (center) entereq the MethodlidsAdopt

quit work to delllonstrate BenedIctines joining his sons in the seminary Their nam~8 im religion are Father J~hJ) Project E~uaiityWJainst the bill and to sboW Igrlatius Habiger OSB (center) Father MatthewH~riy Habiger~ OSB (left) andsupport for the view o~ bullCon~ DALLAS (NC)-The ll-milshy2ervative party me~ber Eno~b F~thet Benedict John HabigeJrp OSW NC Photo li~)Il-member United Methodist ~

PPwell that Britain has too Church-formed by a merger l(Ilany elgtlQred immigranUi $50 $50 of the Methodist Church and

Powell had called for 8 vir WestpolIt Almon L Turner Holy Name Society the Evangelical United Brethshy tual halt to the entry of dependshy Thomas M Ross ren-has ill effect adoptedST GEORGE ST PATRICK~nts of colored immigrants and $45 Project Equality throughoutmiddot ~he$25 $250i for measures to encourage the United States Mr amp Mrsmiddotmiddot Leonard Langlois RobertE Eastman Re~ Tames F McDermottliepatriation of the immigrants The 1400 delegates to WleEveline Magnant Claire Magshy $25 $200 bull OtherWise he said black people QUldrennial General Confershynjllt Mr amp Mrs Roland McGee Dr Frederick G Doran ~ lDr amp Mrs Roger E Cadieuxwill take over whole areas ence adopted a resolution inMr amp Mrs Arthur Perry Landgraf Felix P Kaladin $125 Dnd I3cial violence will follow which the new church endorsesMr amp Mrs Donald Pittman Thomas W Whalen Thepnaa Mrs David M KilroyPowell was later ousted from Project Equality and recomshyMr amp Mrs Jacob Strunk Calisto Raymond P Paine $40his position in the shadow cab- mends cooperation both throup

Richard J McNally inet---the leadership that would participation and financial su~SandwichWoods Hole $30assume power if the Conservashy pori on the part of all United Fernand C E AuclairtiVe6 won control of the governshy CORPUS CHRISTI Methodist Ann u a 1 (regional)llT JOSI~IH Dr Thomas Clarkment - by Conservative party Conferences local churches 10shy$300 $350 John T ~mith

0leader Edward Heath who eal or national institutiomlPaul McCusker Rev William F Morristermed Powells speech racist $26 agencies or organizations$150 $100 William MoranAbstain From Voting Friends of Megansett Mr amp Mrs William Carr The resolution presen ted to

The House of Commons apshy $100 $50 $25 the Conference by the Methodshy

Leo A Bond Mrs Leonard Nproved the bill in principal ist ~neral Board of Christian lOr amp Mrs George Christman Mr amp Mrs Lawrence Perrault313-209 and sent it to commitshy Bilooeau Mr amp Mrs Francis Jr Social Concerns called Project$75 Dr amp Mrs J Minihan lKilgrew Mrs James E Sullivantee for additional study before Equality a responsible consist shyMrs Claudia Pendergast Mr amp Mrs Peter Becker Jrit is presented for fi nal passage Mrs Frank Souza Joseph Tin- ent ethical practical effective$50 Mi amp Mrs Robert KennedyTwenty-five Consenatives abshy Mr amp Mrs Cornelius Hickey Mother Cabrini Circle D of j

sley and positive means whereby the stained from the voting rather Sll ll~OMAS MORE United Methodist Church andMr amp Mrs John McCue Norman McEnaneythan fullow the palty line and $50 other churches can SUppOImiddott fail1Mr amp Mrs Emil Tietje $40vote against the bill Atty amp Mrs Richard N LaSalle employment practices intbe$35 Mr amp Mrs Francis CarpengerAlthough the British in the $2~ United StatesSt Josephs Womens Guild $35past two centuries have govshy In memory of Mr Y J Archshy $30 bull Mr amp Mrs Raymond Doucetteerned a large proportion of the 11mbeaultMr ampmiddotmiddotMrs ElmeiHallett $26 Oppose Cuts worlds black and colored $25 Mrs Charles Russell peoples it is a new thing for ~25 Mrs Margaretmiddot Harris Mr ampbull this country to have such peopie

Mrs Paul La Prade Thomas middotC H Berube MD Mr amp Mrsequal in law moving in by the Rooney Mr amp Mrs Charles Sefshy Joseph Silvia William J Dalton thousands and competing com

mereially and socially with ton Mr amp Mrs JG$eph Sylvia James W Blunt John Hart whites G Stanley Johnson Mr amp Mrs

Fred Comings Mrs Helen ClarkeThe new bill is aimed at outshy Oak Bluffs Mr amp Mrs George PereiraMYIllawing racial discrimination in

SACRraquo IIEAlltT Harry Walkerjobs housing hotels insurance and similar fields The most $125 The Percy Family Mrs Kay

Mr amp Mrs H~l1ry ~orey radical anti - discriminatioJ1 ~iggins ~ yenrsRalph Emerson measure ever Ploposed for Brit shy $100 yenrll Edith chamberlin Mr I

aIn it was introduced by the Reliable Market-In memory Mrs MIchael Cornick Mr amp yenrs of deceased loved ones govelllment of Prime Miliister Ernest Forni Jr

Harold Wilson not so much to $50 MI amp Mrs Shurtleff Mry deal with present circuinstances Mrs Corinne Fournier Ralph Jameson Mr amp Mrs Clemshyas with the future when the $30 mey Mr amp Mrs James Hamlen

A Friendproblem could become more Mr amp lVIIs Charles McHugh acute $25 Mr amp Mrs William Ward Mr

A Friend In memory of Mr amp amp Mrs Charles Pizzottimiddot Mr amp

Diocese Convenes Mrs Antone G Camacho Mr amp Mrs Charles Parks Frances Silva Mrs Thomas DeMont Mrs Rose

First Lay Congress M Peardon A Friend Seekonk BATON ROUGE (NC)The A Friend

first lay congress of the Baton Mr amp Mrs James L Kenney MT CARMELmiddot Rouge diocese convened at the $100 Catholic Lifc Center herc Ostellville St Vincent de Paul Society

More than 600 lay people repshy $50 OUR LADY 0 THEresellting the 12 civil paJishes Knights of Columbus

(~ounties) comprising the Loushy ASSUMPTION Mr amp Mrs Edwnrd McCrystal isiana diocese had the opportu- $50middot $25

nity middotto participate in matters The McKeon Family ToI11enS Guild Mr amp Mrs affecting diocesan finances the $25 Wilfred Blanchette middotMrbullamp Mrs

feasibility of continuingmiddotCath_ Mr ~ Mrs WiUiamHerron Edward Chal)~ler Mr amp Mrs Ciq education apart from the Manu~IJlendricks Jr HOlyName pu~gtlicschool systein the Ray ham ~9ci~ty Mr amp MrsE McPhillips Churchs il)VOlvcmcnt in social SJmiddotANNmiddot action admiriistrative middotstrllemiddot $90 Somerset

tures of themiddot Church and the Rev Thomas F Neilan ST JOHN OF GOD nymans place in diocesan 00shy $75 $150 ministratioa Cirino Dominic P amp Family Dr Americo B AlUehbl

SACRAMENTO (NC) ~ TheJSouth Dart~outh beads of Catholic charitable ST MARY agencies throughout CaliforniD

$125 have joined in opposing 00- Dr amp Mrs Paul E Corley 1~mptsof government to reduce

$50 public spending at the expense Dr ampmiddotMrs Victor Almeida of ihe needy and poor

$30 Mr 1 MrsWilliam Hines

]25 Mi amp Mrs Armand Borgesmiddot Mr amp Mrs Charles Nunes

Mr amp Mrs joseph MOlliz Jr The Johnson Family Dr amp Mr~ Archibald Senesac

Nantucket Sll MARY

OUR LADY OF THE ISLE $36

James E Worth $15

Grace Henry

9ffering You ~ SavingsPIQnsmiddot

lHlome Financingmiddot

WARFJI~~ (O-OP~RATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mass

Telephone 0 295-2400 flllnb-llv-Mall Servlu AYllIIIllII

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Check These Banking Services

bull Savings Bank life Insurance lleaDhtate Loans bull Chri~tmas and Vacation Clube

bull Savings Accoumiddotmiddot -

bull 5 CO~Yl1lient Locaiios bull - - middott

middotNEW BEDFORD INSTITUTImiddotONmiddot tor SAVINGSmiddot

12 -tAE ANCHOR-Diocesa ofFoti Rive~Thurs May 23 1968 l

$copylDfrTht ~$frml 1NJcopy1iU0il Wreg$U9gt[J1 JIl[OlLY CROSS OUIlt LADY OlF GIltACIE

$101 $50 Mr amp Mrs Donald L BergerOlll Rev Rene R Levesque

$100 $25Joseph P Kairys

Mr amp Mrs Orner Duqu~tte$50 Jennie E Overton Mr amp Mrs James R Jones SOWltrlm YIiUililOuii1mDr amp Mrs Thomas Berry Jr Mr amp Mrs John Pilz middotST pros X Mr amp Mrs Robert J Dray $150 John J Smith John F Martin Dr amp Mrs R Earl McLoud $100

$40 Anonymous 1IL F Bergeron $54l

$35 Philip J Hart Frank Ready Ano~ymous (2)

$30 $25 Dr amp Mrs Herbert L Evereti Edward P Hayes John J CarshyLouis Lyne amp Theodore Larishy roll Thomas P McDonough

mere Dorothy Schoonmaker Denis d Brophy Mary Geist Douglas Eo ~

$25 VampJl John Crawford Mr amp Mrs David Gomes M

ampMrs Leo R Schleicher Mr amp Mrs M J Hegarty Thomas F 1fltID01iJil~~ Gentile Mr amp Mrs EdwardlllL Slr JJOSEIPIHILoveday

Mr amp Mrs Robert E Coffey ~150

li$r Francis Welch Mr amp Mrs A Friend Leo F Sullivan Mr amp Mrs Robshy $40

Mr amp Mrs John Aiello I3ehleicher ltUt Downey Mr amp Mrs John E

Mr amp Mrs Gerald Tache $35

Mr amp M~ Arthur LeclairEast FaBmoutlh $30

ST ANTHONY VictormiddotL Brunette $275 Mrs Simonne Fisher

St Vincelllt de Paul Confer- Mr amp Mrs Edwin J Marmk ace Mr amp Mrs William A Olishy

voeira Mr amp Mrs Enos Days $21)

William Bartlett Mr amp Mrs Gerard Benoit Mr amp Mrs Nicholas F Tangshy

~y $25

Mrs Margaret Virgin Alice Bourassa Alexander Perri llIIllll lllli Braley Jr Dr amp Mrs Jell shyorne Brault

Cecile A Daley Mr amp Mra John I)ias Jr Mrs Mary P Gage Mr amp Mrs Ernest RLashysectesse Edward McGrath

Mr amp Mrs Leonard deMeshydeiros Mr amp Mrs Roland L Despres Mrs Irene FitzGeralcll Mr amp Mrs Edward Fitzsimshymons Mary Gogghi

Edmond Goulet Margaret Manghan Joseph C Mello Mrs Carmen Muldoon Mr amp Mrs Paul Murray

Margaret Nickerson Mra Edythe Rankin Mr amp_Mra Frank J Rezendes George Vishyveiros Mr amp Mrs JosephSevigny

Sli MAIlty

$81 St Vincent de Paul Society

$25 Sacred Hearts Association Raymond Dlugosinski Mr amp Mrs Manuel Allua amp

Nancy Mr amp Mrs Antone Costa J1l Mr amp Mrs John A Wojcik

SACRED IHIEARlr $25

St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ST IPATRRCK $iOO

Mr amp Mrs William BrennlUll $75

Anonymous $50

Mr amp Mrs Francis J Flynn Atty amp Mrs Edward Farrell

$30 Mr amp Mrs Albert W Lawrence

bull Major ampMrs Lawrence Uch-shymanowicz

$25 Mrmiddot amp Mrs Edward C Wen Jr John Keohane

Mr~ amp MrS JosephCardeIre Mr amp Mrs Melvin Dolan

Mrmiddotamp Mrs Walter Buguey Mr amp Mrs Robert Costa Mr amp Mrs John Kelliher John Lynch

Mr amp Mrs Thomas Magwre Mr amp Mrs Kenneth Paige

$30 lt $leo~ IJ=1J yltID Uilliil 0$ lllr amp MrsEdward McCarthJ7 lievbull~ 17 ~

Slr FRANCIS XAVlrEllt $2S st ~o Womeno CI~

Holy Name Society COO $450 Mramp RlIra Lee Kingsb~St Vincent de Paul Society $25 Mr amp lVlro Leo Parente

$300 Capitell Mr amp Mrs Richard Dr amp Mrs ~p Sibilll

Charles H McGrath Joan

Mr amp Mrs Larry Newman Sproul lllr amp Mrs Thomas ~$100 Loughlin Mr amp Mrs William Mr amp Mm GeorgeM~Doane Beale amp Ames E Donovan Mr amp lVlm Joseph FalDtoo

$50 Mr amp Mrs Harry SylvesterMr amp Mrs Frank J Dolan Mr amp Mrs Charles Flynn lltlr $25

A Friend Mrs Rockina CaftDoMr amp Mrs Irving Morrissey amp Mrs~ Marshall Field Mr amp amp Family Mr amp Mrs JOQD KmampJ R ~eyburn Mrs Robertmiddot Ryan Vetorlno Mr amp MrS Victor Narciso Mr IIMr amp Mrs John Hart Bros Ipc Fruitland

Scudder amp Taylor Oil Inc CarreiM Florist Mrs John Kinsley Dr amp Mrs Francis ONeil Ilflr amp Moo Wllliam ~

Captains Table Mr lie Mrs John Currivan Mr Bishop Tyler General Assem- McznsfieRdl Mrs Alfred Kuplast Mrs ~

My garet Jordan Mrs Grace Duma Charles J Ardito 8l MARY Mr amp Mrs Fred Taylor Josepla

$ltamp0 $150 E Donovan Jmiddotr Mr amp Mramp W tel Alfieri Catholic Youth Organization st VinceJntt de Paul Society

shy-

SENDYOUR GnJFT TO bull i l j middotcrmiddotmiddot

The Rig Rever~ Edward TO~MeiJramiddot The IUght Reverehd RiJYlIWnd T CQnsidiRf lVallonarpfreclor Olt Diocesiul Di~ecto i

366 Fifth Avenue 368 North MalnSteet f(eWYork New Yo~k ioooi Fall River Massachuseits027l0 -

1iWJlE ADDRESS

THE sectOClllETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH ~ shy

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~~ IiUrge Negro La Guidonce Boord ~n K~s~ Cety

KANSAS CJIIIY (NC~-A five-paltish cooperative illl

ner city ministry guided by a Negro lay board has been proposed os a way o~ bridging the gap betWeen the white Catholic CI1urch and the Negro community here in Misouri

A six-person committee headshyed by MrsThelma Work will identify the nee~ of the lComshymunity-Catholic or not-and to propose a structure fur meetshying those needs I

The action came as the result

of a meeting of the Catholie

V ~

Clergy Conference on Inner Oity bullneeds

Father James Lock chairman cited charges of the Black Cathshyolic ClergyCaucus in Detroit in conjunction with the IImnual meeting of the Catholic Clergy Conference on the Interracial Apostolate The Black Caucus statement said the Catholic Church in the United States 1s gtrimarily a white racist insti shytution which is rapidly dying in the black community and to which the black community no longer looks to with hope

On~ Out f li5 The Caucus recommended fha~ Harrison the Bishop Rev William J Hurley Rev DonaiiIll

white priests become supportshy E Messier Rear Rev Cornelu8 F Kiley Rey Robert A ers and learners listening tc McGowan Rev Edmund J Fitzgerald Rev Kevin F TrippNegroes to find out what tbeir lheir assignment~ are Olll page twoneeds are

The Kansas City-St Joseph diocese bas no Negro diocesan priests Ttrore~ DS~th~ Aoee Sl1m~PO rfif~ifflg tedera~ Jb ~~~

We are trying to start the wheels rolling for some kind of

~umlp~JrlMeFrot Nleereg~~rJ fr CmbCBi OW~iff1ychurch structure through which the black people of our diocese can voice opinions and partici shy WASHINGTON (lTC)-SPokesshy ment of public policy ~t Jlorth oommunity-based Social services esnie cultural values of ~hliv

pate in decision making said men for Protestant Catholic and in the Full Employment Act (l(f to meet Human and community country they said are sucll Father Lock Jewish organizations h a V e 1946 which provides for useshy needs Recipients of rondo that work becomes the basis by

backed federal legislation which ful employment opportunities should not conduct sectarian which a persons worth tnFather Dan Howe declared~

We have set up programB would provide one million jobs for all those able willing and programs judged A job not only tends ie i10r the nations unemployed seeking to work n determine an individuals acshygeared to Catholics in our parshy While they acknowledged that

ceptance by society but it alsish whom we have formed rn Their support was given in The Acts emphasis on education passage of this legislation would affects ones attitude abolll~the white mentality Since cl testimony before the House Seshy and training Training s1Mgtuld be no wre-all for the ills ci oneselfbest we are having contact lect Subcommittee on Iabor be open-ended so that the posshy poverty in America the spokesshy

with only about 2000 people out Studies have shown that unshywhi~ is holding hearings on sibility of permanent full-time men said that any attempt to of the 50000 in our area we the Guaranteed Employment employment beyond fIDe presshy combat poverty must provide employed persons have a ve~

can presume that the activities Act of 1968 ent situation is a reality Trainshy meaningful jobs low level of self-esteem anell we have structed as being our that this attitude tends to pro-ing programs of this ~Testifying were Father JohnChristian program of service do vide a self-fulfilling prophesrshould include basic educationMcCarthy assistant director ofnot reflect or reach black thinkshy MO~~U[ij] ~lW] ~O~S since it then becomes more dif~counseling and opportunities tothe Social Action Departmenting ficult to find or hold a joblearn about appearance manshy

E~GJHlll O]RDAllNJEID FOR IllmCJESJE Bishop Qgtnnolly m-dained eight deacons ro the priesthood for service in the Diocese 21t ceremonies oonducted at St Marys Cathedral Fall River Front Rev Edward E Correia Rev George Eo

We need a board of black of the U S Catholic Confershy OrJi1 AA~jjo Foreg[uGagement of income health IImdence Dr Grover Bagby of thelaymen to tell us what the pe0shy NEW YORK (NC)-Answershyother factors affecting personalDepartment of Social Justice ofple want to help change the well-being and development fog an appeal from the Ceylonthe National Council oftone to establish priorities government now fighting a mashyChurches and Rabbi Richard GFather Howe noted there are lWven fl Sellf-lEs~(()nim laria epidemic threatening 16Hirsch director of the Religiousapproximately 9000 Negro million persons the catholicAction Center of the Union of Involvement of private nonshyCatholics on the books but Medical Mission Board nere sentAmencan Hebrew Congrega- profit organizations Such Oll shynot necessarily active in Kansas by air Ifreight 364000 anti-mashytions - ganizations they said will c0shyCity out of a total Negro popu- laria tablets to Colombo Ceyshyoperate with the development ~lation of about 130000 They specifically suppoit4d lons seaport-capital The shipshyHe said that although the three provisions in the bill ment valued at $10746 conshy

structure of the lay board is yet Creation of an Office of Guarshy (cll)f AdldJrell$$ sisted of tablets for both ooults ro be determined it is the conshy anteed Employnient Opportushy and ~hildren sensus of 20 priests and laity at 1r~~regy Meefrolilregnity l8 a eontinued develop Earlier the CMMB respondingthe meeting that at least half

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-Theshythe lay members would be un- oro a plea for help from Indoneshyology must revolutionize it shyder 25 since the young people ~1JJlhJreg~ WODil$ [Q)~f sian authorities shipped 220shyself John Cogley former reshyare the thought-leaders in the 520 anti-malaria tablets ~aluedligion editor of the New Yorkblack community ~ial ~fit1hvllsW Times told the national convenshy at $7306

NeCeSS31lY ApPll03Cln SCOTCH PLAINS (NC) shytion of the College Theology so-A Negro lawyer Leonara BrotherHarold Woods a teacher The Catholic Medical Mission ciety IN the University m- SainHughes told the meeting at Union Catholic High School Board for 40 years has beenmiddot IfmiddotranciscoOne thlng is clear The clos- here in New Jersey has won a oonducting a worldwide mercy

Ing of any Catholic institution months delay to contest lim Cogley DOW a staff member cl program shipping medicines or cut-back in the inner-city order to report to his New York the Center for the Study m Deshy drugs bandages and various says one thing to Negroes We draft board for induction into mocratic Institutions Santa Barshy other hospital supplies and dont want you to be CathoUcs ~e Airmed Fo~ equipment to some 1000 misshybara Cal and editor of the Censhy

Father Vince~t Lovett dir~ BrOther B8rold la member of ter magazine tlgtld delegates that sion hospitals 4000 dispensaries tor of the new Diocesan Social theology must lead- rather than and clinics in developingAction office saidmiddot middotthe Marist BrotheJS had been eoUJlltriesfollow usemiddotits treasureS ratheT It seems to me we a- 4o_1krecJassified ll-A and Cllldered to than hoard them Liberatemiddot it shying about setting up something after rewmfug biB draft eard 011 self from its own prison ~ c0nshylike II couotywith II state goy- April 19 as a protem agaiDst the formity fear imd be dead Dbshyernment - a regional ministry U4o- actionism of th~ pastwithin tile diocese Be said the war VBallam

S~aking on The image off

WI report for Induction em April M

approach seems not so much lim The 22-year-old teachers ease ideal as lh necessitymiddot bas been taken up by the Amer-o Man as Citizenmiddot Cogley said

iean CDvil Uberties Union that the change in the religlO1Ul Which ealled middottbeboardll action mans self-image and the change

Silent Meditation in reclassifying him ~ new in the image of politleal man are TRENJON ~NC)-A bID pr0shy height of wegality Tbe ACLU not unrealated The image of a

viding for a period of silent said Brother Harolds religious free man redeemed from every meditation each day by students status had not collmged since he form of spiritual servitude and attending public schools was WIlI3 originally classified ~D subjugation he said b triumphshyintroduced in the New Jersey and that he hGd DOt ilrlterfered ing over the old image of eccleshyState Legislature by Assembly with the ndministratlon of the sia9Ucal man-a passive creature Speaker Albert B Smitlll 3eleet1ve ~ BWolltem eOOject ~ the Will ca ~thero

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THE At~~C~_ 15 Th M 231968 urs ~y World Communication Day CtmMG(f~ A~V[JK~$ObsecteWGR1CCe on S~ndl~w O[fi) ~copy~o~ A~fDcopy[jf)

WASHINGION (NC)-In response to an appeal by NEW ORLEANS (NC)-ArchshyPope Paul VI to the universal Ohurch the Church in the bishop PhHip M Hannan asshyUnited States will observe the second World Communicashy serted here As far as I am tions Day on Sunday May 26 The National Conference of concerned segregation in the

Church is dead We are past the Catholic Bishops awroved time for statements Now is thefor Motion Pictures and Bishoplast November the observshy time for actionClarence J Issenmann of Cleveshynnc of World Communicashy Tile archQishop of New Orshy

tions Day in this country on USCC Press Department land episcopal chairman of the

leans told delegates at an diocesan and parish levels ampnd archdiocesan conference on st) shy

members of the U S Bishops cial action I assure you we are going forwardCommittee for Social Commu- Senate Rev1ltews

nications have sent to individ- He outlined programs fe ual Ordinaries throughout the Continued from Page One beMer education for adequate country a cOpy of the Prayer lains to be assigned on a funmiddot housing and for recognition of of the Faithful for that Sunday time basis and that the needs the inherent digni ty of all men and a ooP1 of the Holy ~athers of the sick were being adequateshy The Church is exerting itll message issued earlier this ly met under the present arshy influence in every way to assistmonth ran~ement the poorest he said If we

It is recommended that the 3 Recommendations on salshy follow Christ we must begillilobservance in this country ary adjustments Taken into aeshy with the pOor even if thishave both religious and non- count _by Bishop in his direcshy means asking others to wait 0religious aspects The former tives for Aug I 1967 little longerwould highlight a Mass with 4 Meetings open to all clergy Anyone can live poor the

appropriate sermon in the 00- Bishop approved archbishop said The key thingthedral or some convenient 5 Extension of Synod prepshy is dignity This does not mean church to which executives aration time Bishop approved that this dignity is recognized Wld employes of communica- 6 Secretary to be Treasurer by a dole or a handout or eveD tions media would be specially and Senate budget Bishop apshy preferential treatment We are invited proved confusing issues when we talk

The non-religious asp e c t 7 ChOice of other Prayers of of dignity as if it can be bought would feature news conferences the Faithful Bishop approved or paid for he said articles in the press and radio 8 Referral of matters to Passhy - I am totally for equal oppollaand TV interviews and proshy tunity in jobs and for adequate

housing not just open housincgrams toral Council Bishop approved

In his message to the Church 9 Creation of Clergy Person-In human dignity everyone hasPope Paul invited Catholics to Del Board Bishop approved an equal right to education anell

consider the significance of 1() Clergy retirement policy to culture he declaredthe changes that are taking with Bishop accepting ormiddot not

AWARDS CEREMONIES At the annual Awards Day for hospital personnel at St Annes Hospital Fall River Manuel Benevides 38 years of service receives his award while Bertha Janson 42 years of service awaits her presshyentation from trustees Harold K Hudner left and Arthui Guimond right

place in this field (communica- according to diocesan ll1eed tions) under our very eyes and Bishop approved to ponder the serious responsi- 11 In-service training tor bJlities that theSe imply for one newly-ordained priests Bishop and all approved

Clamor forAttentlo~ 12 Various diocesan diredors Until recently the Holy to recommend men for middotpart shy

Father pointed out many did time or full-time further study not have anything more to Btim- Bishojgtmiddot approved 1IIate their inflection than vague 13 Full participation by memories of what they learned Catholics in middotYMCAyWCA ot school or in the family and programs Bishop aPlgtrov~ What they beard in their envi- 14 Rotation among religious ronment eomniunities of their represen-

Now however with the echo Uitives on Senate Bishop ap- r the press motion pictures proved radio and television clamoring 15 Clergy to recommend men lor attention new h~riZons oPenJor episcopacy Bishop applloved wide before them llIndmiddot they are 16 Lay Personnel pension ttuned to the throbbing life of plan study Bishop approved the ~niverse

Who will not rejoice at this 17 Adjustmentin diocesan progress Do we not 1111 see in assessments Bishop approved It a roadmiddotdestined by Providence 18 Clergy retirement study for the advance of themiddot whole Bishop approved of mankind There is room for 19 Bishop announced through all hopes if man learns to mas- Senate exchange of facultieS ter these techniques but every- between Diocese of Fall River thing can be lost if he shirks his and Providence responsibilities Various commfttees have made

Members of the bishops com- studies to implement some of mittee signing the letter to the these considerations Ordinaries included Auxiliarymiddot Senate representatives have Bishop Gerald V McDevitt of participated on a regional and Philadelphia episcopal moder- national basis regarding a nashyator of the United States Catb- tional organization of priests olic Conference Bureau of In- and its constitution and activity formation Bishop John A Donshyovan of Toledo episcopal chairshyman of the National Catholic Cursillo for Men Office for Radio and Television Bishop Christopher J Weldon Starts Tonightshyof Springfield episcopai chairshy

A mens ~ursillo win ~ginman of the Bishops qo~ttee tonight at La Salette C~nter of Christian Livingmiddot At~leboro Dishy

Delegate Recives rectors will be William Barnes of Marion and Rev GilesHonorary Degree Genest middotMS of the center

HONOLULU (NC) ~ Archshy Allmiddot eursillistas are invited to bishop Luigi RaimondiApostolicmiddotmiddot the firstmiddot anniversary of ultleya Delegate in the Unikld States middotmeetingsmiddotin the Fall River area baS received an honorary deshy at 745 Wednesday night May laquoree froIn Charninade College 29 at Sacred Hearts Academy here the only Catholic eollege Prospect Street Fall River A lID the state of Hawaii concelebrated Mass will be folshy In an Dterview with the Hashy lowed by a song session social

waUmiddotCatholic Herald ArehlSishop bour and refreshments Baimondi ~pressed tolerance Ul1reya meetings are schedshylor student activism in the Unishy uled in Attleboro oat Jettes ted States middotIltating Students Funeral Home Friday May 11 8ft adive everywhere Youth Monday May 27 Monday June ill UyiDg find its WBY aoc1 2 Friday June 14 and FridayecJar patterns of tbougbt IlBd June 21 eetioD e DOt lIS set asin pre A eursillo for W4)men is scbedshy paerationfl Cbolees were 1IIed for August and further inshy

-e fiSHthen tbin ~ tit formation is obtainable inla ~ -e LeSalleUe Centerbull --

You Live Better Electrically

trlc range bullbullbull with Iln ingenious oven that cleans Itself Make 8 clean break with the past bullbullbull and graduate to another appliance

that adds to the Joy of Total Electric Uvlng

Graduate to a ~fiameless electric range thatmiddotcleansits own ovenmiddot

Make 8 clean break~ with the past4

Why spend ~ours stooping scrubbing and scouring to clean your oven Why not grad- uate to a modern flarve1ess range bullbull with anoven that cleans itself electrically Its so

easy to use Set the controls and-zingo The oven cleans Itself (And drip pans) All you dois whisk awaya IIttie pOwder

- YOUll notice toothat a flamelessmiddot range keeps your kitchen clean cool a~d ~omshyfortable And because electric cookmg IS so automatic YOUll cook with pleasure So see

yOur appliance dealer about aflameless elecshy

See Yo~r Appliance Dealer or

FAll RIVER ~l~CTRIC LIGHT COMPANY

o

mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 23 196816 I

Mafttl[p)Dsellt $50 Raymond L W Benoit

$5BTANJrlllONY Jos~ph A Tully William J

$300 OLearY Mr ampMrs Alfred Baty ltlJbades McGowan Mr amp Mrs Fred Harney

$100 Mr amp Mrs Michael C ODonshyaarence G Verdi nell Mr amp Mrs ThomaS P Per~ lIugene F Phelan kins Mr amp Mrs John Kozlowski

$15 mosampry Altar Society

$66 Buzzard$ B~y I

iusan A McGowan ST MAJuiAR]ampTWilliam Keane

$SOshy$55 A Friendllohn P Delaney

$6$40 lIlr amp Mrs Thomas Pina

~h G Perry $25$35

Mr amp Mrs Edwin PaytonlInmothy Manning )l amp Mrs John KarlJfudge E C Horrocks J~

$30 Mr amp Mrs Edwin N Rose Wareham Lodge of Elks 15044bullbull Clayton King

Mr amp Mrs David Fannon$~

Mr amp Mrs John OCOnnellJames Downey Romeo Bedarql William Delaneyhnes H Gifford Mary M Chad Mr amp Mrs James Lopes

Wick George Smith Jr Antone Mr amp Mrs Louis Fougereshy-es Edmund Perry $25 Mr amp Mrs Armand Bedard

Mr amp Mrs Michael DelIsMark H McIntyre Teree JeminaBlossom Joseph Farley Robert Mr amp Mrs William BennettGIngras Real Breton Mr amp MrsLouis Eacobaoct

Jobn Tarvis Francis ODri9shyu Holy Nam~ Society Paull Glennon Joseph Zychowicz Central -VUlageIIaomas Renahan Richard SmiUll

ST JOHN THE BAPTIBJl

~50 bullNorth Dighton Mr amp Mrs John DeNadal

ST JOSEPH nolt Rev John P Hogan$156

IlR Vincent de Paul $75 Dr Peter F Piccinini$50

$25amp11 Name Society Florence I Bessette MrSt Josephs Womens Guild

$35 Mrs John J Ardagh Jr llim Raymond Williamsbull amp Mrs Joseph MWTaJ

Me amp Mrs Daniel TebreiN$30 J Jl)r amp Mrs William AcIamI Mr amp Mrs Robert Albanese

o Iohn W Perreira$5 Ch(ltham

Mr amp Mrs Joseph C Amarat 1lIJr amp Mrs Edward M Berobe HOLY ~EJI)EIEMEamp

bullbull amp Mrs Arthur A Ennes Mr $101 A Mm William Johnson Rose Pi Assqc of the SacredHea~ Mello $lOet

Mr amp Mrs Harold Mendoza Mr amp Mrs Robert Han lIffr amp Mrs Bruce Murph) Mr Col amp Mrs John McCa~ bull Mrs Robert Secatore $50

Mrs James Bell Jr St Vincent de Paul Sodeq Mr amp Mrs John J Cavanaup

IIMMACULATE CONCBPJIl[ON $30 $DOO A- Friend

Ambonymous $2-5 $a Chatham Trust Co Mr af

Anonymous MrS E Joseph Geller Dr~ amp MIlII Robert Harned A Friend (~)

Anonymous $75

Mr amp Mrs William Kent Mr amp Mrs Paul reF~vre Mr lIi$it

- Mrs~ Richard Sylva Mr amp MmHelen P Derby Patrick SullivanMr amp Mn Aibert Giordano

A Friend Mr amp Mrs Frank Dresseli Mr amp Mrs Philip S1iel]oA Friend Mr amp Mrs James Griffin shyAnonymous Mr amp Mrs Frank Wing _ImmaCU1ate Conception MenliI

Club $4G North Attleboro

Mr amp Mrs Raymond ~rgerotl SACRED HEART$35

Mr amp Mrs William Condoo $200 $5 Rev JOuter Lussier

Mr amp Mrs William Buchtman $30 Caesar Cardoza Mr amp Mrs RoT Mr amp MrsJeorge Merewe Howard Immaculate Conception $~ Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Joseph A Jette

Mr amp Mrs Co George Knapp $25 McCarthy Coal Co Mrs Fredshy Mr amp Mrs Paul Dion Mrbull elick H Murphy A Friend Mrs Frederick Fortin LionelL

Martineau Mr amp Mrs~ Philippe Rainville amp Florence

Mr amp Mrs George Beaulieu Sl lWAllUf A Friend

STMA-ElY$50 $150Mr amp Mrs Michael Murphy

Nelson GulskiMr amp Mrs Jose FernandesSIl $75$30 Rev Armando A- AnnunziabMr amp Mrs Thomas J Bryanamp

$50 Eva Morowski

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John HaugMr amp Mrs Roland Roberge Mr amp Mrs John StanfordDavid amp Martha Rocha M Veronica Reilly

Mary Cronin George Yefh Mildred Leary A ~riend

BreWSlfreli $4G Dr amp Mrs Domenie BalJiIe

OUR LADY OF TlIIE CAn $35 o $100 Dr amp Mrs Kenneth AtwiIl lllisBionaries of La saleUe jnr amp Mm JosepiL Dona

MONSIGNOR VI[lELSB

Heads Bishop$ Task force

WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr Aloysius J Welsh of Newark N J a recognized authority in race relations and social aclion work has been named to head the Urban Task Force estabshylished by the U S bishops

Bishop Joseph L Bernardin general secretary of the U S Catholic Conference who anshynounced the monsignors apshypointment said the task force was calhd for by the U S blsbshy

ops at theirmiddot April meeting in SL Louis in their statement on the mational racial crisis The bishshy

ops directed the task foree be established by the USCC Social[ Action Department

In this work he will cooperaW with MsgI George G Higgins director and Father John MeshyCartty assistallt director of the Social Action Department the bishop said

$30 Mr amp Mrs Frederick ThOIpG middotMr amp Mrs Clement Sbarolll

$26 Mr amp Mrs Andtew Boisvert Gertrude Cassi~y

Elizabeth Sheals $25

Mr amp Mrs Daniel J Cava- naugh Mr amp Mrs Raymond Bl~hard Mr~ amp Mrs Robert Brunelli A Friend

Mr amp Mrs Robert Gilmore Mrs James P Reynolds Mr amp Mrs John Donleymiddot Mr amp Mm James Battersby Mr Mn Jlohn bullCollins

Virginia G Robinson

AttRehoro BOLY GHOST

$150 Dr amp Mm LoneJglUl

~110 Mr amp Mm John CapoWglo

$50 Holy Ghost St Vineellllt cle Pail

$35 Mr amp Mra Joseph BJOdeur

$25 Mr amp Mrs Malcolm ~

Mr~ amp Mrs Harry Dowdall Mr amp Mrs RObert Geddes Mr~ I Mrs Frank Pistolese

ST JOlIN $200

In memory of Dn7 hwlbaDcI JIoseph F ODonn~

$100 Mr amp Mrs Raym9nd ENmlIlilll Anonymous Donor Inmemory of GabriGll lYaBltllloshy

alone bull $75 -

Rev Edwarcl A Ra~

Mr amp Mrs John P I4e $50

MaryL Wilhelm Mr amp Mrs J G WaJEll Jlr Mr amp Mrs Franclll Bo Mr Joseph ODonnell1 ~ amp Mrs Ernest ~

$30 m=teanor Robinqmiddot Alice~

ST JOSEPH $25

Counseil Jeanne DAre No 263

ST MARK $50 ~

Edward J Connors Jr $25

William J Roche Jr Joseph Dias Mrs Michael J Croke

ST MARY $50

Holy Name Society of St Mary Knights of Columbus Seekonk

Council Mrs Leland B Smith

$35 Mr amp Mrs Donald Blake

$~O ~r amp Mrs Henry E Woodcome st Marys Womeno Guild

$25 Mr amp Mrs Frank Padykula

Mr amp Mrs Russell J Sumner ST THERESA

$50 Mr amp Mrs Donald Boardman Mr amp Mrs George LeBeau

$30 William Cauley amp Family Mr amp Mrs George Boyd

0 $25 Mr amp Mrs RobeIt Generenl Mr amp MrsRobert St mlaiN

Taunton -HOLY ROSAILY

$30 Mr amp Mrs Russen Woodward stanley Radwansld

$25 Children of Mary Sodality Richard Januse

SACRED HEARi

$50 Mr amp Mrs Joseph S llosamp Mr amp Mrs Vincent BrimleF

$35 Mr amp MnJ Robert MeClellaml

_ S2i Walter Waltman Mr amp Mm

atephen Crosby The ~ Mr amp MrtI William Vaillan-

OOurt Mr amp Mrs Michael Barber

Mrs Margaret Rose llrtr~ bull II Frederick Reams

o

81 JAMES

$U Armand Desautels Tremblay Moving Iii 8tonlge

00mpany

STMABY $100

Dr~ Charles HoYt $60

GeOrge Dion Jr $51

Mr~ amp Mrs Kenneth $50

Mm A Hoffman Dr Normand ~ Mr amp M1lil J McNilmaN ar Dr John Fenton Mr amp Mrs Kicban sm

$36 ~ B Grant

~O Dr EdmWlld Fitzgerald D4niel A J Doyle

$U

Richard Barrington BIizabeCIa dIt Margaret Brady Mr - Mm kmea Bumtl Dr CarsiDbre e-- IlUOCi -Robert J mn JamesD hcige

Mr amp Mra Llocel IaImDee ftlomas Hoye Merrill lliaynard Jmelen amp Catherine McCariIll7

Alice McKenna Ruth MeshyJUona Susan McKenna II

Plan To B~ild

- See Us About ~

lotyCost Financing

WAuREHAM SAVltfGS BANK

WorehaftI falmouth cr J-3800 II 1-3000

Mrs James McMorrow Franeb Mulholland

Mary Mulholland Ma~ Neenan Joseph ODonnell Eveshylyn Rice Agnes amp Joseph Rose

Mrs Joseph Rowley Robert Sullivan J Roger Torme1 Charles H fripp Rita Baker

Mrs James Bennett William Carney John Gonzals James Holmes Mary E McNamara

Dr Thomas~OBrien Cbarleo OConnell Mr amp Mrs Edwarcll OGara Mr amp Mrs John 00 _ Ilfearne MlJI amp Mrs Edward OKeefe

1he Ralph Reckard Famil1 Cecelia F lfi Mary C Sheerin

ST PAUL $150

St Vincent de Paul st Pauh Taunton 0

$100 Rev Cornelius~ltYNem

$50 Mr amp Mrs Edward Roster

$24 Mr amp Mrs John Medas Jr

$25 Mrs Catherine Campbell Mr

amp Mrs Chester Jackman Mr c1i Mrs Richard Silva Mr amp Mrs Leo Leroux Mr Mrs John Steen

Mr amp Mrs Donald Emond Mr Be Mrs Gordon Seekel Mr amp Mrs Charles Welch Mr MllIl Paul Silva

New Bedford HOLY NAME

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John Hallonm Mr amp Mrs Jacob Teser

ST CASIMIR $150

Beltr cutnir Kwiatkowski $109

Atto~ Ferdinand Sowa $25

Mr amp Mrs Joseph FoUrnier The Poczatek Family Mramp M Antbony Rijo Jr Mr Mrs Stanle Scbkk Eve White

I

ST BYACINTB $100 -

Mr Mrs George Vigeallltl $50

st Vincent de Paul ConferenCe Gf Hyacinth Parisb

Tum to Page Seventeen

CONRAD SEGUIN BODY COMPANY

Aluminum or Steel 944 County Seet

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2-6618

w H RILEY amp SON Inc

CITIES SERVICE IDISTRIBUTORS-

0 Gasoline Fuel and Ra~ge

OILS OIL BURNERS

for Prompt Delivery amp hoy amp Night ~ice

8 IE BOIlER BURNER UNITS

80tItecI G48 Service

61 OOItANNET Sf TAUNTON

AJdeb DfO - No- Attleboro

TountoIamp

(l

SUMY pons Nuns (l)ffi) AifrMdl~$o

Re$M~~e~o trMture D~[freg~UDrru~ WASHINGTON (NC)-Resulto

of a survey of all United States nuns reveals a high ooceptance of post-Vatican II changes anell an eagerness robecome morrc involved in the inner city and poverty apostolates

The B1UVey conducted bythe Conference of Major Superiors of Women dlJring 1966 was the first extensive attempt to assess resources and attitudes of reli shygious communicenties c1 women and their memberll in the United States

The JPecific coal of the surshyvey was to assess the resources and determine 1ampIe responses that Religious are making and ean make to the invitation 13shysued in Vatican Us Decree on the Renewal of Religious ~e

More than 135000 Sisters parshyticipated in the survey respondshying to 649 questionnaire items covering religious beliefs atti shytudes toward change edu~shy

tional background present ocshycupation and future plans comshymunity life and proposals for future ohange

Results were processed by 00 Sister-sociologists across the country with the use of comshyputers

llleason for lIAlavnng The survey showed 1827 oil

the 175000 U S Sisters-107 per cent-left religious life durshying 1966 Of those Sisters only 869 had taken final vows In an interview with the NC News Servicemiddota spokesman for the Conference of Major Superiors of Women (CMSW) said most Sisters who have remained feel that a major reason for the inshy

ltereased number of Sisters leavshymg religious life is an increased ~penness to the idea within the lfcligious community

She said that the increased fucus on personal development has caused many Sisters to see that they are not suited to the religious life and that they will find areater personal fulfillment elsewhere

Statistics on be division of labor among U S Sisters show 72 per cent are teachers eight per cent are involved in health work five per cent in catechetshyill~ and missionary work lmd tbr~ per cenmiddott in welfare work

Seventy per cent of the teachshyem ore in elementary school work 195 per cent in high school education and 68 per

eent teach at the college level Of those involved in health care 18 per cent in health administration and 62 per cent in direct care jobs

lEnter New lFienlll1s The survey showed Sisters

have a strong desire to become involved in adult education inshyner city work pre-school teachshying and other s~ial work and to have greater contact with their local community Nuns expressed eagnerness to enter fieldc where few Sisters are now working In 1966 13 per cent ot U S Sisters were engaged in adult education 82 pel cent in speshycial education 31 per cent in poverty work and 06 per cent in migrant education The surshyvey indicafes that there will be a dramatic change in these figures in the next few years

Father Considine Leaves PC$tr Continued fC0m Page One

man of the U S Bishops Comshymittee for Latin America

Bishop Bernardin prai~ed the work of Father Considine in the Latin America Bureau noting

iota progress under his direction since its inauguration in 1960

It has been a labor of love for Father Considine he saici whose long standing interest in the people of Latin America and of other developing areaa is well known

Maryknon Father Considine will return

to his writing and teaching asshymgnments at Maryknoll Ossinshy

lng N Y where he had served as publications director before becoming director of the IAiltin

America Bureau He holds editorial and advishy

lOry posts with several internashytional organizations and servell DS a member of the Council OIl

Foreign Relations He was amp

member of the National Advishysory Council of the Peace Corps from 1961 to 1966 He also founded and directed Fides Inshyternational Service in Rome an Information and research unit of

the Holy See He was born Oct 9 1897 C1shy

1-

~ATIlGR CONSIDINE

da1ned in 1923 and received II

licentiate in sacred theology from the Catholic University of America in 1924 He has reshyceived honorary degrees from Fordham University Manhatshytsnville St John University St Benedicts Atchison and is the author of 10 books on Latin America Asia and Africa and hall edited several others

L9ng-Range

Father Considine Sllid that he IlIaW the Latin America Bureau as set for the proseution ~ tl

vigorous nation-wide program 10 serve our Latin American eonfreres for the next- generashytion through the year 2000 -and into ~ 21st century He felt lIlllch 11 long-range view was necessarJ because at stake are important socio-religious adshyVDnces among hundreds of milshyHons cd people Latin Americas leaders need time for these advances

Be pointed out thatsome of the best Church leadership tbroughout the Catholic world today is found in Latin AmershyICD In turn he noted our U S bi~hops are quietly acceptshying international responsibiliti~s

as never before Father Considine said that the

program of the U S Bishops Committee for Latin Americn ~ablishes the heavy day-to-day work of the Latin America Bureau

Jgtersonnel Father Considine said that

llIODle 60 per cent of all U S apOstolic personnel overseas throughout the world works in Latin America with more Ulan 600 Latin American parishes served by U S priests Major Superiors of women ha~e 2500 Sisters in Latin America PAVLA has put more than 800 laymen there for three-year terms and U S bishops hnv~

more than 300 priests working in Latin America Annual fundshying for Latin Amerietl by U S Catholics ~~ $1f) millioll

SJJREET SCENE This was a busy street scene in the nations capital at the encampment of the Poor Peoples Campaign near the Washington monument More than 100~OOO- protestors are expected to be in Washington for Memorial Day NC Photo

OUlll lLAIDY OlF ll1HI1amp

ASS1lJMJgtJlJlON $26

Clara Rose amp Family $25

Mr amp-Mrs Jose F Cruz St Martin de Porres G~

Mi CARMEL $100

In memory of Mr amp Mrs J~ ilino Simoes

Rev Antonio P Pinto middotCM $75

Rev Azitonio P Pinto em $60

Mary i Ltuiz $50

Mr amp lVIrs Albino daSilv8 1IIt Carmel Womans Club

$30 Manuel Bettencourt Mr amp Mrs Kenneth lltinu

John Rodrigues $26

Olivia M Luiz $25

Cecelia Bettencourt CbildYeli of Mary Mt Carmel ~ouft

Units James Perry Mr amp lnl Manuel G Souza Jr

Mr amp Mrs Arthur Caetano Mr amp Mrs Charles Frate Mramp Mrs Lauran Silva

OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HE]P

~26

Mrs Amelia E Bariteau $25

Dr amp Mrs Francis Green

OURLADY OFPU~GATOB~ l)1I00

In memory of Alex J Ka1He from Cltpe Coo Sportswear ~

lnc Fairhaven Lumber Co

$30 Atty George R Morad euroJ

Atty ~e E Morad $25

Josephine David 1bl mlE1lllllOllY of George A EI-Hillow Mr ampgt Mra ~rge JThomas Mr amp IIIlm Hykel G Simon

ST KIlldAN nSO

Rev WilMeT J Boekley

U~~ amp Wmeentde PaW ~

~ iWa1 1kntley

$2S AlmgeAo OH1feira

SAClllIampDlHlJEAlltT $25

Alexander Caruso

c S11 JAMES

$55 rulllbull amp lVIrs Francis O Quinn

$50 lilred Kelley

$40 William OMalley

~1 A Friend

$3~

Mr amp Mrs Jr Hugh Barry $25

Mr amp Mrs Andrew ONeil Mr 8 Mrs Robert Arnett

ST JOSEPH

$450 sa Josephs Church Societies

$70 Mr amp Mrs Maurice Dansereau

1130 II Mr amp Mrs Luigi Fiano lk Fmniy

125 Mr amp Mrs Thomas Weaver MI amp Mm Maurice Lamonshy

tagne Mrbull Mrs Raymond Rondel1

ST TBERIESA $100

Eugene Lemieux

Sturtevant 6 Hook lEst 1897

Bude~s Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New ~dforcJ

996-5661

THE ANCHOR- ~ 7 lfhuvs May 23 1968

~regreg [copy~G~ ~O~

Oa1l ~MOO~ []M~Orru NEWARK (NC)-A charge (l(

apparent ~racial discriminatiom in the assignment of tenants 00 public housing here is Oontainoo in s report issued by the New Jersey Advisory Committee 00 the U S Commission em CiWl Rights

It said the Newark Housing Authority follows a policy ef permitting people applying fOlr placement in public housin~ projects to choose the project tm whieh they want to live

lit said this policy has ~

llributed to the segregation Cl1I public housing and recomshymended that t1he policy 00 abandoned in favor of first-come first-serVed basis

The report noted that Q01l1li vast housing projects nre locatell in Newarks Central Ward-tho scene of widespread noting D year ago and of two massiv~ firo disasters this spring-and tll~

they are more thanSO Negf~ ~ccupied

It further charged that them Js U a disparity in maintenanceo between the predominantly N~

gro and the rgtredominantly whi~

projects a complaint lIiTegNgt leadership has frequently medea

It termed living conditiom b the Central Ward projects opshypressive and that the proj~cto

are JIOor)y designed llt recomshymeld~d that additionaI ~ev areas for young children ~Gl

meeting places for odww ~ teenagers be provided

Higher ~arnings

ON YOUR SAVINGS Per Annum

I W Ask abow

INVESTMEIlaquo

SAVINGS

CERTIFICATES

$IlFm - Savings insu~ed safe IIlyJ liII ClEerny of the US Government

IlVAILABIU1Y - No notice VCllIirfpound Your funds available when ooedea

Slllil by MAtL - We pr~e5S pt~ ood pay postage both ways

Assets over $41ooo0llC

FIRST fEDERAL SaYings and Loan Associatio1ll

of F~L~ RIVER shy~---__-------------~~~~ First Federal saYIngs bull Loan At ~

1 Borth Main St Fall llliTe1 Ibu ~ ~ Ii 02722 P1Imle 674-4001 ~ ~ ~ke llpplicatlOll oJ phone t1 fOOl wldl ~ o ~ o 0 IlllIivithllll Aceoullt 0 Jont Ac4cwot f)

PIlllse Cl3len II SllVings llCCOUCt blcelaquol

o eAomelamp) = ~ 0 ~ Address 0 ~ l 0 clleck In the amount of e--- ~ ~ 0 ~ _~___~~~_~uuJ

SPECIAL RATES FOR Schoo~ Outings and Picnics

amfACi MANAGERI - UNCOLN PARK 999-6984 636-2744

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs May 23196~

The Parish Parade OUR LADY OF ANGELS SACRED HEART WALL RIVER NORTH ATTLEBORO

Altar bOys willsponsor a cake The CCD program will be lJ81e Sunday May 26 following canonically established Friday Iill1 Masses June 21 the feast of the Sacred

Masses today the feast of the Heart The program will include Ascerision will be at 7 and 9 a 730 evening Mass followed AM and -1215 4 5 and 7 PM by proclamation and reception Confessions will be heard be- of CCD members and a social ~re each Mass hour

The Summer Mass schedule CCD students in grades 6 to will begin Sunday June 2 with 12 will attend a folk Mass and Masses from 6 to noon on the sing-out at La Salefte Shrine hour Monday night May 27 Tnose

Monday May 27 through Fri- participating will leave the ooy May 31 there will be church school yard at 645 and will be services at 7 each evening The returned at 930 living rosary will be sponsored Confirmation ceremonies will by the Holy Rosary Sodality be ~ld at 730 Sunday night Monday night the Council of May 26 Catholic Women on Tuesday ther societies on Wednesday and Thlusday and the Children New Bedford ~ M~~ on lfrIday

ST MARY HOLY NAME $25iALL RIVER Mr amp Mrs Roger Goyette

Contemporary music will acshy The Shea Family company the 1115 Mass Sunday Mrs Vivian Wegrzyniakmorning May 26

New CYO officers are Robert ST LAWRENCE amplois president Paul Durin $200 rice-president Polly Rockett Dr amp Mrs Stanley Koczera eecretary-treasurer A Friend

$125 OUR LADY OF FATIMA Dr amp Mrs Robert Srnan sWANSEA $106

The Womens Guild will hold William E King Its annual penny sale at 730 $100

Monday night May 27 in the Dr amp Mrs William Walsh ehurch hall on Gardners Neck $75 lRoad Rev William F OConnell

A Penny Sale will be held Dr amp Mrs James Bolton MondaYMay 27 at 730 in the $60 dlurch hall A Friend

$50 IMMACULATE CONClEPlIION Teremiddotsa Ruth amp John HarneyNEW BEDFORD Victor T Kondi

Parisnioners will celebrate John L Powell rthe feast of Santo Ohristo this Loretta Lamarre Sunday with a roast beef dinner $45 served from noon to 2 with Mrs Mary B Wheatoil

tickets available at the door $40 lRefreshments and entertainment Mr amp Mrs John Connor will be on the afternoon and Mr amp Mrs Thomas J Longevening program $35

A procession and auction will Mr amp Mrs James M Kearneyfollow the dinner with various Mrmiddot amp Mrs Leo St Aubin Holy Name Society units parti shy $30 cipating in the procession Mr amp Mrs Albert Anderson

Mr amp Mrs Joseph Griffin OUR LADY OF V()T(RY Mr amp Mrs Walter L9veridgeeENTERVILLE Mr camp Mrs Myron Tripp

New officers of the Womens $28amptiild are Mrs John J Pendershy Patricia Connor ~st pre~ident MrS James Murshy $26 phy and Mrs John McBarron Mr amp Mrs Thomas SullivanVoice-president Mrs George Mr amp Mrs Charles BerryReale recording secretary Mrs $25 Richard Griffith treasurer Mr amp Mrs Robert Bedard

A Communion dinner at Mr amp Mrs Albert McMulleneummaquid Inn will follow Mr amp Mrs Theodore J CalnanlB30 Mass Monday night June Mr amp Mrs Alfred Couto Mr amproo Mrs Gilbert Noonan of Falshy Mrs Manuel Guerreira Josephmouth will speak Reservations P Mullen should be made with Mrs Edshy Agnes Proctor Mr amp Misward Welch or Mrs- Stephen Joseph Porter Mr amp MrsOBrien Jr by Thursday June 6 James Ryan Mr amp Mrs Paul

saunders ST THERESA Mr amp Mrs Merton WalkerSOUTH ATTLEBORO Mr amp Mrs John F SullivanMiss Patricia Makin of the

Diocesan CCD Board spoke at the annual Communion breakshy Fall River fast of the Confraternity of

ST MARYS CATHEDRALChristian Mothers Fourteen $50 new members were received at

Gertrude OLoughlinthe monthly meeting arid new officers were installed by Rev $26

In memory of Caroline CasellaGerard J Chabot moderator $25They include Mrs Patricia Helen Burns Mr amp MrsBiziak president Mrs Georshy

George Johnston Corky Rowgette Vachon vice-president Club Rits OLaughlin FrancisMrs Kathy Lamarre treasurer amp Lena MoranMrs Dolores Leedham and Mrs

Mr amp Mrs Carlton GastallBeverly Sousa secretaries Mrs Raymond Reynolds

~CULATE CONC~ON BLESSED SACRAMENTlAUNTON $200A Spring Social and D~nce Rev Herve Jalbert

for the benefit of the church $50sponsored by the Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Michael Felixand the St Vincent de Paul Soshy $36ciety will be held Friday May Mr amp Mrs Richard Hamel24 from 8 to 12 at Lewis Lodge $30Winthrop Street Route 44 A W Root Beer StandTaunton Refreshments will be served Tickets are $200 per lIIIOLY CROSS person and wiU be available at $50 the door Holy Rosary Sodality

lt

PATRIARCH His Holishyness Vazken I of the Armeshynian (Monophysite) Chu~h which comprises five-milli~n communicants in the Soviet Union Near and Far East and the Americas is visiting in the US He paid a visit to the National Shrine of the

Immaculate Conception whilein the nations capital NC Photo

NOTRE DAME $40

The Anne-Marie MasSe fami17 $35

Conrad N Desmarais $25

Norman J A Belanger Rose D Perron

HOLY ROSARY $30

The DePaola Family $25

Mrs Philomena Germane

~CULATE CONCEPTION $50

A Frie~d $40

Mrs Diolinda Wilson $26

In memory of Charlotte DJicholson

$25 Holy Name Society Knights

of the Altar A Friend MlU7 Whitehead John R Burgess In memory of Daniel R Be

Manuel R Pimental Joseph Francoeur

SACRED HEART $l)O ()

~ Katherine D Adams $75

Mr amp Mrs William J Sullivan $5~

Margaret Morriss M~ry V amp Alice C HarrlngtoD Frederick B McD9nald

$31 Frances Mmiddot Cummings Mary C Cummings

$30 Mr amp Mrs John J HarrlngtOil

$28 Florence M Sullivan

$25 Vincent DAndrea Edward

Leary Mr ~ MrsN J Meyer Mary Louise OSullivan John J Sullivan middotMargaret F Lowney

ST MICHAEL $25

Manuel Rogers amp Sons At~

Manuel M Rezendes Henry Leshytendre ~eonardo Cabeceiras

Gerald Mulrooney A Friend edf Catholic Charities

ST ANNE ft JI08ZIII $30

Mrs Rhea Saurette 101at Vincent de Paul ConferenceIrene Theroux leapt amp Mrs Joseph J OCoDshy$26 nellThe Gauthier Family $25

Mr amp Mrs Reginald lerive

A Friend

Belshy $50

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J OCo nell k

$30 St rosephs Mens Club

ST ANTH()NY $25 OF THE DESERT Mr amp Mrs John L Mercer

$100 Mr amp Mrs Daniel W OCoDoshyChor Bishop Joseph Eid nell Dr amp Mrs James J Sabra

$25 SANTO CHRiSTO Rev Kenneth A Michael Mrs August Badway $50

ST ANTHONY OF PADUA $125

Rev Josephmiddot M Ferreira $100

Atty amp Mrs Milton R Silva

StVincent de Paul Society $30

Rev Ernesto R Borges $26

Mr amp Mrs Alfred 1 Cam~ $25

$50 Franco Family Singersmiddot

$25 Mrs Sofia Pacheco Antonio T Cabral

Mary amp Beatrice Costa~ SilD

CnristO Credit Union Manuel Medeiros Laureano Silva

AFriendFrank B Olivei

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Have you ever wished you had a son a priest Now you can hlilve a priest of your own-and ahare forever In all the good he does _ _ Throughout the Near East this month grateful bishops ara ordainlng new priests trained by people like youbullbullbullbull Their own families are toe poor to support them In training but good catholics In America adopted these semIshynarians encouraged them all the way to ordinashytionbullbullbullbull Insome Inspiring cases this support was given at personal sacrifice How can youbegln7 Write to us now Well ~end you the name of ~ young seminarian who needs you and he will write to you Make the payments for his training to suit your convenlence ($850 a month or $100 a year or the total $600 all at once) Join your sacrifices to his and at every Sacrifice of the Mass he will always remember who made It possible

4

Native Sisters In our 18 developingcountries are teaching children of the poor preparing them for First Communion giving medical care to leplrs cal)cer sufferers the aging A SisterS training Ialts two years costs $1250 a month $150 a year or $300 altogetherbullbullbullbull Well send you the name of a Sister you can train as soon as we receive your first payment She will pray for you and write toyou

n An9 day now you may receive a letter contalnn the Holy Fathers appeal for the forgotten Arab refugees-l4 million people without a country bullbullbull most of them destitute bullbullbull more thari half of them childrenbullbullbullbull By trelnlng these children foi middotfuture selfsufflcel]cy we can help brln peace and new selfmiddothelp to the Holy Land atlll divided by warbullbullbullbull But why walt for your mal Hunger cant walt Neither can peace Send your amplIft now in any amount ($500 $200 $100 $75 $50 $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 $2 $1) and the Holy Fathercan put It to work right away Qril1 $10 wlllleed family for a monthl -----~-~---~~---~-IlNCL08ID PLllAIl PIND $_ c_O~__ rFOR _

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MSGR JOHN ClI NOLAN Natlonal5ecretary Write CATHOLIO NIlAR EAST WeLFARE Assoo ~30 Madson Avenue New York NY OOU telephonel 212vtJkon 6middot5840

CATHaLiD

19 DiJoridrrien Ere State r ourlitei

SChoelbOY leag~~Wmrn~regr~ Stii~Pretty Mu~h sampu [j)(Q)Mbt

By PETIm BARJrEK Nmon BitIh ~h

The gehooboy ba8ebaD mmpaignis cllNimatieaDy near- Inlaquo the climax of another spirited seasoo With approxishymately a week of competitioo Nllllaining oontlmdmg teams Me stmggling to keep their pennanf oopes alive while Wtling for the right to rep-JIe8eDt their ll e s pee t i v e leaguesin the nnand-eomin

-y- shy

Btate tournament The Eastshyem Massachusetts ehampionahip

baseball tournamen+ ClIffiMftl-~

tine of the wurney is tiPoDOOred bythe

II a II sac h u~_ lt Iietts Secondary

SChool Princishypals Association bull Par tie i p 8 t _ ing schools have bElen divided i IIl tot h r e e d3ses - A B and C---llccord- Peter iDg to leagues Blrtek r

and comparable independent teams Action tn all three clasampe3 starts Saturday June L

In addition to the three divishyidon3 the baseball tourney amp1shyem radically JIrom the popular

Two Spots for Both BCl (IDnd Marry Five Bristol County League Howard Ferguson which teams

teams Gre still in contention for will represent the circuit in the tourney play ebampionship event

At this writing Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Stang SpaltamJ of Qartmouth who hold a lllim ene-game edge over their rivals are a solid choice to annex one of the two berths to be filled bi BCL teams The second spot 18 un literally up for grabs

Bishop Feehan High of Attieshyboro which led the circuit untll last week Durfee High of Fan River Attleboro and Taunton lire in close pursuit middotof Stang hoping tomiddot overcome the Sparshytans or at least lInish in the league runner-up berth Both the first and second place finshyishers will8utomatically qualify

If either fim OX second place II decided by Monday May 21 league officials w~ have to DOUty the tournament Director

No~tons Lancers in Need cf Help I h e Narragansett league Class B - Southem

whkh got a head start on the its Iud Old Colony champ ft NaITlIlshyv er area Clrcu conc es gansett runner-upleague play today First place

middot Somerset travels to New Bed- Narragansett champ ~ Olcll ford to meet Holy Family High Colony runner-up Case High of Swansea entell-middotmiddot South Shore champ VB Hockshytains Dighton-Rehoboth West- omock runner-up port hoss Msgr Prevost High Hockomock cpamp vs South

middotof Fall River and Dima]l Voce- ShQre runner-up tional nlso of Fall River will 0I Am f N rth E stobe t Se k Iver es 0 0 a n a e o~k

Entering the final week of ac-middot middot tion Somerset and seekonk are in the top two spots in tbe 8tanding They loom the more likely to corral Class B tourney berths But DightOn-Rehoboth Case and Westwrt trail the sec ODd place club by oIl1yone game If the race ends in II tie ]league officials wlll have ample time to schedule play-off games before the tourney deadline

Pairings for Class Bare

Selecting Union PITTSBURGH (NC)-Twentyshy

five maintenance workers at Duquesne University here in Pennsylvania have left their jobs pending a detell1llnation as to which union will represent the workers The remaining 115 members of the maintenance erew lIlre not involved in the atrike which was called by the 2li who are represented by the tJmted Electrical WorkersUnion

Although it occurs infrequentshyly a team does not have to win Its league to represent its league in tourney eompetition

The Bristol County league champion is slated to play the

bull Bay State League runner-up in first round action with the Bay State champs taking on the County runner-up The winners would then meet in second round play

Pairings for Class A are Class A - Southem

Suburban champ w Middleshy8llX runnerup

Middlesex champ ft Suburshyban runner-up Bay state ehamp VB Bristol runner-up

Bristol champ V8 Bay sta~ runnerup

-Tech lxlsketban competition lllll order to qualifyfor the Tech a team mt1BSt win 70 per cent cd its games but onlythe leagu~ champions ond runner-ups M~ eligible ~r playmiddotiImiddotbasebalL

In both Class A andClass B iitOtalof i6 teams will qualify 1lt7middotmiddotmiddotJiY

for the diamond elimination event~ E~~ Will pai1i~ipate in

the nortlHln division and eight in the southern bracllet The winners in each bracket will meet in the Eastern- Massacilushy

llletts fi~ Preliminary games will be played on June 1 4 and 6 The finals are scheduloo June 8

Class C competition will coIi-BiEt of eight clubs in only one division Titlists in seven smallshyDChooI le1gues and one indeshypendent selected by the tournashy

ment coJiunittee Will comprise the field fur this tliil-d group

and Mansfield 1m the Hockoshymock circuit appear to be out of the running this season

Fo~ Class C schools Its Winmiddot or youre out Only the league champions will play in the championships The winner of the Capeway Conference will meet the Cape and Vineyard champ in opening round play Dennis-YarDlQuth and Sandshywich are the likely opponents

The only other school located within the confines of the diocshyesan territorial limits that has an outside ~hance of qualifying for the tournament is Norton of the Tri-Valley Conference The Lancers however will need some outside help if they are to overcome league leading Millis The Tri-Valley champs will take on the Dual County League champions Defending Class C champ Ashland again leading the Dual Co~nty is heavily favored to repeat both in league ond state competition

NOT A BALL-ITS GUM Yem might get the idea that a pitched ban is lodged in the mask of this young Vancouver BC catcher but it isnt a ball This young ma is trying to prove he is just as efficient behillld the plate as he is at blowing bubble gum NC ~middothoto

Stresses Inter~cicdmiddotmiddotPartnership As Solution to Racial Problem

CLEVELAND (NC) - A Nashy world would be better off lr tional ASsociation for Advanceshy iou hadnt gotten involved Jm

ment of Colored People official asserted here interracial part shynership is the key to oolution of the racial problem but it cannot be a partnership dom inated by either race

Dr John A Morrell NAACP assistant nat ion a 1 director speaking at the Cleveland Cathshyltnlic Interracial Councils annual Interracial Justice Awards banshyquet said the nation today is aj an unprecedented crossroads but the interracial way is the democratic part to justice

He spoke in place of Roy Wishydns NAACP national~ director who was with the U S delega- tion at the United Nations con vocation on human rights lin Tehran Iran -

Angry Voices There are angry Negro voiees

raised in protest because develshyopment of opportunity in recent years does not apply to twoshythirds of the Negro population he saidmiddot The kind of jobs they are capable of filling are vanshyishing from the economy he added

But if a fruitful partnership is to continue between the white and Negro the burden of know- ing the truth about Negro hisshytory must be borne by white as well as Negro Dr Morsell said

Vie are all fighting a bitter legacy of generations White people have to know where they stand and why Once you assume the burden of work toward interracial justice you assume the responsibilities be continued

If you are not going to ~

sume them then you and fhe

the first place Informed PariDership

Dr Morsell said a mere sPirit of commitment is not enough to

survive over the hard going Work must be based on a part shynership that is informed intelshyligent understanding and resil shyient he said

The interracial awards were presented to Father Edwan Camille assistant Catholic Charshyities director here and Thom811 C Westropp president of Womshyens Federal Savings and Loan Association

Westropp was cited for his efforts towards opening the

doors of banking and credit 1m the Cleveland area to all ciUshyzens regardless of race creed 011

color while Father CarniDe was cited for his leadership as director of Project Peace (~

irner-city diocesan organizati~ working with the poor mostly Negroes) and for his work as co-chairman of the first tri-faith Greater Cleveland Conference on Religion and Race

ELECTRICAl -Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

SS lPlE1rIEllt amp JgtAIDlj

$103 Womens Club Rose E Sullivan

$50 Joseph P Conaty

$35 Belen M amp William J

De7 $33

Mr amp Mrs James F McMahcm $25

Mrs Margaret Daly amp Mary John Dolan ~illiam Daley amp Mary Esther Mr amp Mrs Stanley M -laniek

~50 In memory of MrsMarga~

W Pow~rs RodneY S DeCecco

$26 Mr amp Mrs John Soula

$25 Edward Healey Mr amp Mrs Michael McCartbiY Mr amp Mrs James Crosson Mrs Gertrude Lomas Mr amp Mrs Norman GagnOOl

ST JOHN TEE BAPTlIS11

$30 St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ampt Jean Baptiste $25

Mr amp Mrs Ovila Caron Henri Demers

In memory of Mr amp lVlrm bullWilliam Sheehan

Open to An PORTLAND (NC)-The seeshy

ond annual Catholic youth conshyvention of the Portland Diocese has opened the convention to all Catholic students of the dioshycese in order to spread the agtOlgto tolate of youth to youth Thll

)faine convention has comprised only students who have takes themiddot youth leadership trainlJnl1 courses

Dont Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH

DO faJse teeth drop slip or wobblo when you talk eat laugh or sneeze Dont be annoyed and embarr1lEsetll lkllh hanl11caps FASTEETH Bamp

e (non-acid) powder to SPr1n~Ikle on your plates keeps false teetb more firmly set Gives confident feel~ Ing Of security and added comfort No gummy gooey taste or feellncr Dentures that 6t are essential to health see your dentist regulorly oet FASTEETH at alll1rug countemJ

o

WYman 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD MASS

IfIIfJltk del1WM

S H~~uO~ Oil

SAVE MONEY 0 OUROILHEATI bull eatt

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

Iritai~ If S)crap SuPPITreg~~5n Acts Of Re~(j[jmlt~oml

LONDON (NC)-It looks as if Britain is at long last glOing to stop suppressing the monasteries-officially that 0

Legal experts sifting through lenturies of forgotten laws clutshyooling the records have found (hat the Suppression of Reli shygious Houses Acts of 1535 and 0039 have never been repealed

They are among 155 statutes weeded out from the statute IJ)ooks between 1239 and 1705middot lmd now to be definitively leshy~aled by a special act of Par-Iliament

These two acts enforced the eosure and pillaging of Catholic monasteries friaries and other religious houses throughout the WINS nsc Chaplain

eountry following King Henry (Captain) Angelo J LitekyVIIIs break with Rome in 1534

assigned to the 199th InfanshyJhey brought vast fortunes On goods property and mog of try Brigade in Vietnam has ell land to the kings favorites been awarded the Distinshyoome of whose families have reshy guished Service Cross forWned their wealth to this day extraordinary heroism SevshyIgnored in Practice

Of course the laws against erely wounded when Viet me Roman Catholic Church Cong ambushed a US infanshyIhave long ago been shelved and try company Ohaplain Lit shyIgnored in practice The reli shy eky braved flying bullets toous houses are back probably

rescue and minister tomore numerous than before iIome have even reoccupied the WQunded and dying meR 0ld sites they hadmiddot before the lReformation

Another notable measure ~ewlfk ~[p)regID Gingled out for repeal is the 1loleration Act of 1688 This act W51f)$ ~WIfltdl although in itself it did not help

NEW YORK (NC)-The Adshy~he Catholics marked the end of

vocate weekly newspaper of1lhe Protestant Reformation and the Newark Archdiocese wont1he beginning of religious tolershythe first-place Silver Medalation in Britain Awarti for weekly newspapersIt allowed freedom of worship in the annual public serviceClgt Protestant Trinitarian Nonshycompetition sponsored by theoonformists provided theiT New York chapter of the Pubiicmeetings were opento the pubshy

Relations Society of AmericaIlk it did not relieve the existing The award was for a five-part

fenaWes of those days against analysis ttl the ills besetting the ~atholics other breakaway Newark public school system lhcnestants or Jews but it was )he analysis was written by a hisberic beginning It has been Advocate news editor Ed Grant ltJeseribed as the Great Oharter and was an examination into ~ religious freedom and the one of the areas of dissatisfacshy~umph ofc9mmon ~ense tion which led to widespread

rioting in Newark last Summer

The series ran lri the newsshylJays Help for Poor paper last september and Octoshy

lPeCice First ~eeds ber The Public Rellitlons SocishyMIAMI (NC)-The Catholic ety award - silver medals are (lihurch in this nation today awarded in each of five cateshy

gories-are given for the mostauast address itself to the presshynoteworthy contributions bullbull 0 toiloing needs of the poor and dis-

~vantaged as well as the better public ~derstanding of ltJnICial issue of peace says the _ community problems in the New

4Tchbishop of Miami York metropolitan area Archbishop Coleman F Calshy New s p a per 8 magazines 0011 following announcement of broadcasting an d television middotGte establishment of the ecclesshy media in the New York-New iastical province of Miami and Jersey-Connecti~ut metropolitan tMs appointment as its first area are eligible for the awards l)rehbishop stressed that the (fhurch must be concerned with ibe problems of the time in Retired ArttlhJboshop S)Vhich we exist Gets College lHlonorThe g~eatest problems at present are the problems of the DUBUQUE ( NC) - Retired disadvantaged the poor and Archbishop Edward D Howard Utase who are in need and of of Portland Ore has been named oourse peace he smiddotaid for Loras Colleges 1968 John

It is more difficult for us to Fitzgerald Kennedy Award The LiOlve in any real way the prob- prelate is a former president of iems that are our concern until the college we have a measure of peace The citation and gold medal And it is the prayer of all of us annual award honoring an out Chat peace will be established as standing Amercian will be preshyiluickly as possible on an honorshy sen ted to the archbishop at the able basis o college commencement cereshy

monies June 2 Camp Directory Archbishop Howard 90 a nashy

Nltlw available from the Nashy ti ve of Cresco Iowa and a Loras lItonal Catholic Camping Assn alumnus was ordained to the ~ 131~ Massachusetts Ave priesthood in 1906middot He became lM- W Washington D C 20005 president of the college in 1921 Is the 1968 Directory of Catholic In 1924 he was consecrated to ~mps which lists all known serve as auxiliary bishop of DavshyearriPs in the U S giving acshy enport He became archbishop of Civities charges dates open and Portland in 1926 and retired in lIbailing addresses 1966

National CYOPlans LeadershipTraining shyImpa~t to Aid Priests Adult Admiddotvisors

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tbe through the introduction of BaWmore June 23-28 ehicagoNational Catholic Youth Organshy leadership methodology which July 1-5 Boston July 14-19 ization Federation will launch a facilitates maximum involveshy Sen Antonio July 28-Aug 3 training program in June called ment 00 the local level and Denver Aug 11-16 and San Impaot be help priests and hence maximum commitment JFaoancisoo Aug 25-30 adults 00 work effectively with The National CYO Federation Dr Donald Ebalt a professhyteenagers in a leisure time proshy will sponsor six sessiOns this lIlional trainbig eonsul1lant of gram summer to train diocesan CYO Washington D c win diiecl

The program was designed in staffs m 1lhe use of the newmiddot ead11ab cooperation with Leadership program lhey win )e held m A pilot Jtudy of the effectiveshyResources Inc a firm _of beshy DeBS of Impact on a group of havior scientists -rolulbteers from the NewarlkAddress Graduates

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishy archdiocese was held at the SOUTH BEND (HC) -Mel-rector of the Youth Department Benedictine Retreat House ill

Jdte-rite Patriarcib Maximoo VUnited States Catholic Confershy jNewton N J ence in announcing ttie new Kakimof Antioch and Dr Ilhirtymiddot persons representashyprogram said tives of youth adult advisorsJames A Perkins of Cornell

The goal 01 Impact is 00 help and priest moderators met withUniversity will be speakers atthe priests who are moderators representattives of the CYO

the 123rd annual cOnW~ncementof CYO the ad~lt advisors and Federation staff and a member youth participating in CYO toshy exerci~ Sundly June 2 at Of Leadership rResources Inc ward maximumpersonal growth Notrlte Dame University 110 assess and to evaluate 1mpaltL

(Cathedral Camp-Resident and Day Camp for Boys

O~ Lady of the L_ke Day Camp fOr Girls

Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON LONG POND ROUTE 18 EAST FREETOWN MAS~

~ RESIDENT CAMP 49th Season June 30 thru August 24 - a Week Season

Diocesan seminar-ians - College Students amp Teachers Under direction StaH of a Diocesan Priest

Saili~g swimming water skiing horseback riding riflery archeryPrograni hiking overnight camping trips ~rts amp crafts Indian crafts camp crafts athletic (team amp individual) competition and inter-camp cOmpetition professional tutorial service available

Private beach large luxurious camphouse dining hall modernfacilities~ washrooms arts and crafts buildings camp store and office first aid and infirmary beautiful chapel overnight and weekend accomodashytions for parents

S WEEK PIERIOD $325 - 4 W~K PERIOD $165 - 2 weEK PERIOD $85

Cathedra~ Day Camp t=or Boys Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period

JULY W- AUGUST 23 Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period fEES INCLUDIE Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Horseback Riding Weekly Cook~Outs amp Milk Daily without Added Cost

--~----------------------------------------Our Lady of the Lake bay Camp For Girls

JULY l _ AUGUST 23 Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period

FEES INCLUD~Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Ilorseback Riding Weekly Cook-Outsmiddot Milk Daily without Added Cost

o

For further information write to

REV WALlER A 5ULLlVANDiredor PO Box 63 - East Freetown Mass 02717

Page 8: 05.23.68

- ~ANCHORl)ioceseofFa RiYer-JIlh~Moy 23 l9cS8

---------------------------shy

~~Says Therre -Arr~ N~ lomnits b T ChrrD~llDcopyHru ~reg~~ITi)~D~D~DifY

~ lffiiY JBa]baJla Ward

l ihe amptarting point Pol judging our-role in the world Us ro lrnow where we are-Ohristians living in the wealthy West a white minority making up about 20 per cent of the worlds peoples and enjoying 80 per cent of the worlds ~me But this is only a ~nning a raw statement If fact And as we know Ilhwts rarely present themshyrelves without a oontext They (ilODle to us in a dense package IOf assumptions ond e~periences

1lake such a ~t as that Mr Brown worth a IlDillion dollars gives nothing to iltirs Smith This Is a fact JIlul- iliPlied a thoushysand times over by all the BroWns who do IiWthing for all ~ Smiths But suppose Mrs Smith is his widowed older sisshyter Iho rovingly brought himmiddot 1ilP as a boy Then the fact of ibis indifference becomes a comshypletely different fact because ~ eoJ1text has changed

Sense e(1 ltDomtext Most of the facts of our oonshy

temporary scene require this oonse of context They do not eome to us neat and bare And ~e first thing that has to be lJ8id about us as Christians is presumably that our context of presuppositions and oommitshyment is somewhat different ilrom that of anyone else

The Gospels are full of the lldea that the Christian angle of

o vision cannot be simply intershyehangeable with the secular or

worldly point of view Leaven makes bread rise because it is differenj Salt gives a taste beshyeause it is not identical with the 2ood Light shines in darkness because light and dark a~e disshyiWlguishable

All these images of the Chrisshy(gan community imply being other different set apart but at the same time guiding inshyGPiring changing ald entering into the whole sum of human ~xistence We are different but our aim is communion We are lteall~ to a vocation but the vocation is unity How is this fundameintal context of Chrisshyiian living to be interpreted in rtbe modern age

Personal Fortune Let us look at two widely

occepted reactions to modern facts and see how they square with the Christian vision The first concerns personal fortune On balance in the landli where the bulk of Christians live the White wealthy post-Christian oocieties of the North AtIantic~ North America Bribin Westshyern Europe - the basic notion about income is to increase it iIIJld about wealth to accumulate to

In general a familys standshyIIllds of living its ciaims on reshylIOurces and its expectations of ilun an~ comfort gO up in step

Institute Participant yeniss Marjorie A MorinNortb

Westport a faculty member at ~cred Hearts Academy Fan Ri~er bas been named as one cent 44 ~igh ~ool bi~19gy teachshy~rs frorn18 states to participate iln a Summer institute on recent bigh school biology curriculum ~evelopments at Wells College Aurora N Y The institute will be in session from June 30 through Julyen S

with bigher earnings One can find it hard to make both ends meet and be resentful of taxes at $6000 a year $12000 a year $24000 a year $48000 0 year ~d so on up - in fact since

taxes rise with income COlIlshy

plairits can be higher as wealth increases even though expendishytures now oover two houses and three cars

Christian teaching in stark contrast reminds us that the higher the income the greater the responsibility The final counsel of perfection was given to the dcb young man sell

all you have and give to the poor- Short of this evengelical extreme the wealthy must not satisfy their oWllJlising supershyfluities at the expense of the basic needs of others 11 they dothey will enter eternity as easshyily as a ca~el through the eye of a needle-not a wholly reasshysuring analogy for our Western societies who bave never had it so good

NQ lLfimfits A secHid pre-suppositionmiddot~

eontempolary society is that chapel z Mount St Mary Con- f te li d d or en rmg re glon an was n obligatIOns an responsibilities vent and a dInner f~r Csters t fr ti A ~ 031 teacher and principal at manyop a on ers man ofdifshyt ferent national I y or citizenship f al 18 no arm ooncern of ours The Gospel approach IS whollydifferent All must)be fed even-shythe least of the little ones All must be clothed and sheltered Even if th th dtch is

e ~an In e 1 a Jew and his rescuer a Samarshyillan their traditional enmity must make no diHerence~ The centurions son is cured even if he is in modern terms a hated

SJl8TER MJIJRlAM RSM o

former DiocesoD1l Supervisor Completes 50 Years As ~eiigiolUJs Sis~er of Mercy

Fifty years in religious life Katherine -ONeil retired prinshycipal of the Aldrich School inwill be marked Sunday by SisshyFall River Both are memberster Miriam RSM former eleshyof Holy Name parish Fall Rivermentary school supervisor in

the Fall River Diocesan systemON II St Louis JgtarishRev Pa trick el supennshy

tendent of schools will cele- Sister Miriam is a native of brate a Mass of Thanksgiving St Louis parish Fall River She at 1045 Sunday morning in the was a public school teacher beshy

and the JubIlanans ~~edIate~m Diocesan schools before beingfaml 11 f II I Y WI () ow appointed a supervisor in 1941

A reception will be held after together with Sister FeIicitadi f t S

e nner or V1S~ mg Isers RSM The two Mercy Sisters ~d a seoond recepti~n fr served as supervisors under

fnends and former p~pl1s WIll the late Rev Edward J Gorman take place from 2 to 5 m Mt Sl ana under Father ONeill pres-Mary Academy library ent superintendent of schools Bec~~vingguests wit~ the until their retirement in 1966

jubllanan WIll be her Sls~ers Since that time they have M~ James Conlin retIred tutored and aided students with prmcIpal of the Mason Barney reading problems at Mt Sl

imperialist There is neither School Swansea and lIfiss Mary COnvent Jew nor Gentile bond nor free ~ bullr

in the a)l-enoompassing gener~ J ~

=~~k~~ ~P-9morL13~J of our prayer Thy Kingdom

40~s eolumn will therefOe try over the coming months to give not only the facts about our strange new world round which the astronaut strolls in 90 minutes It will try tosug gest the oontext without which Christian judgment and re- sponse are hardly possible For if we judge only as secular cit shyizens will the salt keep its taste May it not be fit only to be thrown down the drain

~ L ~ IIrencn lIovor Priests Holding O~her Jobs

PARIS (NC)-A recent surshyvey indicates that Frenchmen are in favor of priests working at n~n-priestly jobs and being marned _

The editor-in-chief will 1roW~D1DXNG GOWNS rm afraid Im overworking the

word romantic in describing the fashions this season but with such-anabundance of frills and tiny waists it seems the only fitting adjective Nowhere does the word crop up with shym 0 r e meaning than when one is trying to convey the imshypression given by the fashions iQr the 68 bride Bridal gownsfor late Sumshymer and early Fall weddings are now being shown and snapped up dewy-eyed brides-to-be

by

~ a survey ~nducted by the Gone are the outlandish 1ent SocIety FrancaJse dEnquetes eire th par ~ndage (SOFRES) 00 Per sses e weIrd IDllll des~gns centCIf those questioned both ~ tte h~v~~ ~ere dSlgnS Catholics and non-Catholics re- Ig wIg ts e Pia~ f~W garded it as normal for a priest ~aso~s als are as n l~

1Q praclice a lleCUiar profession wedding g~wns ~ tor so many and 51 per cent said that work degthther fUlootfitBkmiddot ~lS slelas0ben but by priests in a f~ri or 011amp ey 1ftgt especlay auti shyconstruction JOb is ood ~ in thlS dre~ of dresses One

very g lovely princess design by Ven because that ereates an exchange b - rio1-1- ~ ~ be tb Ch as nerrow s pear

bullween e Ulch and the dli -- fimiddotmiddot 10 workers 0 nIng gure- rIDIng seven out~ 10 persons 81lIr- Bi~h~uette ~Cthe~ by Frmk

veyed favored -marriage for ~zzo for Pandora ~as an Ehzashypriests ~because that would per- bethan aJr to it WIth its lov~ly mit them to better understand 1Jff of OhantIllr lace ~ndmg family problems and difficul- bI~h around the neckline and ties And 25 per cent of those _spIlling d~wn the sleeves surveyed are convinced that Fur-Trimmecll GoWlm

soon~r or l~ter women will be If youre planning an elegant ordaIned prleStamp wedding m the late Fall ~

Alois Schardt a Bavarian tele- early Winter and money is no vision n~ws editor Dr HeE-oobject Mirra has designed a mann Abs of the Deutsche Bank gown with a bodice and sleeores of broadtail cuffed around the wrist and neckline with white mink The price-a mere $800 the price of a good living room oouch but then you could al shyways sit on old orange crates and admire your stunning wed ding pictures

Even the bridal hairdo is as hearts and flowers as Elizabeth Barrett Browiling Curls fall over shoulders peek out from under mantillas and veils and are even caught back in kershychief headpieces If your own

hair refuses to wave never mind curl order some stick-on curls ahead oftime to keep the romantic air

By BOme unexplained miracle all brides are b~autiful but this year the designers are giving the miracle workers a boost in JOWDS that spell romance

New Bedfordilea Elect Officers

The slate of officers el~ to serve for the 1968-69 year d the Catholic Womans Club clil New Bedford are Mn Thomas P Barry president Miss Jean

A McGinnis first vice-p~ dent Mrs Raymond M Atw~ second vice-presisient Mrs ViiDo cent L Hughes recording s~

retary Mrs Maurice A Hurl~ corresponding secretary lViM Charles D Phelan treasureJl Registrars named for ~ coming year are Mrs Ricbam A Parsons Mrs Norman amp Sylvia Mrs Albert J LamolZgt reux Mrs William A Horai Mrs Robert A Vermette lIhe Henry J Fanning Jr Mrs Joseph N Joseph Mlamp3 Dorothy A Curry and lIlra Roland F Mathieu will $erve mJ mrectors

Nome Laymon Official Of Catholic Schoois

MEMPHIS (NC)-Bishop JO seph A Durick apostolic adJ ministrator of the NashVille dl ocese has confirmed the apshypointment of William G Ho~

as administrative assistant tIlll Msgr John A Elliott dioce~ superintendent of schools

In his new Post Hoyt wild serve as coordinator for prCF grams that receive local and federal aid to private schoolBp in addition to general assistance in the overall responsibilities 001 the school board and supeJlgto visors

There are 18 Catholic blgili schools with 5892 students ancll 53 elementary schools with 15

405 students in the Nashvl1lG diocese which comprises the

entire state of Tennessee

Pro~estants to SerVe 0111 Catholic Paperr

BONN (NC)-Protestanf jOllDD nalists will serve on the editoshyrial staff of a new German nashytional Catholic weekly aimed at readers on a high intellectual level which will begin publbshy

-ction in September - Most of the 20 editors wh

will be selected fqr the weeklys staff will be drawn from the ranks of the secular daily press

has been elected director of the papers board of trustees

A total of $4000000 has been raised from among the Well0 Ge~an dioceses to finance the establishment of the paper Wgt be named Publik Stockwill ~ issued

~fiDDY Dining IN YHE

JOILRY WHAlLER -ANID--

SPOUTER INN RESTAURANTS

Always Free Parking

New Bedford Hotel

NASON Oil COMPANY

Our Heating 7 Perry Avenue

Oils Malee Taunton Mass Warm FrienJs 822-2282

Dailymiddot Aittention Necessary To ~[f~Dceate We~~~

1B1y 1J~JlDill alii wnJillYJil ~~

The ~ are on their way and 11 lreems that half r our time i1l spent digging them out ~ the garden No matter haw much time we Gpomd on them they have a way of reappearing within Q few days ad 1l1Inless we really live them OUattention they ean take over a garden middotin lW time Beginning gardenem

bull WOO approaeh gardemng casshyaally or em weekends are often ~helmed by these unwel-CIOme pests ond soon give up the Ilbip Our suggestion is that M)

minutes II day B sufficient to keep even big gardens weeded fithe gardener will get out into Illie garden every day This maw mean nomiddot mOIre than a short trip BIound the garden to look mt Ole plants and to pull out a few ~ds encountered on the weJr

Few llilmtJtes Dadlly

We usually keep a small wamshyms hoeohandy by the back door and as we PlVPare to go to worlx take a short walk in the garden hoe in hand to see what is new The result is that we spend flw minutes or so in the garden beshytore setting out for work in the morning 10 minutes at lunch and ap~roximately 10 minutea before dinner after the working day is over which incidentally il a good time to ioosen up ~

t1ore tearing the kids heads oIif llDr all the misdeeds of the day

The point is that weeding u

attitudes t2lat vtll shape their future are beginning now and IllS theU friends and relatives wish them well they pray that each couple will enjoy the graces and happiness that come from a good Christian marriage with Christ in the home

Ad~ Atmosphere Often a wedding gift can add

to the atmosphere of a Christian home One such gift is a plaque that hangs in our den On it are these words

Sacrifice s usually difficult and irksome only

Love can make ~ easy and perfect love can make it a

Joy I couldnt think of a better

motto with which to begin 0 marriage or one that becomes

more significant through sleepshyless nights with sick babies frustrating job problems or the everpresent money worries Qlat asually plague young couples

A handsome cross a richlY llIustrated b~ble a handsome religious Gtatue or plaque are eccellent gifts to begin a Chrisshy

11 th h t Uan couple on the road to Il we as many 0 er cores mus ~ done on n day-today buis cmd cannot be left for weekendll because there are so many other tmportant things that have to be ltilone then

The grass has to be cut a new lInge put on a door there is a ball game to watch a ride 00 take a tree to be pruned etc Cll of which ore time-eonsuming _ lIIllU necessary With the weather we have been exPeriencing al -te th d~n~ e ~ weedmg gives ll3 middot Iln oPprtunity to g~t a hWe ~h lUI 11 commodity whiclill middot D3ems t0 be gettmg scarcer fa 001 industrial live~ and ehance to commune With Nature een at the wrong end of n

lim tle Kltcbellllmiddot

Did you know that during a wedding ceremony the groom places the ring on the finger of Ule bride because the circlemiddot of gold symbolizes the love and devotion that from this moment on will have no end This is but lti)ne of the many traditions that lJlave come down through the years and now are an accepted ~rt of the Cana celebration

Another must for a wedding dJ the wedding cake that fur eenturies has signified breakshymg of bread in kinship as it Is ll1anded out to friends and relashyves Even the veil that graces tlle l)ead of the beautiful bride b a custom that has come into llUes~nt time from the days when the brides stood under eanopies to show that they were IIDlder the protection of the glOOrp

All these ancientgt traditions give a Uttle added meaning to lYle Cana feast and the sacred acrainent of matrimony but ltWen more significant are the rostoms and traditions that the 1l1Jride and groom will carry into rife as a f~ly Many of the

polsh Mmiddotsommiddot

n ill ~ilI CHiCAGO (NC)-First copies

of the Polish vernacular altar

gful C th li lif Let meanm a 0 c e someone else buy the sheets a~d and ~asters ma~e your pft one Wlt~ eve~las~lDg mea~ll~g

If ou re 1hinking of givmg ~ bridal shower in the n~ar future perbaP you w0llld hke to serve a Bndal Puddmg

Bridal Pudding 2 envelopes unflavored gelatiJm

cup cold water b ili t

llff If cup deghte wa er egg W I StI- ~_

74 aspoon - cup suglllr

q h cups eavy cream (ilDrgetth diet)

1 teapoon vamplilla 1 flaked tcup coconu 1) Soften the gelatin in the k

cup cold watermiddot and then pour the 1fJ cup ofboiling water over the gelatin mixture and stir unntil dissolved Cool

2) Beat the egg whites until foam slowly add the salt and sugar and continue beating unshytil stiff peaks are formed

3) Fold the gelatin into the stiff whites

4) Beat the heavy cream until stiff and add the vanilla Fold the cream into the whites and gelatin mixture

5) Rub the bottom and sides cf an eight-inch spring form pan with butter and sprinkle the bottom with lh cup of the coconut Pour in the cream mixshyture Sprinkle with the remainshying coconut -ltld chill at least four hours or overnight Upshymold and serve with s1rawshyberries and the following rum sauce

lltum Sauce 6 egg yolks (see we didnt

want them to go to waste) 1 cup sugarmiddot

04 cup dark 111m cognac or kirsch

1) Beat the yolks until lemon colored and slightly thickened

2) Gradually beat in the Dugar

Stir in half the rum and cook in tOp of a double boiler over boiling water stirring constantshy131 until the sauce coats a woodshy

THE ANCHORshy

lHIONOR MOTHER lPlilElRRE Mother Pierre Marie of St Annes Hospital Fan River left meets Mrs Joseph Giblin Mrs Richard Donovan and Mrs Eugene Dionne all members of The Friends of St Annes on bhe occasion of the groups honoring the sister in reCognition of her reshyception of the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice Medal from Pope Paul

Aim Is Unity INIUlDil leads New )errsey Periodic White Walkerrs

Se~king to Ascertain Needs of Negroes ENGLEWOOD (NC)-Led by We are trying to find out

a Sister from St Cecilias High what the needs are she said School a group of white resi- We realized that we would dents have been making peri- look liketourists going through odic informal walking toWfl but you have to begin someshythrough the predominantly Ne- where gro Fourth Ward to meet the One result of the middotwalks was people living there

The walks inaugurated by Sister Robert Jean are made in mn effort to break down barriere fllll an area where rioting took place last Summer

Gif~~ Contfnued from Page Four

lNJlf~ihlmiddotAuBehCJH) $750

Jeweled Cross Co Inc $225

Attleboro Particular Council St Vincent de Paul

$200 Society of St Vincent de PaW

St Mary Conference $150

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J Wright bull $75 No Attleboro Catholic Womshy

0ns Club $50

Dr Eugene Leco St Anne Sodality Sacred

Heart Church $40

Edward N Cook Plate Co Inc $35middot

Albert Morawski $30

CYD-Sacred Heart Church $25

Frank M Miller amp Son Inc No Attleboromiddot Coal Co y H Blackington amp Co Inc

II neighborhood meeting at which white and black people discussed the visits and the posshysibility of further involvement in the needs of the Fourth Ward community------------

Universal Roofing amp Sheet Metal Co

Alden Corrugated Container Corp

Mass Trucking Corp New Bedford Hotel Macedo Pharmacy

$51 Building Materials Inc

$5 Sacred Heart Home

Daughters of Isabella Hyacinth Circle No 71

A Friend Damien Council K of C Harbor Beach Club amp Lounge Laurans-Standard Grocery Co

Inc $35

Glemi-on Roofing Co $30

Browne Pharmacy Inc $25

Browne Pharmacy A Friend Local No 168 UAW AFL-CIO Cape Cod Fabrics Philip J

Kane Inc Lions Club of New Bedford

Duplicating Equipment amp Supshyply Atty Jack London New Bedford Catholic Guild for the Blind Sharkeys Tire amp Rubber Comiddot

Tum oto Page Ten

Thurs May 23 1968

AJumna Rece~ves

Tdn~ty Award WASHINGTON (NC)-Doroshy

thea F Sullivan social worker and alumna of Trinity College here was presented the 1968 Julie Billiart medal at the schools Spring honors convocashytion

The annual award established in 1961 in honor of the foundress of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur who conduct the colshylege honors an alumna whose life exemplifies Blessed Julie Billiarts educational objectives -the formation of strong womshyen of faith devoted to God and neighbor living dedicated and fruitful lives

Miss Sullivan a member of the Trinity class of 1926 had been an associate professor at the Catholic University of Americas School of Social Sershyvice since 1941 She has been project director of the South Florida Neighborhood Youth Corps in Miami since 1966

She has been active in a numshyber of youth and welfare organshyizations has contributed articles to numerous periodicals and edited several books

Form Sisterrs 0 Coull1ld~

~Dil HawOJii Diocese HONOLULU (NC)-A Sisshy

ters council ill being formed here with the approval of Bishshyou John J Scanlan of Honoshylulu The council is composed of any Sisters in the diocese who desire to affiliate herself with the organizations objecshytives

The projected aims of the council are to serve as a chanshynei of communication among Religious communities and to the bishop the priests senate shylay senate other religious groups to serve as a source of unity and strength among Reshyligious to foster a closer c0shy

operation among clergy Reshyligious and laity and to be [1

means of coordinating the works of the apostolate after studying the religious educational socishyal economic and ecumenical needs of the diocese

Mfiltie P~Mmbnrwg amp HealltDOI~ (Oe Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Master Plumber 702i1

JOSEPH RAPOSA JR $06 ~O MAUIN $1ltlEfEii

lraaD rlovell 675a74~

SCHOOl MaonteilCllnCe SIlJlPPUO~

$WIEIE~IERS - $OA~$

IOlISUINJIr~CijANIIsect IrU~1E E)IliINGUUSIHIEIl$

DAHill COo nS86 IPUlRCHIASE SIlRIEIETI

NEW I8lEll)fO~1Ol

~9lJ-lJ7~6

~IIII11IJ1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I11I1I11I1I11I11II11I1I1I1I1I1I1I1IJ1I1I1I1I11I11I11I1I1I11I11UIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIII1111I11I

1 ~ESADAV~ lIIli~ls for use at Mass in Polish Coo en spoQn Do not boil Remove ltihurches and institutions in this from the heat and stir in the country have been received ~y remaining rum John Cardinal Cody of Ohicago In answer to - a letter from II member of the Consilium far Mrs Mogardo of Falmouth the Cbe implementation of the Con- amount of all-purpose cream 10 IJtitution Oll the Sacred Liturgy the Creme de Menthe Squares IUN~~A~m M ~58 icIIf the Second Vatican COIDlcil is one pint iillllllJllIlIIlIlIIlIIlIlIlIlIIlIIlIlIlIlIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIlJlIlIlIIlIIllUlIIlIIlIlIlIlIlIIlIIUIIUlIIlIlIlIlIlIUlIlIUIIUIIIIII~I~

I

THE ANCHORTDi~c~se of Foil River-Thurs May 23 1968 indiana Prelate ~ i l bull - 10 Heads NCEACrawford Electrical Co DrSpecial Gifts Morris Feresten Dr Frank L mAiN FRANCISCO r(NC) shy

Collins Mr amp Mrsmiddot John P Bish()p Raymorid J GellagMrContinued from Page Nine Dwyer of Lafayette Ind was ~le~ted

Attleboromiddot Hub Clothing Bristol ~it- president general Of the Nashyting Mills Inc Dixon Burial tionlll1 Catholic Educational Asshy$150

sociation at the final meeting ofVauit Shelburne Shirt Co IncBarry J Boardman Ins Agency $125 the asSoclation~8 6Mb Mnuat

Almeida Electric Co August Elmer C Slater

convention hereraquoIlr amp Mrs James G Heagney He succeeds Bishop ErnestBadwey amp Sons Joseph A Parks$100 Primeau of Manchester N HMrs Mar-y Courtis Dr amp MrsL G Balfour Co

who rervOO as president general Norman pSadler Brothers Inc for three yearsBedford House ConvalescentShields Inc A native of Cleveland BishopHomeInc Dr Sanford I Udis$60 Gallagher was ordained in 1939llI Joseph Madowsky HarveyAtherton Furniture Co~ and served as a Navy chaplainProbber Inc $50 during World War n He w~s

Demers Brothers narned bishop of Lafayette inM S Company 1965 following service as secreshy[P[(D$Iroreg$ $40

tary of the National ConferenceAttleboro Printing amp Embosshy of Catholic Charities

olng Co Inc ~WltWI7il$~ltW Speaker at the election sesshy$35 sion was U S Commissioner ofIOUlIt lLADY IOlF lFAllDMIAReynolds amp Markman In~ $25 Education Harold Howe who

$27 said that Catholic schools willMr amp Mrs Ralph A GuerrieroLeedham Hardware be especially guilty if they doMr amp Mrs Peter J Hoss lFlIt ADlIt][AN OJFM lFlIt lFAJlUAN OJFM $25 not act to solve the crisis of

Attleboro Sun Publishing Co ST IDOMIllN][C ghetto educationmiddotlnc Connelly Gold Stamping $25 Christianity is supposed toCo MacDonald Moving amp Storshy ~[j1Jil~O$ltC[(il$ t[ Our tLC1~ls ~hauraquocetiMr amp Mrs Thomas Paiva offer something more the age Co Marathon Company Mr amp Mrs Thomas C Murphy commissioner told the 6000

Plastic Craft Novelty Co Ob$erve $iver Priestiy Jubilees delegates at the final sessionSTLOUIS OF FRANCE On May 26th the 9 AM Retreat House Pittsfield N 11 ~Let us be fools for Christs

Fall Ri~er $50 MlIss will be conceleprated where _ he served as Retreat sake said St Paul middotWe Ladies of St Ailne raquoy the Franciscan Friars at Our Director and Master~ badly need highminded visionshy

$1200 Holy Name Society Ladys Chapel New Bedford Four years later _1964 Fr aries who can help the poorestFan River Electric Light Co st Vincent de Paul Sooi~ eonmiemoratingthe Silver Ju Fabian was transfe~red to Our of our children see a new dream $1000 $26 bilee of the ordination of) Fr Ladys Ohapel New ~d~()rd and faShion a better reality FOO

FirestoneRubbe~ amp Latex ~ Mr amp Mrs Herman Lamppoin4e Fabian F Joyce OFM and Fr where he has served to the pres- ournations sake Catholic edushy $600 I~ k Adrian F Donachie OFM ent time He is ViCar of the cationmust jointhe rest of edshy

~all R~~er GasCQllpanYj Fr Fabian is a native of Franciscan CommuIlity Father ucation to give them a neW $500 Vineyard iavenc Watertown He is an alumll~sof is well known thr~ughout the botizon

lVlr amp Mrs Henry ~ Feitelberl Boston College High SChool and area as a preacher for the St Mooney amp Co Inc middotUT AUGUSTINE

0Boston College He entered the Jude Novena devotions on$300 FIRST COMMUNION- $46L50 Franciscans of Holy - Nilme Thursdayat the chapel andtbeRev JosephF ODonnell ResidentSofCatholic MemoJillJ Province with headquarters in radio Apostolate

~o~e I $50 ~ PORTRAITSNew Yo~k City in 1937~ - Fr Addlln F Donachie Of~ $300 Mrs James Boyle He was ordained at the Na- is a native of Glasgow Scotland IN LIVING COLOUR

St Augustines GuildCitizens Savings Bank iional Shrine of the Immaculate and was brought up in NewSt Augustines Holy NameFR Five Cent Savings Bank Conception Washington D C York Oity H~ entered ~t $200 St Augustines St Vincent de May 29 1943 His first assign- Joseph s SeraphIcSeminary Jtl Anderson-Little Co inc lPaul Society ment was to St EIizabeths 1932 in preparatIon for the A -Friend $30 - T)enver middotColo from Franciscan Priesthood

$150 Mr amp Mrs William Figueiredo 1944 to Hi58 He was received into the

PR Peoples Cooperative Bank Mr amp Mrs Francis Metell _ Pastor and Supe- Order in 1937 and was ordained $135 $25 rior of the Church and Monas- six years later on May 29 1943

Herve Lagasse Cmdr amp Mrs Daniel Burgo tery in Denver in 1951 and at the National Shrine of the $125 Frank Coutinho Mr amp Mrs served in this capacity for Immaculate Conception Washshy

Cliff Nursing Homes Michael Fonte) Mr- amp Mr~ Eushy seven years ington D C His priestly Hfe$120 gene Frieh Mrs John Hughes In 1958 he was stationed at has been in New York Coloshy

J O Neill Supply Co Marthas Vineyard National St Bonaventure Retreat House rado Connecticut NewHampshy $101 Bank Rep amp Mrs Benjamin C Paterson N J for a period of shire and finally- stationed in ~ Fall River Shopping Ce~nter Mayhew Jr Mr amp Mrs Boleslaw two years giving laymens re- Our Ladys Chapel since 1956Associates Nickowal Mrs Dean Swift 11 treats and days of recollection Fr Adrian came with the origishy $100 Mr amp Mrs Frederick Thifault to the clergy He was then nal group of Franciscans ~o staff

Norbut Mfg Co Inc transferred to St Anthonys- Our Ladys Chapel THE FINEST QU~LITYSullivans of Fall River dk Wareham Hyannis IS WORTH THE PLEASANT

H P Hood amp Sons Inc ST PATRICK Famed Church -Gift SHORT DRIVE TO THE I bull Borden amp Remington Co $50

AREAS LEADING STUDIOr Louis Hand Inc middotMr amp Mrs Thomas Choate To Mission SocietY William T Manning Colnt Mr amp Mrs middotWilliam McLaugbshy BOSJO~ (NC) B~stons

j OPEN SUNDAYS Radio Station WALE I lin famed St Stephens church hasbull Dring Communion Seasonbeen - turned over by Richard

Dr amp Mrs Americo Almeida ~ W Hurley Co Cardinal Cushing to the Misshy $75 $30

Walter A Fur-man Co $45

8io~ary society ot St James ~ BRIDAL PORTRAITS Beetlemiddot Plastics Albert- Guerzoni the Apostle 311d Deluxe Quality Candicts Fall River Lodge No 118 BPO $21 famous for RESERVE YOUR DATE EARLY - The edifice _a short distance E~~ Mrs Am~lia JJaptiste _ from the home of Paul Revere

St- vincent de Paul Salvage - $25 and other Revolutionary War ~rve as QUALITyand EvANS STUDIOS

JBureau Nlr amp I([rs Franci~Murp~y shrines will head- St Patricks Wofuens Guild Miamp Mrs Julius ]~abbitt -I quarters for the society which 18 MAIN STTAUNTON middotCall Rivermiddot Mr amp ~rs JsephNorris the ~ardinal founded to do mis- SERVI(E Tet 822-1181

sect(6nwork in Latin AmericaProvidence Pile Fabric Corp $50 St Stephens church was deshy

Robert L Germaine Inc o o

Atty amp Mrs JohriJ Harringshy OUR LADY OF LOURDF8 whose works also include tne ton $5 Massachusettsmiddot State House It

Simons Supply Co Inc Massasoit Hills Trailer Iark was first used as a CongregashyThe J L amp R Cohen Foundashy Inc

siglled by Charles BlJlfltJch

tienal church but with the influx ~ion of Catholics during the inlmishy

Nira WarehOUse Mart Inc West Harwich gration of the early 1800s it was $45 purchased by the Boston arch-

Drobyski Wallpaper Co HOLY TRINITY diocese $60 In 1964 Cardinal Cushing$40

Dr Harry Cooperstein Mr amp Mrs Theodore F Berg spent more than $1000000 W haus restore the building$30

Ashton Funeral Home $50 Magonis Ferry Landing Mr amp Mrs Manley E Boyce Priests COll1ference

$25 $26 STEUBENVILLE (NC) ~ A Atty Kenneth Sullivan Mr Captain William House group of priests here has fOJmed

- Mrs Lewis Morley Hathaway - $25 -- a CQnference of Steubenville ~nelal Service Cook Bord(l1 ~oha Gillahan Mr amp Mrs Priests to create a general

Co Dr Harry Levine Joseph lttiltpetteMr ampMrsJohn ~pirii of priestly fraterJ~iiy and l)rDa~id P~Iill Tyrells Mar- E Ke~ly ~r Mrs yen~j~ Cor- - professionalism Msgr 0

t Cascaltle Drug CoProfes- ra~o HarQJd~RmiddotMcK~nna ~Tolin A Cymbor pastor ()fStgt Qff~rincllid~SPeciaIILinlie9n~n~ $3 w~rf~ 0( ~ I~al ph~i-rnacy hr havills Mrs R R~ SmalI AnthonYThete~esect Church Piney F6rk

-- middote~rHolvitZampHorvitz Ryan MrampMr~_-JQnljMul- wasnamedtempotary chairman Ride TicketsFor additional details or reservatic5nsmiddot call Mrmiddot Conrad Feriamiddot at (4Ql) RE 14kgtOO collectl lC

High Point Fording Box Corp llnsMr-ampmiddotMrsAllgterf Daven- and chosen to repiesimt the _ ~ ~

A RossEvetett Motors port Mramp Mrs Frank Ball group at the initialmiddot meeting in

-uline Te~tile Co Eagle Mr amp Mrs John W- Anderson Chicago May 21 of the National ine Co Mr amp Mrs Paul Carney Federation of Priests coun(iMI

bull

~~ 1

Q I gt~ j

1tj _-_000 e

Comiddot

~ ~-

JUST OfF ROUTE 117

POINTmiddotRO~-_

SpecialSchool Outinils GjoupOffer $3 per Stuitentmiddot

father OWcopy) Sons Are OEd~glfDregd

BELMONT (NC) - Three members of the Habiger family -two sons and their fathershyare completing studies for the priesthood and will be ordained as Benedictine priests on June M

The lllabigers have prepared Jlor ~e priesthood at Belmont Abbey here They will be Qrshydained by Abbot Thomas Halmiddott shyman at St Benedicts Abbey in Atchinson Kans

John Habiger joined his two sons at Belmont Abbey after the death of his wife Mildred in December 1963 He said he did this because my wife and I just had an understanding that the survivor would give his or her life to the Lord

Before deciding to enter the priesthood Habiger had worked as a sales manager fOl a deep freeze home locker distlibutor

lHE ANCHORshy~urs May 23 1968

_ bull

II

Britista Cot1toIicI Suppolt New Bilt To Ovtlow Bios~

LONDON (NO) ~ 0aitJh0 ~ BeneFally appearr to be ~Ving strong BUPPOOt to the govemme~ controvemial new biJl 110 outlaw racial dls- crimination in Britain

Tile Catholie press glQ~~e bin Its blessing with some quBll shy iDeations Several Catholic anti shyaovermnent politicKms howshyweI have voiced oppositionshynot em principle they eblim but oocause they fear some sections of the bHl eould IIIggravate rather ampan mollify existing racism here by producing II privileged black and colored minority

The Race Relations Biil Which Is backed by the present Labor government and can reashysunably be expected to become law this Summer fs intended to i

strengthen existing legislation in this matter in view of the big rise in the number of Negro and colored (Indian Pakistani and as a labor pool manager for and West Indian) immigrants in the United States Air ForceFATHER AND SONS TO BE ORDAINED A father and his two sons will bethe past few years

Fellls Takeover m-d~ined June 14 to the priesthood at St Benedicts Abbey Church Artchi8on Kansas Nearly 2000 dock workers FoUo~ing the death of his wife five years ago John Paul Habiger (center) entereq the MethodlidsAdopt

quit work to delllonstrate BenedIctines joining his sons in the seminary Their nam~8 im religion are Father J~hJ) Project E~uaiityWJainst the bill and to sboW Igrlatius Habiger OSB (center) Father MatthewH~riy Habiger~ OSB (left) andsupport for the view o~ bullCon~ DALLAS (NC)-The ll-milshy2ervative party me~ber Eno~b F~thet Benedict John HabigeJrp OSW NC Photo li~)Il-member United Methodist ~

PPwell that Britain has too Church-formed by a merger l(Ilany elgtlQred immigranUi $50 $50 of the Methodist Church and

Powell had called for 8 vir WestpolIt Almon L Turner Holy Name Society the Evangelical United Brethshy tual halt to the entry of dependshy Thomas M Ross ren-has ill effect adoptedST GEORGE ST PATRICK~nts of colored immigrants and $45 Project Equality throughoutmiddot ~he$25 $250i for measures to encourage the United States Mr amp Mrsmiddotmiddot Leonard Langlois RobertE Eastman Re~ Tames F McDermottliepatriation of the immigrants The 1400 delegates to WleEveline Magnant Claire Magshy $25 $200 bull OtherWise he said black people QUldrennial General Confershynjllt Mr amp Mrs Roland McGee Dr Frederick G Doran ~ lDr amp Mrs Roger E Cadieuxwill take over whole areas ence adopted a resolution inMr amp Mrs Arthur Perry Landgraf Felix P Kaladin $125 Dnd I3cial violence will follow which the new church endorsesMr amp Mrs Donald Pittman Thomas W Whalen Thepnaa Mrs David M KilroyPowell was later ousted from Project Equality and recomshyMr amp Mrs Jacob Strunk Calisto Raymond P Paine $40his position in the shadow cab- mends cooperation both throup

Richard J McNally inet---the leadership that would participation and financial su~SandwichWoods Hole $30assume power if the Conservashy pori on the part of all United Fernand C E AuclairtiVe6 won control of the governshy CORPUS CHRISTI Methodist Ann u a 1 (regional)llT JOSI~IH Dr Thomas Clarkment - by Conservative party Conferences local churches 10shy$300 $350 John T ~mith

0leader Edward Heath who eal or national institutiomlPaul McCusker Rev William F Morristermed Powells speech racist $26 agencies or organizations$150 $100 William MoranAbstain From Voting Friends of Megansett Mr amp Mrs William Carr The resolution presen ted to

The House of Commons apshy $100 $50 $25 the Conference by the Methodshy

Leo A Bond Mrs Leonard Nproved the bill in principal ist ~neral Board of Christian lOr amp Mrs George Christman Mr amp Mrs Lawrence Perrault313-209 and sent it to commitshy Bilooeau Mr amp Mrs Francis Jr Social Concerns called Project$75 Dr amp Mrs J Minihan lKilgrew Mrs James E Sullivantee for additional study before Equality a responsible consist shyMrs Claudia Pendergast Mr amp Mrs Peter Becker Jrit is presented for fi nal passage Mrs Frank Souza Joseph Tin- ent ethical practical effective$50 Mi amp Mrs Robert KennedyTwenty-five Consenatives abshy Mr amp Mrs Cornelius Hickey Mother Cabrini Circle D of j

sley and positive means whereby the stained from the voting rather Sll ll~OMAS MORE United Methodist Church andMr amp Mrs John McCue Norman McEnaneythan fullow the palty line and $50 other churches can SUppOImiddott fail1Mr amp Mrs Emil Tietje $40vote against the bill Atty amp Mrs Richard N LaSalle employment practices intbe$35 Mr amp Mrs Francis CarpengerAlthough the British in the $2~ United StatesSt Josephs Womens Guild $35past two centuries have govshy In memory of Mr Y J Archshy $30 bull Mr amp Mrs Raymond Doucetteerned a large proportion of the 11mbeaultMr ampmiddotmiddotMrs ElmeiHallett $26 Oppose Cuts worlds black and colored $25 Mrs Charles Russell peoples it is a new thing for ~25 Mrs Margaretmiddot Harris Mr ampbull this country to have such peopie

Mrs Paul La Prade Thomas middotC H Berube MD Mr amp Mrsequal in law moving in by the Rooney Mr amp Mrs Charles Sefshy Joseph Silvia William J Dalton thousands and competing com

mereially and socially with ton Mr amp Mrs JG$eph Sylvia James W Blunt John Hart whites G Stanley Johnson Mr amp Mrs

Fred Comings Mrs Helen ClarkeThe new bill is aimed at outshy Oak Bluffs Mr amp Mrs George PereiraMYIllawing racial discrimination in

SACRraquo IIEAlltT Harry Walkerjobs housing hotels insurance and similar fields The most $125 The Percy Family Mrs Kay

Mr amp Mrs H~l1ry ~orey radical anti - discriminatioJ1 ~iggins ~ yenrsRalph Emerson measure ever Ploposed for Brit shy $100 yenrll Edith chamberlin Mr I

aIn it was introduced by the Reliable Market-In memory Mrs MIchael Cornick Mr amp yenrs of deceased loved ones govelllment of Prime Miliister Ernest Forni Jr

Harold Wilson not so much to $50 MI amp Mrs Shurtleff Mry deal with present circuinstances Mrs Corinne Fournier Ralph Jameson Mr amp Mrs Clemshyas with the future when the $30 mey Mr amp Mrs James Hamlen

A Friendproblem could become more Mr amp lVIIs Charles McHugh acute $25 Mr amp Mrs William Ward Mr

A Friend In memory of Mr amp amp Mrs Charles Pizzottimiddot Mr amp

Diocese Convenes Mrs Antone G Camacho Mr amp Mrs Charles Parks Frances Silva Mrs Thomas DeMont Mrs Rose

First Lay Congress M Peardon A Friend Seekonk BATON ROUGE (NC)The A Friend

first lay congress of the Baton Mr amp Mrs James L Kenney MT CARMELmiddot Rouge diocese convened at the $100 Catholic Lifc Center herc Ostellville St Vincent de Paul Society

More than 600 lay people repshy $50 OUR LADY 0 THEresellting the 12 civil paJishes Knights of Columbus

(~ounties) comprising the Loushy ASSUMPTION Mr amp Mrs Edwnrd McCrystal isiana diocese had the opportu- $50middot $25

nity middotto participate in matters The McKeon Family ToI11enS Guild Mr amp Mrs affecting diocesan finances the $25 Wilfred Blanchette middotMrbullamp Mrs

feasibility of continuingmiddotCath_ Mr ~ Mrs WiUiamHerron Edward Chal)~ler Mr amp Mrs Ciq education apart from the Manu~IJlendricks Jr HOlyName pu~gtlicschool systein the Ray ham ~9ci~ty Mr amp MrsE McPhillips Churchs il)VOlvcmcnt in social SJmiddotANNmiddot action admiriistrative middotstrllemiddot $90 Somerset

tures of themiddot Church and the Rev Thomas F Neilan ST JOHN OF GOD nymans place in diocesan 00shy $75 $150 ministratioa Cirino Dominic P amp Family Dr Americo B AlUehbl

SACRAMENTO (NC) ~ TheJSouth Dart~outh beads of Catholic charitable ST MARY agencies throughout CaliforniD

$125 have joined in opposing 00- Dr amp Mrs Paul E Corley 1~mptsof government to reduce

$50 public spending at the expense Dr ampmiddotMrs Victor Almeida of ihe needy and poor

$30 Mr 1 MrsWilliam Hines

]25 Mi amp Mrs Armand Borgesmiddot Mr amp Mrs Charles Nunes

Mr amp Mrs joseph MOlliz Jr The Johnson Family Dr amp Mr~ Archibald Senesac

Nantucket Sll MARY

OUR LADY OF THE ISLE $36

James E Worth $15

Grace Henry

9ffering You ~ SavingsPIQnsmiddot

lHlome Financingmiddot

WARFJI~~ (O-OP~RATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mass

Telephone 0 295-2400 flllnb-llv-Mall Servlu AYllIIIllII

Q

Check These Banking Services

bull Savings Bank life Insurance lleaDhtate Loans bull Chri~tmas and Vacation Clube

bull Savings Accoumiddotmiddot -

bull 5 CO~Yl1lient Locaiios bull - - middott

middotNEW BEDFORD INSTITUTImiddotONmiddot tor SAVINGSmiddot

12 -tAE ANCHOR-Diocesa ofFoti Rive~Thurs May 23 1968 l

$copylDfrTht ~$frml 1NJcopy1iU0il Wreg$U9gt[J1 JIl[OlLY CROSS OUIlt LADY OlF GIltACIE

$101 $50 Mr amp Mrs Donald L BergerOlll Rev Rene R Levesque

$100 $25Joseph P Kairys

Mr amp Mrs Orner Duqu~tte$50 Jennie E Overton Mr amp Mrs James R Jones SOWltrlm YIiUililOuii1mDr amp Mrs Thomas Berry Jr Mr amp Mrs John Pilz middotST pros X Mr amp Mrs Robert J Dray $150 John J Smith John F Martin Dr amp Mrs R Earl McLoud $100

$40 Anonymous 1IL F Bergeron $54l

$35 Philip J Hart Frank Ready Ano~ymous (2)

$30 $25 Dr amp Mrs Herbert L Evereti Edward P Hayes John J CarshyLouis Lyne amp Theodore Larishy roll Thomas P McDonough

mere Dorothy Schoonmaker Denis d Brophy Mary Geist Douglas Eo ~

$25 VampJl John Crawford Mr amp Mrs David Gomes M

ampMrs Leo R Schleicher Mr amp Mrs M J Hegarty Thomas F 1fltID01iJil~~ Gentile Mr amp Mrs EdwardlllL Slr JJOSEIPIHILoveday

Mr amp Mrs Robert E Coffey ~150

li$r Francis Welch Mr amp Mrs A Friend Leo F Sullivan Mr amp Mrs Robshy $40

Mr amp Mrs John Aiello I3ehleicher ltUt Downey Mr amp Mrs John E

Mr amp Mrs Gerald Tache $35

Mr amp M~ Arthur LeclairEast FaBmoutlh $30

ST ANTHONY VictormiddotL Brunette $275 Mrs Simonne Fisher

St Vincelllt de Paul Confer- Mr amp Mrs Edwin J Marmk ace Mr amp Mrs William A Olishy

voeira Mr amp Mrs Enos Days $21)

William Bartlett Mr amp Mrs Gerard Benoit Mr amp Mrs Nicholas F Tangshy

~y $25

Mrs Margaret Virgin Alice Bourassa Alexander Perri llIIllll lllli Braley Jr Dr amp Mrs Jell shyorne Brault

Cecile A Daley Mr amp Mra John I)ias Jr Mrs Mary P Gage Mr amp Mrs Ernest RLashysectesse Edward McGrath

Mr amp Mrs Leonard deMeshydeiros Mr amp Mrs Roland L Despres Mrs Irene FitzGeralcll Mr amp Mrs Edward Fitzsimshymons Mary Gogghi

Edmond Goulet Margaret Manghan Joseph C Mello Mrs Carmen Muldoon Mr amp Mrs Paul Murray

Margaret Nickerson Mra Edythe Rankin Mr amp_Mra Frank J Rezendes George Vishyveiros Mr amp Mrs JosephSevigny

Sli MAIlty

$81 St Vincent de Paul Society

$25 Sacred Hearts Association Raymond Dlugosinski Mr amp Mrs Manuel Allua amp

Nancy Mr amp Mrs Antone Costa J1l Mr amp Mrs John A Wojcik

SACRED IHIEARlr $25

St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ST IPATRRCK $iOO

Mr amp Mrs William BrennlUll $75

Anonymous $50

Mr amp Mrs Francis J Flynn Atty amp Mrs Edward Farrell

$30 Mr amp Mrs Albert W Lawrence

bull Major ampMrs Lawrence Uch-shymanowicz

$25 Mrmiddot amp Mrs Edward C Wen Jr John Keohane

Mr~ amp MrS JosephCardeIre Mr amp Mrs Melvin Dolan

Mrmiddotamp Mrs Walter Buguey Mr amp Mrs Robert Costa Mr amp Mrs John Kelliher John Lynch

Mr amp Mrs Thomas Magwre Mr amp Mrs Kenneth Paige

$30 lt $leo~ IJ=1J yltID Uilliil 0$ lllr amp MrsEdward McCarthJ7 lievbull~ 17 ~

Slr FRANCIS XAVlrEllt $2S st ~o Womeno CI~

Holy Name Society COO $450 Mramp RlIra Lee Kingsb~St Vincent de Paul Society $25 Mr amp lVlro Leo Parente

$300 Capitell Mr amp Mrs Richard Dr amp Mrs ~p Sibilll

Charles H McGrath Joan

Mr amp Mrs Larry Newman Sproul lllr amp Mrs Thomas ~$100 Loughlin Mr amp Mrs William Mr amp Mm GeorgeM~Doane Beale amp Ames E Donovan Mr amp lVlm Joseph FalDtoo

$50 Mr amp Mrs Harry SylvesterMr amp Mrs Frank J Dolan Mr amp Mrs Charles Flynn lltlr $25

A Friend Mrs Rockina CaftDoMr amp Mrs Irving Morrissey amp Mrs~ Marshall Field Mr amp amp Family Mr amp Mrs JOQD KmampJ R ~eyburn Mrs Robertmiddot Ryan Vetorlno Mr amp MrS Victor Narciso Mr IIMr amp Mrs John Hart Bros Ipc Fruitland

Scudder amp Taylor Oil Inc CarreiM Florist Mrs John Kinsley Dr amp Mrs Francis ONeil Ilflr amp Moo Wllliam ~

Captains Table Mr lie Mrs John Currivan Mr Bishop Tyler General Assem- McznsfieRdl Mrs Alfred Kuplast Mrs ~

My garet Jordan Mrs Grace Duma Charles J Ardito 8l MARY Mr amp Mrs Fred Taylor Josepla

$ltamp0 $150 E Donovan Jmiddotr Mr amp Mramp W tel Alfieri Catholic Youth Organization st VinceJntt de Paul Society

shy-

SENDYOUR GnJFT TO bull i l j middotcrmiddotmiddot

The Rig Rever~ Edward TO~MeiJramiddot The IUght Reverehd RiJYlIWnd T CQnsidiRf lVallonarpfreclor Olt Diocesiul Di~ecto i

366 Fifth Avenue 368 North MalnSteet f(eWYork New Yo~k ioooi Fall River Massachuseits027l0 -

1iWJlE ADDRESS

THE sectOClllETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH ~ shy

I

~~ IiUrge Negro La Guidonce Boord ~n K~s~ Cety

KANSAS CJIIIY (NC~-A five-paltish cooperative illl

ner city ministry guided by a Negro lay board has been proposed os a way o~ bridging the gap betWeen the white Catholic CI1urch and the Negro community here in Misouri

A six-person committee headshyed by MrsThelma Work will identify the nee~ of the lComshymunity-Catholic or not-and to propose a structure fur meetshying those needs I

The action came as the result

of a meeting of the Catholie

V ~

Clergy Conference on Inner Oity bullneeds

Father James Lock chairman cited charges of the Black Cathshyolic ClergyCaucus in Detroit in conjunction with the IImnual meeting of the Catholic Clergy Conference on the Interracial Apostolate The Black Caucus statement said the Catholic Church in the United States 1s gtrimarily a white racist insti shytution which is rapidly dying in the black community and to which the black community no longer looks to with hope

On~ Out f li5 The Caucus recommended fha~ Harrison the Bishop Rev William J Hurley Rev DonaiiIll

white priests become supportshy E Messier Rear Rev Cornelu8 F Kiley Rey Robert A ers and learners listening tc McGowan Rev Edmund J Fitzgerald Rev Kevin F TrippNegroes to find out what tbeir lheir assignment~ are Olll page twoneeds are

The Kansas City-St Joseph diocese bas no Negro diocesan priests Ttrore~ DS~th~ Aoee Sl1m~PO rfif~ifflg tedera~ Jb ~~~

We are trying to start the wheels rolling for some kind of

~umlp~JrlMeFrot Nleereg~~rJ fr CmbCBi OW~iff1ychurch structure through which the black people of our diocese can voice opinions and partici shy WASHINGTON (lTC)-SPokesshy ment of public policy ~t Jlorth oommunity-based Social services esnie cultural values of ~hliv

pate in decision making said men for Protestant Catholic and in the Full Employment Act (l(f to meet Human and community country they said are sucll Father Lock Jewish organizations h a V e 1946 which provides for useshy needs Recipients of rondo that work becomes the basis by

backed federal legislation which ful employment opportunities should not conduct sectarian which a persons worth tnFather Dan Howe declared~

We have set up programB would provide one million jobs for all those able willing and programs judged A job not only tends ie i10r the nations unemployed seeking to work n determine an individuals acshygeared to Catholics in our parshy While they acknowledged that

ceptance by society but it alsish whom we have formed rn Their support was given in The Acts emphasis on education passage of this legislation would affects ones attitude abolll~the white mentality Since cl testimony before the House Seshy and training Training s1Mgtuld be no wre-all for the ills ci oneselfbest we are having contact lect Subcommittee on Iabor be open-ended so that the posshy poverty in America the spokesshy

with only about 2000 people out Studies have shown that unshywhi~ is holding hearings on sibility of permanent full-time men said that any attempt to of the 50000 in our area we the Guaranteed Employment employment beyond fIDe presshy combat poverty must provide employed persons have a ve~

can presume that the activities Act of 1968 ent situation is a reality Trainshy meaningful jobs low level of self-esteem anell we have structed as being our that this attitude tends to pro-ing programs of this ~Testifying were Father JohnChristian program of service do vide a self-fulfilling prophesrshould include basic educationMcCarthy assistant director ofnot reflect or reach black thinkshy MO~~U[ij] ~lW] ~O~S since it then becomes more dif~counseling and opportunities tothe Social Action Departmenting ficult to find or hold a joblearn about appearance manshy

E~GJHlll O]RDAllNJEID FOR IllmCJESJE Bishop Qgtnnolly m-dained eight deacons ro the priesthood for service in the Diocese 21t ceremonies oonducted at St Marys Cathedral Fall River Front Rev Edward E Correia Rev George Eo

We need a board of black of the U S Catholic Confershy OrJi1 AA~jjo Foreg[uGagement of income health IImdence Dr Grover Bagby of thelaymen to tell us what the pe0shy NEW YORK (NC)-Answershyother factors affecting personalDepartment of Social Justice ofple want to help change the well-being and development fog an appeal from the Ceylonthe National Council oftone to establish priorities government now fighting a mashyChurches and Rabbi Richard GFather Howe noted there are lWven fl Sellf-lEs~(()nim laria epidemic threatening 16Hirsch director of the Religiousapproximately 9000 Negro million persons the catholicAction Center of the Union of Involvement of private nonshyCatholics on the books but Medical Mission Board nere sentAmencan Hebrew Congrega- profit organizations Such Oll shynot necessarily active in Kansas by air Ifreight 364000 anti-mashytions - ganizations they said will c0shyCity out of a total Negro popu- laria tablets to Colombo Ceyshyoperate with the development ~lation of about 130000 They specifically suppoit4d lons seaport-capital The shipshyHe said that although the three provisions in the bill ment valued at $10746 conshy

structure of the lay board is yet Creation of an Office of Guarshy (cll)f AdldJrell$$ sisted of tablets for both ooults ro be determined it is the conshy anteed Employnient Opportushy and ~hildren sensus of 20 priests and laity at 1r~~regy Meefrolilregnity l8 a eontinued develop Earlier the CMMB respondingthe meeting that at least half

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-Theshythe lay members would be un- oro a plea for help from Indoneshyology must revolutionize it shyder 25 since the young people ~1JJlhJreg~ WODil$ [Q)~f sian authorities shipped 220shyself John Cogley former reshyare the thought-leaders in the 520 anti-malaria tablets ~aluedligion editor of the New Yorkblack community ~ial ~fit1hvllsW Times told the national convenshy at $7306

NeCeSS31lY ApPll03Cln SCOTCH PLAINS (NC) shytion of the College Theology so-A Negro lawyer Leonara BrotherHarold Woods a teacher The Catholic Medical Mission ciety IN the University m- SainHughes told the meeting at Union Catholic High School Board for 40 years has beenmiddot IfmiddotranciscoOne thlng is clear The clos- here in New Jersey has won a oonducting a worldwide mercy

Ing of any Catholic institution months delay to contest lim Cogley DOW a staff member cl program shipping medicines or cut-back in the inner-city order to report to his New York the Center for the Study m Deshy drugs bandages and various says one thing to Negroes We draft board for induction into mocratic Institutions Santa Barshy other hospital supplies and dont want you to be CathoUcs ~e Airmed Fo~ equipment to some 1000 misshybara Cal and editor of the Censhy

Father Vince~t Lovett dir~ BrOther B8rold la member of ter magazine tlgtld delegates that sion hospitals 4000 dispensaries tor of the new Diocesan Social theology must lead- rather than and clinics in developingAction office saidmiddot middotthe Marist BrotheJS had been eoUJlltriesfollow usemiddotits treasureS ratheT It seems to me we a- 4o_1krecJassified ll-A and Cllldered to than hoard them Liberatemiddot it shying about setting up something after rewmfug biB draft eard 011 self from its own prison ~ c0nshylike II couotywith II state goy- April 19 as a protem agaiDst the formity fear imd be dead Dbshyernment - a regional ministry U4o- actionism of th~ pastwithin tile diocese Be said the war VBallam

S~aking on The image off

WI report for Induction em April M

approach seems not so much lim The 22-year-old teachers ease ideal as lh necessitymiddot bas been taken up by the Amer-o Man as Citizenmiddot Cogley said

iean CDvil Uberties Union that the change in the religlO1Ul Which ealled middottbeboardll action mans self-image and the change

Silent Meditation in reclassifying him ~ new in the image of politleal man are TRENJON ~NC)-A bID pr0shy height of wegality Tbe ACLU not unrealated The image of a

viding for a period of silent said Brother Harolds religious free man redeemed from every meditation each day by students status had not collmged since he form of spiritual servitude and attending public schools was WIlI3 originally classified ~D subjugation he said b triumphshyintroduced in the New Jersey and that he hGd DOt ilrlterfered ing over the old image of eccleshyState Legislature by Assembly with the ndministratlon of the sia9Ucal man-a passive creature Speaker Albert B Smitlll 3eleet1ve ~ BWolltem eOOject ~ the Will ca ~thero

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THE At~~C~_ 15 Th M 231968 urs ~y World Communication Day CtmMG(f~ A~V[JK~$ObsecteWGR1CCe on S~ndl~w O[fi) ~copy~o~ A~fDcopy[jf)

WASHINGION (NC)-In response to an appeal by NEW ORLEANS (NC)-ArchshyPope Paul VI to the universal Ohurch the Church in the bishop PhHip M Hannan asshyUnited States will observe the second World Communicashy serted here As far as I am tions Day on Sunday May 26 The National Conference of concerned segregation in the

Church is dead We are past the Catholic Bishops awroved time for statements Now is thefor Motion Pictures and Bishoplast November the observshy time for actionClarence J Issenmann of Cleveshynnc of World Communicashy Tile archQishop of New Orshy

tions Day in this country on USCC Press Department land episcopal chairman of the

leans told delegates at an diocesan and parish levels ampnd archdiocesan conference on st) shy

members of the U S Bishops cial action I assure you we are going forwardCommittee for Social Commu- Senate Rev1ltews

nications have sent to individ- He outlined programs fe ual Ordinaries throughout the Continued from Page One beMer education for adequate country a cOpy of the Prayer lains to be assigned on a funmiddot housing and for recognition of of the Faithful for that Sunday time basis and that the needs the inherent digni ty of all men and a ooP1 of the Holy ~athers of the sick were being adequateshy The Church is exerting itll message issued earlier this ly met under the present arshy influence in every way to assistmonth ran~ement the poorest he said If we

It is recommended that the 3 Recommendations on salshy follow Christ we must begillilobservance in this country ary adjustments Taken into aeshy with the pOor even if thishave both religious and non- count _by Bishop in his direcshy means asking others to wait 0religious aspects The former tives for Aug I 1967 little longerwould highlight a Mass with 4 Meetings open to all clergy Anyone can live poor the

appropriate sermon in the 00- Bishop approved archbishop said The key thingthedral or some convenient 5 Extension of Synod prepshy is dignity This does not mean church to which executives aration time Bishop approved that this dignity is recognized Wld employes of communica- 6 Secretary to be Treasurer by a dole or a handout or eveD tions media would be specially and Senate budget Bishop apshy preferential treatment We are invited proved confusing issues when we talk

The non-religious asp e c t 7 ChOice of other Prayers of of dignity as if it can be bought would feature news conferences the Faithful Bishop approved or paid for he said articles in the press and radio 8 Referral of matters to Passhy - I am totally for equal oppollaand TV interviews and proshy tunity in jobs and for adequate

housing not just open housincgrams toral Council Bishop approved

In his message to the Church 9 Creation of Clergy Person-In human dignity everyone hasPope Paul invited Catholics to Del Board Bishop approved an equal right to education anell

consider the significance of 1() Clergy retirement policy to culture he declaredthe changes that are taking with Bishop accepting ormiddot not

AWARDS CEREMONIES At the annual Awards Day for hospital personnel at St Annes Hospital Fall River Manuel Benevides 38 years of service receives his award while Bertha Janson 42 years of service awaits her presshyentation from trustees Harold K Hudner left and Arthui Guimond right

place in this field (communica- according to diocesan ll1eed tions) under our very eyes and Bishop approved to ponder the serious responsi- 11 In-service training tor bJlities that theSe imply for one newly-ordained priests Bishop and all approved

Clamor forAttentlo~ 12 Various diocesan diredors Until recently the Holy to recommend men for middotpart shy

Father pointed out many did time or full-time further study not have anything more to Btim- Bishojgtmiddot approved 1IIate their inflection than vague 13 Full participation by memories of what they learned Catholics in middotYMCAyWCA ot school or in the family and programs Bishop aPlgtrov~ What they beard in their envi- 14 Rotation among religious ronment eomniunities of their represen-

Now however with the echo Uitives on Senate Bishop ap- r the press motion pictures proved radio and television clamoring 15 Clergy to recommend men lor attention new h~riZons oPenJor episcopacy Bishop applloved wide before them llIndmiddot they are 16 Lay Personnel pension ttuned to the throbbing life of plan study Bishop approved the ~niverse

Who will not rejoice at this 17 Adjustmentin diocesan progress Do we not 1111 see in assessments Bishop approved It a roadmiddotdestined by Providence 18 Clergy retirement study for the advance of themiddot whole Bishop approved of mankind There is room for 19 Bishop announced through all hopes if man learns to mas- Senate exchange of facultieS ter these techniques but every- between Diocese of Fall River thing can be lost if he shirks his and Providence responsibilities Various commfttees have made

Members of the bishops com- studies to implement some of mittee signing the letter to the these considerations Ordinaries included Auxiliarymiddot Senate representatives have Bishop Gerald V McDevitt of participated on a regional and Philadelphia episcopal moder- national basis regarding a nashyator of the United States Catb- tional organization of priests olic Conference Bureau of In- and its constitution and activity formation Bishop John A Donshyovan of Toledo episcopal chairshyman of the National Catholic Cursillo for Men Office for Radio and Television Bishop Christopher J Weldon Starts Tonightshyof Springfield episcopai chairshy

A mens ~ursillo win ~ginman of the Bishops qo~ttee tonight at La Salette C~nter of Christian Livingmiddot At~leboro Dishy

Delegate Recives rectors will be William Barnes of Marion and Rev GilesHonorary Degree Genest middotMS of the center

HONOLULU (NC) ~ Archshy Allmiddot eursillistas are invited to bishop Luigi RaimondiApostolicmiddotmiddot the firstmiddot anniversary of ultleya Delegate in the Unikld States middotmeetingsmiddotin the Fall River area baS received an honorary deshy at 745 Wednesday night May laquoree froIn Charninade College 29 at Sacred Hearts Academy here the only Catholic eollege Prospect Street Fall River A lID the state of Hawaii concelebrated Mass will be folshy In an Dterview with the Hashy lowed by a song session social

waUmiddotCatholic Herald ArehlSishop bour and refreshments Baimondi ~pressed tolerance Ul1reya meetings are schedshylor student activism in the Unishy uled in Attleboro oat Jettes ted States middotIltating Students Funeral Home Friday May 11 8ft adive everywhere Youth Monday May 27 Monday June ill UyiDg find its WBY aoc1 2 Friday June 14 and FridayecJar patterns of tbougbt IlBd June 21 eetioD e DOt lIS set asin pre A eursillo for W4)men is scbedshy paerationfl Cbolees were 1IIed for August and further inshy

-e fiSHthen tbin ~ tit formation is obtainable inla ~ -e LeSalleUe Centerbull --

You Live Better Electrically

trlc range bullbullbull with Iln ingenious oven that cleans Itself Make 8 clean break with the past bullbullbull and graduate to another appliance

that adds to the Joy of Total Electric Uvlng

Graduate to a ~fiameless electric range thatmiddotcleansits own ovenmiddot

Make 8 clean break~ with the past4

Why spend ~ours stooping scrubbing and scouring to clean your oven Why not grad- uate to a modern flarve1ess range bullbull with anoven that cleans itself electrically Its so

easy to use Set the controls and-zingo The oven cleans Itself (And drip pans) All you dois whisk awaya IIttie pOwder

- YOUll notice toothat a flamelessmiddot range keeps your kitchen clean cool a~d ~omshyfortable And because electric cookmg IS so automatic YOUll cook with pleasure So see

yOur appliance dealer about aflameless elecshy

See Yo~r Appliance Dealer or

FAll RIVER ~l~CTRIC LIGHT COMPANY

o

mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 23 196816 I

Mafttl[p)Dsellt $50 Raymond L W Benoit

$5BTANJrlllONY Jos~ph A Tully William J

$300 OLearY Mr ampMrs Alfred Baty ltlJbades McGowan Mr amp Mrs Fred Harney

$100 Mr amp Mrs Michael C ODonshyaarence G Verdi nell Mr amp Mrs ThomaS P Per~ lIugene F Phelan kins Mr amp Mrs John Kozlowski

$15 mosampry Altar Society

$66 Buzzard$ B~y I

iusan A McGowan ST MAJuiAR]ampTWilliam Keane

$SOshy$55 A Friendllohn P Delaney

$6$40 lIlr amp Mrs Thomas Pina

~h G Perry $25$35

Mr amp Mrs Edwin PaytonlInmothy Manning )l amp Mrs John KarlJfudge E C Horrocks J~

$30 Mr amp Mrs Edwin N Rose Wareham Lodge of Elks 15044bullbull Clayton King

Mr amp Mrs David Fannon$~

Mr amp Mrs John OCOnnellJames Downey Romeo Bedarql William Delaneyhnes H Gifford Mary M Chad Mr amp Mrs James Lopes

Wick George Smith Jr Antone Mr amp Mrs Louis Fougereshy-es Edmund Perry $25 Mr amp Mrs Armand Bedard

Mr amp Mrs Michael DelIsMark H McIntyre Teree JeminaBlossom Joseph Farley Robert Mr amp Mrs William BennettGIngras Real Breton Mr amp MrsLouis Eacobaoct

Jobn Tarvis Francis ODri9shyu Holy Nam~ Society Paull Glennon Joseph Zychowicz Central -VUlageIIaomas Renahan Richard SmiUll

ST JOHN THE BAPTIBJl

~50 bullNorth Dighton Mr amp Mrs John DeNadal

ST JOSEPH nolt Rev John P Hogan$156

IlR Vincent de Paul $75 Dr Peter F Piccinini$50

$25amp11 Name Society Florence I Bessette MrSt Josephs Womens Guild

$35 Mrs John J Ardagh Jr llim Raymond Williamsbull amp Mrs Joseph MWTaJ

Me amp Mrs Daniel TebreiN$30 J Jl)r amp Mrs William AcIamI Mr amp Mrs Robert Albanese

o Iohn W Perreira$5 Ch(ltham

Mr amp Mrs Joseph C Amarat 1lIJr amp Mrs Edward M Berobe HOLY ~EJI)EIEMEamp

bullbull amp Mrs Arthur A Ennes Mr $101 A Mm William Johnson Rose Pi Assqc of the SacredHea~ Mello $lOet

Mr amp Mrs Harold Mendoza Mr amp Mrs Robert Han lIffr amp Mrs Bruce Murph) Mr Col amp Mrs John McCa~ bull Mrs Robert Secatore $50

Mrs James Bell Jr St Vincent de Paul Sodeq Mr amp Mrs John J Cavanaup

IIMMACULATE CONCBPJIl[ON $30 $DOO A- Friend

Ambonymous $2-5 $a Chatham Trust Co Mr af

Anonymous MrS E Joseph Geller Dr~ amp MIlII Robert Harned A Friend (~)

Anonymous $75

Mr amp Mrs William Kent Mr amp Mrs Paul reF~vre Mr lIi$it

- Mrs~ Richard Sylva Mr amp MmHelen P Derby Patrick SullivanMr amp Mn Aibert Giordano

A Friend Mr amp Mrs Frank Dresseli Mr amp Mrs Philip S1iel]oA Friend Mr amp Mrs James Griffin shyAnonymous Mr amp Mrs Frank Wing _ImmaCU1ate Conception MenliI

Club $4G North Attleboro

Mr amp Mrs Raymond ~rgerotl SACRED HEART$35

Mr amp Mrs William Condoo $200 $5 Rev JOuter Lussier

Mr amp Mrs William Buchtman $30 Caesar Cardoza Mr amp Mrs RoT Mr amp MrsJeorge Merewe Howard Immaculate Conception $~ Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Joseph A Jette

Mr amp Mrs Co George Knapp $25 McCarthy Coal Co Mrs Fredshy Mr amp Mrs Paul Dion Mrbull elick H Murphy A Friend Mrs Frederick Fortin LionelL

Martineau Mr amp Mrs~ Philippe Rainville amp Florence

Mr amp Mrs George Beaulieu Sl lWAllUf A Friend

STMA-ElY$50 $150Mr amp Mrs Michael Murphy

Nelson GulskiMr amp Mrs Jose FernandesSIl $75$30 Rev Armando A- AnnunziabMr amp Mrs Thomas J Bryanamp

$50 Eva Morowski

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John HaugMr amp Mrs Roland Roberge Mr amp Mrs John StanfordDavid amp Martha Rocha M Veronica Reilly

Mary Cronin George Yefh Mildred Leary A ~riend

BreWSlfreli $4G Dr amp Mrs Domenie BalJiIe

OUR LADY OF TlIIE CAn $35 o $100 Dr amp Mrs Kenneth AtwiIl lllisBionaries of La saleUe jnr amp Mm JosepiL Dona

MONSIGNOR VI[lELSB

Heads Bishop$ Task force

WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr Aloysius J Welsh of Newark N J a recognized authority in race relations and social aclion work has been named to head the Urban Task Force estabshylished by the U S bishops

Bishop Joseph L Bernardin general secretary of the U S Catholic Conference who anshynounced the monsignors apshypointment said the task force was calhd for by the U S blsbshy

ops at theirmiddot April meeting in SL Louis in their statement on the mational racial crisis The bishshy

ops directed the task foree be established by the USCC Social[ Action Department

In this work he will cooperaW with MsgI George G Higgins director and Father John MeshyCartty assistallt director of the Social Action Department the bishop said

$30 Mr amp Mrs Frederick ThOIpG middotMr amp Mrs Clement Sbarolll

$26 Mr amp Mrs Andtew Boisvert Gertrude Cassi~y

Elizabeth Sheals $25

Mr amp Mrs Daniel J Cava- naugh Mr amp Mrs Raymond Bl~hard Mr~ amp Mrs Robert Brunelli A Friend

Mr amp Mrs Robert Gilmore Mrs James P Reynolds Mr amp Mrs John Donleymiddot Mr amp Mm James Battersby Mr Mn Jlohn bullCollins

Virginia G Robinson

AttRehoro BOLY GHOST

$150 Dr amp Mm LoneJglUl

~110 Mr amp Mm John CapoWglo

$50 Holy Ghost St Vineellllt cle Pail

$35 Mr amp Mra Joseph BJOdeur

$25 Mr amp Mrs Malcolm ~

Mr~ amp Mrs Harry Dowdall Mr amp Mrs RObert Geddes Mr~ I Mrs Frank Pistolese

ST JOlIN $200

In memory of Dn7 hwlbaDcI JIoseph F ODonn~

$100 Mr amp Mrs Raym9nd ENmlIlilll Anonymous Donor Inmemory of GabriGll lYaBltllloshy

alone bull $75 -

Rev Edwarcl A Ra~

Mr amp Mrs John P I4e $50

MaryL Wilhelm Mr amp Mrs J G WaJEll Jlr Mr amp Mrs Franclll Bo Mr Joseph ODonnell1 ~ amp Mrs Ernest ~

$30 m=teanor Robinqmiddot Alice~

ST JOSEPH $25

Counseil Jeanne DAre No 263

ST MARK $50 ~

Edward J Connors Jr $25

William J Roche Jr Joseph Dias Mrs Michael J Croke

ST MARY $50

Holy Name Society of St Mary Knights of Columbus Seekonk

Council Mrs Leland B Smith

$35 Mr amp Mrs Donald Blake

$~O ~r amp Mrs Henry E Woodcome st Marys Womeno Guild

$25 Mr amp Mrs Frank Padykula

Mr amp Mrs Russell J Sumner ST THERESA

$50 Mr amp Mrs Donald Boardman Mr amp Mrs George LeBeau

$30 William Cauley amp Family Mr amp Mrs George Boyd

0 $25 Mr amp Mrs RobeIt Generenl Mr amp MrsRobert St mlaiN

Taunton -HOLY ROSAILY

$30 Mr amp Mrs Russen Woodward stanley Radwansld

$25 Children of Mary Sodality Richard Januse

SACRED HEARi

$50 Mr amp Mrs Joseph S llosamp Mr amp Mrs Vincent BrimleF

$35 Mr amp MnJ Robert MeClellaml

_ S2i Walter Waltman Mr amp Mm

atephen Crosby The ~ Mr amp MrtI William Vaillan-

OOurt Mr amp Mrs Michael Barber

Mrs Margaret Rose llrtr~ bull II Frederick Reams

o

81 JAMES

$U Armand Desautels Tremblay Moving Iii 8tonlge

00mpany

STMABY $100

Dr~ Charles HoYt $60

GeOrge Dion Jr $51

Mr~ amp Mrs Kenneth $50

Mm A Hoffman Dr Normand ~ Mr amp M1lil J McNilmaN ar Dr John Fenton Mr amp Mrs Kicban sm

$36 ~ B Grant

~O Dr EdmWlld Fitzgerald D4niel A J Doyle

$U

Richard Barrington BIizabeCIa dIt Margaret Brady Mr - Mm kmea Bumtl Dr CarsiDbre e-- IlUOCi -Robert J mn JamesD hcige

Mr amp Mra Llocel IaImDee ftlomas Hoye Merrill lliaynard Jmelen amp Catherine McCariIll7

Alice McKenna Ruth MeshyJUona Susan McKenna II

Plan To B~ild

- See Us About ~

lotyCost Financing

WAuREHAM SAVltfGS BANK

WorehaftI falmouth cr J-3800 II 1-3000

Mrs James McMorrow Franeb Mulholland

Mary Mulholland Ma~ Neenan Joseph ODonnell Eveshylyn Rice Agnes amp Joseph Rose

Mrs Joseph Rowley Robert Sullivan J Roger Torme1 Charles H fripp Rita Baker

Mrs James Bennett William Carney John Gonzals James Holmes Mary E McNamara

Dr Thomas~OBrien Cbarleo OConnell Mr amp Mrs Edwarcll OGara Mr amp Mrs John 00 _ Ilfearne MlJI amp Mrs Edward OKeefe

1he Ralph Reckard Famil1 Cecelia F lfi Mary C Sheerin

ST PAUL $150

St Vincent de Paul st Pauh Taunton 0

$100 Rev Cornelius~ltYNem

$50 Mr amp Mrs Edward Roster

$24 Mr amp Mrs John Medas Jr

$25 Mrs Catherine Campbell Mr

amp Mrs Chester Jackman Mr c1i Mrs Richard Silva Mr amp Mrs Leo Leroux Mr Mrs John Steen

Mr amp Mrs Donald Emond Mr Be Mrs Gordon Seekel Mr amp Mrs Charles Welch Mr MllIl Paul Silva

New Bedford HOLY NAME

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John Hallonm Mr amp Mrs Jacob Teser

ST CASIMIR $150

Beltr cutnir Kwiatkowski $109

Atto~ Ferdinand Sowa $25

Mr amp Mrs Joseph FoUrnier The Poczatek Family Mramp M Antbony Rijo Jr Mr Mrs Stanle Scbkk Eve White

I

ST BYACINTB $100 -

Mr Mrs George Vigeallltl $50

st Vincent de Paul ConferenCe Gf Hyacinth Parisb

Tum to Page Seventeen

CONRAD SEGUIN BODY COMPANY

Aluminum or Steel 944 County Seet

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2-6618

w H RILEY amp SON Inc

CITIES SERVICE IDISTRIBUTORS-

0 Gasoline Fuel and Ra~ge

OILS OIL BURNERS

for Prompt Delivery amp hoy amp Night ~ice

8 IE BOIlER BURNER UNITS

80tItecI G48 Service

61 OOItANNET Sf TAUNTON

AJdeb DfO - No- Attleboro

TountoIamp

(l

SUMY pons Nuns (l)ffi) AifrMdl~$o

Re$M~~e~o trMture D~[freg~UDrru~ WASHINGTON (NC)-Resulto

of a survey of all United States nuns reveals a high ooceptance of post-Vatican II changes anell an eagerness robecome morrc involved in the inner city and poverty apostolates

The B1UVey conducted bythe Conference of Major Superiors of Women dlJring 1966 was the first extensive attempt to assess resources and attitudes of reli shygious communicenties c1 women and their memberll in the United States

The JPecific coal of the surshyvey was to assess the resources and determine 1ampIe responses that Religious are making and ean make to the invitation 13shysued in Vatican Us Decree on the Renewal of Religious ~e

More than 135000 Sisters parshyticipated in the survey respondshying to 649 questionnaire items covering religious beliefs atti shytudes toward change edu~shy

tional background present ocshycupation and future plans comshymunity life and proposals for future ohange

Results were processed by 00 Sister-sociologists across the country with the use of comshyputers

llleason for lIAlavnng The survey showed 1827 oil

the 175000 U S Sisters-107 per cent-left religious life durshying 1966 Of those Sisters only 869 had taken final vows In an interview with the NC News Servicemiddota spokesman for the Conference of Major Superiors of Women (CMSW) said most Sisters who have remained feel that a major reason for the inshy

ltereased number of Sisters leavshymg religious life is an increased ~penness to the idea within the lfcligious community

She said that the increased fucus on personal development has caused many Sisters to see that they are not suited to the religious life and that they will find areater personal fulfillment elsewhere

Statistics on be division of labor among U S Sisters show 72 per cent are teachers eight per cent are involved in health work five per cent in catechetshyill~ and missionary work lmd tbr~ per cenmiddott in welfare work

Seventy per cent of the teachshyem ore in elementary school work 195 per cent in high school education and 68 per

eent teach at the college level Of those involved in health care 18 per cent in health administration and 62 per cent in direct care jobs

lEnter New lFienlll1s The survey showed Sisters

have a strong desire to become involved in adult education inshyner city work pre-school teachshying and other s~ial work and to have greater contact with their local community Nuns expressed eagnerness to enter fieldc where few Sisters are now working In 1966 13 per cent ot U S Sisters were engaged in adult education 82 pel cent in speshycial education 31 per cent in poverty work and 06 per cent in migrant education The surshyvey indicafes that there will be a dramatic change in these figures in the next few years

Father Considine Leaves PC$tr Continued fC0m Page One

man of the U S Bishops Comshymittee for Latin America

Bishop Bernardin prai~ed the work of Father Considine in the Latin America Bureau noting

iota progress under his direction since its inauguration in 1960

It has been a labor of love for Father Considine he saici whose long standing interest in the people of Latin America and of other developing areaa is well known

Maryknon Father Considine will return

to his writing and teaching asshymgnments at Maryknoll Ossinshy

lng N Y where he had served as publications director before becoming director of the IAiltin

America Bureau He holds editorial and advishy

lOry posts with several internashytional organizations and servell DS a member of the Council OIl

Foreign Relations He was amp

member of the National Advishysory Council of the Peace Corps from 1961 to 1966 He also founded and directed Fides Inshyternational Service in Rome an Information and research unit of

the Holy See He was born Oct 9 1897 C1shy

1-

~ATIlGR CONSIDINE

da1ned in 1923 and received II

licentiate in sacred theology from the Catholic University of America in 1924 He has reshyceived honorary degrees from Fordham University Manhatshytsnville St John University St Benedicts Atchison and is the author of 10 books on Latin America Asia and Africa and hall edited several others

L9ng-Range

Father Considine Sllid that he IlIaW the Latin America Bureau as set for the proseution ~ tl

vigorous nation-wide program 10 serve our Latin American eonfreres for the next- generashytion through the year 2000 -and into ~ 21st century He felt lIlllch 11 long-range view was necessarJ because at stake are important socio-religious adshyVDnces among hundreds of milshyHons cd people Latin Americas leaders need time for these advances

Be pointed out thatsome of the best Church leadership tbroughout the Catholic world today is found in Latin AmershyICD In turn he noted our U S bi~hops are quietly acceptshying international responsibiliti~s

as never before Father Considine said that the

program of the U S Bishops Committee for Latin Americn ~ablishes the heavy day-to-day work of the Latin America Bureau

Jgtersonnel Father Considine said that

llIODle 60 per cent of all U S apOstolic personnel overseas throughout the world works in Latin America with more Ulan 600 Latin American parishes served by U S priests Major Superiors of women ha~e 2500 Sisters in Latin America PAVLA has put more than 800 laymen there for three-year terms and U S bishops hnv~

more than 300 priests working in Latin America Annual fundshying for Latin Amerietl by U S Catholics ~~ $1f) millioll

SJJREET SCENE This was a busy street scene in the nations capital at the encampment of the Poor Peoples Campaign near the Washington monument More than 100~OOO- protestors are expected to be in Washington for Memorial Day NC Photo

OUlll lLAIDY OlF ll1HI1amp

ASS1lJMJgtJlJlON $26

Clara Rose amp Family $25

Mr amp-Mrs Jose F Cruz St Martin de Porres G~

Mi CARMEL $100

In memory of Mr amp Mrs J~ ilino Simoes

Rev Antonio P Pinto middotCM $75

Rev Azitonio P Pinto em $60

Mary i Ltuiz $50

Mr amp lVIrs Albino daSilv8 1IIt Carmel Womans Club

$30 Manuel Bettencourt Mr amp Mrs Kenneth lltinu

John Rodrigues $26

Olivia M Luiz $25

Cecelia Bettencourt CbildYeli of Mary Mt Carmel ~ouft

Units James Perry Mr amp lnl Manuel G Souza Jr

Mr amp Mrs Arthur Caetano Mr amp Mrs Charles Frate Mramp Mrs Lauran Silva

OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HE]P

~26

Mrs Amelia E Bariteau $25

Dr amp Mrs Francis Green

OURLADY OFPU~GATOB~ l)1I00

In memory of Alex J Ka1He from Cltpe Coo Sportswear ~

lnc Fairhaven Lumber Co

$30 Atty George R Morad euroJ

Atty ~e E Morad $25

Josephine David 1bl mlE1lllllOllY of George A EI-Hillow Mr ampgt Mra ~rge JThomas Mr amp IIIlm Hykel G Simon

ST KIlldAN nSO

Rev WilMeT J Boekley

U~~ amp Wmeentde PaW ~

~ iWa1 1kntley

$2S AlmgeAo OH1feira

SAClllIampDlHlJEAlltT $25

Alexander Caruso

c S11 JAMES

$55 rulllbull amp lVIrs Francis O Quinn

$50 lilred Kelley

$40 William OMalley

~1 A Friend

$3~

Mr amp Mrs Jr Hugh Barry $25

Mr amp Mrs Andrew ONeil Mr 8 Mrs Robert Arnett

ST JOSEPH

$450 sa Josephs Church Societies

$70 Mr amp Mrs Maurice Dansereau

1130 II Mr amp Mrs Luigi Fiano lk Fmniy

125 Mr amp Mrs Thomas Weaver MI amp Mm Maurice Lamonshy

tagne Mrbull Mrs Raymond Rondel1

ST TBERIESA $100

Eugene Lemieux

Sturtevant 6 Hook lEst 1897

Bude~s Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New ~dforcJ

996-5661

THE ANCHOR- ~ 7 lfhuvs May 23 1968

~regreg [copy~G~ ~O~

Oa1l ~MOO~ []M~Orru NEWARK (NC)-A charge (l(

apparent ~racial discriminatiom in the assignment of tenants 00 public housing here is Oontainoo in s report issued by the New Jersey Advisory Committee 00 the U S Commission em CiWl Rights

It said the Newark Housing Authority follows a policy ef permitting people applying fOlr placement in public housin~ projects to choose the project tm whieh they want to live

lit said this policy has ~

llributed to the segregation Cl1I public housing and recomshymended that t1he policy 00 abandoned in favor of first-come first-serVed basis

The report noted that Q01l1li vast housing projects nre locatell in Newarks Central Ward-tho scene of widespread noting D year ago and of two massiv~ firo disasters this spring-and tll~

they are more thanSO Negf~ ~ccupied

It further charged that them Js U a disparity in maintenanceo between the predominantly N~

gro and the rgtredominantly whi~

projects a complaint lIiTegNgt leadership has frequently medea

It termed living conditiom b the Central Ward projects opshypressive and that the proj~cto

are JIOor)y designed llt recomshymeld~d that additionaI ~ev areas for young children ~Gl

meeting places for odww ~ teenagers be provided

Higher ~arnings

ON YOUR SAVINGS Per Annum

I W Ask abow

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$IlFm - Savings insu~ed safe IIlyJ liII ClEerny of the US Government

IlVAILABIU1Y - No notice VCllIirfpound Your funds available when ooedea

Slllil by MAtL - We pr~e5S pt~ ood pay postage both ways

Assets over $41ooo0llC

FIRST fEDERAL SaYings and Loan Associatio1ll

of F~L~ RIVER shy~---__-------------~~~~ First Federal saYIngs bull Loan At ~

1 Borth Main St Fall llliTe1 Ibu ~ ~ Ii 02722 P1Imle 674-4001 ~ ~ ~ke llpplicatlOll oJ phone t1 fOOl wldl ~ o ~ o 0 IlllIivithllll Aceoullt 0 Jont Ac4cwot f)

PIlllse Cl3len II SllVings llCCOUCt blcelaquol

o eAomelamp) = ~ 0 ~ Address 0 ~ l 0 clleck In the amount of e--- ~ ~ 0 ~ _~___~~~_~uuJ

SPECIAL RATES FOR Schoo~ Outings and Picnics

amfACi MANAGERI - UNCOLN PARK 999-6984 636-2744

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs May 23196~

The Parish Parade OUR LADY OF ANGELS SACRED HEART WALL RIVER NORTH ATTLEBORO

Altar bOys willsponsor a cake The CCD program will be lJ81e Sunday May 26 following canonically established Friday Iill1 Masses June 21 the feast of the Sacred

Masses today the feast of the Heart The program will include Ascerision will be at 7 and 9 a 730 evening Mass followed AM and -1215 4 5 and 7 PM by proclamation and reception Confessions will be heard be- of CCD members and a social ~re each Mass hour

The Summer Mass schedule CCD students in grades 6 to will begin Sunday June 2 with 12 will attend a folk Mass and Masses from 6 to noon on the sing-out at La Salefte Shrine hour Monday night May 27 Tnose

Monday May 27 through Fri- participating will leave the ooy May 31 there will be church school yard at 645 and will be services at 7 each evening The returned at 930 living rosary will be sponsored Confirmation ceremonies will by the Holy Rosary Sodality be ~ld at 730 Sunday night Monday night the Council of May 26 Catholic Women on Tuesday ther societies on Wednesday and Thlusday and the Children New Bedford ~ M~~ on lfrIday

ST MARY HOLY NAME $25iALL RIVER Mr amp Mrs Roger Goyette

Contemporary music will acshy The Shea Family company the 1115 Mass Sunday Mrs Vivian Wegrzyniakmorning May 26

New CYO officers are Robert ST LAWRENCE amplois president Paul Durin $200 rice-president Polly Rockett Dr amp Mrs Stanley Koczera eecretary-treasurer A Friend

$125 OUR LADY OF FATIMA Dr amp Mrs Robert Srnan sWANSEA $106

The Womens Guild will hold William E King Its annual penny sale at 730 $100

Monday night May 27 in the Dr amp Mrs William Walsh ehurch hall on Gardners Neck $75 lRoad Rev William F OConnell

A Penny Sale will be held Dr amp Mrs James Bolton MondaYMay 27 at 730 in the $60 dlurch hall A Friend

$50 IMMACULATE CONClEPlIION Teremiddotsa Ruth amp John HarneyNEW BEDFORD Victor T Kondi

Parisnioners will celebrate John L Powell rthe feast of Santo Ohristo this Loretta Lamarre Sunday with a roast beef dinner $45 served from noon to 2 with Mrs Mary B Wheatoil

tickets available at the door $40 lRefreshments and entertainment Mr amp Mrs John Connor will be on the afternoon and Mr amp Mrs Thomas J Longevening program $35

A procession and auction will Mr amp Mrs James M Kearneyfollow the dinner with various Mrmiddot amp Mrs Leo St Aubin Holy Name Society units parti shy $30 cipating in the procession Mr amp Mrs Albert Anderson

Mr amp Mrs Joseph Griffin OUR LADY OF V()T(RY Mr amp Mrs Walter L9veridgeeENTERVILLE Mr camp Mrs Myron Tripp

New officers of the Womens $28amptiild are Mrs John J Pendershy Patricia Connor ~st pre~ident MrS James Murshy $26 phy and Mrs John McBarron Mr amp Mrs Thomas SullivanVoice-president Mrs George Mr amp Mrs Charles BerryReale recording secretary Mrs $25 Richard Griffith treasurer Mr amp Mrs Robert Bedard

A Communion dinner at Mr amp Mrs Albert McMulleneummaquid Inn will follow Mr amp Mrs Theodore J CalnanlB30 Mass Monday night June Mr amp Mrs Alfred Couto Mr amproo Mrs Gilbert Noonan of Falshy Mrs Manuel Guerreira Josephmouth will speak Reservations P Mullen should be made with Mrs Edshy Agnes Proctor Mr amp Misward Welch or Mrs- Stephen Joseph Porter Mr amp MrsOBrien Jr by Thursday June 6 James Ryan Mr amp Mrs Paul

saunders ST THERESA Mr amp Mrs Merton WalkerSOUTH ATTLEBORO Mr amp Mrs John F SullivanMiss Patricia Makin of the

Diocesan CCD Board spoke at the annual Communion breakshy Fall River fast of the Confraternity of

ST MARYS CATHEDRALChristian Mothers Fourteen $50 new members were received at

Gertrude OLoughlinthe monthly meeting arid new officers were installed by Rev $26

In memory of Caroline CasellaGerard J Chabot moderator $25They include Mrs Patricia Helen Burns Mr amp MrsBiziak president Mrs Georshy

George Johnston Corky Rowgette Vachon vice-president Club Rits OLaughlin FrancisMrs Kathy Lamarre treasurer amp Lena MoranMrs Dolores Leedham and Mrs

Mr amp Mrs Carlton GastallBeverly Sousa secretaries Mrs Raymond Reynolds

~CULATE CONC~ON BLESSED SACRAMENTlAUNTON $200A Spring Social and D~nce Rev Herve Jalbert

for the benefit of the church $50sponsored by the Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Michael Felixand the St Vincent de Paul Soshy $36ciety will be held Friday May Mr amp Mrs Richard Hamel24 from 8 to 12 at Lewis Lodge $30Winthrop Street Route 44 A W Root Beer StandTaunton Refreshments will be served Tickets are $200 per lIIIOLY CROSS person and wiU be available at $50 the door Holy Rosary Sodality

lt

PATRIARCH His Holishyness Vazken I of the Armeshynian (Monophysite) Chu~h which comprises five-milli~n communicants in the Soviet Union Near and Far East and the Americas is visiting in the US He paid a visit to the National Shrine of the

Immaculate Conception whilein the nations capital NC Photo

NOTRE DAME $40

The Anne-Marie MasSe fami17 $35

Conrad N Desmarais $25

Norman J A Belanger Rose D Perron

HOLY ROSARY $30

The DePaola Family $25

Mrs Philomena Germane

~CULATE CONCEPTION $50

A Frie~d $40

Mrs Diolinda Wilson $26

In memory of Charlotte DJicholson

$25 Holy Name Society Knights

of the Altar A Friend MlU7 Whitehead John R Burgess In memory of Daniel R Be

Manuel R Pimental Joseph Francoeur

SACRED HEART $l)O ()

~ Katherine D Adams $75

Mr amp Mrs William J Sullivan $5~

Margaret Morriss M~ry V amp Alice C HarrlngtoD Frederick B McD9nald

$31 Frances Mmiddot Cummings Mary C Cummings

$30 Mr amp Mrs John J HarrlngtOil

$28 Florence M Sullivan

$25 Vincent DAndrea Edward

Leary Mr ~ MrsN J Meyer Mary Louise OSullivan John J Sullivan middotMargaret F Lowney

ST MICHAEL $25

Manuel Rogers amp Sons At~

Manuel M Rezendes Henry Leshytendre ~eonardo Cabeceiras

Gerald Mulrooney A Friend edf Catholic Charities

ST ANNE ft JI08ZIII $30

Mrs Rhea Saurette 101at Vincent de Paul ConferenceIrene Theroux leapt amp Mrs Joseph J OCoDshy$26 nellThe Gauthier Family $25

Mr amp Mrs Reginald lerive

A Friend

Belshy $50

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J OCo nell k

$30 St rosephs Mens Club

ST ANTH()NY $25 OF THE DESERT Mr amp Mrs John L Mercer

$100 Mr amp Mrs Daniel W OCoDoshyChor Bishop Joseph Eid nell Dr amp Mrs James J Sabra

$25 SANTO CHRiSTO Rev Kenneth A Michael Mrs August Badway $50

ST ANTHONY OF PADUA $125

Rev Josephmiddot M Ferreira $100

Atty amp Mrs Milton R Silva

StVincent de Paul Society $30

Rev Ernesto R Borges $26

Mr amp Mrs Alfred 1 Cam~ $25

$50 Franco Family Singersmiddot

$25 Mrs Sofia Pacheco Antonio T Cabral

Mary amp Beatrice Costa~ SilD

CnristO Credit Union Manuel Medeiros Laureano Silva

AFriendFrank B Olivei

YDUR SONTHE PRIEST

HI HOLY PATHERS MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL DMURDH

A FUTURE

PRIEST NEEDS

bull SOMEONES HELP

TRAiN ASfSTER

Tau

HUNGER CANT

WAIT

Deai MonBr~orNolam

Please

return couponwith your

offering

Have you ever wished you had a son a priest Now you can hlilve a priest of your own-and ahare forever In all the good he does _ _ Throughout the Near East this month grateful bishops ara ordainlng new priests trained by people like youbullbullbullbull Their own families are toe poor to support them In training but good catholics In America adopted these semIshynarians encouraged them all the way to ordinashytionbullbullbullbull Insome Inspiring cases this support was given at personal sacrifice How can youbegln7 Write to us now Well ~end you the name of ~ young seminarian who needs you and he will write to you Make the payments for his training to suit your convenlence ($850 a month or $100 a year or the total $600 all at once) Join your sacrifices to his and at every Sacrifice of the Mass he will always remember who made It possible

4

Native Sisters In our 18 developingcountries are teaching children of the poor preparing them for First Communion giving medical care to leplrs cal)cer sufferers the aging A SisterS training Ialts two years costs $1250 a month $150 a year or $300 altogetherbullbullbullbull Well send you the name of a Sister you can train as soon as we receive your first payment She will pray for you and write toyou

n An9 day now you may receive a letter contalnn the Holy Fathers appeal for the forgotten Arab refugees-l4 million people without a country bullbullbull most of them destitute bullbullbull more thari half of them childrenbullbullbullbull By trelnlng these children foi middotfuture selfsufflcel]cy we can help brln peace and new selfmiddothelp to the Holy Land atlll divided by warbullbullbullbull But why walt for your mal Hunger cant walt Neither can peace Send your amplIft now in any amount ($500 $200 $100 $75 $50 $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 $2 $1) and the Holy Fathercan put It to work right away Qril1 $10 wlllleed family for a monthl -----~-~---~~---~-IlNCL08ID PLllAIl PIND $_ c_O~__ rFOR _

NAMI ___~

8TRIU ~~=

OlTt ~_eTATIl_lrIp OODII-

NIAll lAST WIILFAAI ASSaDIATtOrlaquo

NEAR EAST MISSIONS J

MSGR JOHN ClI NOLAN Natlonal5ecretary Write CATHOLIO NIlAR EAST WeLFARE Assoo ~30 Madson Avenue New York NY OOU telephonel 212vtJkon 6middot5840

CATHaLiD

19 DiJoridrrien Ere State r ourlitei

SChoelbOY leag~~Wmrn~regr~ Stii~Pretty Mu~h sampu [j)(Q)Mbt

By PETIm BARJrEK Nmon BitIh ~h

The gehooboy ba8ebaD mmpaignis cllNimatieaDy near- Inlaquo the climax of another spirited seasoo With approxishymately a week of competitioo Nllllaining oontlmdmg teams Me stmggling to keep their pennanf oopes alive while Wtling for the right to rep-JIe8eDt their ll e s pee t i v e leaguesin the nnand-eomin

-y- shy

Btate tournament The Eastshyem Massachusetts ehampionahip

baseball tournamen+ ClIffiMftl-~

tine of the wurney is tiPoDOOred bythe

II a II sac h u~_ lt Iietts Secondary

SChool Princishypals Association bull Par tie i p 8 t _ ing schools have bElen divided i IIl tot h r e e d3ses - A B and C---llccord- Peter iDg to leagues Blrtek r

and comparable independent teams Action tn all three clasampe3 starts Saturday June L

In addition to the three divishyidon3 the baseball tourney amp1shyem radically JIrom the popular

Two Spots for Both BCl (IDnd Marry Five Bristol County League Howard Ferguson which teams

teams Gre still in contention for will represent the circuit in the tourney play ebampionship event

At this writing Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Stang SpaltamJ of Qartmouth who hold a lllim ene-game edge over their rivals are a solid choice to annex one of the two berths to be filled bi BCL teams The second spot 18 un literally up for grabs

Bishop Feehan High of Attieshyboro which led the circuit untll last week Durfee High of Fan River Attleboro and Taunton lire in close pursuit middotof Stang hoping tomiddot overcome the Sparshytans or at least lInish in the league runner-up berth Both the first and second place finshyishers will8utomatically qualify

If either fim OX second place II decided by Monday May 21 league officials w~ have to DOUty the tournament Director

No~tons Lancers in Need cf Help I h e Narragansett league Class B - Southem

whkh got a head start on the its Iud Old Colony champ ft NaITlIlshyv er area Clrcu conc es gansett runner-upleague play today First place

middot Somerset travels to New Bed- Narragansett champ ~ Olcll ford to meet Holy Family High Colony runner-up Case High of Swansea entell-middotmiddot South Shore champ VB Hockshytains Dighton-Rehoboth West- omock runner-up port hoss Msgr Prevost High Hockomock cpamp vs South

middotof Fall River and Dima]l Voce- ShQre runner-up tional nlso of Fall River will 0I Am f N rth E stobe t Se k Iver es 0 0 a n a e o~k

Entering the final week of ac-middot middot tion Somerset and seekonk are in the top two spots in tbe 8tanding They loom the more likely to corral Class B tourney berths But DightOn-Rehoboth Case and Westwrt trail the sec ODd place club by oIl1yone game If the race ends in II tie ]league officials wlll have ample time to schedule play-off games before the tourney deadline

Pairings for Class Bare

Selecting Union PITTSBURGH (NC)-Twentyshy

five maintenance workers at Duquesne University here in Pennsylvania have left their jobs pending a detell1llnation as to which union will represent the workers The remaining 115 members of the maintenance erew lIlre not involved in the atrike which was called by the 2li who are represented by the tJmted Electrical WorkersUnion

Although it occurs infrequentshyly a team does not have to win Its league to represent its league in tourney eompetition

The Bristol County league champion is slated to play the

bull Bay State League runner-up in first round action with the Bay State champs taking on the County runner-up The winners would then meet in second round play

Pairings for Class A are Class A - Southem

Suburban champ w Middleshy8llX runnerup

Middlesex champ ft Suburshyban runner-up Bay state ehamp VB Bristol runner-up

Bristol champ V8 Bay sta~ runnerup

-Tech lxlsketban competition lllll order to qualifyfor the Tech a team mt1BSt win 70 per cent cd its games but onlythe leagu~ champions ond runner-ups M~ eligible ~r playmiddotiImiddotbasebalL

In both Class A andClass B iitOtalof i6 teams will qualify 1lt7middotmiddotmiddotJiY

for the diamond elimination event~ E~~ Will pai1i~ipate in

the nortlHln division and eight in the southern bracllet The winners in each bracket will meet in the Eastern- Massacilushy

llletts fi~ Preliminary games will be played on June 1 4 and 6 The finals are scheduloo June 8

Class C competition will coIi-BiEt of eight clubs in only one division Titlists in seven smallshyDChooI le1gues and one indeshypendent selected by the tournashy

ment coJiunittee Will comprise the field fur this tliil-d group

and Mansfield 1m the Hockoshymock circuit appear to be out of the running this season

Fo~ Class C schools Its Winmiddot or youre out Only the league champions will play in the championships The winner of the Capeway Conference will meet the Cape and Vineyard champ in opening round play Dennis-YarDlQuth and Sandshywich are the likely opponents

The only other school located within the confines of the diocshyesan territorial limits that has an outside ~hance of qualifying for the tournament is Norton of the Tri-Valley Conference The Lancers however will need some outside help if they are to overcome league leading Millis The Tri-Valley champs will take on the Dual County League champions Defending Class C champ Ashland again leading the Dual Co~nty is heavily favored to repeat both in league ond state competition

NOT A BALL-ITS GUM Yem might get the idea that a pitched ban is lodged in the mask of this young Vancouver BC catcher but it isnt a ball This young ma is trying to prove he is just as efficient behillld the plate as he is at blowing bubble gum NC ~middothoto

Stresses Inter~cicdmiddotmiddotPartnership As Solution to Racial Problem

CLEVELAND (NC) - A Nashy world would be better off lr tional ASsociation for Advanceshy iou hadnt gotten involved Jm

ment of Colored People official asserted here interracial part shynership is the key to oolution of the racial problem but it cannot be a partnership dom inated by either race

Dr John A Morrell NAACP assistant nat ion a 1 director speaking at the Cleveland Cathshyltnlic Interracial Councils annual Interracial Justice Awards banshyquet said the nation today is aj an unprecedented crossroads but the interracial way is the democratic part to justice

He spoke in place of Roy Wishydns NAACP national~ director who was with the U S delega- tion at the United Nations con vocation on human rights lin Tehran Iran -

Angry Voices There are angry Negro voiees

raised in protest because develshyopment of opportunity in recent years does not apply to twoshythirds of the Negro population he saidmiddot The kind of jobs they are capable of filling are vanshyishing from the economy he added

But if a fruitful partnership is to continue between the white and Negro the burden of know- ing the truth about Negro hisshytory must be borne by white as well as Negro Dr Morsell said

Vie are all fighting a bitter legacy of generations White people have to know where they stand and why Once you assume the burden of work toward interracial justice you assume the responsibilities be continued

If you are not going to ~

sume them then you and fhe

the first place Informed PariDership

Dr Morsell said a mere sPirit of commitment is not enough to

survive over the hard going Work must be based on a part shynership that is informed intelshyligent understanding and resil shyient he said

The interracial awards were presented to Father Edwan Camille assistant Catholic Charshyities director here and Thom811 C Westropp president of Womshyens Federal Savings and Loan Association

Westropp was cited for his efforts towards opening the

doors of banking and credit 1m the Cleveland area to all ciUshyzens regardless of race creed 011

color while Father CarniDe was cited for his leadership as director of Project Peace (~

irner-city diocesan organizati~ working with the poor mostly Negroes) and for his work as co-chairman of the first tri-faith Greater Cleveland Conference on Religion and Race

ELECTRICAl -Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

SS lPlE1rIEllt amp JgtAIDlj

$103 Womens Club Rose E Sullivan

$50 Joseph P Conaty

$35 Belen M amp William J

De7 $33

Mr amp Mrs James F McMahcm $25

Mrs Margaret Daly amp Mary John Dolan ~illiam Daley amp Mary Esther Mr amp Mrs Stanley M -laniek

~50 In memory of MrsMarga~

W Pow~rs RodneY S DeCecco

$26 Mr amp Mrs John Soula

$25 Edward Healey Mr amp Mrs Michael McCartbiY Mr amp Mrs James Crosson Mrs Gertrude Lomas Mr amp Mrs Norman GagnOOl

ST JOHN TEE BAPTlIS11

$30 St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ampt Jean Baptiste $25

Mr amp Mrs Ovila Caron Henri Demers

In memory of Mr amp lVlrm bullWilliam Sheehan

Open to An PORTLAND (NC)-The seeshy

ond annual Catholic youth conshyvention of the Portland Diocese has opened the convention to all Catholic students of the dioshycese in order to spread the agtOlgto tolate of youth to youth Thll

)faine convention has comprised only students who have takes themiddot youth leadership trainlJnl1 courses

Dont Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH

DO faJse teeth drop slip or wobblo when you talk eat laugh or sneeze Dont be annoyed and embarr1lEsetll lkllh hanl11caps FASTEETH Bamp

e (non-acid) powder to SPr1n~Ikle on your plates keeps false teetb more firmly set Gives confident feel~ Ing Of security and added comfort No gummy gooey taste or feellncr Dentures that 6t are essential to health see your dentist regulorly oet FASTEETH at alll1rug countemJ

o

WYman 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD MASS

IfIIfJltk del1WM

S H~~uO~ Oil

SAVE MONEY 0 OUROILHEATI bull eatt

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

Iritai~ If S)crap SuPPITreg~~5n Acts Of Re~(j[jmlt~oml

LONDON (NC)-It looks as if Britain is at long last glOing to stop suppressing the monasteries-officially that 0

Legal experts sifting through lenturies of forgotten laws clutshyooling the records have found (hat the Suppression of Reli shygious Houses Acts of 1535 and 0039 have never been repealed

They are among 155 statutes weeded out from the statute IJ)ooks between 1239 and 1705middot lmd now to be definitively leshy~aled by a special act of Par-Iliament

These two acts enforced the eosure and pillaging of Catholic monasteries friaries and other religious houses throughout the WINS nsc Chaplain

eountry following King Henry (Captain) Angelo J LitekyVIIIs break with Rome in 1534

assigned to the 199th InfanshyJhey brought vast fortunes On goods property and mog of try Brigade in Vietnam has ell land to the kings favorites been awarded the Distinshyoome of whose families have reshy guished Service Cross forWned their wealth to this day extraordinary heroism SevshyIgnored in Practice

Of course the laws against erely wounded when Viet me Roman Catholic Church Cong ambushed a US infanshyIhave long ago been shelved and try company Ohaplain Lit shyIgnored in practice The reli shy eky braved flying bullets toous houses are back probably

rescue and minister tomore numerous than before iIome have even reoccupied the WQunded and dying meR 0ld sites they hadmiddot before the lReformation

Another notable measure ~ewlfk ~[p)regID Gingled out for repeal is the 1loleration Act of 1688 This act W51f)$ ~WIfltdl although in itself it did not help

NEW YORK (NC)-The Adshy~he Catholics marked the end of

vocate weekly newspaper of1lhe Protestant Reformation and the Newark Archdiocese wont1he beginning of religious tolershythe first-place Silver Medalation in Britain Awarti for weekly newspapersIt allowed freedom of worship in the annual public serviceClgt Protestant Trinitarian Nonshycompetition sponsored by theoonformists provided theiT New York chapter of the Pubiicmeetings were opento the pubshy

Relations Society of AmericaIlk it did not relieve the existing The award was for a five-part

fenaWes of those days against analysis ttl the ills besetting the ~atholics other breakaway Newark public school system lhcnestants or Jews but it was )he analysis was written by a hisberic beginning It has been Advocate news editor Ed Grant ltJeseribed as the Great Oharter and was an examination into ~ religious freedom and the one of the areas of dissatisfacshy~umph ofc9mmon ~ense tion which led to widespread

rioting in Newark last Summer

The series ran lri the newsshylJays Help for Poor paper last september and Octoshy

lPeCice First ~eeds ber The Public Rellitlons SocishyMIAMI (NC)-The Catholic ety award - silver medals are (lihurch in this nation today awarded in each of five cateshy

gories-are given for the mostauast address itself to the presshynoteworthy contributions bullbull 0 toiloing needs of the poor and dis-

~vantaged as well as the better public ~derstanding of ltJnICial issue of peace says the _ community problems in the New

4Tchbishop of Miami York metropolitan area Archbishop Coleman F Calshy New s p a per 8 magazines 0011 following announcement of broadcasting an d television middotGte establishment of the ecclesshy media in the New York-New iastical province of Miami and Jersey-Connecti~ut metropolitan tMs appointment as its first area are eligible for the awards l)rehbishop stressed that the (fhurch must be concerned with ibe problems of the time in Retired ArttlhJboshop S)Vhich we exist Gets College lHlonorThe g~eatest problems at present are the problems of the DUBUQUE ( NC) - Retired disadvantaged the poor and Archbishop Edward D Howard Utase who are in need and of of Portland Ore has been named oourse peace he smiddotaid for Loras Colleges 1968 John

It is more difficult for us to Fitzgerald Kennedy Award The LiOlve in any real way the prob- prelate is a former president of iems that are our concern until the college we have a measure of peace The citation and gold medal And it is the prayer of all of us annual award honoring an out Chat peace will be established as standing Amercian will be preshyiluickly as possible on an honorshy sen ted to the archbishop at the able basis o college commencement cereshy

monies June 2 Camp Directory Archbishop Howard 90 a nashy

Nltlw available from the Nashy ti ve of Cresco Iowa and a Loras lItonal Catholic Camping Assn alumnus was ordained to the ~ 131~ Massachusetts Ave priesthood in 1906middot He became lM- W Washington D C 20005 president of the college in 1921 Is the 1968 Directory of Catholic In 1924 he was consecrated to ~mps which lists all known serve as auxiliary bishop of DavshyearriPs in the U S giving acshy enport He became archbishop of Civities charges dates open and Portland in 1926 and retired in lIbailing addresses 1966

National CYOPlans LeadershipTraining shyImpa~t to Aid Priests Adult Admiddotvisors

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tbe through the introduction of BaWmore June 23-28 ehicagoNational Catholic Youth Organshy leadership methodology which July 1-5 Boston July 14-19 ization Federation will launch a facilitates maximum involveshy Sen Antonio July 28-Aug 3 training program in June called ment 00 the local level and Denver Aug 11-16 and San Impaot be help priests and hence maximum commitment JFaoancisoo Aug 25-30 adults 00 work effectively with The National CYO Federation Dr Donald Ebalt a professhyteenagers in a leisure time proshy will sponsor six sessiOns this lIlional trainbig eonsul1lant of gram summer to train diocesan CYO Washington D c win diiecl

The program was designed in staffs m 1lhe use of the newmiddot ead11ab cooperation with Leadership program lhey win )e held m A pilot Jtudy of the effectiveshyResources Inc a firm _of beshy DeBS of Impact on a group of havior scientists -rolulbteers from the NewarlkAddress Graduates

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishy archdiocese was held at the SOUTH BEND (HC) -Mel-rector of the Youth Department Benedictine Retreat House ill

Jdte-rite Patriarcib Maximoo VUnited States Catholic Confershy jNewton N J ence in announcing ttie new Kakimof Antioch and Dr Ilhirtymiddot persons representashyprogram said tives of youth adult advisorsJames A Perkins of Cornell

The goal 01 Impact is 00 help and priest moderators met withUniversity will be speakers atthe priests who are moderators representattives of the CYO

the 123rd annual cOnW~ncementof CYO the ad~lt advisors and Federation staff and a member youth participating in CYO toshy exerci~ Sundly June 2 at Of Leadership rResources Inc ward maximumpersonal growth Notrlte Dame University 110 assess and to evaluate 1mpaltL

(Cathedral Camp-Resident and Day Camp for Boys

O~ Lady of the L_ke Day Camp fOr Girls

Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON LONG POND ROUTE 18 EAST FREETOWN MAS~

~ RESIDENT CAMP 49th Season June 30 thru August 24 - a Week Season

Diocesan seminar-ians - College Students amp Teachers Under direction StaH of a Diocesan Priest

Saili~g swimming water skiing horseback riding riflery archeryPrograni hiking overnight camping trips ~rts amp crafts Indian crafts camp crafts athletic (team amp individual) competition and inter-camp cOmpetition professional tutorial service available

Private beach large luxurious camphouse dining hall modernfacilities~ washrooms arts and crafts buildings camp store and office first aid and infirmary beautiful chapel overnight and weekend accomodashytions for parents

S WEEK PIERIOD $325 - 4 W~K PERIOD $165 - 2 weEK PERIOD $85

Cathedra~ Day Camp t=or Boys Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period

JULY W- AUGUST 23 Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period fEES INCLUDIE Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Horseback Riding Weekly Cook~Outs amp Milk Daily without Added Cost

--~----------------------------------------Our Lady of the Lake bay Camp For Girls

JULY l _ AUGUST 23 Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period

FEES INCLUD~Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Ilorseback Riding Weekly Cook-Outsmiddot Milk Daily without Added Cost

o

For further information write to

REV WALlER A 5ULLlVANDiredor PO Box 63 - East Freetown Mass 02717

Page 9: 05.23.68

Dailymiddot Aittention Necessary To ~[f~Dceate We~~~

1B1y 1J~JlDill alii wnJillYJil ~~

The ~ are on their way and 11 lreems that half r our time i1l spent digging them out ~ the garden No matter haw much time we Gpomd on them they have a way of reappearing within Q few days ad 1l1Inless we really live them OUattention they ean take over a garden middotin lW time Beginning gardenem

bull WOO approaeh gardemng casshyaally or em weekends are often ~helmed by these unwel-CIOme pests ond soon give up the Ilbip Our suggestion is that M)

minutes II day B sufficient to keep even big gardens weeded fithe gardener will get out into Illie garden every day This maw mean nomiddot mOIre than a short trip BIound the garden to look mt Ole plants and to pull out a few ~ds encountered on the weJr

Few llilmtJtes Dadlly

We usually keep a small wamshyms hoeohandy by the back door and as we PlVPare to go to worlx take a short walk in the garden hoe in hand to see what is new The result is that we spend flw minutes or so in the garden beshytore setting out for work in the morning 10 minutes at lunch and ap~roximately 10 minutea before dinner after the working day is over which incidentally il a good time to ioosen up ~

t1ore tearing the kids heads oIif llDr all the misdeeds of the day

The point is that weeding u

attitudes t2lat vtll shape their future are beginning now and IllS theU friends and relatives wish them well they pray that each couple will enjoy the graces and happiness that come from a good Christian marriage with Christ in the home

Ad~ Atmosphere Often a wedding gift can add

to the atmosphere of a Christian home One such gift is a plaque that hangs in our den On it are these words

Sacrifice s usually difficult and irksome only

Love can make ~ easy and perfect love can make it a

Joy I couldnt think of a better

motto with which to begin 0 marriage or one that becomes

more significant through sleepshyless nights with sick babies frustrating job problems or the everpresent money worries Qlat asually plague young couples

A handsome cross a richlY llIustrated b~ble a handsome religious Gtatue or plaque are eccellent gifts to begin a Chrisshy

11 th h t Uan couple on the road to Il we as many 0 er cores mus ~ done on n day-today buis cmd cannot be left for weekendll because there are so many other tmportant things that have to be ltilone then

The grass has to be cut a new lInge put on a door there is a ball game to watch a ride 00 take a tree to be pruned etc Cll of which ore time-eonsuming _ lIIllU necessary With the weather we have been exPeriencing al -te th d~n~ e ~ weedmg gives ll3 middot Iln oPprtunity to g~t a hWe ~h lUI 11 commodity whiclill middot D3ems t0 be gettmg scarcer fa 001 industrial live~ and ehance to commune With Nature een at the wrong end of n

lim tle Kltcbellllmiddot

Did you know that during a wedding ceremony the groom places the ring on the finger of Ule bride because the circlemiddot of gold symbolizes the love and devotion that from this moment on will have no end This is but lti)ne of the many traditions that lJlave come down through the years and now are an accepted ~rt of the Cana celebration

Another must for a wedding dJ the wedding cake that fur eenturies has signified breakshymg of bread in kinship as it Is ll1anded out to friends and relashyves Even the veil that graces tlle l)ead of the beautiful bride b a custom that has come into llUes~nt time from the days when the brides stood under eanopies to show that they were IIDlder the protection of the glOOrp

All these ancientgt traditions give a Uttle added meaning to lYle Cana feast and the sacred acrainent of matrimony but ltWen more significant are the rostoms and traditions that the 1l1Jride and groom will carry into rife as a f~ly Many of the

polsh Mmiddotsommiddot

n ill ~ilI CHiCAGO (NC)-First copies

of the Polish vernacular altar

gful C th li lif Let meanm a 0 c e someone else buy the sheets a~d and ~asters ma~e your pft one Wlt~ eve~las~lDg mea~ll~g

If ou re 1hinking of givmg ~ bridal shower in the n~ar future perbaP you w0llld hke to serve a Bndal Puddmg

Bridal Pudding 2 envelopes unflavored gelatiJm

cup cold water b ili t

llff If cup deghte wa er egg W I StI- ~_

74 aspoon - cup suglllr

q h cups eavy cream (ilDrgetth diet)

1 teapoon vamplilla 1 flaked tcup coconu 1) Soften the gelatin in the k

cup cold watermiddot and then pour the 1fJ cup ofboiling water over the gelatin mixture and stir unntil dissolved Cool

2) Beat the egg whites until foam slowly add the salt and sugar and continue beating unshytil stiff peaks are formed

3) Fold the gelatin into the stiff whites

4) Beat the heavy cream until stiff and add the vanilla Fold the cream into the whites and gelatin mixture

5) Rub the bottom and sides cf an eight-inch spring form pan with butter and sprinkle the bottom with lh cup of the coconut Pour in the cream mixshyture Sprinkle with the remainshying coconut -ltld chill at least four hours or overnight Upshymold and serve with s1rawshyberries and the following rum sauce

lltum Sauce 6 egg yolks (see we didnt

want them to go to waste) 1 cup sugarmiddot

04 cup dark 111m cognac or kirsch

1) Beat the yolks until lemon colored and slightly thickened

2) Gradually beat in the Dugar

Stir in half the rum and cook in tOp of a double boiler over boiling water stirring constantshy131 until the sauce coats a woodshy

THE ANCHORshy

lHIONOR MOTHER lPlilElRRE Mother Pierre Marie of St Annes Hospital Fan River left meets Mrs Joseph Giblin Mrs Richard Donovan and Mrs Eugene Dionne all members of The Friends of St Annes on bhe occasion of the groups honoring the sister in reCognition of her reshyception of the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice Medal from Pope Paul

Aim Is Unity INIUlDil leads New )errsey Periodic White Walkerrs

Se~king to Ascertain Needs of Negroes ENGLEWOOD (NC)-Led by We are trying to find out

a Sister from St Cecilias High what the needs are she said School a group of white resi- We realized that we would dents have been making peri- look liketourists going through odic informal walking toWfl but you have to begin someshythrough the predominantly Ne- where gro Fourth Ward to meet the One result of the middotwalks was people living there

The walks inaugurated by Sister Robert Jean are made in mn effort to break down barriere fllll an area where rioting took place last Summer

Gif~~ Contfnued from Page Four

lNJlf~ihlmiddotAuBehCJH) $750

Jeweled Cross Co Inc $225

Attleboro Particular Council St Vincent de Paul

$200 Society of St Vincent de PaW

St Mary Conference $150

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J Wright bull $75 No Attleboro Catholic Womshy

0ns Club $50

Dr Eugene Leco St Anne Sodality Sacred

Heart Church $40

Edward N Cook Plate Co Inc $35middot

Albert Morawski $30

CYD-Sacred Heart Church $25

Frank M Miller amp Son Inc No Attleboromiddot Coal Co y H Blackington amp Co Inc

II neighborhood meeting at which white and black people discussed the visits and the posshysibility of further involvement in the needs of the Fourth Ward community------------

Universal Roofing amp Sheet Metal Co

Alden Corrugated Container Corp

Mass Trucking Corp New Bedford Hotel Macedo Pharmacy

$51 Building Materials Inc

$5 Sacred Heart Home

Daughters of Isabella Hyacinth Circle No 71

A Friend Damien Council K of C Harbor Beach Club amp Lounge Laurans-Standard Grocery Co

Inc $35

Glemi-on Roofing Co $30

Browne Pharmacy Inc $25

Browne Pharmacy A Friend Local No 168 UAW AFL-CIO Cape Cod Fabrics Philip J

Kane Inc Lions Club of New Bedford

Duplicating Equipment amp Supshyply Atty Jack London New Bedford Catholic Guild for the Blind Sharkeys Tire amp Rubber Comiddot

Tum oto Page Ten

Thurs May 23 1968

AJumna Rece~ves

Tdn~ty Award WASHINGTON (NC)-Doroshy

thea F Sullivan social worker and alumna of Trinity College here was presented the 1968 Julie Billiart medal at the schools Spring honors convocashytion

The annual award established in 1961 in honor of the foundress of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur who conduct the colshylege honors an alumna whose life exemplifies Blessed Julie Billiarts educational objectives -the formation of strong womshyen of faith devoted to God and neighbor living dedicated and fruitful lives

Miss Sullivan a member of the Trinity class of 1926 had been an associate professor at the Catholic University of Americas School of Social Sershyvice since 1941 She has been project director of the South Florida Neighborhood Youth Corps in Miami since 1966

She has been active in a numshyber of youth and welfare organshyizations has contributed articles to numerous periodicals and edited several books

Form Sisterrs 0 Coull1ld~

~Dil HawOJii Diocese HONOLULU (NC)-A Sisshy

ters council ill being formed here with the approval of Bishshyou John J Scanlan of Honoshylulu The council is composed of any Sisters in the diocese who desire to affiliate herself with the organizations objecshytives

The projected aims of the council are to serve as a chanshynei of communication among Religious communities and to the bishop the priests senate shylay senate other religious groups to serve as a source of unity and strength among Reshyligious to foster a closer c0shy

operation among clergy Reshyligious and laity and to be [1

means of coordinating the works of the apostolate after studying the religious educational socishyal economic and ecumenical needs of the diocese

Mfiltie P~Mmbnrwg amp HealltDOI~ (Oe Over 35 Years

of Satisfied Service Reg Master Plumber 702i1

JOSEPH RAPOSA JR $06 ~O MAUIN $1ltlEfEii

lraaD rlovell 675a74~

SCHOOl MaonteilCllnCe SIlJlPPUO~

$WIEIE~IERS - $OA~$

IOlISUINJIr~CijANIIsect IrU~1E E)IliINGUUSIHIEIl$

DAHill COo nS86 IPUlRCHIASE SIlRIEIETI

NEW I8lEll)fO~1Ol

~9lJ-lJ7~6

~IIII11IJ1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I11I1I11I1I11I11II11I1I1I1I1I1I1I1IJ1I1I1I1I11I11I11I1I1I11I11UIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIII1111I11I

1 ~ESADAV~ lIIli~ls for use at Mass in Polish Coo en spoQn Do not boil Remove ltihurches and institutions in this from the heat and stir in the country have been received ~y remaining rum John Cardinal Cody of Ohicago In answer to - a letter from II member of the Consilium far Mrs Mogardo of Falmouth the Cbe implementation of the Con- amount of all-purpose cream 10 IJtitution Oll the Sacred Liturgy the Creme de Menthe Squares IUN~~A~m M ~58 icIIf the Second Vatican COIDlcil is one pint iillllllJllIlIIlIlIIlIIlIlIlIlIIlIIlIlIlIlIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIIlIlJlIlIlIIlIIllUlIIlIIlIlIlIlIlIIlIIUIIUlIIlIlIlIlIlIUlIlIUIIUIIIIII~I~

I

THE ANCHORTDi~c~se of Foil River-Thurs May 23 1968 indiana Prelate ~ i l bull - 10 Heads NCEACrawford Electrical Co DrSpecial Gifts Morris Feresten Dr Frank L mAiN FRANCISCO r(NC) shy

Collins Mr amp Mrsmiddot John P Bish()p Raymorid J GellagMrContinued from Page Nine Dwyer of Lafayette Ind was ~le~ted

Attleboromiddot Hub Clothing Bristol ~it- president general Of the Nashyting Mills Inc Dixon Burial tionlll1 Catholic Educational Asshy$150

sociation at the final meeting ofVauit Shelburne Shirt Co IncBarry J Boardman Ins Agency $125 the asSoclation~8 6Mb Mnuat

Almeida Electric Co August Elmer C Slater

convention hereraquoIlr amp Mrs James G Heagney He succeeds Bishop ErnestBadwey amp Sons Joseph A Parks$100 Primeau of Manchester N HMrs Mar-y Courtis Dr amp MrsL G Balfour Co

who rervOO as president general Norman pSadler Brothers Inc for three yearsBedford House ConvalescentShields Inc A native of Cleveland BishopHomeInc Dr Sanford I Udis$60 Gallagher was ordained in 1939llI Joseph Madowsky HarveyAtherton Furniture Co~ and served as a Navy chaplainProbber Inc $50 during World War n He w~s

Demers Brothers narned bishop of Lafayette inM S Company 1965 following service as secreshy[P[(D$Iroreg$ $40

tary of the National ConferenceAttleboro Printing amp Embosshy of Catholic Charities

olng Co Inc ~WltWI7il$~ltW Speaker at the election sesshy$35 sion was U S Commissioner ofIOUlIt lLADY IOlF lFAllDMIAReynolds amp Markman In~ $25 Education Harold Howe who

$27 said that Catholic schools willMr amp Mrs Ralph A GuerrieroLeedham Hardware be especially guilty if they doMr amp Mrs Peter J Hoss lFlIt ADlIt][AN OJFM lFlIt lFAJlUAN OJFM $25 not act to solve the crisis of

Attleboro Sun Publishing Co ST IDOMIllN][C ghetto educationmiddotlnc Connelly Gold Stamping $25 Christianity is supposed toCo MacDonald Moving amp Storshy ~[j1Jil~O$ltC[(il$ t[ Our tLC1~ls ~hauraquocetiMr amp Mrs Thomas Paiva offer something more the age Co Marathon Company Mr amp Mrs Thomas C Murphy commissioner told the 6000

Plastic Craft Novelty Co Ob$erve $iver Priestiy Jubilees delegates at the final sessionSTLOUIS OF FRANCE On May 26th the 9 AM Retreat House Pittsfield N 11 ~Let us be fools for Christs

Fall Ri~er $50 MlIss will be conceleprated where _ he served as Retreat sake said St Paul middotWe Ladies of St Ailne raquoy the Franciscan Friars at Our Director and Master~ badly need highminded visionshy

$1200 Holy Name Society Ladys Chapel New Bedford Four years later _1964 Fr aries who can help the poorestFan River Electric Light Co st Vincent de Paul Sooi~ eonmiemoratingthe Silver Ju Fabian was transfe~red to Our of our children see a new dream $1000 $26 bilee of the ordination of) Fr Ladys Ohapel New ~d~()rd and faShion a better reality FOO

FirestoneRubbe~ amp Latex ~ Mr amp Mrs Herman Lamppoin4e Fabian F Joyce OFM and Fr where he has served to the pres- ournations sake Catholic edushy $600 I~ k Adrian F Donachie OFM ent time He is ViCar of the cationmust jointhe rest of edshy

~all R~~er GasCQllpanYj Fr Fabian is a native of Franciscan CommuIlity Father ucation to give them a neW $500 Vineyard iavenc Watertown He is an alumll~sof is well known thr~ughout the botizon

lVlr amp Mrs Henry ~ Feitelberl Boston College High SChool and area as a preacher for the St Mooney amp Co Inc middotUT AUGUSTINE

0Boston College He entered the Jude Novena devotions on$300 FIRST COMMUNION- $46L50 Franciscans of Holy - Nilme Thursdayat the chapel andtbeRev JosephF ODonnell ResidentSofCatholic MemoJillJ Province with headquarters in radio Apostolate

~o~e I $50 ~ PORTRAITSNew Yo~k City in 1937~ - Fr Addlln F Donachie Of~ $300 Mrs James Boyle He was ordained at the Na- is a native of Glasgow Scotland IN LIVING COLOUR

St Augustines GuildCitizens Savings Bank iional Shrine of the Immaculate and was brought up in NewSt Augustines Holy NameFR Five Cent Savings Bank Conception Washington D C York Oity H~ entered ~t $200 St Augustines St Vincent de May 29 1943 His first assign- Joseph s SeraphIcSeminary Jtl Anderson-Little Co inc lPaul Society ment was to St EIizabeths 1932 in preparatIon for the A -Friend $30 - T)enver middotColo from Franciscan Priesthood

$150 Mr amp Mrs William Figueiredo 1944 to Hi58 He was received into the

PR Peoples Cooperative Bank Mr amp Mrs Francis Metell _ Pastor and Supe- Order in 1937 and was ordained $135 $25 rior of the Church and Monas- six years later on May 29 1943

Herve Lagasse Cmdr amp Mrs Daniel Burgo tery in Denver in 1951 and at the National Shrine of the $125 Frank Coutinho Mr amp Mrs served in this capacity for Immaculate Conception Washshy

Cliff Nursing Homes Michael Fonte) Mr- amp Mr~ Eushy seven years ington D C His priestly Hfe$120 gene Frieh Mrs John Hughes In 1958 he was stationed at has been in New York Coloshy

J O Neill Supply Co Marthas Vineyard National St Bonaventure Retreat House rado Connecticut NewHampshy $101 Bank Rep amp Mrs Benjamin C Paterson N J for a period of shire and finally- stationed in ~ Fall River Shopping Ce~nter Mayhew Jr Mr amp Mrs Boleslaw two years giving laymens re- Our Ladys Chapel since 1956Associates Nickowal Mrs Dean Swift 11 treats and days of recollection Fr Adrian came with the origishy $100 Mr amp Mrs Frederick Thifault to the clergy He was then nal group of Franciscans ~o staff

Norbut Mfg Co Inc transferred to St Anthonys- Our Ladys Chapel THE FINEST QU~LITYSullivans of Fall River dk Wareham Hyannis IS WORTH THE PLEASANT

H P Hood amp Sons Inc ST PATRICK Famed Church -Gift SHORT DRIVE TO THE I bull Borden amp Remington Co $50

AREAS LEADING STUDIOr Louis Hand Inc middotMr amp Mrs Thomas Choate To Mission SocietY William T Manning Colnt Mr amp Mrs middotWilliam McLaugbshy BOSJO~ (NC) B~stons

j OPEN SUNDAYS Radio Station WALE I lin famed St Stephens church hasbull Dring Communion Seasonbeen - turned over by Richard

Dr amp Mrs Americo Almeida ~ W Hurley Co Cardinal Cushing to the Misshy $75 $30

Walter A Fur-man Co $45

8io~ary society ot St James ~ BRIDAL PORTRAITS Beetlemiddot Plastics Albert- Guerzoni the Apostle 311d Deluxe Quality Candicts Fall River Lodge No 118 BPO $21 famous for RESERVE YOUR DATE EARLY - The edifice _a short distance E~~ Mrs Am~lia JJaptiste _ from the home of Paul Revere

St- vincent de Paul Salvage - $25 and other Revolutionary War ~rve as QUALITyand EvANS STUDIOS

JBureau Nlr amp I([rs Franci~Murp~y shrines will head- St Patricks Wofuens Guild Miamp Mrs Julius ]~abbitt -I quarters for the society which 18 MAIN STTAUNTON middotCall Rivermiddot Mr amp ~rs JsephNorris the ~ardinal founded to do mis- SERVI(E Tet 822-1181

sect(6nwork in Latin AmericaProvidence Pile Fabric Corp $50 St Stephens church was deshy

Robert L Germaine Inc o o

Atty amp Mrs JohriJ Harringshy OUR LADY OF LOURDF8 whose works also include tne ton $5 Massachusettsmiddot State House It

Simons Supply Co Inc Massasoit Hills Trailer Iark was first used as a CongregashyThe J L amp R Cohen Foundashy Inc

siglled by Charles BlJlfltJch

tienal church but with the influx ~ion of Catholics during the inlmishy

Nira WarehOUse Mart Inc West Harwich gration of the early 1800s it was $45 purchased by the Boston arch-

Drobyski Wallpaper Co HOLY TRINITY diocese $60 In 1964 Cardinal Cushing$40

Dr Harry Cooperstein Mr amp Mrs Theodore F Berg spent more than $1000000 W haus restore the building$30

Ashton Funeral Home $50 Magonis Ferry Landing Mr amp Mrs Manley E Boyce Priests COll1ference

$25 $26 STEUBENVILLE (NC) ~ A Atty Kenneth Sullivan Mr Captain William House group of priests here has fOJmed

- Mrs Lewis Morley Hathaway - $25 -- a CQnference of Steubenville ~nelal Service Cook Bord(l1 ~oha Gillahan Mr amp Mrs Priests to create a general

Co Dr Harry Levine Joseph lttiltpetteMr ampMrsJohn ~pirii of priestly fraterJ~iiy and l)rDa~id P~Iill Tyrells Mar- E Ke~ly ~r Mrs yen~j~ Cor- - professionalism Msgr 0

t Cascaltle Drug CoProfes- ra~o HarQJd~RmiddotMcK~nna ~Tolin A Cymbor pastor ()fStgt Qff~rincllid~SPeciaIILinlie9n~n~ $3 w~rf~ 0( ~ I~al ph~i-rnacy hr havills Mrs R R~ SmalI AnthonYThete~esect Church Piney F6rk

-- middote~rHolvitZampHorvitz Ryan MrampMr~_-JQnljMul- wasnamedtempotary chairman Ride TicketsFor additional details or reservatic5nsmiddot call Mrmiddot Conrad Feriamiddot at (4Ql) RE 14kgtOO collectl lC

High Point Fording Box Corp llnsMr-ampmiddotMrsAllgterf Daven- and chosen to repiesimt the _ ~ ~

A RossEvetett Motors port Mramp Mrs Frank Ball group at the initialmiddot meeting in

-uline Te~tile Co Eagle Mr amp Mrs John W- Anderson Chicago May 21 of the National ine Co Mr amp Mrs Paul Carney Federation of Priests coun(iMI

bull

~~ 1

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Comiddot

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JUST OfF ROUTE 117

POINTmiddotRO~-_

SpecialSchool Outinils GjoupOffer $3 per Stuitentmiddot

father OWcopy) Sons Are OEd~glfDregd

BELMONT (NC) - Three members of the Habiger family -two sons and their fathershyare completing studies for the priesthood and will be ordained as Benedictine priests on June M

The lllabigers have prepared Jlor ~e priesthood at Belmont Abbey here They will be Qrshydained by Abbot Thomas Halmiddott shyman at St Benedicts Abbey in Atchinson Kans

John Habiger joined his two sons at Belmont Abbey after the death of his wife Mildred in December 1963 He said he did this because my wife and I just had an understanding that the survivor would give his or her life to the Lord

Before deciding to enter the priesthood Habiger had worked as a sales manager fOl a deep freeze home locker distlibutor

lHE ANCHORshy~urs May 23 1968

_ bull

II

Britista Cot1toIicI Suppolt New Bilt To Ovtlow Bios~

LONDON (NO) ~ 0aitJh0 ~ BeneFally appearr to be ~Ving strong BUPPOOt to the govemme~ controvemial new biJl 110 outlaw racial dls- crimination in Britain

Tile Catholie press glQ~~e bin Its blessing with some quBll shy iDeations Several Catholic anti shyaovermnent politicKms howshyweI have voiced oppositionshynot em principle they eblim but oocause they fear some sections of the bHl eould IIIggravate rather ampan mollify existing racism here by producing II privileged black and colored minority

The Race Relations Biil Which Is backed by the present Labor government and can reashysunably be expected to become law this Summer fs intended to i

strengthen existing legislation in this matter in view of the big rise in the number of Negro and colored (Indian Pakistani and as a labor pool manager for and West Indian) immigrants in the United States Air ForceFATHER AND SONS TO BE ORDAINED A father and his two sons will bethe past few years

Fellls Takeover m-d~ined June 14 to the priesthood at St Benedicts Abbey Church Artchi8on Kansas Nearly 2000 dock workers FoUo~ing the death of his wife five years ago John Paul Habiger (center) entereq the MethodlidsAdopt

quit work to delllonstrate BenedIctines joining his sons in the seminary Their nam~8 im religion are Father J~hJ) Project E~uaiityWJainst the bill and to sboW Igrlatius Habiger OSB (center) Father MatthewH~riy Habiger~ OSB (left) andsupport for the view o~ bullCon~ DALLAS (NC)-The ll-milshy2ervative party me~ber Eno~b F~thet Benedict John HabigeJrp OSW NC Photo li~)Il-member United Methodist ~

PPwell that Britain has too Church-formed by a merger l(Ilany elgtlQred immigranUi $50 $50 of the Methodist Church and

Powell had called for 8 vir WestpolIt Almon L Turner Holy Name Society the Evangelical United Brethshy tual halt to the entry of dependshy Thomas M Ross ren-has ill effect adoptedST GEORGE ST PATRICK~nts of colored immigrants and $45 Project Equality throughoutmiddot ~he$25 $250i for measures to encourage the United States Mr amp Mrsmiddotmiddot Leonard Langlois RobertE Eastman Re~ Tames F McDermottliepatriation of the immigrants The 1400 delegates to WleEveline Magnant Claire Magshy $25 $200 bull OtherWise he said black people QUldrennial General Confershynjllt Mr amp Mrs Roland McGee Dr Frederick G Doran ~ lDr amp Mrs Roger E Cadieuxwill take over whole areas ence adopted a resolution inMr amp Mrs Arthur Perry Landgraf Felix P Kaladin $125 Dnd I3cial violence will follow which the new church endorsesMr amp Mrs Donald Pittman Thomas W Whalen Thepnaa Mrs David M KilroyPowell was later ousted from Project Equality and recomshyMr amp Mrs Jacob Strunk Calisto Raymond P Paine $40his position in the shadow cab- mends cooperation both throup

Richard J McNally inet---the leadership that would participation and financial su~SandwichWoods Hole $30assume power if the Conservashy pori on the part of all United Fernand C E AuclairtiVe6 won control of the governshy CORPUS CHRISTI Methodist Ann u a 1 (regional)llT JOSI~IH Dr Thomas Clarkment - by Conservative party Conferences local churches 10shy$300 $350 John T ~mith

0leader Edward Heath who eal or national institutiomlPaul McCusker Rev William F Morristermed Powells speech racist $26 agencies or organizations$150 $100 William MoranAbstain From Voting Friends of Megansett Mr amp Mrs William Carr The resolution presen ted to

The House of Commons apshy $100 $50 $25 the Conference by the Methodshy

Leo A Bond Mrs Leonard Nproved the bill in principal ist ~neral Board of Christian lOr amp Mrs George Christman Mr amp Mrs Lawrence Perrault313-209 and sent it to commitshy Bilooeau Mr amp Mrs Francis Jr Social Concerns called Project$75 Dr amp Mrs J Minihan lKilgrew Mrs James E Sullivantee for additional study before Equality a responsible consist shyMrs Claudia Pendergast Mr amp Mrs Peter Becker Jrit is presented for fi nal passage Mrs Frank Souza Joseph Tin- ent ethical practical effective$50 Mi amp Mrs Robert KennedyTwenty-five Consenatives abshy Mr amp Mrs Cornelius Hickey Mother Cabrini Circle D of j

sley and positive means whereby the stained from the voting rather Sll ll~OMAS MORE United Methodist Church andMr amp Mrs John McCue Norman McEnaneythan fullow the palty line and $50 other churches can SUppOImiddott fail1Mr amp Mrs Emil Tietje $40vote against the bill Atty amp Mrs Richard N LaSalle employment practices intbe$35 Mr amp Mrs Francis CarpengerAlthough the British in the $2~ United StatesSt Josephs Womens Guild $35past two centuries have govshy In memory of Mr Y J Archshy $30 bull Mr amp Mrs Raymond Doucetteerned a large proportion of the 11mbeaultMr ampmiddotmiddotMrs ElmeiHallett $26 Oppose Cuts worlds black and colored $25 Mrs Charles Russell peoples it is a new thing for ~25 Mrs Margaretmiddot Harris Mr ampbull this country to have such peopie

Mrs Paul La Prade Thomas middotC H Berube MD Mr amp Mrsequal in law moving in by the Rooney Mr amp Mrs Charles Sefshy Joseph Silvia William J Dalton thousands and competing com

mereially and socially with ton Mr amp Mrs JG$eph Sylvia James W Blunt John Hart whites G Stanley Johnson Mr amp Mrs

Fred Comings Mrs Helen ClarkeThe new bill is aimed at outshy Oak Bluffs Mr amp Mrs George PereiraMYIllawing racial discrimination in

SACRraquo IIEAlltT Harry Walkerjobs housing hotels insurance and similar fields The most $125 The Percy Family Mrs Kay

Mr amp Mrs H~l1ry ~orey radical anti - discriminatioJ1 ~iggins ~ yenrsRalph Emerson measure ever Ploposed for Brit shy $100 yenrll Edith chamberlin Mr I

aIn it was introduced by the Reliable Market-In memory Mrs MIchael Cornick Mr amp yenrs of deceased loved ones govelllment of Prime Miliister Ernest Forni Jr

Harold Wilson not so much to $50 MI amp Mrs Shurtleff Mry deal with present circuinstances Mrs Corinne Fournier Ralph Jameson Mr amp Mrs Clemshyas with the future when the $30 mey Mr amp Mrs James Hamlen

A Friendproblem could become more Mr amp lVIIs Charles McHugh acute $25 Mr amp Mrs William Ward Mr

A Friend In memory of Mr amp amp Mrs Charles Pizzottimiddot Mr amp

Diocese Convenes Mrs Antone G Camacho Mr amp Mrs Charles Parks Frances Silva Mrs Thomas DeMont Mrs Rose

First Lay Congress M Peardon A Friend Seekonk BATON ROUGE (NC)The A Friend

first lay congress of the Baton Mr amp Mrs James L Kenney MT CARMELmiddot Rouge diocese convened at the $100 Catholic Lifc Center herc Ostellville St Vincent de Paul Society

More than 600 lay people repshy $50 OUR LADY 0 THEresellting the 12 civil paJishes Knights of Columbus

(~ounties) comprising the Loushy ASSUMPTION Mr amp Mrs Edwnrd McCrystal isiana diocese had the opportu- $50middot $25

nity middotto participate in matters The McKeon Family ToI11enS Guild Mr amp Mrs affecting diocesan finances the $25 Wilfred Blanchette middotMrbullamp Mrs

feasibility of continuingmiddotCath_ Mr ~ Mrs WiUiamHerron Edward Chal)~ler Mr amp Mrs Ciq education apart from the Manu~IJlendricks Jr HOlyName pu~gtlicschool systein the Ray ham ~9ci~ty Mr amp MrsE McPhillips Churchs il)VOlvcmcnt in social SJmiddotANNmiddot action admiriistrative middotstrllemiddot $90 Somerset

tures of themiddot Church and the Rev Thomas F Neilan ST JOHN OF GOD nymans place in diocesan 00shy $75 $150 ministratioa Cirino Dominic P amp Family Dr Americo B AlUehbl

SACRAMENTO (NC) ~ TheJSouth Dart~outh beads of Catholic charitable ST MARY agencies throughout CaliforniD

$125 have joined in opposing 00- Dr amp Mrs Paul E Corley 1~mptsof government to reduce

$50 public spending at the expense Dr ampmiddotMrs Victor Almeida of ihe needy and poor

$30 Mr 1 MrsWilliam Hines

]25 Mi amp Mrs Armand Borgesmiddot Mr amp Mrs Charles Nunes

Mr amp Mrs joseph MOlliz Jr The Johnson Family Dr amp Mr~ Archibald Senesac

Nantucket Sll MARY

OUR LADY OF THE ISLE $36

James E Worth $15

Grace Henry

9ffering You ~ SavingsPIQnsmiddot

lHlome Financingmiddot

WARFJI~~ (O-OP~RATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mass

Telephone 0 295-2400 flllnb-llv-Mall Servlu AYllIIIllII

Q

Check These Banking Services

bull Savings Bank life Insurance lleaDhtate Loans bull Chri~tmas and Vacation Clube

bull Savings Accoumiddotmiddot -

bull 5 CO~Yl1lient Locaiios bull - - middott

middotNEW BEDFORD INSTITUTImiddotONmiddot tor SAVINGSmiddot

12 -tAE ANCHOR-Diocesa ofFoti Rive~Thurs May 23 1968 l

$copylDfrTht ~$frml 1NJcopy1iU0il Wreg$U9gt[J1 JIl[OlLY CROSS OUIlt LADY OlF GIltACIE

$101 $50 Mr amp Mrs Donald L BergerOlll Rev Rene R Levesque

$100 $25Joseph P Kairys

Mr amp Mrs Orner Duqu~tte$50 Jennie E Overton Mr amp Mrs James R Jones SOWltrlm YIiUililOuii1mDr amp Mrs Thomas Berry Jr Mr amp Mrs John Pilz middotST pros X Mr amp Mrs Robert J Dray $150 John J Smith John F Martin Dr amp Mrs R Earl McLoud $100

$40 Anonymous 1IL F Bergeron $54l

$35 Philip J Hart Frank Ready Ano~ymous (2)

$30 $25 Dr amp Mrs Herbert L Evereti Edward P Hayes John J CarshyLouis Lyne amp Theodore Larishy roll Thomas P McDonough

mere Dorothy Schoonmaker Denis d Brophy Mary Geist Douglas Eo ~

$25 VampJl John Crawford Mr amp Mrs David Gomes M

ampMrs Leo R Schleicher Mr amp Mrs M J Hegarty Thomas F 1fltID01iJil~~ Gentile Mr amp Mrs EdwardlllL Slr JJOSEIPIHILoveday

Mr amp Mrs Robert E Coffey ~150

li$r Francis Welch Mr amp Mrs A Friend Leo F Sullivan Mr amp Mrs Robshy $40

Mr amp Mrs John Aiello I3ehleicher ltUt Downey Mr amp Mrs John E

Mr amp Mrs Gerald Tache $35

Mr amp M~ Arthur LeclairEast FaBmoutlh $30

ST ANTHONY VictormiddotL Brunette $275 Mrs Simonne Fisher

St Vincelllt de Paul Confer- Mr amp Mrs Edwin J Marmk ace Mr amp Mrs William A Olishy

voeira Mr amp Mrs Enos Days $21)

William Bartlett Mr amp Mrs Gerard Benoit Mr amp Mrs Nicholas F Tangshy

~y $25

Mrs Margaret Virgin Alice Bourassa Alexander Perri llIIllll lllli Braley Jr Dr amp Mrs Jell shyorne Brault

Cecile A Daley Mr amp Mra John I)ias Jr Mrs Mary P Gage Mr amp Mrs Ernest RLashysectesse Edward McGrath

Mr amp Mrs Leonard deMeshydeiros Mr amp Mrs Roland L Despres Mrs Irene FitzGeralcll Mr amp Mrs Edward Fitzsimshymons Mary Gogghi

Edmond Goulet Margaret Manghan Joseph C Mello Mrs Carmen Muldoon Mr amp Mrs Paul Murray

Margaret Nickerson Mra Edythe Rankin Mr amp_Mra Frank J Rezendes George Vishyveiros Mr amp Mrs JosephSevigny

Sli MAIlty

$81 St Vincent de Paul Society

$25 Sacred Hearts Association Raymond Dlugosinski Mr amp Mrs Manuel Allua amp

Nancy Mr amp Mrs Antone Costa J1l Mr amp Mrs John A Wojcik

SACRED IHIEARlr $25

St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ST IPATRRCK $iOO

Mr amp Mrs William BrennlUll $75

Anonymous $50

Mr amp Mrs Francis J Flynn Atty amp Mrs Edward Farrell

$30 Mr amp Mrs Albert W Lawrence

bull Major ampMrs Lawrence Uch-shymanowicz

$25 Mrmiddot amp Mrs Edward C Wen Jr John Keohane

Mr~ amp MrS JosephCardeIre Mr amp Mrs Melvin Dolan

Mrmiddotamp Mrs Walter Buguey Mr amp Mrs Robert Costa Mr amp Mrs John Kelliher John Lynch

Mr amp Mrs Thomas Magwre Mr amp Mrs Kenneth Paige

$30 lt $leo~ IJ=1J yltID Uilliil 0$ lllr amp MrsEdward McCarthJ7 lievbull~ 17 ~

Slr FRANCIS XAVlrEllt $2S st ~o Womeno CI~

Holy Name Society COO $450 Mramp RlIra Lee Kingsb~St Vincent de Paul Society $25 Mr amp lVlro Leo Parente

$300 Capitell Mr amp Mrs Richard Dr amp Mrs ~p Sibilll

Charles H McGrath Joan

Mr amp Mrs Larry Newman Sproul lllr amp Mrs Thomas ~$100 Loughlin Mr amp Mrs William Mr amp Mm GeorgeM~Doane Beale amp Ames E Donovan Mr amp lVlm Joseph FalDtoo

$50 Mr amp Mrs Harry SylvesterMr amp Mrs Frank J Dolan Mr amp Mrs Charles Flynn lltlr $25

A Friend Mrs Rockina CaftDoMr amp Mrs Irving Morrissey amp Mrs~ Marshall Field Mr amp amp Family Mr amp Mrs JOQD KmampJ R ~eyburn Mrs Robertmiddot Ryan Vetorlno Mr amp MrS Victor Narciso Mr IIMr amp Mrs John Hart Bros Ipc Fruitland

Scudder amp Taylor Oil Inc CarreiM Florist Mrs John Kinsley Dr amp Mrs Francis ONeil Ilflr amp Moo Wllliam ~

Captains Table Mr lie Mrs John Currivan Mr Bishop Tyler General Assem- McznsfieRdl Mrs Alfred Kuplast Mrs ~

My garet Jordan Mrs Grace Duma Charles J Ardito 8l MARY Mr amp Mrs Fred Taylor Josepla

$ltamp0 $150 E Donovan Jmiddotr Mr amp Mramp W tel Alfieri Catholic Youth Organization st VinceJntt de Paul Society

shy-

SENDYOUR GnJFT TO bull i l j middotcrmiddotmiddot

The Rig Rever~ Edward TO~MeiJramiddot The IUght Reverehd RiJYlIWnd T CQnsidiRf lVallonarpfreclor Olt Diocesiul Di~ecto i

366 Fifth Avenue 368 North MalnSteet f(eWYork New Yo~k ioooi Fall River Massachuseits027l0 -

1iWJlE ADDRESS

THE sectOClllETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH ~ shy

I

~~ IiUrge Negro La Guidonce Boord ~n K~s~ Cety

KANSAS CJIIIY (NC~-A five-paltish cooperative illl

ner city ministry guided by a Negro lay board has been proposed os a way o~ bridging the gap betWeen the white Catholic CI1urch and the Negro community here in Misouri

A six-person committee headshyed by MrsThelma Work will identify the nee~ of the lComshymunity-Catholic or not-and to propose a structure fur meetshying those needs I

The action came as the result

of a meeting of the Catholie

V ~

Clergy Conference on Inner Oity bullneeds

Father James Lock chairman cited charges of the Black Cathshyolic ClergyCaucus in Detroit in conjunction with the IImnual meeting of the Catholic Clergy Conference on the Interracial Apostolate The Black Caucus statement said the Catholic Church in the United States 1s gtrimarily a white racist insti shytution which is rapidly dying in the black community and to which the black community no longer looks to with hope

On~ Out f li5 The Caucus recommended fha~ Harrison the Bishop Rev William J Hurley Rev DonaiiIll

white priests become supportshy E Messier Rear Rev Cornelu8 F Kiley Rey Robert A ers and learners listening tc McGowan Rev Edmund J Fitzgerald Rev Kevin F TrippNegroes to find out what tbeir lheir assignment~ are Olll page twoneeds are

The Kansas City-St Joseph diocese bas no Negro diocesan priests Ttrore~ DS~th~ Aoee Sl1m~PO rfif~ifflg tedera~ Jb ~~~

We are trying to start the wheels rolling for some kind of

~umlp~JrlMeFrot Nleereg~~rJ fr CmbCBi OW~iff1ychurch structure through which the black people of our diocese can voice opinions and partici shy WASHINGTON (lTC)-SPokesshy ment of public policy ~t Jlorth oommunity-based Social services esnie cultural values of ~hliv

pate in decision making said men for Protestant Catholic and in the Full Employment Act (l(f to meet Human and community country they said are sucll Father Lock Jewish organizations h a V e 1946 which provides for useshy needs Recipients of rondo that work becomes the basis by

backed federal legislation which ful employment opportunities should not conduct sectarian which a persons worth tnFather Dan Howe declared~

We have set up programB would provide one million jobs for all those able willing and programs judged A job not only tends ie i10r the nations unemployed seeking to work n determine an individuals acshygeared to Catholics in our parshy While they acknowledged that

ceptance by society but it alsish whom we have formed rn Their support was given in The Acts emphasis on education passage of this legislation would affects ones attitude abolll~the white mentality Since cl testimony before the House Seshy and training Training s1Mgtuld be no wre-all for the ills ci oneselfbest we are having contact lect Subcommittee on Iabor be open-ended so that the posshy poverty in America the spokesshy

with only about 2000 people out Studies have shown that unshywhi~ is holding hearings on sibility of permanent full-time men said that any attempt to of the 50000 in our area we the Guaranteed Employment employment beyond fIDe presshy combat poverty must provide employed persons have a ve~

can presume that the activities Act of 1968 ent situation is a reality Trainshy meaningful jobs low level of self-esteem anell we have structed as being our that this attitude tends to pro-ing programs of this ~Testifying were Father JohnChristian program of service do vide a self-fulfilling prophesrshould include basic educationMcCarthy assistant director ofnot reflect or reach black thinkshy MO~~U[ij] ~lW] ~O~S since it then becomes more dif~counseling and opportunities tothe Social Action Departmenting ficult to find or hold a joblearn about appearance manshy

E~GJHlll O]RDAllNJEID FOR IllmCJESJE Bishop Qgtnnolly m-dained eight deacons ro the priesthood for service in the Diocese 21t ceremonies oonducted at St Marys Cathedral Fall River Front Rev Edward E Correia Rev George Eo

We need a board of black of the U S Catholic Confershy OrJi1 AA~jjo Foreg[uGagement of income health IImdence Dr Grover Bagby of thelaymen to tell us what the pe0shy NEW YORK (NC)-Answershyother factors affecting personalDepartment of Social Justice ofple want to help change the well-being and development fog an appeal from the Ceylonthe National Council oftone to establish priorities government now fighting a mashyChurches and Rabbi Richard GFather Howe noted there are lWven fl Sellf-lEs~(()nim laria epidemic threatening 16Hirsch director of the Religiousapproximately 9000 Negro million persons the catholicAction Center of the Union of Involvement of private nonshyCatholics on the books but Medical Mission Board nere sentAmencan Hebrew Congrega- profit organizations Such Oll shynot necessarily active in Kansas by air Ifreight 364000 anti-mashytions - ganizations they said will c0shyCity out of a total Negro popu- laria tablets to Colombo Ceyshyoperate with the development ~lation of about 130000 They specifically suppoit4d lons seaport-capital The shipshyHe said that although the three provisions in the bill ment valued at $10746 conshy

structure of the lay board is yet Creation of an Office of Guarshy (cll)f AdldJrell$$ sisted of tablets for both ooults ro be determined it is the conshy anteed Employnient Opportushy and ~hildren sensus of 20 priests and laity at 1r~~regy Meefrolilregnity l8 a eontinued develop Earlier the CMMB respondingthe meeting that at least half

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-Theshythe lay members would be un- oro a plea for help from Indoneshyology must revolutionize it shyder 25 since the young people ~1JJlhJreg~ WODil$ [Q)~f sian authorities shipped 220shyself John Cogley former reshyare the thought-leaders in the 520 anti-malaria tablets ~aluedligion editor of the New Yorkblack community ~ial ~fit1hvllsW Times told the national convenshy at $7306

NeCeSS31lY ApPll03Cln SCOTCH PLAINS (NC) shytion of the College Theology so-A Negro lawyer Leonara BrotherHarold Woods a teacher The Catholic Medical Mission ciety IN the University m- SainHughes told the meeting at Union Catholic High School Board for 40 years has beenmiddot IfmiddotranciscoOne thlng is clear The clos- here in New Jersey has won a oonducting a worldwide mercy

Ing of any Catholic institution months delay to contest lim Cogley DOW a staff member cl program shipping medicines or cut-back in the inner-city order to report to his New York the Center for the Study m Deshy drugs bandages and various says one thing to Negroes We draft board for induction into mocratic Institutions Santa Barshy other hospital supplies and dont want you to be CathoUcs ~e Airmed Fo~ equipment to some 1000 misshybara Cal and editor of the Censhy

Father Vince~t Lovett dir~ BrOther B8rold la member of ter magazine tlgtld delegates that sion hospitals 4000 dispensaries tor of the new Diocesan Social theology must lead- rather than and clinics in developingAction office saidmiddot middotthe Marist BrotheJS had been eoUJlltriesfollow usemiddotits treasureS ratheT It seems to me we a- 4o_1krecJassified ll-A and Cllldered to than hoard them Liberatemiddot it shying about setting up something after rewmfug biB draft eard 011 self from its own prison ~ c0nshylike II couotywith II state goy- April 19 as a protem agaiDst the formity fear imd be dead Dbshyernment - a regional ministry U4o- actionism of th~ pastwithin tile diocese Be said the war VBallam

S~aking on The image off

WI report for Induction em April M

approach seems not so much lim The 22-year-old teachers ease ideal as lh necessitymiddot bas been taken up by the Amer-o Man as Citizenmiddot Cogley said

iean CDvil Uberties Union that the change in the religlO1Ul Which ealled middottbeboardll action mans self-image and the change

Silent Meditation in reclassifying him ~ new in the image of politleal man are TRENJON ~NC)-A bID pr0shy height of wegality Tbe ACLU not unrealated The image of a

viding for a period of silent said Brother Harolds religious free man redeemed from every meditation each day by students status had not collmged since he form of spiritual servitude and attending public schools was WIlI3 originally classified ~D subjugation he said b triumphshyintroduced in the New Jersey and that he hGd DOt ilrlterfered ing over the old image of eccleshyState Legislature by Assembly with the ndministratlon of the sia9Ucal man-a passive creature Speaker Albert B Smitlll 3eleet1ve ~ BWolltem eOOject ~ the Will ca ~thero

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THE At~~C~_ 15 Th M 231968 urs ~y World Communication Day CtmMG(f~ A~V[JK~$ObsecteWGR1CCe on S~ndl~w O[fi) ~copy~o~ A~fDcopy[jf)

WASHINGION (NC)-In response to an appeal by NEW ORLEANS (NC)-ArchshyPope Paul VI to the universal Ohurch the Church in the bishop PhHip M Hannan asshyUnited States will observe the second World Communicashy serted here As far as I am tions Day on Sunday May 26 The National Conference of concerned segregation in the

Church is dead We are past the Catholic Bishops awroved time for statements Now is thefor Motion Pictures and Bishoplast November the observshy time for actionClarence J Issenmann of Cleveshynnc of World Communicashy Tile archQishop of New Orshy

tions Day in this country on USCC Press Department land episcopal chairman of the

leans told delegates at an diocesan and parish levels ampnd archdiocesan conference on st) shy

members of the U S Bishops cial action I assure you we are going forwardCommittee for Social Commu- Senate Rev1ltews

nications have sent to individ- He outlined programs fe ual Ordinaries throughout the Continued from Page One beMer education for adequate country a cOpy of the Prayer lains to be assigned on a funmiddot housing and for recognition of of the Faithful for that Sunday time basis and that the needs the inherent digni ty of all men and a ooP1 of the Holy ~athers of the sick were being adequateshy The Church is exerting itll message issued earlier this ly met under the present arshy influence in every way to assistmonth ran~ement the poorest he said If we

It is recommended that the 3 Recommendations on salshy follow Christ we must begillilobservance in this country ary adjustments Taken into aeshy with the pOor even if thishave both religious and non- count _by Bishop in his direcshy means asking others to wait 0religious aspects The former tives for Aug I 1967 little longerwould highlight a Mass with 4 Meetings open to all clergy Anyone can live poor the

appropriate sermon in the 00- Bishop approved archbishop said The key thingthedral or some convenient 5 Extension of Synod prepshy is dignity This does not mean church to which executives aration time Bishop approved that this dignity is recognized Wld employes of communica- 6 Secretary to be Treasurer by a dole or a handout or eveD tions media would be specially and Senate budget Bishop apshy preferential treatment We are invited proved confusing issues when we talk

The non-religious asp e c t 7 ChOice of other Prayers of of dignity as if it can be bought would feature news conferences the Faithful Bishop approved or paid for he said articles in the press and radio 8 Referral of matters to Passhy - I am totally for equal oppollaand TV interviews and proshy tunity in jobs and for adequate

housing not just open housincgrams toral Council Bishop approved

In his message to the Church 9 Creation of Clergy Person-In human dignity everyone hasPope Paul invited Catholics to Del Board Bishop approved an equal right to education anell

consider the significance of 1() Clergy retirement policy to culture he declaredthe changes that are taking with Bishop accepting ormiddot not

AWARDS CEREMONIES At the annual Awards Day for hospital personnel at St Annes Hospital Fall River Manuel Benevides 38 years of service receives his award while Bertha Janson 42 years of service awaits her presshyentation from trustees Harold K Hudner left and Arthui Guimond right

place in this field (communica- according to diocesan ll1eed tions) under our very eyes and Bishop approved to ponder the serious responsi- 11 In-service training tor bJlities that theSe imply for one newly-ordained priests Bishop and all approved

Clamor forAttentlo~ 12 Various diocesan diredors Until recently the Holy to recommend men for middotpart shy

Father pointed out many did time or full-time further study not have anything more to Btim- Bishojgtmiddot approved 1IIate their inflection than vague 13 Full participation by memories of what they learned Catholics in middotYMCAyWCA ot school or in the family and programs Bishop aPlgtrov~ What they beard in their envi- 14 Rotation among religious ronment eomniunities of their represen-

Now however with the echo Uitives on Senate Bishop ap- r the press motion pictures proved radio and television clamoring 15 Clergy to recommend men lor attention new h~riZons oPenJor episcopacy Bishop applloved wide before them llIndmiddot they are 16 Lay Personnel pension ttuned to the throbbing life of plan study Bishop approved the ~niverse

Who will not rejoice at this 17 Adjustmentin diocesan progress Do we not 1111 see in assessments Bishop approved It a roadmiddotdestined by Providence 18 Clergy retirement study for the advance of themiddot whole Bishop approved of mankind There is room for 19 Bishop announced through all hopes if man learns to mas- Senate exchange of facultieS ter these techniques but every- between Diocese of Fall River thing can be lost if he shirks his and Providence responsibilities Various commfttees have made

Members of the bishops com- studies to implement some of mittee signing the letter to the these considerations Ordinaries included Auxiliarymiddot Senate representatives have Bishop Gerald V McDevitt of participated on a regional and Philadelphia episcopal moder- national basis regarding a nashyator of the United States Catb- tional organization of priests olic Conference Bureau of In- and its constitution and activity formation Bishop John A Donshyovan of Toledo episcopal chairshyman of the National Catholic Cursillo for Men Office for Radio and Television Bishop Christopher J Weldon Starts Tonightshyof Springfield episcopai chairshy

A mens ~ursillo win ~ginman of the Bishops qo~ttee tonight at La Salette C~nter of Christian Livingmiddot At~leboro Dishy

Delegate Recives rectors will be William Barnes of Marion and Rev GilesHonorary Degree Genest middotMS of the center

HONOLULU (NC) ~ Archshy Allmiddot eursillistas are invited to bishop Luigi RaimondiApostolicmiddotmiddot the firstmiddot anniversary of ultleya Delegate in the Unikld States middotmeetingsmiddotin the Fall River area baS received an honorary deshy at 745 Wednesday night May laquoree froIn Charninade College 29 at Sacred Hearts Academy here the only Catholic eollege Prospect Street Fall River A lID the state of Hawaii concelebrated Mass will be folshy In an Dterview with the Hashy lowed by a song session social

waUmiddotCatholic Herald ArehlSishop bour and refreshments Baimondi ~pressed tolerance Ul1reya meetings are schedshylor student activism in the Unishy uled in Attleboro oat Jettes ted States middotIltating Students Funeral Home Friday May 11 8ft adive everywhere Youth Monday May 27 Monday June ill UyiDg find its WBY aoc1 2 Friday June 14 and FridayecJar patterns of tbougbt IlBd June 21 eetioD e DOt lIS set asin pre A eursillo for W4)men is scbedshy paerationfl Cbolees were 1IIed for August and further inshy

-e fiSHthen tbin ~ tit formation is obtainable inla ~ -e LeSalleUe Centerbull --

You Live Better Electrically

trlc range bullbullbull with Iln ingenious oven that cleans Itself Make 8 clean break with the past bullbullbull and graduate to another appliance

that adds to the Joy of Total Electric Uvlng

Graduate to a ~fiameless electric range thatmiddotcleansits own ovenmiddot

Make 8 clean break~ with the past4

Why spend ~ours stooping scrubbing and scouring to clean your oven Why not grad- uate to a modern flarve1ess range bullbull with anoven that cleans itself electrically Its so

easy to use Set the controls and-zingo The oven cleans Itself (And drip pans) All you dois whisk awaya IIttie pOwder

- YOUll notice toothat a flamelessmiddot range keeps your kitchen clean cool a~d ~omshyfortable And because electric cookmg IS so automatic YOUll cook with pleasure So see

yOur appliance dealer about aflameless elecshy

See Yo~r Appliance Dealer or

FAll RIVER ~l~CTRIC LIGHT COMPANY

o

mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 23 196816 I

Mafttl[p)Dsellt $50 Raymond L W Benoit

$5BTANJrlllONY Jos~ph A Tully William J

$300 OLearY Mr ampMrs Alfred Baty ltlJbades McGowan Mr amp Mrs Fred Harney

$100 Mr amp Mrs Michael C ODonshyaarence G Verdi nell Mr amp Mrs ThomaS P Per~ lIugene F Phelan kins Mr amp Mrs John Kozlowski

$15 mosampry Altar Society

$66 Buzzard$ B~y I

iusan A McGowan ST MAJuiAR]ampTWilliam Keane

$SOshy$55 A Friendllohn P Delaney

$6$40 lIlr amp Mrs Thomas Pina

~h G Perry $25$35

Mr amp Mrs Edwin PaytonlInmothy Manning )l amp Mrs John KarlJfudge E C Horrocks J~

$30 Mr amp Mrs Edwin N Rose Wareham Lodge of Elks 15044bullbull Clayton King

Mr amp Mrs David Fannon$~

Mr amp Mrs John OCOnnellJames Downey Romeo Bedarql William Delaneyhnes H Gifford Mary M Chad Mr amp Mrs James Lopes

Wick George Smith Jr Antone Mr amp Mrs Louis Fougereshy-es Edmund Perry $25 Mr amp Mrs Armand Bedard

Mr amp Mrs Michael DelIsMark H McIntyre Teree JeminaBlossom Joseph Farley Robert Mr amp Mrs William BennettGIngras Real Breton Mr amp MrsLouis Eacobaoct

Jobn Tarvis Francis ODri9shyu Holy Nam~ Society Paull Glennon Joseph Zychowicz Central -VUlageIIaomas Renahan Richard SmiUll

ST JOHN THE BAPTIBJl

~50 bullNorth Dighton Mr amp Mrs John DeNadal

ST JOSEPH nolt Rev John P Hogan$156

IlR Vincent de Paul $75 Dr Peter F Piccinini$50

$25amp11 Name Society Florence I Bessette MrSt Josephs Womens Guild

$35 Mrs John J Ardagh Jr llim Raymond Williamsbull amp Mrs Joseph MWTaJ

Me amp Mrs Daniel TebreiN$30 J Jl)r amp Mrs William AcIamI Mr amp Mrs Robert Albanese

o Iohn W Perreira$5 Ch(ltham

Mr amp Mrs Joseph C Amarat 1lIJr amp Mrs Edward M Berobe HOLY ~EJI)EIEMEamp

bullbull amp Mrs Arthur A Ennes Mr $101 A Mm William Johnson Rose Pi Assqc of the SacredHea~ Mello $lOet

Mr amp Mrs Harold Mendoza Mr amp Mrs Robert Han lIffr amp Mrs Bruce Murph) Mr Col amp Mrs John McCa~ bull Mrs Robert Secatore $50

Mrs James Bell Jr St Vincent de Paul Sodeq Mr amp Mrs John J Cavanaup

IIMMACULATE CONCBPJIl[ON $30 $DOO A- Friend

Ambonymous $2-5 $a Chatham Trust Co Mr af

Anonymous MrS E Joseph Geller Dr~ amp MIlII Robert Harned A Friend (~)

Anonymous $75

Mr amp Mrs William Kent Mr amp Mrs Paul reF~vre Mr lIi$it

- Mrs~ Richard Sylva Mr amp MmHelen P Derby Patrick SullivanMr amp Mn Aibert Giordano

A Friend Mr amp Mrs Frank Dresseli Mr amp Mrs Philip S1iel]oA Friend Mr amp Mrs James Griffin shyAnonymous Mr amp Mrs Frank Wing _ImmaCU1ate Conception MenliI

Club $4G North Attleboro

Mr amp Mrs Raymond ~rgerotl SACRED HEART$35

Mr amp Mrs William Condoo $200 $5 Rev JOuter Lussier

Mr amp Mrs William Buchtman $30 Caesar Cardoza Mr amp Mrs RoT Mr amp MrsJeorge Merewe Howard Immaculate Conception $~ Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Joseph A Jette

Mr amp Mrs Co George Knapp $25 McCarthy Coal Co Mrs Fredshy Mr amp Mrs Paul Dion Mrbull elick H Murphy A Friend Mrs Frederick Fortin LionelL

Martineau Mr amp Mrs~ Philippe Rainville amp Florence

Mr amp Mrs George Beaulieu Sl lWAllUf A Friend

STMA-ElY$50 $150Mr amp Mrs Michael Murphy

Nelson GulskiMr amp Mrs Jose FernandesSIl $75$30 Rev Armando A- AnnunziabMr amp Mrs Thomas J Bryanamp

$50 Eva Morowski

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John HaugMr amp Mrs Roland Roberge Mr amp Mrs John StanfordDavid amp Martha Rocha M Veronica Reilly

Mary Cronin George Yefh Mildred Leary A ~riend

BreWSlfreli $4G Dr amp Mrs Domenie BalJiIe

OUR LADY OF TlIIE CAn $35 o $100 Dr amp Mrs Kenneth AtwiIl lllisBionaries of La saleUe jnr amp Mm JosepiL Dona

MONSIGNOR VI[lELSB

Heads Bishop$ Task force

WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr Aloysius J Welsh of Newark N J a recognized authority in race relations and social aclion work has been named to head the Urban Task Force estabshylished by the U S bishops

Bishop Joseph L Bernardin general secretary of the U S Catholic Conference who anshynounced the monsignors apshypointment said the task force was calhd for by the U S blsbshy

ops at theirmiddot April meeting in SL Louis in their statement on the mational racial crisis The bishshy

ops directed the task foree be established by the USCC Social[ Action Department

In this work he will cooperaW with MsgI George G Higgins director and Father John MeshyCartty assistallt director of the Social Action Department the bishop said

$30 Mr amp Mrs Frederick ThOIpG middotMr amp Mrs Clement Sbarolll

$26 Mr amp Mrs Andtew Boisvert Gertrude Cassi~y

Elizabeth Sheals $25

Mr amp Mrs Daniel J Cava- naugh Mr amp Mrs Raymond Bl~hard Mr~ amp Mrs Robert Brunelli A Friend

Mr amp Mrs Robert Gilmore Mrs James P Reynolds Mr amp Mrs John Donleymiddot Mr amp Mm James Battersby Mr Mn Jlohn bullCollins

Virginia G Robinson

AttRehoro BOLY GHOST

$150 Dr amp Mm LoneJglUl

~110 Mr amp Mm John CapoWglo

$50 Holy Ghost St Vineellllt cle Pail

$35 Mr amp Mra Joseph BJOdeur

$25 Mr amp Mrs Malcolm ~

Mr~ amp Mrs Harry Dowdall Mr amp Mrs RObert Geddes Mr~ I Mrs Frank Pistolese

ST JOlIN $200

In memory of Dn7 hwlbaDcI JIoseph F ODonn~

$100 Mr amp Mrs Raym9nd ENmlIlilll Anonymous Donor Inmemory of GabriGll lYaBltllloshy

alone bull $75 -

Rev Edwarcl A Ra~

Mr amp Mrs John P I4e $50

MaryL Wilhelm Mr amp Mrs J G WaJEll Jlr Mr amp Mrs Franclll Bo Mr Joseph ODonnell1 ~ amp Mrs Ernest ~

$30 m=teanor Robinqmiddot Alice~

ST JOSEPH $25

Counseil Jeanne DAre No 263

ST MARK $50 ~

Edward J Connors Jr $25

William J Roche Jr Joseph Dias Mrs Michael J Croke

ST MARY $50

Holy Name Society of St Mary Knights of Columbus Seekonk

Council Mrs Leland B Smith

$35 Mr amp Mrs Donald Blake

$~O ~r amp Mrs Henry E Woodcome st Marys Womeno Guild

$25 Mr amp Mrs Frank Padykula

Mr amp Mrs Russell J Sumner ST THERESA

$50 Mr amp Mrs Donald Boardman Mr amp Mrs George LeBeau

$30 William Cauley amp Family Mr amp Mrs George Boyd

0 $25 Mr amp Mrs RobeIt Generenl Mr amp MrsRobert St mlaiN

Taunton -HOLY ROSAILY

$30 Mr amp Mrs Russen Woodward stanley Radwansld

$25 Children of Mary Sodality Richard Januse

SACRED HEARi

$50 Mr amp Mrs Joseph S llosamp Mr amp Mrs Vincent BrimleF

$35 Mr amp MnJ Robert MeClellaml

_ S2i Walter Waltman Mr amp Mm

atephen Crosby The ~ Mr amp MrtI William Vaillan-

OOurt Mr amp Mrs Michael Barber

Mrs Margaret Rose llrtr~ bull II Frederick Reams

o

81 JAMES

$U Armand Desautels Tremblay Moving Iii 8tonlge

00mpany

STMABY $100

Dr~ Charles HoYt $60

GeOrge Dion Jr $51

Mr~ amp Mrs Kenneth $50

Mm A Hoffman Dr Normand ~ Mr amp M1lil J McNilmaN ar Dr John Fenton Mr amp Mrs Kicban sm

$36 ~ B Grant

~O Dr EdmWlld Fitzgerald D4niel A J Doyle

$U

Richard Barrington BIizabeCIa dIt Margaret Brady Mr - Mm kmea Bumtl Dr CarsiDbre e-- IlUOCi -Robert J mn JamesD hcige

Mr amp Mra Llocel IaImDee ftlomas Hoye Merrill lliaynard Jmelen amp Catherine McCariIll7

Alice McKenna Ruth MeshyJUona Susan McKenna II

Plan To B~ild

- See Us About ~

lotyCost Financing

WAuREHAM SAVltfGS BANK

WorehaftI falmouth cr J-3800 II 1-3000

Mrs James McMorrow Franeb Mulholland

Mary Mulholland Ma~ Neenan Joseph ODonnell Eveshylyn Rice Agnes amp Joseph Rose

Mrs Joseph Rowley Robert Sullivan J Roger Torme1 Charles H fripp Rita Baker

Mrs James Bennett William Carney John Gonzals James Holmes Mary E McNamara

Dr Thomas~OBrien Cbarleo OConnell Mr amp Mrs Edwarcll OGara Mr amp Mrs John 00 _ Ilfearne MlJI amp Mrs Edward OKeefe

1he Ralph Reckard Famil1 Cecelia F lfi Mary C Sheerin

ST PAUL $150

St Vincent de Paul st Pauh Taunton 0

$100 Rev Cornelius~ltYNem

$50 Mr amp Mrs Edward Roster

$24 Mr amp Mrs John Medas Jr

$25 Mrs Catherine Campbell Mr

amp Mrs Chester Jackman Mr c1i Mrs Richard Silva Mr amp Mrs Leo Leroux Mr Mrs John Steen

Mr amp Mrs Donald Emond Mr Be Mrs Gordon Seekel Mr amp Mrs Charles Welch Mr MllIl Paul Silva

New Bedford HOLY NAME

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John Hallonm Mr amp Mrs Jacob Teser

ST CASIMIR $150

Beltr cutnir Kwiatkowski $109

Atto~ Ferdinand Sowa $25

Mr amp Mrs Joseph FoUrnier The Poczatek Family Mramp M Antbony Rijo Jr Mr Mrs Stanle Scbkk Eve White

I

ST BYACINTB $100 -

Mr Mrs George Vigeallltl $50

st Vincent de Paul ConferenCe Gf Hyacinth Parisb

Tum to Page Seventeen

CONRAD SEGUIN BODY COMPANY

Aluminum or Steel 944 County Seet

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2-6618

w H RILEY amp SON Inc

CITIES SERVICE IDISTRIBUTORS-

0 Gasoline Fuel and Ra~ge

OILS OIL BURNERS

for Prompt Delivery amp hoy amp Night ~ice

8 IE BOIlER BURNER UNITS

80tItecI G48 Service

61 OOItANNET Sf TAUNTON

AJdeb DfO - No- Attleboro

TountoIamp

(l

SUMY pons Nuns (l)ffi) AifrMdl~$o

Re$M~~e~o trMture D~[freg~UDrru~ WASHINGTON (NC)-Resulto

of a survey of all United States nuns reveals a high ooceptance of post-Vatican II changes anell an eagerness robecome morrc involved in the inner city and poverty apostolates

The B1UVey conducted bythe Conference of Major Superiors of Women dlJring 1966 was the first extensive attempt to assess resources and attitudes of reli shygious communicenties c1 women and their memberll in the United States

The JPecific coal of the surshyvey was to assess the resources and determine 1ampIe responses that Religious are making and ean make to the invitation 13shysued in Vatican Us Decree on the Renewal of Religious ~e

More than 135000 Sisters parshyticipated in the survey respondshying to 649 questionnaire items covering religious beliefs atti shytudes toward change edu~shy

tional background present ocshycupation and future plans comshymunity life and proposals for future ohange

Results were processed by 00 Sister-sociologists across the country with the use of comshyputers

llleason for lIAlavnng The survey showed 1827 oil

the 175000 U S Sisters-107 per cent-left religious life durshying 1966 Of those Sisters only 869 had taken final vows In an interview with the NC News Servicemiddota spokesman for the Conference of Major Superiors of Women (CMSW) said most Sisters who have remained feel that a major reason for the inshy

ltereased number of Sisters leavshymg religious life is an increased ~penness to the idea within the lfcligious community

She said that the increased fucus on personal development has caused many Sisters to see that they are not suited to the religious life and that they will find areater personal fulfillment elsewhere

Statistics on be division of labor among U S Sisters show 72 per cent are teachers eight per cent are involved in health work five per cent in catechetshyill~ and missionary work lmd tbr~ per cenmiddott in welfare work

Seventy per cent of the teachshyem ore in elementary school work 195 per cent in high school education and 68 per

eent teach at the college level Of those involved in health care 18 per cent in health administration and 62 per cent in direct care jobs

lEnter New lFienlll1s The survey showed Sisters

have a strong desire to become involved in adult education inshyner city work pre-school teachshying and other s~ial work and to have greater contact with their local community Nuns expressed eagnerness to enter fieldc where few Sisters are now working In 1966 13 per cent ot U S Sisters were engaged in adult education 82 pel cent in speshycial education 31 per cent in poverty work and 06 per cent in migrant education The surshyvey indicafes that there will be a dramatic change in these figures in the next few years

Father Considine Leaves PC$tr Continued fC0m Page One

man of the U S Bishops Comshymittee for Latin America

Bishop Bernardin prai~ed the work of Father Considine in the Latin America Bureau noting

iota progress under his direction since its inauguration in 1960

It has been a labor of love for Father Considine he saici whose long standing interest in the people of Latin America and of other developing areaa is well known

Maryknon Father Considine will return

to his writing and teaching asshymgnments at Maryknoll Ossinshy

lng N Y where he had served as publications director before becoming director of the IAiltin

America Bureau He holds editorial and advishy

lOry posts with several internashytional organizations and servell DS a member of the Council OIl

Foreign Relations He was amp

member of the National Advishysory Council of the Peace Corps from 1961 to 1966 He also founded and directed Fides Inshyternational Service in Rome an Information and research unit of

the Holy See He was born Oct 9 1897 C1shy

1-

~ATIlGR CONSIDINE

da1ned in 1923 and received II

licentiate in sacred theology from the Catholic University of America in 1924 He has reshyceived honorary degrees from Fordham University Manhatshytsnville St John University St Benedicts Atchison and is the author of 10 books on Latin America Asia and Africa and hall edited several others

L9ng-Range

Father Considine Sllid that he IlIaW the Latin America Bureau as set for the proseution ~ tl

vigorous nation-wide program 10 serve our Latin American eonfreres for the next- generashytion through the year 2000 -and into ~ 21st century He felt lIlllch 11 long-range view was necessarJ because at stake are important socio-religious adshyVDnces among hundreds of milshyHons cd people Latin Americas leaders need time for these advances

Be pointed out thatsome of the best Church leadership tbroughout the Catholic world today is found in Latin AmershyICD In turn he noted our U S bi~hops are quietly acceptshying international responsibiliti~s

as never before Father Considine said that the

program of the U S Bishops Committee for Latin Americn ~ablishes the heavy day-to-day work of the Latin America Bureau

Jgtersonnel Father Considine said that

llIODle 60 per cent of all U S apOstolic personnel overseas throughout the world works in Latin America with more Ulan 600 Latin American parishes served by U S priests Major Superiors of women ha~e 2500 Sisters in Latin America PAVLA has put more than 800 laymen there for three-year terms and U S bishops hnv~

more than 300 priests working in Latin America Annual fundshying for Latin Amerietl by U S Catholics ~~ $1f) millioll

SJJREET SCENE This was a busy street scene in the nations capital at the encampment of the Poor Peoples Campaign near the Washington monument More than 100~OOO- protestors are expected to be in Washington for Memorial Day NC Photo

OUlll lLAIDY OlF ll1HI1amp

ASS1lJMJgtJlJlON $26

Clara Rose amp Family $25

Mr amp-Mrs Jose F Cruz St Martin de Porres G~

Mi CARMEL $100

In memory of Mr amp Mrs J~ ilino Simoes

Rev Antonio P Pinto middotCM $75

Rev Azitonio P Pinto em $60

Mary i Ltuiz $50

Mr amp lVIrs Albino daSilv8 1IIt Carmel Womans Club

$30 Manuel Bettencourt Mr amp Mrs Kenneth lltinu

John Rodrigues $26

Olivia M Luiz $25

Cecelia Bettencourt CbildYeli of Mary Mt Carmel ~ouft

Units James Perry Mr amp lnl Manuel G Souza Jr

Mr amp Mrs Arthur Caetano Mr amp Mrs Charles Frate Mramp Mrs Lauran Silva

OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HE]P

~26

Mrs Amelia E Bariteau $25

Dr amp Mrs Francis Green

OURLADY OFPU~GATOB~ l)1I00

In memory of Alex J Ka1He from Cltpe Coo Sportswear ~

lnc Fairhaven Lumber Co

$30 Atty George R Morad euroJ

Atty ~e E Morad $25

Josephine David 1bl mlE1lllllOllY of George A EI-Hillow Mr ampgt Mra ~rge JThomas Mr amp IIIlm Hykel G Simon

ST KIlldAN nSO

Rev WilMeT J Boekley

U~~ amp Wmeentde PaW ~

~ iWa1 1kntley

$2S AlmgeAo OH1feira

SAClllIampDlHlJEAlltT $25

Alexander Caruso

c S11 JAMES

$55 rulllbull amp lVIrs Francis O Quinn

$50 lilred Kelley

$40 William OMalley

~1 A Friend

$3~

Mr amp Mrs Jr Hugh Barry $25

Mr amp Mrs Andrew ONeil Mr 8 Mrs Robert Arnett

ST JOSEPH

$450 sa Josephs Church Societies

$70 Mr amp Mrs Maurice Dansereau

1130 II Mr amp Mrs Luigi Fiano lk Fmniy

125 Mr amp Mrs Thomas Weaver MI amp Mm Maurice Lamonshy

tagne Mrbull Mrs Raymond Rondel1

ST TBERIESA $100

Eugene Lemieux

Sturtevant 6 Hook lEst 1897

Bude~s Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New ~dforcJ

996-5661

THE ANCHOR- ~ 7 lfhuvs May 23 1968

~regreg [copy~G~ ~O~

Oa1l ~MOO~ []M~Orru NEWARK (NC)-A charge (l(

apparent ~racial discriminatiom in the assignment of tenants 00 public housing here is Oontainoo in s report issued by the New Jersey Advisory Committee 00 the U S Commission em CiWl Rights

It said the Newark Housing Authority follows a policy ef permitting people applying fOlr placement in public housin~ projects to choose the project tm whieh they want to live

lit said this policy has ~

llributed to the segregation Cl1I public housing and recomshymended that t1he policy 00 abandoned in favor of first-come first-serVed basis

The report noted that Q01l1li vast housing projects nre locatell in Newarks Central Ward-tho scene of widespread noting D year ago and of two massiv~ firo disasters this spring-and tll~

they are more thanSO Negf~ ~ccupied

It further charged that them Js U a disparity in maintenanceo between the predominantly N~

gro and the rgtredominantly whi~

projects a complaint lIiTegNgt leadership has frequently medea

It termed living conditiom b the Central Ward projects opshypressive and that the proj~cto

are JIOor)y designed llt recomshymeld~d that additionaI ~ev areas for young children ~Gl

meeting places for odww ~ teenagers be provided

Higher ~arnings

ON YOUR SAVINGS Per Annum

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1 Borth Main St Fall llliTe1 Ibu ~ ~ Ii 02722 P1Imle 674-4001 ~ ~ ~ke llpplicatlOll oJ phone t1 fOOl wldl ~ o ~ o 0 IlllIivithllll Aceoullt 0 Jont Ac4cwot f)

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amfACi MANAGERI - UNCOLN PARK 999-6984 636-2744

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs May 23196~

The Parish Parade OUR LADY OF ANGELS SACRED HEART WALL RIVER NORTH ATTLEBORO

Altar bOys willsponsor a cake The CCD program will be lJ81e Sunday May 26 following canonically established Friday Iill1 Masses June 21 the feast of the Sacred

Masses today the feast of the Heart The program will include Ascerision will be at 7 and 9 a 730 evening Mass followed AM and -1215 4 5 and 7 PM by proclamation and reception Confessions will be heard be- of CCD members and a social ~re each Mass hour

The Summer Mass schedule CCD students in grades 6 to will begin Sunday June 2 with 12 will attend a folk Mass and Masses from 6 to noon on the sing-out at La Salefte Shrine hour Monday night May 27 Tnose

Monday May 27 through Fri- participating will leave the ooy May 31 there will be church school yard at 645 and will be services at 7 each evening The returned at 930 living rosary will be sponsored Confirmation ceremonies will by the Holy Rosary Sodality be ~ld at 730 Sunday night Monday night the Council of May 26 Catholic Women on Tuesday ther societies on Wednesday and Thlusday and the Children New Bedford ~ M~~ on lfrIday

ST MARY HOLY NAME $25iALL RIVER Mr amp Mrs Roger Goyette

Contemporary music will acshy The Shea Family company the 1115 Mass Sunday Mrs Vivian Wegrzyniakmorning May 26

New CYO officers are Robert ST LAWRENCE amplois president Paul Durin $200 rice-president Polly Rockett Dr amp Mrs Stanley Koczera eecretary-treasurer A Friend

$125 OUR LADY OF FATIMA Dr amp Mrs Robert Srnan sWANSEA $106

The Womens Guild will hold William E King Its annual penny sale at 730 $100

Monday night May 27 in the Dr amp Mrs William Walsh ehurch hall on Gardners Neck $75 lRoad Rev William F OConnell

A Penny Sale will be held Dr amp Mrs James Bolton MondaYMay 27 at 730 in the $60 dlurch hall A Friend

$50 IMMACULATE CONClEPlIION Teremiddotsa Ruth amp John HarneyNEW BEDFORD Victor T Kondi

Parisnioners will celebrate John L Powell rthe feast of Santo Ohristo this Loretta Lamarre Sunday with a roast beef dinner $45 served from noon to 2 with Mrs Mary B Wheatoil

tickets available at the door $40 lRefreshments and entertainment Mr amp Mrs John Connor will be on the afternoon and Mr amp Mrs Thomas J Longevening program $35

A procession and auction will Mr amp Mrs James M Kearneyfollow the dinner with various Mrmiddot amp Mrs Leo St Aubin Holy Name Society units parti shy $30 cipating in the procession Mr amp Mrs Albert Anderson

Mr amp Mrs Joseph Griffin OUR LADY OF V()T(RY Mr amp Mrs Walter L9veridgeeENTERVILLE Mr camp Mrs Myron Tripp

New officers of the Womens $28amptiild are Mrs John J Pendershy Patricia Connor ~st pre~ident MrS James Murshy $26 phy and Mrs John McBarron Mr amp Mrs Thomas SullivanVoice-president Mrs George Mr amp Mrs Charles BerryReale recording secretary Mrs $25 Richard Griffith treasurer Mr amp Mrs Robert Bedard

A Communion dinner at Mr amp Mrs Albert McMulleneummaquid Inn will follow Mr amp Mrs Theodore J CalnanlB30 Mass Monday night June Mr amp Mrs Alfred Couto Mr amproo Mrs Gilbert Noonan of Falshy Mrs Manuel Guerreira Josephmouth will speak Reservations P Mullen should be made with Mrs Edshy Agnes Proctor Mr amp Misward Welch or Mrs- Stephen Joseph Porter Mr amp MrsOBrien Jr by Thursday June 6 James Ryan Mr amp Mrs Paul

saunders ST THERESA Mr amp Mrs Merton WalkerSOUTH ATTLEBORO Mr amp Mrs John F SullivanMiss Patricia Makin of the

Diocesan CCD Board spoke at the annual Communion breakshy Fall River fast of the Confraternity of

ST MARYS CATHEDRALChristian Mothers Fourteen $50 new members were received at

Gertrude OLoughlinthe monthly meeting arid new officers were installed by Rev $26

In memory of Caroline CasellaGerard J Chabot moderator $25They include Mrs Patricia Helen Burns Mr amp MrsBiziak president Mrs Georshy

George Johnston Corky Rowgette Vachon vice-president Club Rits OLaughlin FrancisMrs Kathy Lamarre treasurer amp Lena MoranMrs Dolores Leedham and Mrs

Mr amp Mrs Carlton GastallBeverly Sousa secretaries Mrs Raymond Reynolds

~CULATE CONC~ON BLESSED SACRAMENTlAUNTON $200A Spring Social and D~nce Rev Herve Jalbert

for the benefit of the church $50sponsored by the Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Michael Felixand the St Vincent de Paul Soshy $36ciety will be held Friday May Mr amp Mrs Richard Hamel24 from 8 to 12 at Lewis Lodge $30Winthrop Street Route 44 A W Root Beer StandTaunton Refreshments will be served Tickets are $200 per lIIIOLY CROSS person and wiU be available at $50 the door Holy Rosary Sodality

lt

PATRIARCH His Holishyness Vazken I of the Armeshynian (Monophysite) Chu~h which comprises five-milli~n communicants in the Soviet Union Near and Far East and the Americas is visiting in the US He paid a visit to the National Shrine of the

Immaculate Conception whilein the nations capital NC Photo

NOTRE DAME $40

The Anne-Marie MasSe fami17 $35

Conrad N Desmarais $25

Norman J A Belanger Rose D Perron

HOLY ROSARY $30

The DePaola Family $25

Mrs Philomena Germane

~CULATE CONCEPTION $50

A Frie~d $40

Mrs Diolinda Wilson $26

In memory of Charlotte DJicholson

$25 Holy Name Society Knights

of the Altar A Friend MlU7 Whitehead John R Burgess In memory of Daniel R Be

Manuel R Pimental Joseph Francoeur

SACRED HEART $l)O ()

~ Katherine D Adams $75

Mr amp Mrs William J Sullivan $5~

Margaret Morriss M~ry V amp Alice C HarrlngtoD Frederick B McD9nald

$31 Frances Mmiddot Cummings Mary C Cummings

$30 Mr amp Mrs John J HarrlngtOil

$28 Florence M Sullivan

$25 Vincent DAndrea Edward

Leary Mr ~ MrsN J Meyer Mary Louise OSullivan John J Sullivan middotMargaret F Lowney

ST MICHAEL $25

Manuel Rogers amp Sons At~

Manuel M Rezendes Henry Leshytendre ~eonardo Cabeceiras

Gerald Mulrooney A Friend edf Catholic Charities

ST ANNE ft JI08ZIII $30

Mrs Rhea Saurette 101at Vincent de Paul ConferenceIrene Theroux leapt amp Mrs Joseph J OCoDshy$26 nellThe Gauthier Family $25

Mr amp Mrs Reginald lerive

A Friend

Belshy $50

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J OCo nell k

$30 St rosephs Mens Club

ST ANTH()NY $25 OF THE DESERT Mr amp Mrs John L Mercer

$100 Mr amp Mrs Daniel W OCoDoshyChor Bishop Joseph Eid nell Dr amp Mrs James J Sabra

$25 SANTO CHRiSTO Rev Kenneth A Michael Mrs August Badway $50

ST ANTHONY OF PADUA $125

Rev Josephmiddot M Ferreira $100

Atty amp Mrs Milton R Silva

StVincent de Paul Society $30

Rev Ernesto R Borges $26

Mr amp Mrs Alfred 1 Cam~ $25

$50 Franco Family Singersmiddot

$25 Mrs Sofia Pacheco Antonio T Cabral

Mary amp Beatrice Costa~ SilD

CnristO Credit Union Manuel Medeiros Laureano Silva

AFriendFrank B Olivei

YDUR SONTHE PRIEST

HI HOLY PATHERS MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL DMURDH

A FUTURE

PRIEST NEEDS

bull SOMEONES HELP

TRAiN ASfSTER

Tau

HUNGER CANT

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Please

return couponwith your

offering

Have you ever wished you had a son a priest Now you can hlilve a priest of your own-and ahare forever In all the good he does _ _ Throughout the Near East this month grateful bishops ara ordainlng new priests trained by people like youbullbullbullbull Their own families are toe poor to support them In training but good catholics In America adopted these semIshynarians encouraged them all the way to ordinashytionbullbullbullbull Insome Inspiring cases this support was given at personal sacrifice How can youbegln7 Write to us now Well ~end you the name of ~ young seminarian who needs you and he will write to you Make the payments for his training to suit your convenlence ($850 a month or $100 a year or the total $600 all at once) Join your sacrifices to his and at every Sacrifice of the Mass he will always remember who made It possible

4

Native Sisters In our 18 developingcountries are teaching children of the poor preparing them for First Communion giving medical care to leplrs cal)cer sufferers the aging A SisterS training Ialts two years costs $1250 a month $150 a year or $300 altogetherbullbullbullbull Well send you the name of a Sister you can train as soon as we receive your first payment She will pray for you and write toyou

n An9 day now you may receive a letter contalnn the Holy Fathers appeal for the forgotten Arab refugees-l4 million people without a country bullbullbull most of them destitute bullbullbull more thari half of them childrenbullbullbullbull By trelnlng these children foi middotfuture selfsufflcel]cy we can help brln peace and new selfmiddothelp to the Holy Land atlll divided by warbullbullbullbull But why walt for your mal Hunger cant walt Neither can peace Send your amplIft now in any amount ($500 $200 $100 $75 $50 $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 $2 $1) and the Holy Fathercan put It to work right away Qril1 $10 wlllleed family for a monthl -----~-~---~~---~-IlNCL08ID PLllAIl PIND $_ c_O~__ rFOR _

NAMI ___~

8TRIU ~~=

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NIAll lAST WIILFAAI ASSaDIATtOrlaquo

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MSGR JOHN ClI NOLAN Natlonal5ecretary Write CATHOLIO NIlAR EAST WeLFARE Assoo ~30 Madson Avenue New York NY OOU telephonel 212vtJkon 6middot5840

CATHaLiD

19 DiJoridrrien Ere State r ourlitei

SChoelbOY leag~~Wmrn~regr~ Stii~Pretty Mu~h sampu [j)(Q)Mbt

By PETIm BARJrEK Nmon BitIh ~h

The gehooboy ba8ebaD mmpaignis cllNimatieaDy near- Inlaquo the climax of another spirited seasoo With approxishymately a week of competitioo Nllllaining oontlmdmg teams Me stmggling to keep their pennanf oopes alive while Wtling for the right to rep-JIe8eDt their ll e s pee t i v e leaguesin the nnand-eomin

-y- shy

Btate tournament The Eastshyem Massachusetts ehampionahip

baseball tournamen+ ClIffiMftl-~

tine of the wurney is tiPoDOOred bythe

II a II sac h u~_ lt Iietts Secondary

SChool Princishypals Association bull Par tie i p 8 t _ ing schools have bElen divided i IIl tot h r e e d3ses - A B and C---llccord- Peter iDg to leagues Blrtek r

and comparable independent teams Action tn all three clasampe3 starts Saturday June L

In addition to the three divishyidon3 the baseball tourney amp1shyem radically JIrom the popular

Two Spots for Both BCl (IDnd Marry Five Bristol County League Howard Ferguson which teams

teams Gre still in contention for will represent the circuit in the tourney play ebampionship event

At this writing Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Stang SpaltamJ of Qartmouth who hold a lllim ene-game edge over their rivals are a solid choice to annex one of the two berths to be filled bi BCL teams The second spot 18 un literally up for grabs

Bishop Feehan High of Attieshyboro which led the circuit untll last week Durfee High of Fan River Attleboro and Taunton lire in close pursuit middotof Stang hoping tomiddot overcome the Sparshytans or at least lInish in the league runner-up berth Both the first and second place finshyishers will8utomatically qualify

If either fim OX second place II decided by Monday May 21 league officials w~ have to DOUty the tournament Director

No~tons Lancers in Need cf Help I h e Narragansett league Class B - Southem

whkh got a head start on the its Iud Old Colony champ ft NaITlIlshyv er area Clrcu conc es gansett runner-upleague play today First place

middot Somerset travels to New Bed- Narragansett champ ~ Olcll ford to meet Holy Family High Colony runner-up Case High of Swansea entell-middotmiddot South Shore champ VB Hockshytains Dighton-Rehoboth West- omock runner-up port hoss Msgr Prevost High Hockomock cpamp vs South

middotof Fall River and Dima]l Voce- ShQre runner-up tional nlso of Fall River will 0I Am f N rth E stobe t Se k Iver es 0 0 a n a e o~k

Entering the final week of ac-middot middot tion Somerset and seekonk are in the top two spots in tbe 8tanding They loom the more likely to corral Class B tourney berths But DightOn-Rehoboth Case and Westwrt trail the sec ODd place club by oIl1yone game If the race ends in II tie ]league officials wlll have ample time to schedule play-off games before the tourney deadline

Pairings for Class Bare

Selecting Union PITTSBURGH (NC)-Twentyshy

five maintenance workers at Duquesne University here in Pennsylvania have left their jobs pending a detell1llnation as to which union will represent the workers The remaining 115 members of the maintenance erew lIlre not involved in the atrike which was called by the 2li who are represented by the tJmted Electrical WorkersUnion

Although it occurs infrequentshyly a team does not have to win Its league to represent its league in tourney eompetition

The Bristol County league champion is slated to play the

bull Bay State League runner-up in first round action with the Bay State champs taking on the County runner-up The winners would then meet in second round play

Pairings for Class A are Class A - Southem

Suburban champ w Middleshy8llX runnerup

Middlesex champ ft Suburshyban runner-up Bay state ehamp VB Bristol runner-up

Bristol champ V8 Bay sta~ runnerup

-Tech lxlsketban competition lllll order to qualifyfor the Tech a team mt1BSt win 70 per cent cd its games but onlythe leagu~ champions ond runner-ups M~ eligible ~r playmiddotiImiddotbasebalL

In both Class A andClass B iitOtalof i6 teams will qualify 1lt7middotmiddotmiddotJiY

for the diamond elimination event~ E~~ Will pai1i~ipate in

the nortlHln division and eight in the southern bracllet The winners in each bracket will meet in the Eastern- Massacilushy

llletts fi~ Preliminary games will be played on June 1 4 and 6 The finals are scheduloo June 8

Class C competition will coIi-BiEt of eight clubs in only one division Titlists in seven smallshyDChooI le1gues and one indeshypendent selected by the tournashy

ment coJiunittee Will comprise the field fur this tliil-d group

and Mansfield 1m the Hockoshymock circuit appear to be out of the running this season

Fo~ Class C schools Its Winmiddot or youre out Only the league champions will play in the championships The winner of the Capeway Conference will meet the Cape and Vineyard champ in opening round play Dennis-YarDlQuth and Sandshywich are the likely opponents

The only other school located within the confines of the diocshyesan territorial limits that has an outside ~hance of qualifying for the tournament is Norton of the Tri-Valley Conference The Lancers however will need some outside help if they are to overcome league leading Millis The Tri-Valley champs will take on the Dual County League champions Defending Class C champ Ashland again leading the Dual Co~nty is heavily favored to repeat both in league ond state competition

NOT A BALL-ITS GUM Yem might get the idea that a pitched ban is lodged in the mask of this young Vancouver BC catcher but it isnt a ball This young ma is trying to prove he is just as efficient behillld the plate as he is at blowing bubble gum NC ~middothoto

Stresses Inter~cicdmiddotmiddotPartnership As Solution to Racial Problem

CLEVELAND (NC) - A Nashy world would be better off lr tional ASsociation for Advanceshy iou hadnt gotten involved Jm

ment of Colored People official asserted here interracial part shynership is the key to oolution of the racial problem but it cannot be a partnership dom inated by either race

Dr John A Morrell NAACP assistant nat ion a 1 director speaking at the Cleveland Cathshyltnlic Interracial Councils annual Interracial Justice Awards banshyquet said the nation today is aj an unprecedented crossroads but the interracial way is the democratic part to justice

He spoke in place of Roy Wishydns NAACP national~ director who was with the U S delega- tion at the United Nations con vocation on human rights lin Tehran Iran -

Angry Voices There are angry Negro voiees

raised in protest because develshyopment of opportunity in recent years does not apply to twoshythirds of the Negro population he saidmiddot The kind of jobs they are capable of filling are vanshyishing from the economy he added

But if a fruitful partnership is to continue between the white and Negro the burden of know- ing the truth about Negro hisshytory must be borne by white as well as Negro Dr Morsell said

Vie are all fighting a bitter legacy of generations White people have to know where they stand and why Once you assume the burden of work toward interracial justice you assume the responsibilities be continued

If you are not going to ~

sume them then you and fhe

the first place Informed PariDership

Dr Morsell said a mere sPirit of commitment is not enough to

survive over the hard going Work must be based on a part shynership that is informed intelshyligent understanding and resil shyient he said

The interracial awards were presented to Father Edwan Camille assistant Catholic Charshyities director here and Thom811 C Westropp president of Womshyens Federal Savings and Loan Association

Westropp was cited for his efforts towards opening the

doors of banking and credit 1m the Cleveland area to all ciUshyzens regardless of race creed 011

color while Father CarniDe was cited for his leadership as director of Project Peace (~

irner-city diocesan organizati~ working with the poor mostly Negroes) and for his work as co-chairman of the first tri-faith Greater Cleveland Conference on Religion and Race

ELECTRICAl -Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

SS lPlE1rIEllt amp JgtAIDlj

$103 Womens Club Rose E Sullivan

$50 Joseph P Conaty

$35 Belen M amp William J

De7 $33

Mr amp Mrs James F McMahcm $25

Mrs Margaret Daly amp Mary John Dolan ~illiam Daley amp Mary Esther Mr amp Mrs Stanley M -laniek

~50 In memory of MrsMarga~

W Pow~rs RodneY S DeCecco

$26 Mr amp Mrs John Soula

$25 Edward Healey Mr amp Mrs Michael McCartbiY Mr amp Mrs James Crosson Mrs Gertrude Lomas Mr amp Mrs Norman GagnOOl

ST JOHN TEE BAPTlIS11

$30 St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ampt Jean Baptiste $25

Mr amp Mrs Ovila Caron Henri Demers

In memory of Mr amp lVlrm bullWilliam Sheehan

Open to An PORTLAND (NC)-The seeshy

ond annual Catholic youth conshyvention of the Portland Diocese has opened the convention to all Catholic students of the dioshycese in order to spread the agtOlgto tolate of youth to youth Thll

)faine convention has comprised only students who have takes themiddot youth leadership trainlJnl1 courses

Dont Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH

DO faJse teeth drop slip or wobblo when you talk eat laugh or sneeze Dont be annoyed and embarr1lEsetll lkllh hanl11caps FASTEETH Bamp

e (non-acid) powder to SPr1n~Ikle on your plates keeps false teetb more firmly set Gives confident feel~ Ing Of security and added comfort No gummy gooey taste or feellncr Dentures that 6t are essential to health see your dentist regulorly oet FASTEETH at alll1rug countemJ

o

WYman 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD MASS

IfIIfJltk del1WM

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SAVE MONEY 0 OUROILHEATI bull eatt

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

Iritai~ If S)crap SuPPITreg~~5n Acts Of Re~(j[jmlt~oml

LONDON (NC)-It looks as if Britain is at long last glOing to stop suppressing the monasteries-officially that 0

Legal experts sifting through lenturies of forgotten laws clutshyooling the records have found (hat the Suppression of Reli shygious Houses Acts of 1535 and 0039 have never been repealed

They are among 155 statutes weeded out from the statute IJ)ooks between 1239 and 1705middot lmd now to be definitively leshy~aled by a special act of Par-Iliament

These two acts enforced the eosure and pillaging of Catholic monasteries friaries and other religious houses throughout the WINS nsc Chaplain

eountry following King Henry (Captain) Angelo J LitekyVIIIs break with Rome in 1534

assigned to the 199th InfanshyJhey brought vast fortunes On goods property and mog of try Brigade in Vietnam has ell land to the kings favorites been awarded the Distinshyoome of whose families have reshy guished Service Cross forWned their wealth to this day extraordinary heroism SevshyIgnored in Practice

Of course the laws against erely wounded when Viet me Roman Catholic Church Cong ambushed a US infanshyIhave long ago been shelved and try company Ohaplain Lit shyIgnored in practice The reli shy eky braved flying bullets toous houses are back probably

rescue and minister tomore numerous than before iIome have even reoccupied the WQunded and dying meR 0ld sites they hadmiddot before the lReformation

Another notable measure ~ewlfk ~[p)regID Gingled out for repeal is the 1loleration Act of 1688 This act W51f)$ ~WIfltdl although in itself it did not help

NEW YORK (NC)-The Adshy~he Catholics marked the end of

vocate weekly newspaper of1lhe Protestant Reformation and the Newark Archdiocese wont1he beginning of religious tolershythe first-place Silver Medalation in Britain Awarti for weekly newspapersIt allowed freedom of worship in the annual public serviceClgt Protestant Trinitarian Nonshycompetition sponsored by theoonformists provided theiT New York chapter of the Pubiicmeetings were opento the pubshy

Relations Society of AmericaIlk it did not relieve the existing The award was for a five-part

fenaWes of those days against analysis ttl the ills besetting the ~atholics other breakaway Newark public school system lhcnestants or Jews but it was )he analysis was written by a hisberic beginning It has been Advocate news editor Ed Grant ltJeseribed as the Great Oharter and was an examination into ~ religious freedom and the one of the areas of dissatisfacshy~umph ofc9mmon ~ense tion which led to widespread

rioting in Newark last Summer

The series ran lri the newsshylJays Help for Poor paper last september and Octoshy

lPeCice First ~eeds ber The Public Rellitlons SocishyMIAMI (NC)-The Catholic ety award - silver medals are (lihurch in this nation today awarded in each of five cateshy

gories-are given for the mostauast address itself to the presshynoteworthy contributions bullbull 0 toiloing needs of the poor and dis-

~vantaged as well as the better public ~derstanding of ltJnICial issue of peace says the _ community problems in the New

4Tchbishop of Miami York metropolitan area Archbishop Coleman F Calshy New s p a per 8 magazines 0011 following announcement of broadcasting an d television middotGte establishment of the ecclesshy media in the New York-New iastical province of Miami and Jersey-Connecti~ut metropolitan tMs appointment as its first area are eligible for the awards l)rehbishop stressed that the (fhurch must be concerned with ibe problems of the time in Retired ArttlhJboshop S)Vhich we exist Gets College lHlonorThe g~eatest problems at present are the problems of the DUBUQUE ( NC) - Retired disadvantaged the poor and Archbishop Edward D Howard Utase who are in need and of of Portland Ore has been named oourse peace he smiddotaid for Loras Colleges 1968 John

It is more difficult for us to Fitzgerald Kennedy Award The LiOlve in any real way the prob- prelate is a former president of iems that are our concern until the college we have a measure of peace The citation and gold medal And it is the prayer of all of us annual award honoring an out Chat peace will be established as standing Amercian will be preshyiluickly as possible on an honorshy sen ted to the archbishop at the able basis o college commencement cereshy

monies June 2 Camp Directory Archbishop Howard 90 a nashy

Nltlw available from the Nashy ti ve of Cresco Iowa and a Loras lItonal Catholic Camping Assn alumnus was ordained to the ~ 131~ Massachusetts Ave priesthood in 1906middot He became lM- W Washington D C 20005 president of the college in 1921 Is the 1968 Directory of Catholic In 1924 he was consecrated to ~mps which lists all known serve as auxiliary bishop of DavshyearriPs in the U S giving acshy enport He became archbishop of Civities charges dates open and Portland in 1926 and retired in lIbailing addresses 1966

National CYOPlans LeadershipTraining shyImpa~t to Aid Priests Adult Admiddotvisors

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tbe through the introduction of BaWmore June 23-28 ehicagoNational Catholic Youth Organshy leadership methodology which July 1-5 Boston July 14-19 ization Federation will launch a facilitates maximum involveshy Sen Antonio July 28-Aug 3 training program in June called ment 00 the local level and Denver Aug 11-16 and San Impaot be help priests and hence maximum commitment JFaoancisoo Aug 25-30 adults 00 work effectively with The National CYO Federation Dr Donald Ebalt a professhyteenagers in a leisure time proshy will sponsor six sessiOns this lIlional trainbig eonsul1lant of gram summer to train diocesan CYO Washington D c win diiecl

The program was designed in staffs m 1lhe use of the newmiddot ead11ab cooperation with Leadership program lhey win )e held m A pilot Jtudy of the effectiveshyResources Inc a firm _of beshy DeBS of Impact on a group of havior scientists -rolulbteers from the NewarlkAddress Graduates

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishy archdiocese was held at the SOUTH BEND (HC) -Mel-rector of the Youth Department Benedictine Retreat House ill

Jdte-rite Patriarcib Maximoo VUnited States Catholic Confershy jNewton N J ence in announcing ttie new Kakimof Antioch and Dr Ilhirtymiddot persons representashyprogram said tives of youth adult advisorsJames A Perkins of Cornell

The goal 01 Impact is 00 help and priest moderators met withUniversity will be speakers atthe priests who are moderators representattives of the CYO

the 123rd annual cOnW~ncementof CYO the ad~lt advisors and Federation staff and a member youth participating in CYO toshy exerci~ Sundly June 2 at Of Leadership rResources Inc ward maximumpersonal growth Notrlte Dame University 110 assess and to evaluate 1mpaltL

(Cathedral Camp-Resident and Day Camp for Boys

O~ Lady of the L_ke Day Camp fOr Girls

Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON LONG POND ROUTE 18 EAST FREETOWN MAS~

~ RESIDENT CAMP 49th Season June 30 thru August 24 - a Week Season

Diocesan seminar-ians - College Students amp Teachers Under direction StaH of a Diocesan Priest

Saili~g swimming water skiing horseback riding riflery archeryPrograni hiking overnight camping trips ~rts amp crafts Indian crafts camp crafts athletic (team amp individual) competition and inter-camp cOmpetition professional tutorial service available

Private beach large luxurious camphouse dining hall modernfacilities~ washrooms arts and crafts buildings camp store and office first aid and infirmary beautiful chapel overnight and weekend accomodashytions for parents

S WEEK PIERIOD $325 - 4 W~K PERIOD $165 - 2 weEK PERIOD $85

Cathedra~ Day Camp t=or Boys Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period

JULY W- AUGUST 23 Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period fEES INCLUDIE Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Horseback Riding Weekly Cook~Outs amp Milk Daily without Added Cost

--~----------------------------------------Our Lady of the Lake bay Camp For Girls

JULY l _ AUGUST 23 Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period

FEES INCLUD~Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Ilorseback Riding Weekly Cook-Outsmiddot Milk Daily without Added Cost

o

For further information write to

REV WALlER A 5ULLlVANDiredor PO Box 63 - East Freetown Mass 02717

Page 10: 05.23.68

THE ANCHORTDi~c~se of Foil River-Thurs May 23 1968 indiana Prelate ~ i l bull - 10 Heads NCEACrawford Electrical Co DrSpecial Gifts Morris Feresten Dr Frank L mAiN FRANCISCO r(NC) shy

Collins Mr amp Mrsmiddot John P Bish()p Raymorid J GellagMrContinued from Page Nine Dwyer of Lafayette Ind was ~le~ted

Attleboromiddot Hub Clothing Bristol ~it- president general Of the Nashyting Mills Inc Dixon Burial tionlll1 Catholic Educational Asshy$150

sociation at the final meeting ofVauit Shelburne Shirt Co IncBarry J Boardman Ins Agency $125 the asSoclation~8 6Mb Mnuat

Almeida Electric Co August Elmer C Slater

convention hereraquoIlr amp Mrs James G Heagney He succeeds Bishop ErnestBadwey amp Sons Joseph A Parks$100 Primeau of Manchester N HMrs Mar-y Courtis Dr amp MrsL G Balfour Co

who rervOO as president general Norman pSadler Brothers Inc for three yearsBedford House ConvalescentShields Inc A native of Cleveland BishopHomeInc Dr Sanford I Udis$60 Gallagher was ordained in 1939llI Joseph Madowsky HarveyAtherton Furniture Co~ and served as a Navy chaplainProbber Inc $50 during World War n He w~s

Demers Brothers narned bishop of Lafayette inM S Company 1965 following service as secreshy[P[(D$Iroreg$ $40

tary of the National ConferenceAttleboro Printing amp Embosshy of Catholic Charities

olng Co Inc ~WltWI7il$~ltW Speaker at the election sesshy$35 sion was U S Commissioner ofIOUlIt lLADY IOlF lFAllDMIAReynolds amp Markman In~ $25 Education Harold Howe who

$27 said that Catholic schools willMr amp Mrs Ralph A GuerrieroLeedham Hardware be especially guilty if they doMr amp Mrs Peter J Hoss lFlIt ADlIt][AN OJFM lFlIt lFAJlUAN OJFM $25 not act to solve the crisis of

Attleboro Sun Publishing Co ST IDOMIllN][C ghetto educationmiddotlnc Connelly Gold Stamping $25 Christianity is supposed toCo MacDonald Moving amp Storshy ~[j1Jil~O$ltC[(il$ t[ Our tLC1~ls ~hauraquocetiMr amp Mrs Thomas Paiva offer something more the age Co Marathon Company Mr amp Mrs Thomas C Murphy commissioner told the 6000

Plastic Craft Novelty Co Ob$erve $iver Priestiy Jubilees delegates at the final sessionSTLOUIS OF FRANCE On May 26th the 9 AM Retreat House Pittsfield N 11 ~Let us be fools for Christs

Fall Ri~er $50 MlIss will be conceleprated where _ he served as Retreat sake said St Paul middotWe Ladies of St Ailne raquoy the Franciscan Friars at Our Director and Master~ badly need highminded visionshy

$1200 Holy Name Society Ladys Chapel New Bedford Four years later _1964 Fr aries who can help the poorestFan River Electric Light Co st Vincent de Paul Sooi~ eonmiemoratingthe Silver Ju Fabian was transfe~red to Our of our children see a new dream $1000 $26 bilee of the ordination of) Fr Ladys Ohapel New ~d~()rd and faShion a better reality FOO

FirestoneRubbe~ amp Latex ~ Mr amp Mrs Herman Lamppoin4e Fabian F Joyce OFM and Fr where he has served to the pres- ournations sake Catholic edushy $600 I~ k Adrian F Donachie OFM ent time He is ViCar of the cationmust jointhe rest of edshy

~all R~~er GasCQllpanYj Fr Fabian is a native of Franciscan CommuIlity Father ucation to give them a neW $500 Vineyard iavenc Watertown He is an alumll~sof is well known thr~ughout the botizon

lVlr amp Mrs Henry ~ Feitelberl Boston College High SChool and area as a preacher for the St Mooney amp Co Inc middotUT AUGUSTINE

0Boston College He entered the Jude Novena devotions on$300 FIRST COMMUNION- $46L50 Franciscans of Holy - Nilme Thursdayat the chapel andtbeRev JosephF ODonnell ResidentSofCatholic MemoJillJ Province with headquarters in radio Apostolate

~o~e I $50 ~ PORTRAITSNew Yo~k City in 1937~ - Fr Addlln F Donachie Of~ $300 Mrs James Boyle He was ordained at the Na- is a native of Glasgow Scotland IN LIVING COLOUR

St Augustines GuildCitizens Savings Bank iional Shrine of the Immaculate and was brought up in NewSt Augustines Holy NameFR Five Cent Savings Bank Conception Washington D C York Oity H~ entered ~t $200 St Augustines St Vincent de May 29 1943 His first assign- Joseph s SeraphIcSeminary Jtl Anderson-Little Co inc lPaul Society ment was to St EIizabeths 1932 in preparatIon for the A -Friend $30 - T)enver middotColo from Franciscan Priesthood

$150 Mr amp Mrs William Figueiredo 1944 to Hi58 He was received into the

PR Peoples Cooperative Bank Mr amp Mrs Francis Metell _ Pastor and Supe- Order in 1937 and was ordained $135 $25 rior of the Church and Monas- six years later on May 29 1943

Herve Lagasse Cmdr amp Mrs Daniel Burgo tery in Denver in 1951 and at the National Shrine of the $125 Frank Coutinho Mr amp Mrs served in this capacity for Immaculate Conception Washshy

Cliff Nursing Homes Michael Fonte) Mr- amp Mr~ Eushy seven years ington D C His priestly Hfe$120 gene Frieh Mrs John Hughes In 1958 he was stationed at has been in New York Coloshy

J O Neill Supply Co Marthas Vineyard National St Bonaventure Retreat House rado Connecticut NewHampshy $101 Bank Rep amp Mrs Benjamin C Paterson N J for a period of shire and finally- stationed in ~ Fall River Shopping Ce~nter Mayhew Jr Mr amp Mrs Boleslaw two years giving laymens re- Our Ladys Chapel since 1956Associates Nickowal Mrs Dean Swift 11 treats and days of recollection Fr Adrian came with the origishy $100 Mr amp Mrs Frederick Thifault to the clergy He was then nal group of Franciscans ~o staff

Norbut Mfg Co Inc transferred to St Anthonys- Our Ladys Chapel THE FINEST QU~LITYSullivans of Fall River dk Wareham Hyannis IS WORTH THE PLEASANT

H P Hood amp Sons Inc ST PATRICK Famed Church -Gift SHORT DRIVE TO THE I bull Borden amp Remington Co $50

AREAS LEADING STUDIOr Louis Hand Inc middotMr amp Mrs Thomas Choate To Mission SocietY William T Manning Colnt Mr amp Mrs middotWilliam McLaugbshy BOSJO~ (NC) B~stons

j OPEN SUNDAYS Radio Station WALE I lin famed St Stephens church hasbull Dring Communion Seasonbeen - turned over by Richard

Dr amp Mrs Americo Almeida ~ W Hurley Co Cardinal Cushing to the Misshy $75 $30

Walter A Fur-man Co $45

8io~ary society ot St James ~ BRIDAL PORTRAITS Beetlemiddot Plastics Albert- Guerzoni the Apostle 311d Deluxe Quality Candicts Fall River Lodge No 118 BPO $21 famous for RESERVE YOUR DATE EARLY - The edifice _a short distance E~~ Mrs Am~lia JJaptiste _ from the home of Paul Revere

St- vincent de Paul Salvage - $25 and other Revolutionary War ~rve as QUALITyand EvANS STUDIOS

JBureau Nlr amp I([rs Franci~Murp~y shrines will head- St Patricks Wofuens Guild Miamp Mrs Julius ]~abbitt -I quarters for the society which 18 MAIN STTAUNTON middotCall Rivermiddot Mr amp ~rs JsephNorris the ~ardinal founded to do mis- SERVI(E Tet 822-1181

sect(6nwork in Latin AmericaProvidence Pile Fabric Corp $50 St Stephens church was deshy

Robert L Germaine Inc o o

Atty amp Mrs JohriJ Harringshy OUR LADY OF LOURDF8 whose works also include tne ton $5 Massachusettsmiddot State House It

Simons Supply Co Inc Massasoit Hills Trailer Iark was first used as a CongregashyThe J L amp R Cohen Foundashy Inc

siglled by Charles BlJlfltJch

tienal church but with the influx ~ion of Catholics during the inlmishy

Nira WarehOUse Mart Inc West Harwich gration of the early 1800s it was $45 purchased by the Boston arch-

Drobyski Wallpaper Co HOLY TRINITY diocese $60 In 1964 Cardinal Cushing$40

Dr Harry Cooperstein Mr amp Mrs Theodore F Berg spent more than $1000000 W haus restore the building$30

Ashton Funeral Home $50 Magonis Ferry Landing Mr amp Mrs Manley E Boyce Priests COll1ference

$25 $26 STEUBENVILLE (NC) ~ A Atty Kenneth Sullivan Mr Captain William House group of priests here has fOJmed

- Mrs Lewis Morley Hathaway - $25 -- a CQnference of Steubenville ~nelal Service Cook Bord(l1 ~oha Gillahan Mr amp Mrs Priests to create a general

Co Dr Harry Levine Joseph lttiltpetteMr ampMrsJohn ~pirii of priestly fraterJ~iiy and l)rDa~id P~Iill Tyrells Mar- E Ke~ly ~r Mrs yen~j~ Cor- - professionalism Msgr 0

t Cascaltle Drug CoProfes- ra~o HarQJd~RmiddotMcK~nna ~Tolin A Cymbor pastor ()fStgt Qff~rincllid~SPeciaIILinlie9n~n~ $3 w~rf~ 0( ~ I~al ph~i-rnacy hr havills Mrs R R~ SmalI AnthonYThete~esect Church Piney F6rk

-- middote~rHolvitZampHorvitz Ryan MrampMr~_-JQnljMul- wasnamedtempotary chairman Ride TicketsFor additional details or reservatic5nsmiddot call Mrmiddot Conrad Feriamiddot at (4Ql) RE 14kgtOO collectl lC

High Point Fording Box Corp llnsMr-ampmiddotMrsAllgterf Daven- and chosen to repiesimt the _ ~ ~

A RossEvetett Motors port Mramp Mrs Frank Ball group at the initialmiddot meeting in

-uline Te~tile Co Eagle Mr amp Mrs John W- Anderson Chicago May 21 of the National ine Co Mr amp Mrs Paul Carney Federation of Priests coun(iMI

bull

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JUST OfF ROUTE 117

POINTmiddotRO~-_

SpecialSchool Outinils GjoupOffer $3 per Stuitentmiddot

father OWcopy) Sons Are OEd~glfDregd

BELMONT (NC) - Three members of the Habiger family -two sons and their fathershyare completing studies for the priesthood and will be ordained as Benedictine priests on June M

The lllabigers have prepared Jlor ~e priesthood at Belmont Abbey here They will be Qrshydained by Abbot Thomas Halmiddott shyman at St Benedicts Abbey in Atchinson Kans

John Habiger joined his two sons at Belmont Abbey after the death of his wife Mildred in December 1963 He said he did this because my wife and I just had an understanding that the survivor would give his or her life to the Lord

Before deciding to enter the priesthood Habiger had worked as a sales manager fOl a deep freeze home locker distlibutor

lHE ANCHORshy~urs May 23 1968

_ bull

II

Britista Cot1toIicI Suppolt New Bilt To Ovtlow Bios~

LONDON (NO) ~ 0aitJh0 ~ BeneFally appearr to be ~Ving strong BUPPOOt to the govemme~ controvemial new biJl 110 outlaw racial dls- crimination in Britain

Tile Catholie press glQ~~e bin Its blessing with some quBll shy iDeations Several Catholic anti shyaovermnent politicKms howshyweI have voiced oppositionshynot em principle they eblim but oocause they fear some sections of the bHl eould IIIggravate rather ampan mollify existing racism here by producing II privileged black and colored minority

The Race Relations Biil Which Is backed by the present Labor government and can reashysunably be expected to become law this Summer fs intended to i

strengthen existing legislation in this matter in view of the big rise in the number of Negro and colored (Indian Pakistani and as a labor pool manager for and West Indian) immigrants in the United States Air ForceFATHER AND SONS TO BE ORDAINED A father and his two sons will bethe past few years

Fellls Takeover m-d~ined June 14 to the priesthood at St Benedicts Abbey Church Artchi8on Kansas Nearly 2000 dock workers FoUo~ing the death of his wife five years ago John Paul Habiger (center) entereq the MethodlidsAdopt

quit work to delllonstrate BenedIctines joining his sons in the seminary Their nam~8 im religion are Father J~hJ) Project E~uaiityWJainst the bill and to sboW Igrlatius Habiger OSB (center) Father MatthewH~riy Habiger~ OSB (left) andsupport for the view o~ bullCon~ DALLAS (NC)-The ll-milshy2ervative party me~ber Eno~b F~thet Benedict John HabigeJrp OSW NC Photo li~)Il-member United Methodist ~

PPwell that Britain has too Church-formed by a merger l(Ilany elgtlQred immigranUi $50 $50 of the Methodist Church and

Powell had called for 8 vir WestpolIt Almon L Turner Holy Name Society the Evangelical United Brethshy tual halt to the entry of dependshy Thomas M Ross ren-has ill effect adoptedST GEORGE ST PATRICK~nts of colored immigrants and $45 Project Equality throughoutmiddot ~he$25 $250i for measures to encourage the United States Mr amp Mrsmiddotmiddot Leonard Langlois RobertE Eastman Re~ Tames F McDermottliepatriation of the immigrants The 1400 delegates to WleEveline Magnant Claire Magshy $25 $200 bull OtherWise he said black people QUldrennial General Confershynjllt Mr amp Mrs Roland McGee Dr Frederick G Doran ~ lDr amp Mrs Roger E Cadieuxwill take over whole areas ence adopted a resolution inMr amp Mrs Arthur Perry Landgraf Felix P Kaladin $125 Dnd I3cial violence will follow which the new church endorsesMr amp Mrs Donald Pittman Thomas W Whalen Thepnaa Mrs David M KilroyPowell was later ousted from Project Equality and recomshyMr amp Mrs Jacob Strunk Calisto Raymond P Paine $40his position in the shadow cab- mends cooperation both throup

Richard J McNally inet---the leadership that would participation and financial su~SandwichWoods Hole $30assume power if the Conservashy pori on the part of all United Fernand C E AuclairtiVe6 won control of the governshy CORPUS CHRISTI Methodist Ann u a 1 (regional)llT JOSI~IH Dr Thomas Clarkment - by Conservative party Conferences local churches 10shy$300 $350 John T ~mith

0leader Edward Heath who eal or national institutiomlPaul McCusker Rev William F Morristermed Powells speech racist $26 agencies or organizations$150 $100 William MoranAbstain From Voting Friends of Megansett Mr amp Mrs William Carr The resolution presen ted to

The House of Commons apshy $100 $50 $25 the Conference by the Methodshy

Leo A Bond Mrs Leonard Nproved the bill in principal ist ~neral Board of Christian lOr amp Mrs George Christman Mr amp Mrs Lawrence Perrault313-209 and sent it to commitshy Bilooeau Mr amp Mrs Francis Jr Social Concerns called Project$75 Dr amp Mrs J Minihan lKilgrew Mrs James E Sullivantee for additional study before Equality a responsible consist shyMrs Claudia Pendergast Mr amp Mrs Peter Becker Jrit is presented for fi nal passage Mrs Frank Souza Joseph Tin- ent ethical practical effective$50 Mi amp Mrs Robert KennedyTwenty-five Consenatives abshy Mr amp Mrs Cornelius Hickey Mother Cabrini Circle D of j

sley and positive means whereby the stained from the voting rather Sll ll~OMAS MORE United Methodist Church andMr amp Mrs John McCue Norman McEnaneythan fullow the palty line and $50 other churches can SUppOImiddott fail1Mr amp Mrs Emil Tietje $40vote against the bill Atty amp Mrs Richard N LaSalle employment practices intbe$35 Mr amp Mrs Francis CarpengerAlthough the British in the $2~ United StatesSt Josephs Womens Guild $35past two centuries have govshy In memory of Mr Y J Archshy $30 bull Mr amp Mrs Raymond Doucetteerned a large proportion of the 11mbeaultMr ampmiddotmiddotMrs ElmeiHallett $26 Oppose Cuts worlds black and colored $25 Mrs Charles Russell peoples it is a new thing for ~25 Mrs Margaretmiddot Harris Mr ampbull this country to have such peopie

Mrs Paul La Prade Thomas middotC H Berube MD Mr amp Mrsequal in law moving in by the Rooney Mr amp Mrs Charles Sefshy Joseph Silvia William J Dalton thousands and competing com

mereially and socially with ton Mr amp Mrs JG$eph Sylvia James W Blunt John Hart whites G Stanley Johnson Mr amp Mrs

Fred Comings Mrs Helen ClarkeThe new bill is aimed at outshy Oak Bluffs Mr amp Mrs George PereiraMYIllawing racial discrimination in

SACRraquo IIEAlltT Harry Walkerjobs housing hotels insurance and similar fields The most $125 The Percy Family Mrs Kay

Mr amp Mrs H~l1ry ~orey radical anti - discriminatioJ1 ~iggins ~ yenrsRalph Emerson measure ever Ploposed for Brit shy $100 yenrll Edith chamberlin Mr I

aIn it was introduced by the Reliable Market-In memory Mrs MIchael Cornick Mr amp yenrs of deceased loved ones govelllment of Prime Miliister Ernest Forni Jr

Harold Wilson not so much to $50 MI amp Mrs Shurtleff Mry deal with present circuinstances Mrs Corinne Fournier Ralph Jameson Mr amp Mrs Clemshyas with the future when the $30 mey Mr amp Mrs James Hamlen

A Friendproblem could become more Mr amp lVIIs Charles McHugh acute $25 Mr amp Mrs William Ward Mr

A Friend In memory of Mr amp amp Mrs Charles Pizzottimiddot Mr amp

Diocese Convenes Mrs Antone G Camacho Mr amp Mrs Charles Parks Frances Silva Mrs Thomas DeMont Mrs Rose

First Lay Congress M Peardon A Friend Seekonk BATON ROUGE (NC)The A Friend

first lay congress of the Baton Mr amp Mrs James L Kenney MT CARMELmiddot Rouge diocese convened at the $100 Catholic Lifc Center herc Ostellville St Vincent de Paul Society

More than 600 lay people repshy $50 OUR LADY 0 THEresellting the 12 civil paJishes Knights of Columbus

(~ounties) comprising the Loushy ASSUMPTION Mr amp Mrs Edwnrd McCrystal isiana diocese had the opportu- $50middot $25

nity middotto participate in matters The McKeon Family ToI11enS Guild Mr amp Mrs affecting diocesan finances the $25 Wilfred Blanchette middotMrbullamp Mrs

feasibility of continuingmiddotCath_ Mr ~ Mrs WiUiamHerron Edward Chal)~ler Mr amp Mrs Ciq education apart from the Manu~IJlendricks Jr HOlyName pu~gtlicschool systein the Ray ham ~9ci~ty Mr amp MrsE McPhillips Churchs il)VOlvcmcnt in social SJmiddotANNmiddot action admiriistrative middotstrllemiddot $90 Somerset

tures of themiddot Church and the Rev Thomas F Neilan ST JOHN OF GOD nymans place in diocesan 00shy $75 $150 ministratioa Cirino Dominic P amp Family Dr Americo B AlUehbl

SACRAMENTO (NC) ~ TheJSouth Dart~outh beads of Catholic charitable ST MARY agencies throughout CaliforniD

$125 have joined in opposing 00- Dr amp Mrs Paul E Corley 1~mptsof government to reduce

$50 public spending at the expense Dr ampmiddotMrs Victor Almeida of ihe needy and poor

$30 Mr 1 MrsWilliam Hines

]25 Mi amp Mrs Armand Borgesmiddot Mr amp Mrs Charles Nunes

Mr amp Mrs joseph MOlliz Jr The Johnson Family Dr amp Mr~ Archibald Senesac

Nantucket Sll MARY

OUR LADY OF THE ISLE $36

James E Worth $15

Grace Henry

9ffering You ~ SavingsPIQnsmiddot

lHlome Financingmiddot

WARFJI~~ (O-OP~RATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mass

Telephone 0 295-2400 flllnb-llv-Mall Servlu AYllIIIllII

Q

Check These Banking Services

bull Savings Bank life Insurance lleaDhtate Loans bull Chri~tmas and Vacation Clube

bull Savings Accoumiddotmiddot -

bull 5 CO~Yl1lient Locaiios bull - - middott

middotNEW BEDFORD INSTITUTImiddotONmiddot tor SAVINGSmiddot

12 -tAE ANCHOR-Diocesa ofFoti Rive~Thurs May 23 1968 l

$copylDfrTht ~$frml 1NJcopy1iU0il Wreg$U9gt[J1 JIl[OlLY CROSS OUIlt LADY OlF GIltACIE

$101 $50 Mr amp Mrs Donald L BergerOlll Rev Rene R Levesque

$100 $25Joseph P Kairys

Mr amp Mrs Orner Duqu~tte$50 Jennie E Overton Mr amp Mrs James R Jones SOWltrlm YIiUililOuii1mDr amp Mrs Thomas Berry Jr Mr amp Mrs John Pilz middotST pros X Mr amp Mrs Robert J Dray $150 John J Smith John F Martin Dr amp Mrs R Earl McLoud $100

$40 Anonymous 1IL F Bergeron $54l

$35 Philip J Hart Frank Ready Ano~ymous (2)

$30 $25 Dr amp Mrs Herbert L Evereti Edward P Hayes John J CarshyLouis Lyne amp Theodore Larishy roll Thomas P McDonough

mere Dorothy Schoonmaker Denis d Brophy Mary Geist Douglas Eo ~

$25 VampJl John Crawford Mr amp Mrs David Gomes M

ampMrs Leo R Schleicher Mr amp Mrs M J Hegarty Thomas F 1fltID01iJil~~ Gentile Mr amp Mrs EdwardlllL Slr JJOSEIPIHILoveday

Mr amp Mrs Robert E Coffey ~150

li$r Francis Welch Mr amp Mrs A Friend Leo F Sullivan Mr amp Mrs Robshy $40

Mr amp Mrs John Aiello I3ehleicher ltUt Downey Mr amp Mrs John E

Mr amp Mrs Gerald Tache $35

Mr amp M~ Arthur LeclairEast FaBmoutlh $30

ST ANTHONY VictormiddotL Brunette $275 Mrs Simonne Fisher

St Vincelllt de Paul Confer- Mr amp Mrs Edwin J Marmk ace Mr amp Mrs William A Olishy

voeira Mr amp Mrs Enos Days $21)

William Bartlett Mr amp Mrs Gerard Benoit Mr amp Mrs Nicholas F Tangshy

~y $25

Mrs Margaret Virgin Alice Bourassa Alexander Perri llIIllll lllli Braley Jr Dr amp Mrs Jell shyorne Brault

Cecile A Daley Mr amp Mra John I)ias Jr Mrs Mary P Gage Mr amp Mrs Ernest RLashysectesse Edward McGrath

Mr amp Mrs Leonard deMeshydeiros Mr amp Mrs Roland L Despres Mrs Irene FitzGeralcll Mr amp Mrs Edward Fitzsimshymons Mary Gogghi

Edmond Goulet Margaret Manghan Joseph C Mello Mrs Carmen Muldoon Mr amp Mrs Paul Murray

Margaret Nickerson Mra Edythe Rankin Mr amp_Mra Frank J Rezendes George Vishyveiros Mr amp Mrs JosephSevigny

Sli MAIlty

$81 St Vincent de Paul Society

$25 Sacred Hearts Association Raymond Dlugosinski Mr amp Mrs Manuel Allua amp

Nancy Mr amp Mrs Antone Costa J1l Mr amp Mrs John A Wojcik

SACRED IHIEARlr $25

St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ST IPATRRCK $iOO

Mr amp Mrs William BrennlUll $75

Anonymous $50

Mr amp Mrs Francis J Flynn Atty amp Mrs Edward Farrell

$30 Mr amp Mrs Albert W Lawrence

bull Major ampMrs Lawrence Uch-shymanowicz

$25 Mrmiddot amp Mrs Edward C Wen Jr John Keohane

Mr~ amp MrS JosephCardeIre Mr amp Mrs Melvin Dolan

Mrmiddotamp Mrs Walter Buguey Mr amp Mrs Robert Costa Mr amp Mrs John Kelliher John Lynch

Mr amp Mrs Thomas Magwre Mr amp Mrs Kenneth Paige

$30 lt $leo~ IJ=1J yltID Uilliil 0$ lllr amp MrsEdward McCarthJ7 lievbull~ 17 ~

Slr FRANCIS XAVlrEllt $2S st ~o Womeno CI~

Holy Name Society COO $450 Mramp RlIra Lee Kingsb~St Vincent de Paul Society $25 Mr amp lVlro Leo Parente

$300 Capitell Mr amp Mrs Richard Dr amp Mrs ~p Sibilll

Charles H McGrath Joan

Mr amp Mrs Larry Newman Sproul lllr amp Mrs Thomas ~$100 Loughlin Mr amp Mrs William Mr amp Mm GeorgeM~Doane Beale amp Ames E Donovan Mr amp lVlm Joseph FalDtoo

$50 Mr amp Mrs Harry SylvesterMr amp Mrs Frank J Dolan Mr amp Mrs Charles Flynn lltlr $25

A Friend Mrs Rockina CaftDoMr amp Mrs Irving Morrissey amp Mrs~ Marshall Field Mr amp amp Family Mr amp Mrs JOQD KmampJ R ~eyburn Mrs Robertmiddot Ryan Vetorlno Mr amp MrS Victor Narciso Mr IIMr amp Mrs John Hart Bros Ipc Fruitland

Scudder amp Taylor Oil Inc CarreiM Florist Mrs John Kinsley Dr amp Mrs Francis ONeil Ilflr amp Moo Wllliam ~

Captains Table Mr lie Mrs John Currivan Mr Bishop Tyler General Assem- McznsfieRdl Mrs Alfred Kuplast Mrs ~

My garet Jordan Mrs Grace Duma Charles J Ardito 8l MARY Mr amp Mrs Fred Taylor Josepla

$ltamp0 $150 E Donovan Jmiddotr Mr amp Mramp W tel Alfieri Catholic Youth Organization st VinceJntt de Paul Society

shy-

SENDYOUR GnJFT TO bull i l j middotcrmiddotmiddot

The Rig Rever~ Edward TO~MeiJramiddot The IUght Reverehd RiJYlIWnd T CQnsidiRf lVallonarpfreclor Olt Diocesiul Di~ecto i

366 Fifth Avenue 368 North MalnSteet f(eWYork New Yo~k ioooi Fall River Massachuseits027l0 -

1iWJlE ADDRESS

THE sectOClllETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH ~ shy

I

~~ IiUrge Negro La Guidonce Boord ~n K~s~ Cety

KANSAS CJIIIY (NC~-A five-paltish cooperative illl

ner city ministry guided by a Negro lay board has been proposed os a way o~ bridging the gap betWeen the white Catholic CI1urch and the Negro community here in Misouri

A six-person committee headshyed by MrsThelma Work will identify the nee~ of the lComshymunity-Catholic or not-and to propose a structure fur meetshying those needs I

The action came as the result

of a meeting of the Catholie

V ~

Clergy Conference on Inner Oity bullneeds

Father James Lock chairman cited charges of the Black Cathshyolic ClergyCaucus in Detroit in conjunction with the IImnual meeting of the Catholic Clergy Conference on the Interracial Apostolate The Black Caucus statement said the Catholic Church in the United States 1s gtrimarily a white racist insti shytution which is rapidly dying in the black community and to which the black community no longer looks to with hope

On~ Out f li5 The Caucus recommended fha~ Harrison the Bishop Rev William J Hurley Rev DonaiiIll

white priests become supportshy E Messier Rear Rev Cornelu8 F Kiley Rey Robert A ers and learners listening tc McGowan Rev Edmund J Fitzgerald Rev Kevin F TrippNegroes to find out what tbeir lheir assignment~ are Olll page twoneeds are

The Kansas City-St Joseph diocese bas no Negro diocesan priests Ttrore~ DS~th~ Aoee Sl1m~PO rfif~ifflg tedera~ Jb ~~~

We are trying to start the wheels rolling for some kind of

~umlp~JrlMeFrot Nleereg~~rJ fr CmbCBi OW~iff1ychurch structure through which the black people of our diocese can voice opinions and partici shy WASHINGTON (lTC)-SPokesshy ment of public policy ~t Jlorth oommunity-based Social services esnie cultural values of ~hliv

pate in decision making said men for Protestant Catholic and in the Full Employment Act (l(f to meet Human and community country they said are sucll Father Lock Jewish organizations h a V e 1946 which provides for useshy needs Recipients of rondo that work becomes the basis by

backed federal legislation which ful employment opportunities should not conduct sectarian which a persons worth tnFather Dan Howe declared~

We have set up programB would provide one million jobs for all those able willing and programs judged A job not only tends ie i10r the nations unemployed seeking to work n determine an individuals acshygeared to Catholics in our parshy While they acknowledged that

ceptance by society but it alsish whom we have formed rn Their support was given in The Acts emphasis on education passage of this legislation would affects ones attitude abolll~the white mentality Since cl testimony before the House Seshy and training Training s1Mgtuld be no wre-all for the ills ci oneselfbest we are having contact lect Subcommittee on Iabor be open-ended so that the posshy poverty in America the spokesshy

with only about 2000 people out Studies have shown that unshywhi~ is holding hearings on sibility of permanent full-time men said that any attempt to of the 50000 in our area we the Guaranteed Employment employment beyond fIDe presshy combat poverty must provide employed persons have a ve~

can presume that the activities Act of 1968 ent situation is a reality Trainshy meaningful jobs low level of self-esteem anell we have structed as being our that this attitude tends to pro-ing programs of this ~Testifying were Father JohnChristian program of service do vide a self-fulfilling prophesrshould include basic educationMcCarthy assistant director ofnot reflect or reach black thinkshy MO~~U[ij] ~lW] ~O~S since it then becomes more dif~counseling and opportunities tothe Social Action Departmenting ficult to find or hold a joblearn about appearance manshy

E~GJHlll O]RDAllNJEID FOR IllmCJESJE Bishop Qgtnnolly m-dained eight deacons ro the priesthood for service in the Diocese 21t ceremonies oonducted at St Marys Cathedral Fall River Front Rev Edward E Correia Rev George Eo

We need a board of black of the U S Catholic Confershy OrJi1 AA~jjo Foreg[uGagement of income health IImdence Dr Grover Bagby of thelaymen to tell us what the pe0shy NEW YORK (NC)-Answershyother factors affecting personalDepartment of Social Justice ofple want to help change the well-being and development fog an appeal from the Ceylonthe National Council oftone to establish priorities government now fighting a mashyChurches and Rabbi Richard GFather Howe noted there are lWven fl Sellf-lEs~(()nim laria epidemic threatening 16Hirsch director of the Religiousapproximately 9000 Negro million persons the catholicAction Center of the Union of Involvement of private nonshyCatholics on the books but Medical Mission Board nere sentAmencan Hebrew Congrega- profit organizations Such Oll shynot necessarily active in Kansas by air Ifreight 364000 anti-mashytions - ganizations they said will c0shyCity out of a total Negro popu- laria tablets to Colombo Ceyshyoperate with the development ~lation of about 130000 They specifically suppoit4d lons seaport-capital The shipshyHe said that although the three provisions in the bill ment valued at $10746 conshy

structure of the lay board is yet Creation of an Office of Guarshy (cll)f AdldJrell$$ sisted of tablets for both ooults ro be determined it is the conshy anteed Employnient Opportushy and ~hildren sensus of 20 priests and laity at 1r~~regy Meefrolilregnity l8 a eontinued develop Earlier the CMMB respondingthe meeting that at least half

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-Theshythe lay members would be un- oro a plea for help from Indoneshyology must revolutionize it shyder 25 since the young people ~1JJlhJreg~ WODil$ [Q)~f sian authorities shipped 220shyself John Cogley former reshyare the thought-leaders in the 520 anti-malaria tablets ~aluedligion editor of the New Yorkblack community ~ial ~fit1hvllsW Times told the national convenshy at $7306

NeCeSS31lY ApPll03Cln SCOTCH PLAINS (NC) shytion of the College Theology so-A Negro lawyer Leonara BrotherHarold Woods a teacher The Catholic Medical Mission ciety IN the University m- SainHughes told the meeting at Union Catholic High School Board for 40 years has beenmiddot IfmiddotranciscoOne thlng is clear The clos- here in New Jersey has won a oonducting a worldwide mercy

Ing of any Catholic institution months delay to contest lim Cogley DOW a staff member cl program shipping medicines or cut-back in the inner-city order to report to his New York the Center for the Study m Deshy drugs bandages and various says one thing to Negroes We draft board for induction into mocratic Institutions Santa Barshy other hospital supplies and dont want you to be CathoUcs ~e Airmed Fo~ equipment to some 1000 misshybara Cal and editor of the Censhy

Father Vince~t Lovett dir~ BrOther B8rold la member of ter magazine tlgtld delegates that sion hospitals 4000 dispensaries tor of the new Diocesan Social theology must lead- rather than and clinics in developingAction office saidmiddot middotthe Marist BrotheJS had been eoUJlltriesfollow usemiddotits treasureS ratheT It seems to me we a- 4o_1krecJassified ll-A and Cllldered to than hoard them Liberatemiddot it shying about setting up something after rewmfug biB draft eard 011 self from its own prison ~ c0nshylike II couotywith II state goy- April 19 as a protem agaiDst the formity fear imd be dead Dbshyernment - a regional ministry U4o- actionism of th~ pastwithin tile diocese Be said the war VBallam

S~aking on The image off

WI report for Induction em April M

approach seems not so much lim The 22-year-old teachers ease ideal as lh necessitymiddot bas been taken up by the Amer-o Man as Citizenmiddot Cogley said

iean CDvil Uberties Union that the change in the religlO1Ul Which ealled middottbeboardll action mans self-image and the change

Silent Meditation in reclassifying him ~ new in the image of politleal man are TRENJON ~NC)-A bID pr0shy height of wegality Tbe ACLU not unrealated The image of a

viding for a period of silent said Brother Harolds religious free man redeemed from every meditation each day by students status had not collmged since he form of spiritual servitude and attending public schools was WIlI3 originally classified ~D subjugation he said b triumphshyintroduced in the New Jersey and that he hGd DOt ilrlterfered ing over the old image of eccleshyState Legislature by Assembly with the ndministratlon of the sia9Ucal man-a passive creature Speaker Albert B Smitlll 3eleet1ve ~ BWolltem eOOject ~ the Will ca ~thero

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THE At~~C~_ 15 Th M 231968 urs ~y World Communication Day CtmMG(f~ A~V[JK~$ObsecteWGR1CCe on S~ndl~w O[fi) ~copy~o~ A~fDcopy[jf)

WASHINGION (NC)-In response to an appeal by NEW ORLEANS (NC)-ArchshyPope Paul VI to the universal Ohurch the Church in the bishop PhHip M Hannan asshyUnited States will observe the second World Communicashy serted here As far as I am tions Day on Sunday May 26 The National Conference of concerned segregation in the

Church is dead We are past the Catholic Bishops awroved time for statements Now is thefor Motion Pictures and Bishoplast November the observshy time for actionClarence J Issenmann of Cleveshynnc of World Communicashy Tile archQishop of New Orshy

tions Day in this country on USCC Press Department land episcopal chairman of the

leans told delegates at an diocesan and parish levels ampnd archdiocesan conference on st) shy

members of the U S Bishops cial action I assure you we are going forwardCommittee for Social Commu- Senate Rev1ltews

nications have sent to individ- He outlined programs fe ual Ordinaries throughout the Continued from Page One beMer education for adequate country a cOpy of the Prayer lains to be assigned on a funmiddot housing and for recognition of of the Faithful for that Sunday time basis and that the needs the inherent digni ty of all men and a ooP1 of the Holy ~athers of the sick were being adequateshy The Church is exerting itll message issued earlier this ly met under the present arshy influence in every way to assistmonth ran~ement the poorest he said If we

It is recommended that the 3 Recommendations on salshy follow Christ we must begillilobservance in this country ary adjustments Taken into aeshy with the pOor even if thishave both religious and non- count _by Bishop in his direcshy means asking others to wait 0religious aspects The former tives for Aug I 1967 little longerwould highlight a Mass with 4 Meetings open to all clergy Anyone can live poor the

appropriate sermon in the 00- Bishop approved archbishop said The key thingthedral or some convenient 5 Extension of Synod prepshy is dignity This does not mean church to which executives aration time Bishop approved that this dignity is recognized Wld employes of communica- 6 Secretary to be Treasurer by a dole or a handout or eveD tions media would be specially and Senate budget Bishop apshy preferential treatment We are invited proved confusing issues when we talk

The non-religious asp e c t 7 ChOice of other Prayers of of dignity as if it can be bought would feature news conferences the Faithful Bishop approved or paid for he said articles in the press and radio 8 Referral of matters to Passhy - I am totally for equal oppollaand TV interviews and proshy tunity in jobs and for adequate

housing not just open housincgrams toral Council Bishop approved

In his message to the Church 9 Creation of Clergy Person-In human dignity everyone hasPope Paul invited Catholics to Del Board Bishop approved an equal right to education anell

consider the significance of 1() Clergy retirement policy to culture he declaredthe changes that are taking with Bishop accepting ormiddot not

AWARDS CEREMONIES At the annual Awards Day for hospital personnel at St Annes Hospital Fall River Manuel Benevides 38 years of service receives his award while Bertha Janson 42 years of service awaits her presshyentation from trustees Harold K Hudner left and Arthui Guimond right

place in this field (communica- according to diocesan ll1eed tions) under our very eyes and Bishop approved to ponder the serious responsi- 11 In-service training tor bJlities that theSe imply for one newly-ordained priests Bishop and all approved

Clamor forAttentlo~ 12 Various diocesan diredors Until recently the Holy to recommend men for middotpart shy

Father pointed out many did time or full-time further study not have anything more to Btim- Bishojgtmiddot approved 1IIate their inflection than vague 13 Full participation by memories of what they learned Catholics in middotYMCAyWCA ot school or in the family and programs Bishop aPlgtrov~ What they beard in their envi- 14 Rotation among religious ronment eomniunities of their represen-

Now however with the echo Uitives on Senate Bishop ap- r the press motion pictures proved radio and television clamoring 15 Clergy to recommend men lor attention new h~riZons oPenJor episcopacy Bishop applloved wide before them llIndmiddot they are 16 Lay Personnel pension ttuned to the throbbing life of plan study Bishop approved the ~niverse

Who will not rejoice at this 17 Adjustmentin diocesan progress Do we not 1111 see in assessments Bishop approved It a roadmiddotdestined by Providence 18 Clergy retirement study for the advance of themiddot whole Bishop approved of mankind There is room for 19 Bishop announced through all hopes if man learns to mas- Senate exchange of facultieS ter these techniques but every- between Diocese of Fall River thing can be lost if he shirks his and Providence responsibilities Various commfttees have made

Members of the bishops com- studies to implement some of mittee signing the letter to the these considerations Ordinaries included Auxiliarymiddot Senate representatives have Bishop Gerald V McDevitt of participated on a regional and Philadelphia episcopal moder- national basis regarding a nashyator of the United States Catb- tional organization of priests olic Conference Bureau of In- and its constitution and activity formation Bishop John A Donshyovan of Toledo episcopal chairshyman of the National Catholic Cursillo for Men Office for Radio and Television Bishop Christopher J Weldon Starts Tonightshyof Springfield episcopai chairshy

A mens ~ursillo win ~ginman of the Bishops qo~ttee tonight at La Salette C~nter of Christian Livingmiddot At~leboro Dishy

Delegate Recives rectors will be William Barnes of Marion and Rev GilesHonorary Degree Genest middotMS of the center

HONOLULU (NC) ~ Archshy Allmiddot eursillistas are invited to bishop Luigi RaimondiApostolicmiddotmiddot the firstmiddot anniversary of ultleya Delegate in the Unikld States middotmeetingsmiddotin the Fall River area baS received an honorary deshy at 745 Wednesday night May laquoree froIn Charninade College 29 at Sacred Hearts Academy here the only Catholic eollege Prospect Street Fall River A lID the state of Hawaii concelebrated Mass will be folshy In an Dterview with the Hashy lowed by a song session social

waUmiddotCatholic Herald ArehlSishop bour and refreshments Baimondi ~pressed tolerance Ul1reya meetings are schedshylor student activism in the Unishy uled in Attleboro oat Jettes ted States middotIltating Students Funeral Home Friday May 11 8ft adive everywhere Youth Monday May 27 Monday June ill UyiDg find its WBY aoc1 2 Friday June 14 and FridayecJar patterns of tbougbt IlBd June 21 eetioD e DOt lIS set asin pre A eursillo for W4)men is scbedshy paerationfl Cbolees were 1IIed for August and further inshy

-e fiSHthen tbin ~ tit formation is obtainable inla ~ -e LeSalleUe Centerbull --

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Why spend ~ours stooping scrubbing and scouring to clean your oven Why not grad- uate to a modern flarve1ess range bullbull with anoven that cleans itself electrically Its so

easy to use Set the controls and-zingo The oven cleans Itself (And drip pans) All you dois whisk awaya IIttie pOwder

- YOUll notice toothat a flamelessmiddot range keeps your kitchen clean cool a~d ~omshyfortable And because electric cookmg IS so automatic YOUll cook with pleasure So see

yOur appliance dealer about aflameless elecshy

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FAll RIVER ~l~CTRIC LIGHT COMPANY

o

mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 23 196816 I

Mafttl[p)Dsellt $50 Raymond L W Benoit

$5BTANJrlllONY Jos~ph A Tully William J

$300 OLearY Mr ampMrs Alfred Baty ltlJbades McGowan Mr amp Mrs Fred Harney

$100 Mr amp Mrs Michael C ODonshyaarence G Verdi nell Mr amp Mrs ThomaS P Per~ lIugene F Phelan kins Mr amp Mrs John Kozlowski

$15 mosampry Altar Society

$66 Buzzard$ B~y I

iusan A McGowan ST MAJuiAR]ampTWilliam Keane

$SOshy$55 A Friendllohn P Delaney

$6$40 lIlr amp Mrs Thomas Pina

~h G Perry $25$35

Mr amp Mrs Edwin PaytonlInmothy Manning )l amp Mrs John KarlJfudge E C Horrocks J~

$30 Mr amp Mrs Edwin N Rose Wareham Lodge of Elks 15044bullbull Clayton King

Mr amp Mrs David Fannon$~

Mr amp Mrs John OCOnnellJames Downey Romeo Bedarql William Delaneyhnes H Gifford Mary M Chad Mr amp Mrs James Lopes

Wick George Smith Jr Antone Mr amp Mrs Louis Fougereshy-es Edmund Perry $25 Mr amp Mrs Armand Bedard

Mr amp Mrs Michael DelIsMark H McIntyre Teree JeminaBlossom Joseph Farley Robert Mr amp Mrs William BennettGIngras Real Breton Mr amp MrsLouis Eacobaoct

Jobn Tarvis Francis ODri9shyu Holy Nam~ Society Paull Glennon Joseph Zychowicz Central -VUlageIIaomas Renahan Richard SmiUll

ST JOHN THE BAPTIBJl

~50 bullNorth Dighton Mr amp Mrs John DeNadal

ST JOSEPH nolt Rev John P Hogan$156

IlR Vincent de Paul $75 Dr Peter F Piccinini$50

$25amp11 Name Society Florence I Bessette MrSt Josephs Womens Guild

$35 Mrs John J Ardagh Jr llim Raymond Williamsbull amp Mrs Joseph MWTaJ

Me amp Mrs Daniel TebreiN$30 J Jl)r amp Mrs William AcIamI Mr amp Mrs Robert Albanese

o Iohn W Perreira$5 Ch(ltham

Mr amp Mrs Joseph C Amarat 1lIJr amp Mrs Edward M Berobe HOLY ~EJI)EIEMEamp

bullbull amp Mrs Arthur A Ennes Mr $101 A Mm William Johnson Rose Pi Assqc of the SacredHea~ Mello $lOet

Mr amp Mrs Harold Mendoza Mr amp Mrs Robert Han lIffr amp Mrs Bruce Murph) Mr Col amp Mrs John McCa~ bull Mrs Robert Secatore $50

Mrs James Bell Jr St Vincent de Paul Sodeq Mr amp Mrs John J Cavanaup

IIMMACULATE CONCBPJIl[ON $30 $DOO A- Friend

Ambonymous $2-5 $a Chatham Trust Co Mr af

Anonymous MrS E Joseph Geller Dr~ amp MIlII Robert Harned A Friend (~)

Anonymous $75

Mr amp Mrs William Kent Mr amp Mrs Paul reF~vre Mr lIi$it

- Mrs~ Richard Sylva Mr amp MmHelen P Derby Patrick SullivanMr amp Mn Aibert Giordano

A Friend Mr amp Mrs Frank Dresseli Mr amp Mrs Philip S1iel]oA Friend Mr amp Mrs James Griffin shyAnonymous Mr amp Mrs Frank Wing _ImmaCU1ate Conception MenliI

Club $4G North Attleboro

Mr amp Mrs Raymond ~rgerotl SACRED HEART$35

Mr amp Mrs William Condoo $200 $5 Rev JOuter Lussier

Mr amp Mrs William Buchtman $30 Caesar Cardoza Mr amp Mrs RoT Mr amp MrsJeorge Merewe Howard Immaculate Conception $~ Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Joseph A Jette

Mr amp Mrs Co George Knapp $25 McCarthy Coal Co Mrs Fredshy Mr amp Mrs Paul Dion Mrbull elick H Murphy A Friend Mrs Frederick Fortin LionelL

Martineau Mr amp Mrs~ Philippe Rainville amp Florence

Mr amp Mrs George Beaulieu Sl lWAllUf A Friend

STMA-ElY$50 $150Mr amp Mrs Michael Murphy

Nelson GulskiMr amp Mrs Jose FernandesSIl $75$30 Rev Armando A- AnnunziabMr amp Mrs Thomas J Bryanamp

$50 Eva Morowski

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John HaugMr amp Mrs Roland Roberge Mr amp Mrs John StanfordDavid amp Martha Rocha M Veronica Reilly

Mary Cronin George Yefh Mildred Leary A ~riend

BreWSlfreli $4G Dr amp Mrs Domenie BalJiIe

OUR LADY OF TlIIE CAn $35 o $100 Dr amp Mrs Kenneth AtwiIl lllisBionaries of La saleUe jnr amp Mm JosepiL Dona

MONSIGNOR VI[lELSB

Heads Bishop$ Task force

WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr Aloysius J Welsh of Newark N J a recognized authority in race relations and social aclion work has been named to head the Urban Task Force estabshylished by the U S bishops

Bishop Joseph L Bernardin general secretary of the U S Catholic Conference who anshynounced the monsignors apshypointment said the task force was calhd for by the U S blsbshy

ops at theirmiddot April meeting in SL Louis in their statement on the mational racial crisis The bishshy

ops directed the task foree be established by the USCC Social[ Action Department

In this work he will cooperaW with MsgI George G Higgins director and Father John MeshyCartty assistallt director of the Social Action Department the bishop said

$30 Mr amp Mrs Frederick ThOIpG middotMr amp Mrs Clement Sbarolll

$26 Mr amp Mrs Andtew Boisvert Gertrude Cassi~y

Elizabeth Sheals $25

Mr amp Mrs Daniel J Cava- naugh Mr amp Mrs Raymond Bl~hard Mr~ amp Mrs Robert Brunelli A Friend

Mr amp Mrs Robert Gilmore Mrs James P Reynolds Mr amp Mrs John Donleymiddot Mr amp Mm James Battersby Mr Mn Jlohn bullCollins

Virginia G Robinson

AttRehoro BOLY GHOST

$150 Dr amp Mm LoneJglUl

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$25 Mr amp Mrs Malcolm ~

Mr~ amp Mrs Harry Dowdall Mr amp Mrs RObert Geddes Mr~ I Mrs Frank Pistolese

ST JOlIN $200

In memory of Dn7 hwlbaDcI JIoseph F ODonn~

$100 Mr amp Mrs Raym9nd ENmlIlilll Anonymous Donor Inmemory of GabriGll lYaBltllloshy

alone bull $75 -

Rev Edwarcl A Ra~

Mr amp Mrs John P I4e $50

MaryL Wilhelm Mr amp Mrs J G WaJEll Jlr Mr amp Mrs Franclll Bo Mr Joseph ODonnell1 ~ amp Mrs Ernest ~

$30 m=teanor Robinqmiddot Alice~

ST JOSEPH $25

Counseil Jeanne DAre No 263

ST MARK $50 ~

Edward J Connors Jr $25

William J Roche Jr Joseph Dias Mrs Michael J Croke

ST MARY $50

Holy Name Society of St Mary Knights of Columbus Seekonk

Council Mrs Leland B Smith

$35 Mr amp Mrs Donald Blake

$~O ~r amp Mrs Henry E Woodcome st Marys Womeno Guild

$25 Mr amp Mrs Frank Padykula

Mr amp Mrs Russell J Sumner ST THERESA

$50 Mr amp Mrs Donald Boardman Mr amp Mrs George LeBeau

$30 William Cauley amp Family Mr amp Mrs George Boyd

0 $25 Mr amp Mrs RobeIt Generenl Mr amp MrsRobert St mlaiN

Taunton -HOLY ROSAILY

$30 Mr amp Mrs Russen Woodward stanley Radwansld

$25 Children of Mary Sodality Richard Januse

SACRED HEARi

$50 Mr amp Mrs Joseph S llosamp Mr amp Mrs Vincent BrimleF

$35 Mr amp MnJ Robert MeClellaml

_ S2i Walter Waltman Mr amp Mm

atephen Crosby The ~ Mr amp MrtI William Vaillan-

OOurt Mr amp Mrs Michael Barber

Mrs Margaret Rose llrtr~ bull II Frederick Reams

o

81 JAMES

$U Armand Desautels Tremblay Moving Iii 8tonlge

00mpany

STMABY $100

Dr~ Charles HoYt $60

GeOrge Dion Jr $51

Mr~ amp Mrs Kenneth $50

Mm A Hoffman Dr Normand ~ Mr amp M1lil J McNilmaN ar Dr John Fenton Mr amp Mrs Kicban sm

$36 ~ B Grant

~O Dr EdmWlld Fitzgerald D4niel A J Doyle

$U

Richard Barrington BIizabeCIa dIt Margaret Brady Mr - Mm kmea Bumtl Dr CarsiDbre e-- IlUOCi -Robert J mn JamesD hcige

Mr amp Mra Llocel IaImDee ftlomas Hoye Merrill lliaynard Jmelen amp Catherine McCariIll7

Alice McKenna Ruth MeshyJUona Susan McKenna II

Plan To B~ild

- See Us About ~

lotyCost Financing

WAuREHAM SAVltfGS BANK

WorehaftI falmouth cr J-3800 II 1-3000

Mrs James McMorrow Franeb Mulholland

Mary Mulholland Ma~ Neenan Joseph ODonnell Eveshylyn Rice Agnes amp Joseph Rose

Mrs Joseph Rowley Robert Sullivan J Roger Torme1 Charles H fripp Rita Baker

Mrs James Bennett William Carney John Gonzals James Holmes Mary E McNamara

Dr Thomas~OBrien Cbarleo OConnell Mr amp Mrs Edwarcll OGara Mr amp Mrs John 00 _ Ilfearne MlJI amp Mrs Edward OKeefe

1he Ralph Reckard Famil1 Cecelia F lfi Mary C Sheerin

ST PAUL $150

St Vincent de Paul st Pauh Taunton 0

$100 Rev Cornelius~ltYNem

$50 Mr amp Mrs Edward Roster

$24 Mr amp Mrs John Medas Jr

$25 Mrs Catherine Campbell Mr

amp Mrs Chester Jackman Mr c1i Mrs Richard Silva Mr amp Mrs Leo Leroux Mr Mrs John Steen

Mr amp Mrs Donald Emond Mr Be Mrs Gordon Seekel Mr amp Mrs Charles Welch Mr MllIl Paul Silva

New Bedford HOLY NAME

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John Hallonm Mr amp Mrs Jacob Teser

ST CASIMIR $150

Beltr cutnir Kwiatkowski $109

Atto~ Ferdinand Sowa $25

Mr amp Mrs Joseph FoUrnier The Poczatek Family Mramp M Antbony Rijo Jr Mr Mrs Stanle Scbkk Eve White

I

ST BYACINTB $100 -

Mr Mrs George Vigeallltl $50

st Vincent de Paul ConferenCe Gf Hyacinth Parisb

Tum to Page Seventeen

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for Prompt Delivery amp hoy amp Night ~ice

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SUMY pons Nuns (l)ffi) AifrMdl~$o

Re$M~~e~o trMture D~[freg~UDrru~ WASHINGTON (NC)-Resulto

of a survey of all United States nuns reveals a high ooceptance of post-Vatican II changes anell an eagerness robecome morrc involved in the inner city and poverty apostolates

The B1UVey conducted bythe Conference of Major Superiors of Women dlJring 1966 was the first extensive attempt to assess resources and attitudes of reli shygious communicenties c1 women and their memberll in the United States

The JPecific coal of the surshyvey was to assess the resources and determine 1ampIe responses that Religious are making and ean make to the invitation 13shysued in Vatican Us Decree on the Renewal of Religious ~e

More than 135000 Sisters parshyticipated in the survey respondshying to 649 questionnaire items covering religious beliefs atti shytudes toward change edu~shy

tional background present ocshycupation and future plans comshymunity life and proposals for future ohange

Results were processed by 00 Sister-sociologists across the country with the use of comshyputers

llleason for lIAlavnng The survey showed 1827 oil

the 175000 U S Sisters-107 per cent-left religious life durshying 1966 Of those Sisters only 869 had taken final vows In an interview with the NC News Servicemiddota spokesman for the Conference of Major Superiors of Women (CMSW) said most Sisters who have remained feel that a major reason for the inshy

ltereased number of Sisters leavshymg religious life is an increased ~penness to the idea within the lfcligious community

She said that the increased fucus on personal development has caused many Sisters to see that they are not suited to the religious life and that they will find areater personal fulfillment elsewhere

Statistics on be division of labor among U S Sisters show 72 per cent are teachers eight per cent are involved in health work five per cent in catechetshyill~ and missionary work lmd tbr~ per cenmiddott in welfare work

Seventy per cent of the teachshyem ore in elementary school work 195 per cent in high school education and 68 per

eent teach at the college level Of those involved in health care 18 per cent in health administration and 62 per cent in direct care jobs

lEnter New lFienlll1s The survey showed Sisters

have a strong desire to become involved in adult education inshyner city work pre-school teachshying and other s~ial work and to have greater contact with their local community Nuns expressed eagnerness to enter fieldc where few Sisters are now working In 1966 13 per cent ot U S Sisters were engaged in adult education 82 pel cent in speshycial education 31 per cent in poverty work and 06 per cent in migrant education The surshyvey indicafes that there will be a dramatic change in these figures in the next few years

Father Considine Leaves PC$tr Continued fC0m Page One

man of the U S Bishops Comshymittee for Latin America

Bishop Bernardin prai~ed the work of Father Considine in the Latin America Bureau noting

iota progress under his direction since its inauguration in 1960

It has been a labor of love for Father Considine he saici whose long standing interest in the people of Latin America and of other developing areaa is well known

Maryknon Father Considine will return

to his writing and teaching asshymgnments at Maryknoll Ossinshy

lng N Y where he had served as publications director before becoming director of the IAiltin

America Bureau He holds editorial and advishy

lOry posts with several internashytional organizations and servell DS a member of the Council OIl

Foreign Relations He was amp

member of the National Advishysory Council of the Peace Corps from 1961 to 1966 He also founded and directed Fides Inshyternational Service in Rome an Information and research unit of

the Holy See He was born Oct 9 1897 C1shy

1-

~ATIlGR CONSIDINE

da1ned in 1923 and received II

licentiate in sacred theology from the Catholic University of America in 1924 He has reshyceived honorary degrees from Fordham University Manhatshytsnville St John University St Benedicts Atchison and is the author of 10 books on Latin America Asia and Africa and hall edited several others

L9ng-Range

Father Considine Sllid that he IlIaW the Latin America Bureau as set for the proseution ~ tl

vigorous nation-wide program 10 serve our Latin American eonfreres for the next- generashytion through the year 2000 -and into ~ 21st century He felt lIlllch 11 long-range view was necessarJ because at stake are important socio-religious adshyVDnces among hundreds of milshyHons cd people Latin Americas leaders need time for these advances

Be pointed out thatsome of the best Church leadership tbroughout the Catholic world today is found in Latin AmershyICD In turn he noted our U S bi~hops are quietly acceptshying international responsibiliti~s

as never before Father Considine said that the

program of the U S Bishops Committee for Latin Americn ~ablishes the heavy day-to-day work of the Latin America Bureau

Jgtersonnel Father Considine said that

llIODle 60 per cent of all U S apOstolic personnel overseas throughout the world works in Latin America with more Ulan 600 Latin American parishes served by U S priests Major Superiors of women ha~e 2500 Sisters in Latin America PAVLA has put more than 800 laymen there for three-year terms and U S bishops hnv~

more than 300 priests working in Latin America Annual fundshying for Latin Amerietl by U S Catholics ~~ $1f) millioll

SJJREET SCENE This was a busy street scene in the nations capital at the encampment of the Poor Peoples Campaign near the Washington monument More than 100~OOO- protestors are expected to be in Washington for Memorial Day NC Photo

OUlll lLAIDY OlF ll1HI1amp

ASS1lJMJgtJlJlON $26

Clara Rose amp Family $25

Mr amp-Mrs Jose F Cruz St Martin de Porres G~

Mi CARMEL $100

In memory of Mr amp Mrs J~ ilino Simoes

Rev Antonio P Pinto middotCM $75

Rev Azitonio P Pinto em $60

Mary i Ltuiz $50

Mr amp lVIrs Albino daSilv8 1IIt Carmel Womans Club

$30 Manuel Bettencourt Mr amp Mrs Kenneth lltinu

John Rodrigues $26

Olivia M Luiz $25

Cecelia Bettencourt CbildYeli of Mary Mt Carmel ~ouft

Units James Perry Mr amp lnl Manuel G Souza Jr

Mr amp Mrs Arthur Caetano Mr amp Mrs Charles Frate Mramp Mrs Lauran Silva

OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HE]P

~26

Mrs Amelia E Bariteau $25

Dr amp Mrs Francis Green

OURLADY OFPU~GATOB~ l)1I00

In memory of Alex J Ka1He from Cltpe Coo Sportswear ~

lnc Fairhaven Lumber Co

$30 Atty George R Morad euroJ

Atty ~e E Morad $25

Josephine David 1bl mlE1lllllOllY of George A EI-Hillow Mr ampgt Mra ~rge JThomas Mr amp IIIlm Hykel G Simon

ST KIlldAN nSO

Rev WilMeT J Boekley

U~~ amp Wmeentde PaW ~

~ iWa1 1kntley

$2S AlmgeAo OH1feira

SAClllIampDlHlJEAlltT $25

Alexander Caruso

c S11 JAMES

$55 rulllbull amp lVIrs Francis O Quinn

$50 lilred Kelley

$40 William OMalley

~1 A Friend

$3~

Mr amp Mrs Jr Hugh Barry $25

Mr amp Mrs Andrew ONeil Mr 8 Mrs Robert Arnett

ST JOSEPH

$450 sa Josephs Church Societies

$70 Mr amp Mrs Maurice Dansereau

1130 II Mr amp Mrs Luigi Fiano lk Fmniy

125 Mr amp Mrs Thomas Weaver MI amp Mm Maurice Lamonshy

tagne Mrbull Mrs Raymond Rondel1

ST TBERIESA $100

Eugene Lemieux

Sturtevant 6 Hook lEst 1897

Bude~s Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New ~dforcJ

996-5661

THE ANCHOR- ~ 7 lfhuvs May 23 1968

~regreg [copy~G~ ~O~

Oa1l ~MOO~ []M~Orru NEWARK (NC)-A charge (l(

apparent ~racial discriminatiom in the assignment of tenants 00 public housing here is Oontainoo in s report issued by the New Jersey Advisory Committee 00 the U S Commission em CiWl Rights

It said the Newark Housing Authority follows a policy ef permitting people applying fOlr placement in public housin~ projects to choose the project tm whieh they want to live

lit said this policy has ~

llributed to the segregation Cl1I public housing and recomshymended that t1he policy 00 abandoned in favor of first-come first-serVed basis

The report noted that Q01l1li vast housing projects nre locatell in Newarks Central Ward-tho scene of widespread noting D year ago and of two massiv~ firo disasters this spring-and tll~

they are more thanSO Negf~ ~ccupied

It further charged that them Js U a disparity in maintenanceo between the predominantly N~

gro and the rgtredominantly whi~

projects a complaint lIiTegNgt leadership has frequently medea

It termed living conditiom b the Central Ward projects opshypressive and that the proj~cto

are JIOor)y designed llt recomshymeld~d that additionaI ~ev areas for young children ~Gl

meeting places for odww ~ teenagers be provided

Higher ~arnings

ON YOUR SAVINGS Per Annum

I W Ask abow

INVESTMEIlaquo

SAVINGS

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$IlFm - Savings insu~ed safe IIlyJ liII ClEerny of the US Government

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Assets over $41ooo0llC

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of F~L~ RIVER shy~---__-------------~~~~ First Federal saYIngs bull Loan At ~

1 Borth Main St Fall llliTe1 Ibu ~ ~ Ii 02722 P1Imle 674-4001 ~ ~ ~ke llpplicatlOll oJ phone t1 fOOl wldl ~ o ~ o 0 IlllIivithllll Aceoullt 0 Jont Ac4cwot f)

PIlllse Cl3len II SllVings llCCOUCt blcelaquol

o eAomelamp) = ~ 0 ~ Address 0 ~ l 0 clleck In the amount of e--- ~ ~ 0 ~ _~___~~~_~uuJ

SPECIAL RATES FOR Schoo~ Outings and Picnics

amfACi MANAGERI - UNCOLN PARK 999-6984 636-2744

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs May 23196~

The Parish Parade OUR LADY OF ANGELS SACRED HEART WALL RIVER NORTH ATTLEBORO

Altar bOys willsponsor a cake The CCD program will be lJ81e Sunday May 26 following canonically established Friday Iill1 Masses June 21 the feast of the Sacred

Masses today the feast of the Heart The program will include Ascerision will be at 7 and 9 a 730 evening Mass followed AM and -1215 4 5 and 7 PM by proclamation and reception Confessions will be heard be- of CCD members and a social ~re each Mass hour

The Summer Mass schedule CCD students in grades 6 to will begin Sunday June 2 with 12 will attend a folk Mass and Masses from 6 to noon on the sing-out at La Salefte Shrine hour Monday night May 27 Tnose

Monday May 27 through Fri- participating will leave the ooy May 31 there will be church school yard at 645 and will be services at 7 each evening The returned at 930 living rosary will be sponsored Confirmation ceremonies will by the Holy Rosary Sodality be ~ld at 730 Sunday night Monday night the Council of May 26 Catholic Women on Tuesday ther societies on Wednesday and Thlusday and the Children New Bedford ~ M~~ on lfrIday

ST MARY HOLY NAME $25iALL RIVER Mr amp Mrs Roger Goyette

Contemporary music will acshy The Shea Family company the 1115 Mass Sunday Mrs Vivian Wegrzyniakmorning May 26

New CYO officers are Robert ST LAWRENCE amplois president Paul Durin $200 rice-president Polly Rockett Dr amp Mrs Stanley Koczera eecretary-treasurer A Friend

$125 OUR LADY OF FATIMA Dr amp Mrs Robert Srnan sWANSEA $106

The Womens Guild will hold William E King Its annual penny sale at 730 $100

Monday night May 27 in the Dr amp Mrs William Walsh ehurch hall on Gardners Neck $75 lRoad Rev William F OConnell

A Penny Sale will be held Dr amp Mrs James Bolton MondaYMay 27 at 730 in the $60 dlurch hall A Friend

$50 IMMACULATE CONClEPlIION Teremiddotsa Ruth amp John HarneyNEW BEDFORD Victor T Kondi

Parisnioners will celebrate John L Powell rthe feast of Santo Ohristo this Loretta Lamarre Sunday with a roast beef dinner $45 served from noon to 2 with Mrs Mary B Wheatoil

tickets available at the door $40 lRefreshments and entertainment Mr amp Mrs John Connor will be on the afternoon and Mr amp Mrs Thomas J Longevening program $35

A procession and auction will Mr amp Mrs James M Kearneyfollow the dinner with various Mrmiddot amp Mrs Leo St Aubin Holy Name Society units parti shy $30 cipating in the procession Mr amp Mrs Albert Anderson

Mr amp Mrs Joseph Griffin OUR LADY OF V()T(RY Mr amp Mrs Walter L9veridgeeENTERVILLE Mr camp Mrs Myron Tripp

New officers of the Womens $28amptiild are Mrs John J Pendershy Patricia Connor ~st pre~ident MrS James Murshy $26 phy and Mrs John McBarron Mr amp Mrs Thomas SullivanVoice-president Mrs George Mr amp Mrs Charles BerryReale recording secretary Mrs $25 Richard Griffith treasurer Mr amp Mrs Robert Bedard

A Communion dinner at Mr amp Mrs Albert McMulleneummaquid Inn will follow Mr amp Mrs Theodore J CalnanlB30 Mass Monday night June Mr amp Mrs Alfred Couto Mr amproo Mrs Gilbert Noonan of Falshy Mrs Manuel Guerreira Josephmouth will speak Reservations P Mullen should be made with Mrs Edshy Agnes Proctor Mr amp Misward Welch or Mrs- Stephen Joseph Porter Mr amp MrsOBrien Jr by Thursday June 6 James Ryan Mr amp Mrs Paul

saunders ST THERESA Mr amp Mrs Merton WalkerSOUTH ATTLEBORO Mr amp Mrs John F SullivanMiss Patricia Makin of the

Diocesan CCD Board spoke at the annual Communion breakshy Fall River fast of the Confraternity of

ST MARYS CATHEDRALChristian Mothers Fourteen $50 new members were received at

Gertrude OLoughlinthe monthly meeting arid new officers were installed by Rev $26

In memory of Caroline CasellaGerard J Chabot moderator $25They include Mrs Patricia Helen Burns Mr amp MrsBiziak president Mrs Georshy

George Johnston Corky Rowgette Vachon vice-president Club Rits OLaughlin FrancisMrs Kathy Lamarre treasurer amp Lena MoranMrs Dolores Leedham and Mrs

Mr amp Mrs Carlton GastallBeverly Sousa secretaries Mrs Raymond Reynolds

~CULATE CONC~ON BLESSED SACRAMENTlAUNTON $200A Spring Social and D~nce Rev Herve Jalbert

for the benefit of the church $50sponsored by the Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Michael Felixand the St Vincent de Paul Soshy $36ciety will be held Friday May Mr amp Mrs Richard Hamel24 from 8 to 12 at Lewis Lodge $30Winthrop Street Route 44 A W Root Beer StandTaunton Refreshments will be served Tickets are $200 per lIIIOLY CROSS person and wiU be available at $50 the door Holy Rosary Sodality

lt

PATRIARCH His Holishyness Vazken I of the Armeshynian (Monophysite) Chu~h which comprises five-milli~n communicants in the Soviet Union Near and Far East and the Americas is visiting in the US He paid a visit to the National Shrine of the

Immaculate Conception whilein the nations capital NC Photo

NOTRE DAME $40

The Anne-Marie MasSe fami17 $35

Conrad N Desmarais $25

Norman J A Belanger Rose D Perron

HOLY ROSARY $30

The DePaola Family $25

Mrs Philomena Germane

~CULATE CONCEPTION $50

A Frie~d $40

Mrs Diolinda Wilson $26

In memory of Charlotte DJicholson

$25 Holy Name Society Knights

of the Altar A Friend MlU7 Whitehead John R Burgess In memory of Daniel R Be

Manuel R Pimental Joseph Francoeur

SACRED HEART $l)O ()

~ Katherine D Adams $75

Mr amp Mrs William J Sullivan $5~

Margaret Morriss M~ry V amp Alice C HarrlngtoD Frederick B McD9nald

$31 Frances Mmiddot Cummings Mary C Cummings

$30 Mr amp Mrs John J HarrlngtOil

$28 Florence M Sullivan

$25 Vincent DAndrea Edward

Leary Mr ~ MrsN J Meyer Mary Louise OSullivan John J Sullivan middotMargaret F Lowney

ST MICHAEL $25

Manuel Rogers amp Sons At~

Manuel M Rezendes Henry Leshytendre ~eonardo Cabeceiras

Gerald Mulrooney A Friend edf Catholic Charities

ST ANNE ft JI08ZIII $30

Mrs Rhea Saurette 101at Vincent de Paul ConferenceIrene Theroux leapt amp Mrs Joseph J OCoDshy$26 nellThe Gauthier Family $25

Mr amp Mrs Reginald lerive

A Friend

Belshy $50

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J OCo nell k

$30 St rosephs Mens Club

ST ANTH()NY $25 OF THE DESERT Mr amp Mrs John L Mercer

$100 Mr amp Mrs Daniel W OCoDoshyChor Bishop Joseph Eid nell Dr amp Mrs James J Sabra

$25 SANTO CHRiSTO Rev Kenneth A Michael Mrs August Badway $50

ST ANTHONY OF PADUA $125

Rev Josephmiddot M Ferreira $100

Atty amp Mrs Milton R Silva

StVincent de Paul Society $30

Rev Ernesto R Borges $26

Mr amp Mrs Alfred 1 Cam~ $25

$50 Franco Family Singersmiddot

$25 Mrs Sofia Pacheco Antonio T Cabral

Mary amp Beatrice Costa~ SilD

CnristO Credit Union Manuel Medeiros Laureano Silva

AFriendFrank B Olivei

YDUR SONTHE PRIEST

HI HOLY PATHERS MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL DMURDH

A FUTURE

PRIEST NEEDS

bull SOMEONES HELP

TRAiN ASfSTER

Tau

HUNGER CANT

WAIT

Deai MonBr~orNolam

Please

return couponwith your

offering

Have you ever wished you had a son a priest Now you can hlilve a priest of your own-and ahare forever In all the good he does _ _ Throughout the Near East this month grateful bishops ara ordainlng new priests trained by people like youbullbullbullbull Their own families are toe poor to support them In training but good catholics In America adopted these semIshynarians encouraged them all the way to ordinashytionbullbullbullbull Insome Inspiring cases this support was given at personal sacrifice How can youbegln7 Write to us now Well ~end you the name of ~ young seminarian who needs you and he will write to you Make the payments for his training to suit your convenlence ($850 a month or $100 a year or the total $600 all at once) Join your sacrifices to his and at every Sacrifice of the Mass he will always remember who made It possible

4

Native Sisters In our 18 developingcountries are teaching children of the poor preparing them for First Communion giving medical care to leplrs cal)cer sufferers the aging A SisterS training Ialts two years costs $1250 a month $150 a year or $300 altogetherbullbullbullbull Well send you the name of a Sister you can train as soon as we receive your first payment She will pray for you and write toyou

n An9 day now you may receive a letter contalnn the Holy Fathers appeal for the forgotten Arab refugees-l4 million people without a country bullbullbull most of them destitute bullbullbull more thari half of them childrenbullbullbullbull By trelnlng these children foi middotfuture selfsufflcel]cy we can help brln peace and new selfmiddothelp to the Holy Land atlll divided by warbullbullbullbull But why walt for your mal Hunger cant walt Neither can peace Send your amplIft now in any amount ($500 $200 $100 $75 $50 $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 $2 $1) and the Holy Fathercan put It to work right away Qril1 $10 wlllleed family for a monthl -----~-~---~~---~-IlNCL08ID PLllAIl PIND $_ c_O~__ rFOR _

NAMI ___~

8TRIU ~~=

OlTt ~_eTATIl_lrIp OODII-

NIAll lAST WIILFAAI ASSaDIATtOrlaquo

NEAR EAST MISSIONS J

MSGR JOHN ClI NOLAN Natlonal5ecretary Write CATHOLIO NIlAR EAST WeLFARE Assoo ~30 Madson Avenue New York NY OOU telephonel 212vtJkon 6middot5840

CATHaLiD

19 DiJoridrrien Ere State r ourlitei

SChoelbOY leag~~Wmrn~regr~ Stii~Pretty Mu~h sampu [j)(Q)Mbt

By PETIm BARJrEK Nmon BitIh ~h

The gehooboy ba8ebaD mmpaignis cllNimatieaDy near- Inlaquo the climax of another spirited seasoo With approxishymately a week of competitioo Nllllaining oontlmdmg teams Me stmggling to keep their pennanf oopes alive while Wtling for the right to rep-JIe8eDt their ll e s pee t i v e leaguesin the nnand-eomin

-y- shy

Btate tournament The Eastshyem Massachusetts ehampionahip

baseball tournamen+ ClIffiMftl-~

tine of the wurney is tiPoDOOred bythe

II a II sac h u~_ lt Iietts Secondary

SChool Princishypals Association bull Par tie i p 8 t _ ing schools have bElen divided i IIl tot h r e e d3ses - A B and C---llccord- Peter iDg to leagues Blrtek r

and comparable independent teams Action tn all three clasampe3 starts Saturday June L

In addition to the three divishyidon3 the baseball tourney amp1shyem radically JIrom the popular

Two Spots for Both BCl (IDnd Marry Five Bristol County League Howard Ferguson which teams

teams Gre still in contention for will represent the circuit in the tourney play ebampionship event

At this writing Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Stang SpaltamJ of Qartmouth who hold a lllim ene-game edge over their rivals are a solid choice to annex one of the two berths to be filled bi BCL teams The second spot 18 un literally up for grabs

Bishop Feehan High of Attieshyboro which led the circuit untll last week Durfee High of Fan River Attleboro and Taunton lire in close pursuit middotof Stang hoping tomiddot overcome the Sparshytans or at least lInish in the league runner-up berth Both the first and second place finshyishers will8utomatically qualify

If either fim OX second place II decided by Monday May 21 league officials w~ have to DOUty the tournament Director

No~tons Lancers in Need cf Help I h e Narragansett league Class B - Southem

whkh got a head start on the its Iud Old Colony champ ft NaITlIlshyv er area Clrcu conc es gansett runner-upleague play today First place

middot Somerset travels to New Bed- Narragansett champ ~ Olcll ford to meet Holy Family High Colony runner-up Case High of Swansea entell-middotmiddot South Shore champ VB Hockshytains Dighton-Rehoboth West- omock runner-up port hoss Msgr Prevost High Hockomock cpamp vs South

middotof Fall River and Dima]l Voce- ShQre runner-up tional nlso of Fall River will 0I Am f N rth E stobe t Se k Iver es 0 0 a n a e o~k

Entering the final week of ac-middot middot tion Somerset and seekonk are in the top two spots in tbe 8tanding They loom the more likely to corral Class B tourney berths But DightOn-Rehoboth Case and Westwrt trail the sec ODd place club by oIl1yone game If the race ends in II tie ]league officials wlll have ample time to schedule play-off games before the tourney deadline

Pairings for Class Bare

Selecting Union PITTSBURGH (NC)-Twentyshy

five maintenance workers at Duquesne University here in Pennsylvania have left their jobs pending a detell1llnation as to which union will represent the workers The remaining 115 members of the maintenance erew lIlre not involved in the atrike which was called by the 2li who are represented by the tJmted Electrical WorkersUnion

Although it occurs infrequentshyly a team does not have to win Its league to represent its league in tourney eompetition

The Bristol County league champion is slated to play the

bull Bay State League runner-up in first round action with the Bay State champs taking on the County runner-up The winners would then meet in second round play

Pairings for Class A are Class A - Southem

Suburban champ w Middleshy8llX runnerup

Middlesex champ ft Suburshyban runner-up Bay state ehamp VB Bristol runner-up

Bristol champ V8 Bay sta~ runnerup

-Tech lxlsketban competition lllll order to qualifyfor the Tech a team mt1BSt win 70 per cent cd its games but onlythe leagu~ champions ond runner-ups M~ eligible ~r playmiddotiImiddotbasebalL

In both Class A andClass B iitOtalof i6 teams will qualify 1lt7middotmiddotmiddotJiY

for the diamond elimination event~ E~~ Will pai1i~ipate in

the nortlHln division and eight in the southern bracllet The winners in each bracket will meet in the Eastern- Massacilushy

llletts fi~ Preliminary games will be played on June 1 4 and 6 The finals are scheduloo June 8

Class C competition will coIi-BiEt of eight clubs in only one division Titlists in seven smallshyDChooI le1gues and one indeshypendent selected by the tournashy

ment coJiunittee Will comprise the field fur this tliil-d group

and Mansfield 1m the Hockoshymock circuit appear to be out of the running this season

Fo~ Class C schools Its Winmiddot or youre out Only the league champions will play in the championships The winner of the Capeway Conference will meet the Cape and Vineyard champ in opening round play Dennis-YarDlQuth and Sandshywich are the likely opponents

The only other school located within the confines of the diocshyesan territorial limits that has an outside ~hance of qualifying for the tournament is Norton of the Tri-Valley Conference The Lancers however will need some outside help if they are to overcome league leading Millis The Tri-Valley champs will take on the Dual County League champions Defending Class C champ Ashland again leading the Dual Co~nty is heavily favored to repeat both in league ond state competition

NOT A BALL-ITS GUM Yem might get the idea that a pitched ban is lodged in the mask of this young Vancouver BC catcher but it isnt a ball This young ma is trying to prove he is just as efficient behillld the plate as he is at blowing bubble gum NC ~middothoto

Stresses Inter~cicdmiddotmiddotPartnership As Solution to Racial Problem

CLEVELAND (NC) - A Nashy world would be better off lr tional ASsociation for Advanceshy iou hadnt gotten involved Jm

ment of Colored People official asserted here interracial part shynership is the key to oolution of the racial problem but it cannot be a partnership dom inated by either race

Dr John A Morrell NAACP assistant nat ion a 1 director speaking at the Cleveland Cathshyltnlic Interracial Councils annual Interracial Justice Awards banshyquet said the nation today is aj an unprecedented crossroads but the interracial way is the democratic part to justice

He spoke in place of Roy Wishydns NAACP national~ director who was with the U S delega- tion at the United Nations con vocation on human rights lin Tehran Iran -

Angry Voices There are angry Negro voiees

raised in protest because develshyopment of opportunity in recent years does not apply to twoshythirds of the Negro population he saidmiddot The kind of jobs they are capable of filling are vanshyishing from the economy he added

But if a fruitful partnership is to continue between the white and Negro the burden of know- ing the truth about Negro hisshytory must be borne by white as well as Negro Dr Morsell said

Vie are all fighting a bitter legacy of generations White people have to know where they stand and why Once you assume the burden of work toward interracial justice you assume the responsibilities be continued

If you are not going to ~

sume them then you and fhe

the first place Informed PariDership

Dr Morsell said a mere sPirit of commitment is not enough to

survive over the hard going Work must be based on a part shynership that is informed intelshyligent understanding and resil shyient he said

The interracial awards were presented to Father Edwan Camille assistant Catholic Charshyities director here and Thom811 C Westropp president of Womshyens Federal Savings and Loan Association

Westropp was cited for his efforts towards opening the

doors of banking and credit 1m the Cleveland area to all ciUshyzens regardless of race creed 011

color while Father CarniDe was cited for his leadership as director of Project Peace (~

irner-city diocesan organizati~ working with the poor mostly Negroes) and for his work as co-chairman of the first tri-faith Greater Cleveland Conference on Religion and Race

ELECTRICAl -Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

SS lPlE1rIEllt amp JgtAIDlj

$103 Womens Club Rose E Sullivan

$50 Joseph P Conaty

$35 Belen M amp William J

De7 $33

Mr amp Mrs James F McMahcm $25

Mrs Margaret Daly amp Mary John Dolan ~illiam Daley amp Mary Esther Mr amp Mrs Stanley M -laniek

~50 In memory of MrsMarga~

W Pow~rs RodneY S DeCecco

$26 Mr amp Mrs John Soula

$25 Edward Healey Mr amp Mrs Michael McCartbiY Mr amp Mrs James Crosson Mrs Gertrude Lomas Mr amp Mrs Norman GagnOOl

ST JOHN TEE BAPTlIS11

$30 St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ampt Jean Baptiste $25

Mr amp Mrs Ovila Caron Henri Demers

In memory of Mr amp lVlrm bullWilliam Sheehan

Open to An PORTLAND (NC)-The seeshy

ond annual Catholic youth conshyvention of the Portland Diocese has opened the convention to all Catholic students of the dioshycese in order to spread the agtOlgto tolate of youth to youth Thll

)faine convention has comprised only students who have takes themiddot youth leadership trainlJnl1 courses

Dont Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH

DO faJse teeth drop slip or wobblo when you talk eat laugh or sneeze Dont be annoyed and embarr1lEsetll lkllh hanl11caps FASTEETH Bamp

e (non-acid) powder to SPr1n~Ikle on your plates keeps false teetb more firmly set Gives confident feel~ Ing Of security and added comfort No gummy gooey taste or feellncr Dentures that 6t are essential to health see your dentist regulorly oet FASTEETH at alll1rug countemJ

o

WYman 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD MASS

IfIIfJltk del1WM

S H~~uO~ Oil

SAVE MONEY 0 OUROILHEATI bull eatt

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

Iritai~ If S)crap SuPPITreg~~5n Acts Of Re~(j[jmlt~oml

LONDON (NC)-It looks as if Britain is at long last glOing to stop suppressing the monasteries-officially that 0

Legal experts sifting through lenturies of forgotten laws clutshyooling the records have found (hat the Suppression of Reli shygious Houses Acts of 1535 and 0039 have never been repealed

They are among 155 statutes weeded out from the statute IJ)ooks between 1239 and 1705middot lmd now to be definitively leshy~aled by a special act of Par-Iliament

These two acts enforced the eosure and pillaging of Catholic monasteries friaries and other religious houses throughout the WINS nsc Chaplain

eountry following King Henry (Captain) Angelo J LitekyVIIIs break with Rome in 1534

assigned to the 199th InfanshyJhey brought vast fortunes On goods property and mog of try Brigade in Vietnam has ell land to the kings favorites been awarded the Distinshyoome of whose families have reshy guished Service Cross forWned their wealth to this day extraordinary heroism SevshyIgnored in Practice

Of course the laws against erely wounded when Viet me Roman Catholic Church Cong ambushed a US infanshyIhave long ago been shelved and try company Ohaplain Lit shyIgnored in practice The reli shy eky braved flying bullets toous houses are back probably

rescue and minister tomore numerous than before iIome have even reoccupied the WQunded and dying meR 0ld sites they hadmiddot before the lReformation

Another notable measure ~ewlfk ~[p)regID Gingled out for repeal is the 1loleration Act of 1688 This act W51f)$ ~WIfltdl although in itself it did not help

NEW YORK (NC)-The Adshy~he Catholics marked the end of

vocate weekly newspaper of1lhe Protestant Reformation and the Newark Archdiocese wont1he beginning of religious tolershythe first-place Silver Medalation in Britain Awarti for weekly newspapersIt allowed freedom of worship in the annual public serviceClgt Protestant Trinitarian Nonshycompetition sponsored by theoonformists provided theiT New York chapter of the Pubiicmeetings were opento the pubshy

Relations Society of AmericaIlk it did not relieve the existing The award was for a five-part

fenaWes of those days against analysis ttl the ills besetting the ~atholics other breakaway Newark public school system lhcnestants or Jews but it was )he analysis was written by a hisberic beginning It has been Advocate news editor Ed Grant ltJeseribed as the Great Oharter and was an examination into ~ religious freedom and the one of the areas of dissatisfacshy~umph ofc9mmon ~ense tion which led to widespread

rioting in Newark last Summer

The series ran lri the newsshylJays Help for Poor paper last september and Octoshy

lPeCice First ~eeds ber The Public Rellitlons SocishyMIAMI (NC)-The Catholic ety award - silver medals are (lihurch in this nation today awarded in each of five cateshy

gories-are given for the mostauast address itself to the presshynoteworthy contributions bullbull 0 toiloing needs of the poor and dis-

~vantaged as well as the better public ~derstanding of ltJnICial issue of peace says the _ community problems in the New

4Tchbishop of Miami York metropolitan area Archbishop Coleman F Calshy New s p a per 8 magazines 0011 following announcement of broadcasting an d television middotGte establishment of the ecclesshy media in the New York-New iastical province of Miami and Jersey-Connecti~ut metropolitan tMs appointment as its first area are eligible for the awards l)rehbishop stressed that the (fhurch must be concerned with ibe problems of the time in Retired ArttlhJboshop S)Vhich we exist Gets College lHlonorThe g~eatest problems at present are the problems of the DUBUQUE ( NC) - Retired disadvantaged the poor and Archbishop Edward D Howard Utase who are in need and of of Portland Ore has been named oourse peace he smiddotaid for Loras Colleges 1968 John

It is more difficult for us to Fitzgerald Kennedy Award The LiOlve in any real way the prob- prelate is a former president of iems that are our concern until the college we have a measure of peace The citation and gold medal And it is the prayer of all of us annual award honoring an out Chat peace will be established as standing Amercian will be preshyiluickly as possible on an honorshy sen ted to the archbishop at the able basis o college commencement cereshy

monies June 2 Camp Directory Archbishop Howard 90 a nashy

Nltlw available from the Nashy ti ve of Cresco Iowa and a Loras lItonal Catholic Camping Assn alumnus was ordained to the ~ 131~ Massachusetts Ave priesthood in 1906middot He became lM- W Washington D C 20005 president of the college in 1921 Is the 1968 Directory of Catholic In 1924 he was consecrated to ~mps which lists all known serve as auxiliary bishop of DavshyearriPs in the U S giving acshy enport He became archbishop of Civities charges dates open and Portland in 1926 and retired in lIbailing addresses 1966

National CYOPlans LeadershipTraining shyImpa~t to Aid Priests Adult Admiddotvisors

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tbe through the introduction of BaWmore June 23-28 ehicagoNational Catholic Youth Organshy leadership methodology which July 1-5 Boston July 14-19 ization Federation will launch a facilitates maximum involveshy Sen Antonio July 28-Aug 3 training program in June called ment 00 the local level and Denver Aug 11-16 and San Impaot be help priests and hence maximum commitment JFaoancisoo Aug 25-30 adults 00 work effectively with The National CYO Federation Dr Donald Ebalt a professhyteenagers in a leisure time proshy will sponsor six sessiOns this lIlional trainbig eonsul1lant of gram summer to train diocesan CYO Washington D c win diiecl

The program was designed in staffs m 1lhe use of the newmiddot ead11ab cooperation with Leadership program lhey win )e held m A pilot Jtudy of the effectiveshyResources Inc a firm _of beshy DeBS of Impact on a group of havior scientists -rolulbteers from the NewarlkAddress Graduates

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishy archdiocese was held at the SOUTH BEND (HC) -Mel-rector of the Youth Department Benedictine Retreat House ill

Jdte-rite Patriarcib Maximoo VUnited States Catholic Confershy jNewton N J ence in announcing ttie new Kakimof Antioch and Dr Ilhirtymiddot persons representashyprogram said tives of youth adult advisorsJames A Perkins of Cornell

The goal 01 Impact is 00 help and priest moderators met withUniversity will be speakers atthe priests who are moderators representattives of the CYO

the 123rd annual cOnW~ncementof CYO the ad~lt advisors and Federation staff and a member youth participating in CYO toshy exerci~ Sundly June 2 at Of Leadership rResources Inc ward maximumpersonal growth Notrlte Dame University 110 assess and to evaluate 1mpaltL

(Cathedral Camp-Resident and Day Camp for Boys

O~ Lady of the L_ke Day Camp fOr Girls

Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON LONG POND ROUTE 18 EAST FREETOWN MAS~

~ RESIDENT CAMP 49th Season June 30 thru August 24 - a Week Season

Diocesan seminar-ians - College Students amp Teachers Under direction StaH of a Diocesan Priest

Saili~g swimming water skiing horseback riding riflery archeryPrograni hiking overnight camping trips ~rts amp crafts Indian crafts camp crafts athletic (team amp individual) competition and inter-camp cOmpetition professional tutorial service available

Private beach large luxurious camphouse dining hall modernfacilities~ washrooms arts and crafts buildings camp store and office first aid and infirmary beautiful chapel overnight and weekend accomodashytions for parents

S WEEK PIERIOD $325 - 4 W~K PERIOD $165 - 2 weEK PERIOD $85

Cathedra~ Day Camp t=or Boys Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period

JULY W- AUGUST 23 Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period fEES INCLUDIE Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Horseback Riding Weekly Cook~Outs amp Milk Daily without Added Cost

--~----------------------------------------Our Lady of the Lake bay Camp For Girls

JULY l _ AUGUST 23 Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period

FEES INCLUD~Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Ilorseback Riding Weekly Cook-Outsmiddot Milk Daily without Added Cost

o

For further information write to

REV WALlER A 5ULLlVANDiredor PO Box 63 - East Freetown Mass 02717

Page 11: 05.23.68

father OWcopy) Sons Are OEd~glfDregd

BELMONT (NC) - Three members of the Habiger family -two sons and their fathershyare completing studies for the priesthood and will be ordained as Benedictine priests on June M

The lllabigers have prepared Jlor ~e priesthood at Belmont Abbey here They will be Qrshydained by Abbot Thomas Halmiddott shyman at St Benedicts Abbey in Atchinson Kans

John Habiger joined his two sons at Belmont Abbey after the death of his wife Mildred in December 1963 He said he did this because my wife and I just had an understanding that the survivor would give his or her life to the Lord

Before deciding to enter the priesthood Habiger had worked as a sales manager fOl a deep freeze home locker distlibutor

lHE ANCHORshy~urs May 23 1968

_ bull

II

Britista Cot1toIicI Suppolt New Bilt To Ovtlow Bios~

LONDON (NO) ~ 0aitJh0 ~ BeneFally appearr to be ~Ving strong BUPPOOt to the govemme~ controvemial new biJl 110 outlaw racial dls- crimination in Britain

Tile Catholie press glQ~~e bin Its blessing with some quBll shy iDeations Several Catholic anti shyaovermnent politicKms howshyweI have voiced oppositionshynot em principle they eblim but oocause they fear some sections of the bHl eould IIIggravate rather ampan mollify existing racism here by producing II privileged black and colored minority

The Race Relations Biil Which Is backed by the present Labor government and can reashysunably be expected to become law this Summer fs intended to i

strengthen existing legislation in this matter in view of the big rise in the number of Negro and colored (Indian Pakistani and as a labor pool manager for and West Indian) immigrants in the United States Air ForceFATHER AND SONS TO BE ORDAINED A father and his two sons will bethe past few years

Fellls Takeover m-d~ined June 14 to the priesthood at St Benedicts Abbey Church Artchi8on Kansas Nearly 2000 dock workers FoUo~ing the death of his wife five years ago John Paul Habiger (center) entereq the MethodlidsAdopt

quit work to delllonstrate BenedIctines joining his sons in the seminary Their nam~8 im religion are Father J~hJ) Project E~uaiityWJainst the bill and to sboW Igrlatius Habiger OSB (center) Father MatthewH~riy Habiger~ OSB (left) andsupport for the view o~ bullCon~ DALLAS (NC)-The ll-milshy2ervative party me~ber Eno~b F~thet Benedict John HabigeJrp OSW NC Photo li~)Il-member United Methodist ~

PPwell that Britain has too Church-formed by a merger l(Ilany elgtlQred immigranUi $50 $50 of the Methodist Church and

Powell had called for 8 vir WestpolIt Almon L Turner Holy Name Society the Evangelical United Brethshy tual halt to the entry of dependshy Thomas M Ross ren-has ill effect adoptedST GEORGE ST PATRICK~nts of colored immigrants and $45 Project Equality throughoutmiddot ~he$25 $250i for measures to encourage the United States Mr amp Mrsmiddotmiddot Leonard Langlois RobertE Eastman Re~ Tames F McDermottliepatriation of the immigrants The 1400 delegates to WleEveline Magnant Claire Magshy $25 $200 bull OtherWise he said black people QUldrennial General Confershynjllt Mr amp Mrs Roland McGee Dr Frederick G Doran ~ lDr amp Mrs Roger E Cadieuxwill take over whole areas ence adopted a resolution inMr amp Mrs Arthur Perry Landgraf Felix P Kaladin $125 Dnd I3cial violence will follow which the new church endorsesMr amp Mrs Donald Pittman Thomas W Whalen Thepnaa Mrs David M KilroyPowell was later ousted from Project Equality and recomshyMr amp Mrs Jacob Strunk Calisto Raymond P Paine $40his position in the shadow cab- mends cooperation both throup

Richard J McNally inet---the leadership that would participation and financial su~SandwichWoods Hole $30assume power if the Conservashy pori on the part of all United Fernand C E AuclairtiVe6 won control of the governshy CORPUS CHRISTI Methodist Ann u a 1 (regional)llT JOSI~IH Dr Thomas Clarkment - by Conservative party Conferences local churches 10shy$300 $350 John T ~mith

0leader Edward Heath who eal or national institutiomlPaul McCusker Rev William F Morristermed Powells speech racist $26 agencies or organizations$150 $100 William MoranAbstain From Voting Friends of Megansett Mr amp Mrs William Carr The resolution presen ted to

The House of Commons apshy $100 $50 $25 the Conference by the Methodshy

Leo A Bond Mrs Leonard Nproved the bill in principal ist ~neral Board of Christian lOr amp Mrs George Christman Mr amp Mrs Lawrence Perrault313-209 and sent it to commitshy Bilooeau Mr amp Mrs Francis Jr Social Concerns called Project$75 Dr amp Mrs J Minihan lKilgrew Mrs James E Sullivantee for additional study before Equality a responsible consist shyMrs Claudia Pendergast Mr amp Mrs Peter Becker Jrit is presented for fi nal passage Mrs Frank Souza Joseph Tin- ent ethical practical effective$50 Mi amp Mrs Robert KennedyTwenty-five Consenatives abshy Mr amp Mrs Cornelius Hickey Mother Cabrini Circle D of j

sley and positive means whereby the stained from the voting rather Sll ll~OMAS MORE United Methodist Church andMr amp Mrs John McCue Norman McEnaneythan fullow the palty line and $50 other churches can SUppOImiddott fail1Mr amp Mrs Emil Tietje $40vote against the bill Atty amp Mrs Richard N LaSalle employment practices intbe$35 Mr amp Mrs Francis CarpengerAlthough the British in the $2~ United StatesSt Josephs Womens Guild $35past two centuries have govshy In memory of Mr Y J Archshy $30 bull Mr amp Mrs Raymond Doucetteerned a large proportion of the 11mbeaultMr ampmiddotmiddotMrs ElmeiHallett $26 Oppose Cuts worlds black and colored $25 Mrs Charles Russell peoples it is a new thing for ~25 Mrs Margaretmiddot Harris Mr ampbull this country to have such peopie

Mrs Paul La Prade Thomas middotC H Berube MD Mr amp Mrsequal in law moving in by the Rooney Mr amp Mrs Charles Sefshy Joseph Silvia William J Dalton thousands and competing com

mereially and socially with ton Mr amp Mrs JG$eph Sylvia James W Blunt John Hart whites G Stanley Johnson Mr amp Mrs

Fred Comings Mrs Helen ClarkeThe new bill is aimed at outshy Oak Bluffs Mr amp Mrs George PereiraMYIllawing racial discrimination in

SACRraquo IIEAlltT Harry Walkerjobs housing hotels insurance and similar fields The most $125 The Percy Family Mrs Kay

Mr amp Mrs H~l1ry ~orey radical anti - discriminatioJ1 ~iggins ~ yenrsRalph Emerson measure ever Ploposed for Brit shy $100 yenrll Edith chamberlin Mr I

aIn it was introduced by the Reliable Market-In memory Mrs MIchael Cornick Mr amp yenrs of deceased loved ones govelllment of Prime Miliister Ernest Forni Jr

Harold Wilson not so much to $50 MI amp Mrs Shurtleff Mry deal with present circuinstances Mrs Corinne Fournier Ralph Jameson Mr amp Mrs Clemshyas with the future when the $30 mey Mr amp Mrs James Hamlen

A Friendproblem could become more Mr amp lVIIs Charles McHugh acute $25 Mr amp Mrs William Ward Mr

A Friend In memory of Mr amp amp Mrs Charles Pizzottimiddot Mr amp

Diocese Convenes Mrs Antone G Camacho Mr amp Mrs Charles Parks Frances Silva Mrs Thomas DeMont Mrs Rose

First Lay Congress M Peardon A Friend Seekonk BATON ROUGE (NC)The A Friend

first lay congress of the Baton Mr amp Mrs James L Kenney MT CARMELmiddot Rouge diocese convened at the $100 Catholic Lifc Center herc Ostellville St Vincent de Paul Society

More than 600 lay people repshy $50 OUR LADY 0 THEresellting the 12 civil paJishes Knights of Columbus

(~ounties) comprising the Loushy ASSUMPTION Mr amp Mrs Edwnrd McCrystal isiana diocese had the opportu- $50middot $25

nity middotto participate in matters The McKeon Family ToI11enS Guild Mr amp Mrs affecting diocesan finances the $25 Wilfred Blanchette middotMrbullamp Mrs

feasibility of continuingmiddotCath_ Mr ~ Mrs WiUiamHerron Edward Chal)~ler Mr amp Mrs Ciq education apart from the Manu~IJlendricks Jr HOlyName pu~gtlicschool systein the Ray ham ~9ci~ty Mr amp MrsE McPhillips Churchs il)VOlvcmcnt in social SJmiddotANNmiddot action admiriistrative middotstrllemiddot $90 Somerset

tures of themiddot Church and the Rev Thomas F Neilan ST JOHN OF GOD nymans place in diocesan 00shy $75 $150 ministratioa Cirino Dominic P amp Family Dr Americo B AlUehbl

SACRAMENTO (NC) ~ TheJSouth Dart~outh beads of Catholic charitable ST MARY agencies throughout CaliforniD

$125 have joined in opposing 00- Dr amp Mrs Paul E Corley 1~mptsof government to reduce

$50 public spending at the expense Dr ampmiddotMrs Victor Almeida of ihe needy and poor

$30 Mr 1 MrsWilliam Hines

]25 Mi amp Mrs Armand Borgesmiddot Mr amp Mrs Charles Nunes

Mr amp Mrs joseph MOlliz Jr The Johnson Family Dr amp Mr~ Archibald Senesac

Nantucket Sll MARY

OUR LADY OF THE ISLE $36

James E Worth $15

Grace Henry

9ffering You ~ SavingsPIQnsmiddot

lHlome Financingmiddot

WARFJI~~ (O-OP~RATIVE

BANK 261 Main St Wareham Mass

Telephone 0 295-2400 flllnb-llv-Mall Servlu AYllIIIllII

Q

Check These Banking Services

bull Savings Bank life Insurance lleaDhtate Loans bull Chri~tmas and Vacation Clube

bull Savings Accoumiddotmiddot -

bull 5 CO~Yl1lient Locaiios bull - - middott

middotNEW BEDFORD INSTITUTImiddotONmiddot tor SAVINGSmiddot

12 -tAE ANCHOR-Diocesa ofFoti Rive~Thurs May 23 1968 l

$copylDfrTht ~$frml 1NJcopy1iU0il Wreg$U9gt[J1 JIl[OlLY CROSS OUIlt LADY OlF GIltACIE

$101 $50 Mr amp Mrs Donald L BergerOlll Rev Rene R Levesque

$100 $25Joseph P Kairys

Mr amp Mrs Orner Duqu~tte$50 Jennie E Overton Mr amp Mrs James R Jones SOWltrlm YIiUililOuii1mDr amp Mrs Thomas Berry Jr Mr amp Mrs John Pilz middotST pros X Mr amp Mrs Robert J Dray $150 John J Smith John F Martin Dr amp Mrs R Earl McLoud $100

$40 Anonymous 1IL F Bergeron $54l

$35 Philip J Hart Frank Ready Ano~ymous (2)

$30 $25 Dr amp Mrs Herbert L Evereti Edward P Hayes John J CarshyLouis Lyne amp Theodore Larishy roll Thomas P McDonough

mere Dorothy Schoonmaker Denis d Brophy Mary Geist Douglas Eo ~

$25 VampJl John Crawford Mr amp Mrs David Gomes M

ampMrs Leo R Schleicher Mr amp Mrs M J Hegarty Thomas F 1fltID01iJil~~ Gentile Mr amp Mrs EdwardlllL Slr JJOSEIPIHILoveday

Mr amp Mrs Robert E Coffey ~150

li$r Francis Welch Mr amp Mrs A Friend Leo F Sullivan Mr amp Mrs Robshy $40

Mr amp Mrs John Aiello I3ehleicher ltUt Downey Mr amp Mrs John E

Mr amp Mrs Gerald Tache $35

Mr amp M~ Arthur LeclairEast FaBmoutlh $30

ST ANTHONY VictormiddotL Brunette $275 Mrs Simonne Fisher

St Vincelllt de Paul Confer- Mr amp Mrs Edwin J Marmk ace Mr amp Mrs William A Olishy

voeira Mr amp Mrs Enos Days $21)

William Bartlett Mr amp Mrs Gerard Benoit Mr amp Mrs Nicholas F Tangshy

~y $25

Mrs Margaret Virgin Alice Bourassa Alexander Perri llIIllll lllli Braley Jr Dr amp Mrs Jell shyorne Brault

Cecile A Daley Mr amp Mra John I)ias Jr Mrs Mary P Gage Mr amp Mrs Ernest RLashysectesse Edward McGrath

Mr amp Mrs Leonard deMeshydeiros Mr amp Mrs Roland L Despres Mrs Irene FitzGeralcll Mr amp Mrs Edward Fitzsimshymons Mary Gogghi

Edmond Goulet Margaret Manghan Joseph C Mello Mrs Carmen Muldoon Mr amp Mrs Paul Murray

Margaret Nickerson Mra Edythe Rankin Mr amp_Mra Frank J Rezendes George Vishyveiros Mr amp Mrs JosephSevigny

Sli MAIlty

$81 St Vincent de Paul Society

$25 Sacred Hearts Association Raymond Dlugosinski Mr amp Mrs Manuel Allua amp

Nancy Mr amp Mrs Antone Costa J1l Mr amp Mrs John A Wojcik

SACRED IHIEARlr $25

St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ST IPATRRCK $iOO

Mr amp Mrs William BrennlUll $75

Anonymous $50

Mr amp Mrs Francis J Flynn Atty amp Mrs Edward Farrell

$30 Mr amp Mrs Albert W Lawrence

bull Major ampMrs Lawrence Uch-shymanowicz

$25 Mrmiddot amp Mrs Edward C Wen Jr John Keohane

Mr~ amp MrS JosephCardeIre Mr amp Mrs Melvin Dolan

Mrmiddotamp Mrs Walter Buguey Mr amp Mrs Robert Costa Mr amp Mrs John Kelliher John Lynch

Mr amp Mrs Thomas Magwre Mr amp Mrs Kenneth Paige

$30 lt $leo~ IJ=1J yltID Uilliil 0$ lllr amp MrsEdward McCarthJ7 lievbull~ 17 ~

Slr FRANCIS XAVlrEllt $2S st ~o Womeno CI~

Holy Name Society COO $450 Mramp RlIra Lee Kingsb~St Vincent de Paul Society $25 Mr amp lVlro Leo Parente

$300 Capitell Mr amp Mrs Richard Dr amp Mrs ~p Sibilll

Charles H McGrath Joan

Mr amp Mrs Larry Newman Sproul lllr amp Mrs Thomas ~$100 Loughlin Mr amp Mrs William Mr amp Mm GeorgeM~Doane Beale amp Ames E Donovan Mr amp lVlm Joseph FalDtoo

$50 Mr amp Mrs Harry SylvesterMr amp Mrs Frank J Dolan Mr amp Mrs Charles Flynn lltlr $25

A Friend Mrs Rockina CaftDoMr amp Mrs Irving Morrissey amp Mrs~ Marshall Field Mr amp amp Family Mr amp Mrs JOQD KmampJ R ~eyburn Mrs Robertmiddot Ryan Vetorlno Mr amp MrS Victor Narciso Mr IIMr amp Mrs John Hart Bros Ipc Fruitland

Scudder amp Taylor Oil Inc CarreiM Florist Mrs John Kinsley Dr amp Mrs Francis ONeil Ilflr amp Moo Wllliam ~

Captains Table Mr lie Mrs John Currivan Mr Bishop Tyler General Assem- McznsfieRdl Mrs Alfred Kuplast Mrs ~

My garet Jordan Mrs Grace Duma Charles J Ardito 8l MARY Mr amp Mrs Fred Taylor Josepla

$ltamp0 $150 E Donovan Jmiddotr Mr amp Mramp W tel Alfieri Catholic Youth Organization st VinceJntt de Paul Society

shy-

SENDYOUR GnJFT TO bull i l j middotcrmiddotmiddot

The Rig Rever~ Edward TO~MeiJramiddot The IUght Reverehd RiJYlIWnd T CQnsidiRf lVallonarpfreclor Olt Diocesiul Di~ecto i

366 Fifth Avenue 368 North MalnSteet f(eWYork New Yo~k ioooi Fall River Massachuseits027l0 -

1iWJlE ADDRESS

THE sectOClllETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH ~ shy

I

~~ IiUrge Negro La Guidonce Boord ~n K~s~ Cety

KANSAS CJIIIY (NC~-A five-paltish cooperative illl

ner city ministry guided by a Negro lay board has been proposed os a way o~ bridging the gap betWeen the white Catholic CI1urch and the Negro community here in Misouri

A six-person committee headshyed by MrsThelma Work will identify the nee~ of the lComshymunity-Catholic or not-and to propose a structure fur meetshying those needs I

The action came as the result

of a meeting of the Catholie

V ~

Clergy Conference on Inner Oity bullneeds

Father James Lock chairman cited charges of the Black Cathshyolic ClergyCaucus in Detroit in conjunction with the IImnual meeting of the Catholic Clergy Conference on the Interracial Apostolate The Black Caucus statement said the Catholic Church in the United States 1s gtrimarily a white racist insti shytution which is rapidly dying in the black community and to which the black community no longer looks to with hope

On~ Out f li5 The Caucus recommended fha~ Harrison the Bishop Rev William J Hurley Rev DonaiiIll

white priests become supportshy E Messier Rear Rev Cornelu8 F Kiley Rey Robert A ers and learners listening tc McGowan Rev Edmund J Fitzgerald Rev Kevin F TrippNegroes to find out what tbeir lheir assignment~ are Olll page twoneeds are

The Kansas City-St Joseph diocese bas no Negro diocesan priests Ttrore~ DS~th~ Aoee Sl1m~PO rfif~ifflg tedera~ Jb ~~~

We are trying to start the wheels rolling for some kind of

~umlp~JrlMeFrot Nleereg~~rJ fr CmbCBi OW~iff1ychurch structure through which the black people of our diocese can voice opinions and partici shy WASHINGTON (lTC)-SPokesshy ment of public policy ~t Jlorth oommunity-based Social services esnie cultural values of ~hliv

pate in decision making said men for Protestant Catholic and in the Full Employment Act (l(f to meet Human and community country they said are sucll Father Lock Jewish organizations h a V e 1946 which provides for useshy needs Recipients of rondo that work becomes the basis by

backed federal legislation which ful employment opportunities should not conduct sectarian which a persons worth tnFather Dan Howe declared~

We have set up programB would provide one million jobs for all those able willing and programs judged A job not only tends ie i10r the nations unemployed seeking to work n determine an individuals acshygeared to Catholics in our parshy While they acknowledged that

ceptance by society but it alsish whom we have formed rn Their support was given in The Acts emphasis on education passage of this legislation would affects ones attitude abolll~the white mentality Since cl testimony before the House Seshy and training Training s1Mgtuld be no wre-all for the ills ci oneselfbest we are having contact lect Subcommittee on Iabor be open-ended so that the posshy poverty in America the spokesshy

with only about 2000 people out Studies have shown that unshywhi~ is holding hearings on sibility of permanent full-time men said that any attempt to of the 50000 in our area we the Guaranteed Employment employment beyond fIDe presshy combat poverty must provide employed persons have a ve~

can presume that the activities Act of 1968 ent situation is a reality Trainshy meaningful jobs low level of self-esteem anell we have structed as being our that this attitude tends to pro-ing programs of this ~Testifying were Father JohnChristian program of service do vide a self-fulfilling prophesrshould include basic educationMcCarthy assistant director ofnot reflect or reach black thinkshy MO~~U[ij] ~lW] ~O~S since it then becomes more dif~counseling and opportunities tothe Social Action Departmenting ficult to find or hold a joblearn about appearance manshy

E~GJHlll O]RDAllNJEID FOR IllmCJESJE Bishop Qgtnnolly m-dained eight deacons ro the priesthood for service in the Diocese 21t ceremonies oonducted at St Marys Cathedral Fall River Front Rev Edward E Correia Rev George Eo

We need a board of black of the U S Catholic Confershy OrJi1 AA~jjo Foreg[uGagement of income health IImdence Dr Grover Bagby of thelaymen to tell us what the pe0shy NEW YORK (NC)-Answershyother factors affecting personalDepartment of Social Justice ofple want to help change the well-being and development fog an appeal from the Ceylonthe National Council oftone to establish priorities government now fighting a mashyChurches and Rabbi Richard GFather Howe noted there are lWven fl Sellf-lEs~(()nim laria epidemic threatening 16Hirsch director of the Religiousapproximately 9000 Negro million persons the catholicAction Center of the Union of Involvement of private nonshyCatholics on the books but Medical Mission Board nere sentAmencan Hebrew Congrega- profit organizations Such Oll shynot necessarily active in Kansas by air Ifreight 364000 anti-mashytions - ganizations they said will c0shyCity out of a total Negro popu- laria tablets to Colombo Ceyshyoperate with the development ~lation of about 130000 They specifically suppoit4d lons seaport-capital The shipshyHe said that although the three provisions in the bill ment valued at $10746 conshy

structure of the lay board is yet Creation of an Office of Guarshy (cll)f AdldJrell$$ sisted of tablets for both ooults ro be determined it is the conshy anteed Employnient Opportushy and ~hildren sensus of 20 priests and laity at 1r~~regy Meefrolilregnity l8 a eontinued develop Earlier the CMMB respondingthe meeting that at least half

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-Theshythe lay members would be un- oro a plea for help from Indoneshyology must revolutionize it shyder 25 since the young people ~1JJlhJreg~ WODil$ [Q)~f sian authorities shipped 220shyself John Cogley former reshyare the thought-leaders in the 520 anti-malaria tablets ~aluedligion editor of the New Yorkblack community ~ial ~fit1hvllsW Times told the national convenshy at $7306

NeCeSS31lY ApPll03Cln SCOTCH PLAINS (NC) shytion of the College Theology so-A Negro lawyer Leonara BrotherHarold Woods a teacher The Catholic Medical Mission ciety IN the University m- SainHughes told the meeting at Union Catholic High School Board for 40 years has beenmiddot IfmiddotranciscoOne thlng is clear The clos- here in New Jersey has won a oonducting a worldwide mercy

Ing of any Catholic institution months delay to contest lim Cogley DOW a staff member cl program shipping medicines or cut-back in the inner-city order to report to his New York the Center for the Study m Deshy drugs bandages and various says one thing to Negroes We draft board for induction into mocratic Institutions Santa Barshy other hospital supplies and dont want you to be CathoUcs ~e Airmed Fo~ equipment to some 1000 misshybara Cal and editor of the Censhy

Father Vince~t Lovett dir~ BrOther B8rold la member of ter magazine tlgtld delegates that sion hospitals 4000 dispensaries tor of the new Diocesan Social theology must lead- rather than and clinics in developingAction office saidmiddot middotthe Marist BrotheJS had been eoUJlltriesfollow usemiddotits treasureS ratheT It seems to me we a- 4o_1krecJassified ll-A and Cllldered to than hoard them Liberatemiddot it shying about setting up something after rewmfug biB draft eard 011 self from its own prison ~ c0nshylike II couotywith II state goy- April 19 as a protem agaiDst the formity fear imd be dead Dbshyernment - a regional ministry U4o- actionism of th~ pastwithin tile diocese Be said the war VBallam

S~aking on The image off

WI report for Induction em April M

approach seems not so much lim The 22-year-old teachers ease ideal as lh necessitymiddot bas been taken up by the Amer-o Man as Citizenmiddot Cogley said

iean CDvil Uberties Union that the change in the religlO1Ul Which ealled middottbeboardll action mans self-image and the change

Silent Meditation in reclassifying him ~ new in the image of politleal man are TRENJON ~NC)-A bID pr0shy height of wegality Tbe ACLU not unrealated The image of a

viding for a period of silent said Brother Harolds religious free man redeemed from every meditation each day by students status had not collmged since he form of spiritual servitude and attending public schools was WIlI3 originally classified ~D subjugation he said b triumphshyintroduced in the New Jersey and that he hGd DOt ilrlterfered ing over the old image of eccleshyState Legislature by Assembly with the ndministratlon of the sia9Ucal man-a passive creature Speaker Albert B Smitlll 3eleet1ve ~ BWolltem eOOject ~ the Will ca ~thero

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THE At~~C~_ 15 Th M 231968 urs ~y World Communication Day CtmMG(f~ A~V[JK~$ObsecteWGR1CCe on S~ndl~w O[fi) ~copy~o~ A~fDcopy[jf)

WASHINGION (NC)-In response to an appeal by NEW ORLEANS (NC)-ArchshyPope Paul VI to the universal Ohurch the Church in the bishop PhHip M Hannan asshyUnited States will observe the second World Communicashy serted here As far as I am tions Day on Sunday May 26 The National Conference of concerned segregation in the

Church is dead We are past the Catholic Bishops awroved time for statements Now is thefor Motion Pictures and Bishoplast November the observshy time for actionClarence J Issenmann of Cleveshynnc of World Communicashy Tile archQishop of New Orshy

tions Day in this country on USCC Press Department land episcopal chairman of the

leans told delegates at an diocesan and parish levels ampnd archdiocesan conference on st) shy

members of the U S Bishops cial action I assure you we are going forwardCommittee for Social Commu- Senate Rev1ltews

nications have sent to individ- He outlined programs fe ual Ordinaries throughout the Continued from Page One beMer education for adequate country a cOpy of the Prayer lains to be assigned on a funmiddot housing and for recognition of of the Faithful for that Sunday time basis and that the needs the inherent digni ty of all men and a ooP1 of the Holy ~athers of the sick were being adequateshy The Church is exerting itll message issued earlier this ly met under the present arshy influence in every way to assistmonth ran~ement the poorest he said If we

It is recommended that the 3 Recommendations on salshy follow Christ we must begillilobservance in this country ary adjustments Taken into aeshy with the pOor even if thishave both religious and non- count _by Bishop in his direcshy means asking others to wait 0religious aspects The former tives for Aug I 1967 little longerwould highlight a Mass with 4 Meetings open to all clergy Anyone can live poor the

appropriate sermon in the 00- Bishop approved archbishop said The key thingthedral or some convenient 5 Extension of Synod prepshy is dignity This does not mean church to which executives aration time Bishop approved that this dignity is recognized Wld employes of communica- 6 Secretary to be Treasurer by a dole or a handout or eveD tions media would be specially and Senate budget Bishop apshy preferential treatment We are invited proved confusing issues when we talk

The non-religious asp e c t 7 ChOice of other Prayers of of dignity as if it can be bought would feature news conferences the Faithful Bishop approved or paid for he said articles in the press and radio 8 Referral of matters to Passhy - I am totally for equal oppollaand TV interviews and proshy tunity in jobs and for adequate

housing not just open housincgrams toral Council Bishop approved

In his message to the Church 9 Creation of Clergy Person-In human dignity everyone hasPope Paul invited Catholics to Del Board Bishop approved an equal right to education anell

consider the significance of 1() Clergy retirement policy to culture he declaredthe changes that are taking with Bishop accepting ormiddot not

AWARDS CEREMONIES At the annual Awards Day for hospital personnel at St Annes Hospital Fall River Manuel Benevides 38 years of service receives his award while Bertha Janson 42 years of service awaits her presshyentation from trustees Harold K Hudner left and Arthui Guimond right

place in this field (communica- according to diocesan ll1eed tions) under our very eyes and Bishop approved to ponder the serious responsi- 11 In-service training tor bJlities that theSe imply for one newly-ordained priests Bishop and all approved

Clamor forAttentlo~ 12 Various diocesan diredors Until recently the Holy to recommend men for middotpart shy

Father pointed out many did time or full-time further study not have anything more to Btim- Bishojgtmiddot approved 1IIate their inflection than vague 13 Full participation by memories of what they learned Catholics in middotYMCAyWCA ot school or in the family and programs Bishop aPlgtrov~ What they beard in their envi- 14 Rotation among religious ronment eomniunities of their represen-

Now however with the echo Uitives on Senate Bishop ap- r the press motion pictures proved radio and television clamoring 15 Clergy to recommend men lor attention new h~riZons oPenJor episcopacy Bishop applloved wide before them llIndmiddot they are 16 Lay Personnel pension ttuned to the throbbing life of plan study Bishop approved the ~niverse

Who will not rejoice at this 17 Adjustmentin diocesan progress Do we not 1111 see in assessments Bishop approved It a roadmiddotdestined by Providence 18 Clergy retirement study for the advance of themiddot whole Bishop approved of mankind There is room for 19 Bishop announced through all hopes if man learns to mas- Senate exchange of facultieS ter these techniques but every- between Diocese of Fall River thing can be lost if he shirks his and Providence responsibilities Various commfttees have made

Members of the bishops com- studies to implement some of mittee signing the letter to the these considerations Ordinaries included Auxiliarymiddot Senate representatives have Bishop Gerald V McDevitt of participated on a regional and Philadelphia episcopal moder- national basis regarding a nashyator of the United States Catb- tional organization of priests olic Conference Bureau of In- and its constitution and activity formation Bishop John A Donshyovan of Toledo episcopal chairshyman of the National Catholic Cursillo for Men Office for Radio and Television Bishop Christopher J Weldon Starts Tonightshyof Springfield episcopai chairshy

A mens ~ursillo win ~ginman of the Bishops qo~ttee tonight at La Salette C~nter of Christian Livingmiddot At~leboro Dishy

Delegate Recives rectors will be William Barnes of Marion and Rev GilesHonorary Degree Genest middotMS of the center

HONOLULU (NC) ~ Archshy Allmiddot eursillistas are invited to bishop Luigi RaimondiApostolicmiddotmiddot the firstmiddot anniversary of ultleya Delegate in the Unikld States middotmeetingsmiddotin the Fall River area baS received an honorary deshy at 745 Wednesday night May laquoree froIn Charninade College 29 at Sacred Hearts Academy here the only Catholic eollege Prospect Street Fall River A lID the state of Hawaii concelebrated Mass will be folshy In an Dterview with the Hashy lowed by a song session social

waUmiddotCatholic Herald ArehlSishop bour and refreshments Baimondi ~pressed tolerance Ul1reya meetings are schedshylor student activism in the Unishy uled in Attleboro oat Jettes ted States middotIltating Students Funeral Home Friday May 11 8ft adive everywhere Youth Monday May 27 Monday June ill UyiDg find its WBY aoc1 2 Friday June 14 and FridayecJar patterns of tbougbt IlBd June 21 eetioD e DOt lIS set asin pre A eursillo for W4)men is scbedshy paerationfl Cbolees were 1IIed for August and further inshy

-e fiSHthen tbin ~ tit formation is obtainable inla ~ -e LeSalleUe Centerbull --

You Live Better Electrically

trlc range bullbullbull with Iln ingenious oven that cleans Itself Make 8 clean break with the past bullbullbull and graduate to another appliance

that adds to the Joy of Total Electric Uvlng

Graduate to a ~fiameless electric range thatmiddotcleansits own ovenmiddot

Make 8 clean break~ with the past4

Why spend ~ours stooping scrubbing and scouring to clean your oven Why not grad- uate to a modern flarve1ess range bullbull with anoven that cleans itself electrically Its so

easy to use Set the controls and-zingo The oven cleans Itself (And drip pans) All you dois whisk awaya IIttie pOwder

- YOUll notice toothat a flamelessmiddot range keeps your kitchen clean cool a~d ~omshyfortable And because electric cookmg IS so automatic YOUll cook with pleasure So see

yOur appliance dealer about aflameless elecshy

See Yo~r Appliance Dealer or

FAll RIVER ~l~CTRIC LIGHT COMPANY

o

mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 23 196816 I

Mafttl[p)Dsellt $50 Raymond L W Benoit

$5BTANJrlllONY Jos~ph A Tully William J

$300 OLearY Mr ampMrs Alfred Baty ltlJbades McGowan Mr amp Mrs Fred Harney

$100 Mr amp Mrs Michael C ODonshyaarence G Verdi nell Mr amp Mrs ThomaS P Per~ lIugene F Phelan kins Mr amp Mrs John Kozlowski

$15 mosampry Altar Society

$66 Buzzard$ B~y I

iusan A McGowan ST MAJuiAR]ampTWilliam Keane

$SOshy$55 A Friendllohn P Delaney

$6$40 lIlr amp Mrs Thomas Pina

~h G Perry $25$35

Mr amp Mrs Edwin PaytonlInmothy Manning )l amp Mrs John KarlJfudge E C Horrocks J~

$30 Mr amp Mrs Edwin N Rose Wareham Lodge of Elks 15044bullbull Clayton King

Mr amp Mrs David Fannon$~

Mr amp Mrs John OCOnnellJames Downey Romeo Bedarql William Delaneyhnes H Gifford Mary M Chad Mr amp Mrs James Lopes

Wick George Smith Jr Antone Mr amp Mrs Louis Fougereshy-es Edmund Perry $25 Mr amp Mrs Armand Bedard

Mr amp Mrs Michael DelIsMark H McIntyre Teree JeminaBlossom Joseph Farley Robert Mr amp Mrs William BennettGIngras Real Breton Mr amp MrsLouis Eacobaoct

Jobn Tarvis Francis ODri9shyu Holy Nam~ Society Paull Glennon Joseph Zychowicz Central -VUlageIIaomas Renahan Richard SmiUll

ST JOHN THE BAPTIBJl

~50 bullNorth Dighton Mr amp Mrs John DeNadal

ST JOSEPH nolt Rev John P Hogan$156

IlR Vincent de Paul $75 Dr Peter F Piccinini$50

$25amp11 Name Society Florence I Bessette MrSt Josephs Womens Guild

$35 Mrs John J Ardagh Jr llim Raymond Williamsbull amp Mrs Joseph MWTaJ

Me amp Mrs Daniel TebreiN$30 J Jl)r amp Mrs William AcIamI Mr amp Mrs Robert Albanese

o Iohn W Perreira$5 Ch(ltham

Mr amp Mrs Joseph C Amarat 1lIJr amp Mrs Edward M Berobe HOLY ~EJI)EIEMEamp

bullbull amp Mrs Arthur A Ennes Mr $101 A Mm William Johnson Rose Pi Assqc of the SacredHea~ Mello $lOet

Mr amp Mrs Harold Mendoza Mr amp Mrs Robert Han lIffr amp Mrs Bruce Murph) Mr Col amp Mrs John McCa~ bull Mrs Robert Secatore $50

Mrs James Bell Jr St Vincent de Paul Sodeq Mr amp Mrs John J Cavanaup

IIMMACULATE CONCBPJIl[ON $30 $DOO A- Friend

Ambonymous $2-5 $a Chatham Trust Co Mr af

Anonymous MrS E Joseph Geller Dr~ amp MIlII Robert Harned A Friend (~)

Anonymous $75

Mr amp Mrs William Kent Mr amp Mrs Paul reF~vre Mr lIi$it

- Mrs~ Richard Sylva Mr amp MmHelen P Derby Patrick SullivanMr amp Mn Aibert Giordano

A Friend Mr amp Mrs Frank Dresseli Mr amp Mrs Philip S1iel]oA Friend Mr amp Mrs James Griffin shyAnonymous Mr amp Mrs Frank Wing _ImmaCU1ate Conception MenliI

Club $4G North Attleboro

Mr amp Mrs Raymond ~rgerotl SACRED HEART$35

Mr amp Mrs William Condoo $200 $5 Rev JOuter Lussier

Mr amp Mrs William Buchtman $30 Caesar Cardoza Mr amp Mrs RoT Mr amp MrsJeorge Merewe Howard Immaculate Conception $~ Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Joseph A Jette

Mr amp Mrs Co George Knapp $25 McCarthy Coal Co Mrs Fredshy Mr amp Mrs Paul Dion Mrbull elick H Murphy A Friend Mrs Frederick Fortin LionelL

Martineau Mr amp Mrs~ Philippe Rainville amp Florence

Mr amp Mrs George Beaulieu Sl lWAllUf A Friend

STMA-ElY$50 $150Mr amp Mrs Michael Murphy

Nelson GulskiMr amp Mrs Jose FernandesSIl $75$30 Rev Armando A- AnnunziabMr amp Mrs Thomas J Bryanamp

$50 Eva Morowski

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John HaugMr amp Mrs Roland Roberge Mr amp Mrs John StanfordDavid amp Martha Rocha M Veronica Reilly

Mary Cronin George Yefh Mildred Leary A ~riend

BreWSlfreli $4G Dr amp Mrs Domenie BalJiIe

OUR LADY OF TlIIE CAn $35 o $100 Dr amp Mrs Kenneth AtwiIl lllisBionaries of La saleUe jnr amp Mm JosepiL Dona

MONSIGNOR VI[lELSB

Heads Bishop$ Task force

WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr Aloysius J Welsh of Newark N J a recognized authority in race relations and social aclion work has been named to head the Urban Task Force estabshylished by the U S bishops

Bishop Joseph L Bernardin general secretary of the U S Catholic Conference who anshynounced the monsignors apshypointment said the task force was calhd for by the U S blsbshy

ops at theirmiddot April meeting in SL Louis in their statement on the mational racial crisis The bishshy

ops directed the task foree be established by the USCC Social[ Action Department

In this work he will cooperaW with MsgI George G Higgins director and Father John MeshyCartty assistallt director of the Social Action Department the bishop said

$30 Mr amp Mrs Frederick ThOIpG middotMr amp Mrs Clement Sbarolll

$26 Mr amp Mrs Andtew Boisvert Gertrude Cassi~y

Elizabeth Sheals $25

Mr amp Mrs Daniel J Cava- naugh Mr amp Mrs Raymond Bl~hard Mr~ amp Mrs Robert Brunelli A Friend

Mr amp Mrs Robert Gilmore Mrs James P Reynolds Mr amp Mrs John Donleymiddot Mr amp Mm James Battersby Mr Mn Jlohn bullCollins

Virginia G Robinson

AttRehoro BOLY GHOST

$150 Dr amp Mm LoneJglUl

~110 Mr amp Mm John CapoWglo

$50 Holy Ghost St Vineellllt cle Pail

$35 Mr amp Mra Joseph BJOdeur

$25 Mr amp Mrs Malcolm ~

Mr~ amp Mrs Harry Dowdall Mr amp Mrs RObert Geddes Mr~ I Mrs Frank Pistolese

ST JOlIN $200

In memory of Dn7 hwlbaDcI JIoseph F ODonn~

$100 Mr amp Mrs Raym9nd ENmlIlilll Anonymous Donor Inmemory of GabriGll lYaBltllloshy

alone bull $75 -

Rev Edwarcl A Ra~

Mr amp Mrs John P I4e $50

MaryL Wilhelm Mr amp Mrs J G WaJEll Jlr Mr amp Mrs Franclll Bo Mr Joseph ODonnell1 ~ amp Mrs Ernest ~

$30 m=teanor Robinqmiddot Alice~

ST JOSEPH $25

Counseil Jeanne DAre No 263

ST MARK $50 ~

Edward J Connors Jr $25

William J Roche Jr Joseph Dias Mrs Michael J Croke

ST MARY $50

Holy Name Society of St Mary Knights of Columbus Seekonk

Council Mrs Leland B Smith

$35 Mr amp Mrs Donald Blake

$~O ~r amp Mrs Henry E Woodcome st Marys Womeno Guild

$25 Mr amp Mrs Frank Padykula

Mr amp Mrs Russell J Sumner ST THERESA

$50 Mr amp Mrs Donald Boardman Mr amp Mrs George LeBeau

$30 William Cauley amp Family Mr amp Mrs George Boyd

0 $25 Mr amp Mrs RobeIt Generenl Mr amp MrsRobert St mlaiN

Taunton -HOLY ROSAILY

$30 Mr amp Mrs Russen Woodward stanley Radwansld

$25 Children of Mary Sodality Richard Januse

SACRED HEARi

$50 Mr amp Mrs Joseph S llosamp Mr amp Mrs Vincent BrimleF

$35 Mr amp MnJ Robert MeClellaml

_ S2i Walter Waltman Mr amp Mm

atephen Crosby The ~ Mr amp MrtI William Vaillan-

OOurt Mr amp Mrs Michael Barber

Mrs Margaret Rose llrtr~ bull II Frederick Reams

o

81 JAMES

$U Armand Desautels Tremblay Moving Iii 8tonlge

00mpany

STMABY $100

Dr~ Charles HoYt $60

GeOrge Dion Jr $51

Mr~ amp Mrs Kenneth $50

Mm A Hoffman Dr Normand ~ Mr amp M1lil J McNilmaN ar Dr John Fenton Mr amp Mrs Kicban sm

$36 ~ B Grant

~O Dr EdmWlld Fitzgerald D4niel A J Doyle

$U

Richard Barrington BIizabeCIa dIt Margaret Brady Mr - Mm kmea Bumtl Dr CarsiDbre e-- IlUOCi -Robert J mn JamesD hcige

Mr amp Mra Llocel IaImDee ftlomas Hoye Merrill lliaynard Jmelen amp Catherine McCariIll7

Alice McKenna Ruth MeshyJUona Susan McKenna II

Plan To B~ild

- See Us About ~

lotyCost Financing

WAuREHAM SAVltfGS BANK

WorehaftI falmouth cr J-3800 II 1-3000

Mrs James McMorrow Franeb Mulholland

Mary Mulholland Ma~ Neenan Joseph ODonnell Eveshylyn Rice Agnes amp Joseph Rose

Mrs Joseph Rowley Robert Sullivan J Roger Torme1 Charles H fripp Rita Baker

Mrs James Bennett William Carney John Gonzals James Holmes Mary E McNamara

Dr Thomas~OBrien Cbarleo OConnell Mr amp Mrs Edwarcll OGara Mr amp Mrs John 00 _ Ilfearne MlJI amp Mrs Edward OKeefe

1he Ralph Reckard Famil1 Cecelia F lfi Mary C Sheerin

ST PAUL $150

St Vincent de Paul st Pauh Taunton 0

$100 Rev Cornelius~ltYNem

$50 Mr amp Mrs Edward Roster

$24 Mr amp Mrs John Medas Jr

$25 Mrs Catherine Campbell Mr

amp Mrs Chester Jackman Mr c1i Mrs Richard Silva Mr amp Mrs Leo Leroux Mr Mrs John Steen

Mr amp Mrs Donald Emond Mr Be Mrs Gordon Seekel Mr amp Mrs Charles Welch Mr MllIl Paul Silva

New Bedford HOLY NAME

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John Hallonm Mr amp Mrs Jacob Teser

ST CASIMIR $150

Beltr cutnir Kwiatkowski $109

Atto~ Ferdinand Sowa $25

Mr amp Mrs Joseph FoUrnier The Poczatek Family Mramp M Antbony Rijo Jr Mr Mrs Stanle Scbkk Eve White

I

ST BYACINTB $100 -

Mr Mrs George Vigeallltl $50

st Vincent de Paul ConferenCe Gf Hyacinth Parisb

Tum to Page Seventeen

CONRAD SEGUIN BODY COMPANY

Aluminum or Steel 944 County Seet

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2-6618

w H RILEY amp SON Inc

CITIES SERVICE IDISTRIBUTORS-

0 Gasoline Fuel and Ra~ge

OILS OIL BURNERS

for Prompt Delivery amp hoy amp Night ~ice

8 IE BOIlER BURNER UNITS

80tItecI G48 Service

61 OOItANNET Sf TAUNTON

AJdeb DfO - No- Attleboro

TountoIamp

(l

SUMY pons Nuns (l)ffi) AifrMdl~$o

Re$M~~e~o trMture D~[freg~UDrru~ WASHINGTON (NC)-Resulto

of a survey of all United States nuns reveals a high ooceptance of post-Vatican II changes anell an eagerness robecome morrc involved in the inner city and poverty apostolates

The B1UVey conducted bythe Conference of Major Superiors of Women dlJring 1966 was the first extensive attempt to assess resources and attitudes of reli shygious communicenties c1 women and their memberll in the United States

The JPecific coal of the surshyvey was to assess the resources and determine 1ampIe responses that Religious are making and ean make to the invitation 13shysued in Vatican Us Decree on the Renewal of Religious ~e

More than 135000 Sisters parshyticipated in the survey respondshying to 649 questionnaire items covering religious beliefs atti shytudes toward change edu~shy

tional background present ocshycupation and future plans comshymunity life and proposals for future ohange

Results were processed by 00 Sister-sociologists across the country with the use of comshyputers

llleason for lIAlavnng The survey showed 1827 oil

the 175000 U S Sisters-107 per cent-left religious life durshying 1966 Of those Sisters only 869 had taken final vows In an interview with the NC News Servicemiddota spokesman for the Conference of Major Superiors of Women (CMSW) said most Sisters who have remained feel that a major reason for the inshy

ltereased number of Sisters leavshymg religious life is an increased ~penness to the idea within the lfcligious community

She said that the increased fucus on personal development has caused many Sisters to see that they are not suited to the religious life and that they will find areater personal fulfillment elsewhere

Statistics on be division of labor among U S Sisters show 72 per cent are teachers eight per cent are involved in health work five per cent in catechetshyill~ and missionary work lmd tbr~ per cenmiddott in welfare work

Seventy per cent of the teachshyem ore in elementary school work 195 per cent in high school education and 68 per

eent teach at the college level Of those involved in health care 18 per cent in health administration and 62 per cent in direct care jobs

lEnter New lFienlll1s The survey showed Sisters

have a strong desire to become involved in adult education inshyner city work pre-school teachshying and other s~ial work and to have greater contact with their local community Nuns expressed eagnerness to enter fieldc where few Sisters are now working In 1966 13 per cent ot U S Sisters were engaged in adult education 82 pel cent in speshycial education 31 per cent in poverty work and 06 per cent in migrant education The surshyvey indicafes that there will be a dramatic change in these figures in the next few years

Father Considine Leaves PC$tr Continued fC0m Page One

man of the U S Bishops Comshymittee for Latin America

Bishop Bernardin prai~ed the work of Father Considine in the Latin America Bureau noting

iota progress under his direction since its inauguration in 1960

It has been a labor of love for Father Considine he saici whose long standing interest in the people of Latin America and of other developing areaa is well known

Maryknon Father Considine will return

to his writing and teaching asshymgnments at Maryknoll Ossinshy

lng N Y where he had served as publications director before becoming director of the IAiltin

America Bureau He holds editorial and advishy

lOry posts with several internashytional organizations and servell DS a member of the Council OIl

Foreign Relations He was amp

member of the National Advishysory Council of the Peace Corps from 1961 to 1966 He also founded and directed Fides Inshyternational Service in Rome an Information and research unit of

the Holy See He was born Oct 9 1897 C1shy

1-

~ATIlGR CONSIDINE

da1ned in 1923 and received II

licentiate in sacred theology from the Catholic University of America in 1924 He has reshyceived honorary degrees from Fordham University Manhatshytsnville St John University St Benedicts Atchison and is the author of 10 books on Latin America Asia and Africa and hall edited several others

L9ng-Range

Father Considine Sllid that he IlIaW the Latin America Bureau as set for the proseution ~ tl

vigorous nation-wide program 10 serve our Latin American eonfreres for the next- generashytion through the year 2000 -and into ~ 21st century He felt lIlllch 11 long-range view was necessarJ because at stake are important socio-religious adshyVDnces among hundreds of milshyHons cd people Latin Americas leaders need time for these advances

Be pointed out thatsome of the best Church leadership tbroughout the Catholic world today is found in Latin AmershyICD In turn he noted our U S bi~hops are quietly acceptshying international responsibiliti~s

as never before Father Considine said that the

program of the U S Bishops Committee for Latin Americn ~ablishes the heavy day-to-day work of the Latin America Bureau

Jgtersonnel Father Considine said that

llIODle 60 per cent of all U S apOstolic personnel overseas throughout the world works in Latin America with more Ulan 600 Latin American parishes served by U S priests Major Superiors of women ha~e 2500 Sisters in Latin America PAVLA has put more than 800 laymen there for three-year terms and U S bishops hnv~

more than 300 priests working in Latin America Annual fundshying for Latin Amerietl by U S Catholics ~~ $1f) millioll

SJJREET SCENE This was a busy street scene in the nations capital at the encampment of the Poor Peoples Campaign near the Washington monument More than 100~OOO- protestors are expected to be in Washington for Memorial Day NC Photo

OUlll lLAIDY OlF ll1HI1amp

ASS1lJMJgtJlJlON $26

Clara Rose amp Family $25

Mr amp-Mrs Jose F Cruz St Martin de Porres G~

Mi CARMEL $100

In memory of Mr amp Mrs J~ ilino Simoes

Rev Antonio P Pinto middotCM $75

Rev Azitonio P Pinto em $60

Mary i Ltuiz $50

Mr amp lVIrs Albino daSilv8 1IIt Carmel Womans Club

$30 Manuel Bettencourt Mr amp Mrs Kenneth lltinu

John Rodrigues $26

Olivia M Luiz $25

Cecelia Bettencourt CbildYeli of Mary Mt Carmel ~ouft

Units James Perry Mr amp lnl Manuel G Souza Jr

Mr amp Mrs Arthur Caetano Mr amp Mrs Charles Frate Mramp Mrs Lauran Silva

OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HE]P

~26

Mrs Amelia E Bariteau $25

Dr amp Mrs Francis Green

OURLADY OFPU~GATOB~ l)1I00

In memory of Alex J Ka1He from Cltpe Coo Sportswear ~

lnc Fairhaven Lumber Co

$30 Atty George R Morad euroJ

Atty ~e E Morad $25

Josephine David 1bl mlE1lllllOllY of George A EI-Hillow Mr ampgt Mra ~rge JThomas Mr amp IIIlm Hykel G Simon

ST KIlldAN nSO

Rev WilMeT J Boekley

U~~ amp Wmeentde PaW ~

~ iWa1 1kntley

$2S AlmgeAo OH1feira

SAClllIampDlHlJEAlltT $25

Alexander Caruso

c S11 JAMES

$55 rulllbull amp lVIrs Francis O Quinn

$50 lilred Kelley

$40 William OMalley

~1 A Friend

$3~

Mr amp Mrs Jr Hugh Barry $25

Mr amp Mrs Andrew ONeil Mr 8 Mrs Robert Arnett

ST JOSEPH

$450 sa Josephs Church Societies

$70 Mr amp Mrs Maurice Dansereau

1130 II Mr amp Mrs Luigi Fiano lk Fmniy

125 Mr amp Mrs Thomas Weaver MI amp Mm Maurice Lamonshy

tagne Mrbull Mrs Raymond Rondel1

ST TBERIESA $100

Eugene Lemieux

Sturtevant 6 Hook lEst 1897

Bude~s Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New ~dforcJ

996-5661

THE ANCHOR- ~ 7 lfhuvs May 23 1968

~regreg [copy~G~ ~O~

Oa1l ~MOO~ []M~Orru NEWARK (NC)-A charge (l(

apparent ~racial discriminatiom in the assignment of tenants 00 public housing here is Oontainoo in s report issued by the New Jersey Advisory Committee 00 the U S Commission em CiWl Rights

It said the Newark Housing Authority follows a policy ef permitting people applying fOlr placement in public housin~ projects to choose the project tm whieh they want to live

lit said this policy has ~

llributed to the segregation Cl1I public housing and recomshymended that t1he policy 00 abandoned in favor of first-come first-serVed basis

The report noted that Q01l1li vast housing projects nre locatell in Newarks Central Ward-tho scene of widespread noting D year ago and of two massiv~ firo disasters this spring-and tll~

they are more thanSO Negf~ ~ccupied

It further charged that them Js U a disparity in maintenanceo between the predominantly N~

gro and the rgtredominantly whi~

projects a complaint lIiTegNgt leadership has frequently medea

It termed living conditiom b the Central Ward projects opshypressive and that the proj~cto

are JIOor)y designed llt recomshymeld~d that additionaI ~ev areas for young children ~Gl

meeting places for odww ~ teenagers be provided

Higher ~arnings

ON YOUR SAVINGS Per Annum

I W Ask abow

INVESTMEIlaquo

SAVINGS

CERTIFICATES

$IlFm - Savings insu~ed safe IIlyJ liII ClEerny of the US Government

IlVAILABIU1Y - No notice VCllIirfpound Your funds available when ooedea

Slllil by MAtL - We pr~e5S pt~ ood pay postage both ways

Assets over $41ooo0llC

FIRST fEDERAL SaYings and Loan Associatio1ll

of F~L~ RIVER shy~---__-------------~~~~ First Federal saYIngs bull Loan At ~

1 Borth Main St Fall llliTe1 Ibu ~ ~ Ii 02722 P1Imle 674-4001 ~ ~ ~ke llpplicatlOll oJ phone t1 fOOl wldl ~ o ~ o 0 IlllIivithllll Aceoullt 0 Jont Ac4cwot f)

PIlllse Cl3len II SllVings llCCOUCt blcelaquol

o eAomelamp) = ~ 0 ~ Address 0 ~ l 0 clleck In the amount of e--- ~ ~ 0 ~ _~___~~~_~uuJ

SPECIAL RATES FOR Schoo~ Outings and Picnics

amfACi MANAGERI - UNCOLN PARK 999-6984 636-2744

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs May 23196~

The Parish Parade OUR LADY OF ANGELS SACRED HEART WALL RIVER NORTH ATTLEBORO

Altar bOys willsponsor a cake The CCD program will be lJ81e Sunday May 26 following canonically established Friday Iill1 Masses June 21 the feast of the Sacred

Masses today the feast of the Heart The program will include Ascerision will be at 7 and 9 a 730 evening Mass followed AM and -1215 4 5 and 7 PM by proclamation and reception Confessions will be heard be- of CCD members and a social ~re each Mass hour

The Summer Mass schedule CCD students in grades 6 to will begin Sunday June 2 with 12 will attend a folk Mass and Masses from 6 to noon on the sing-out at La Salefte Shrine hour Monday night May 27 Tnose

Monday May 27 through Fri- participating will leave the ooy May 31 there will be church school yard at 645 and will be services at 7 each evening The returned at 930 living rosary will be sponsored Confirmation ceremonies will by the Holy Rosary Sodality be ~ld at 730 Sunday night Monday night the Council of May 26 Catholic Women on Tuesday ther societies on Wednesday and Thlusday and the Children New Bedford ~ M~~ on lfrIday

ST MARY HOLY NAME $25iALL RIVER Mr amp Mrs Roger Goyette

Contemporary music will acshy The Shea Family company the 1115 Mass Sunday Mrs Vivian Wegrzyniakmorning May 26

New CYO officers are Robert ST LAWRENCE amplois president Paul Durin $200 rice-president Polly Rockett Dr amp Mrs Stanley Koczera eecretary-treasurer A Friend

$125 OUR LADY OF FATIMA Dr amp Mrs Robert Srnan sWANSEA $106

The Womens Guild will hold William E King Its annual penny sale at 730 $100

Monday night May 27 in the Dr amp Mrs William Walsh ehurch hall on Gardners Neck $75 lRoad Rev William F OConnell

A Penny Sale will be held Dr amp Mrs James Bolton MondaYMay 27 at 730 in the $60 dlurch hall A Friend

$50 IMMACULATE CONClEPlIION Teremiddotsa Ruth amp John HarneyNEW BEDFORD Victor T Kondi

Parisnioners will celebrate John L Powell rthe feast of Santo Ohristo this Loretta Lamarre Sunday with a roast beef dinner $45 served from noon to 2 with Mrs Mary B Wheatoil

tickets available at the door $40 lRefreshments and entertainment Mr amp Mrs John Connor will be on the afternoon and Mr amp Mrs Thomas J Longevening program $35

A procession and auction will Mr amp Mrs James M Kearneyfollow the dinner with various Mrmiddot amp Mrs Leo St Aubin Holy Name Society units parti shy $30 cipating in the procession Mr amp Mrs Albert Anderson

Mr amp Mrs Joseph Griffin OUR LADY OF V()T(RY Mr amp Mrs Walter L9veridgeeENTERVILLE Mr camp Mrs Myron Tripp

New officers of the Womens $28amptiild are Mrs John J Pendershy Patricia Connor ~st pre~ident MrS James Murshy $26 phy and Mrs John McBarron Mr amp Mrs Thomas SullivanVoice-president Mrs George Mr amp Mrs Charles BerryReale recording secretary Mrs $25 Richard Griffith treasurer Mr amp Mrs Robert Bedard

A Communion dinner at Mr amp Mrs Albert McMulleneummaquid Inn will follow Mr amp Mrs Theodore J CalnanlB30 Mass Monday night June Mr amp Mrs Alfred Couto Mr amproo Mrs Gilbert Noonan of Falshy Mrs Manuel Guerreira Josephmouth will speak Reservations P Mullen should be made with Mrs Edshy Agnes Proctor Mr amp Misward Welch or Mrs- Stephen Joseph Porter Mr amp MrsOBrien Jr by Thursday June 6 James Ryan Mr amp Mrs Paul

saunders ST THERESA Mr amp Mrs Merton WalkerSOUTH ATTLEBORO Mr amp Mrs John F SullivanMiss Patricia Makin of the

Diocesan CCD Board spoke at the annual Communion breakshy Fall River fast of the Confraternity of

ST MARYS CATHEDRALChristian Mothers Fourteen $50 new members were received at

Gertrude OLoughlinthe monthly meeting arid new officers were installed by Rev $26

In memory of Caroline CasellaGerard J Chabot moderator $25They include Mrs Patricia Helen Burns Mr amp MrsBiziak president Mrs Georshy

George Johnston Corky Rowgette Vachon vice-president Club Rits OLaughlin FrancisMrs Kathy Lamarre treasurer amp Lena MoranMrs Dolores Leedham and Mrs

Mr amp Mrs Carlton GastallBeverly Sousa secretaries Mrs Raymond Reynolds

~CULATE CONC~ON BLESSED SACRAMENTlAUNTON $200A Spring Social and D~nce Rev Herve Jalbert

for the benefit of the church $50sponsored by the Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Michael Felixand the St Vincent de Paul Soshy $36ciety will be held Friday May Mr amp Mrs Richard Hamel24 from 8 to 12 at Lewis Lodge $30Winthrop Street Route 44 A W Root Beer StandTaunton Refreshments will be served Tickets are $200 per lIIIOLY CROSS person and wiU be available at $50 the door Holy Rosary Sodality

lt

PATRIARCH His Holishyness Vazken I of the Armeshynian (Monophysite) Chu~h which comprises five-milli~n communicants in the Soviet Union Near and Far East and the Americas is visiting in the US He paid a visit to the National Shrine of the

Immaculate Conception whilein the nations capital NC Photo

NOTRE DAME $40

The Anne-Marie MasSe fami17 $35

Conrad N Desmarais $25

Norman J A Belanger Rose D Perron

HOLY ROSARY $30

The DePaola Family $25

Mrs Philomena Germane

~CULATE CONCEPTION $50

A Frie~d $40

Mrs Diolinda Wilson $26

In memory of Charlotte DJicholson

$25 Holy Name Society Knights

of the Altar A Friend MlU7 Whitehead John R Burgess In memory of Daniel R Be

Manuel R Pimental Joseph Francoeur

SACRED HEART $l)O ()

~ Katherine D Adams $75

Mr amp Mrs William J Sullivan $5~

Margaret Morriss M~ry V amp Alice C HarrlngtoD Frederick B McD9nald

$31 Frances Mmiddot Cummings Mary C Cummings

$30 Mr amp Mrs John J HarrlngtOil

$28 Florence M Sullivan

$25 Vincent DAndrea Edward

Leary Mr ~ MrsN J Meyer Mary Louise OSullivan John J Sullivan middotMargaret F Lowney

ST MICHAEL $25

Manuel Rogers amp Sons At~

Manuel M Rezendes Henry Leshytendre ~eonardo Cabeceiras

Gerald Mulrooney A Friend edf Catholic Charities

ST ANNE ft JI08ZIII $30

Mrs Rhea Saurette 101at Vincent de Paul ConferenceIrene Theroux leapt amp Mrs Joseph J OCoDshy$26 nellThe Gauthier Family $25

Mr amp Mrs Reginald lerive

A Friend

Belshy $50

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J OCo nell k

$30 St rosephs Mens Club

ST ANTH()NY $25 OF THE DESERT Mr amp Mrs John L Mercer

$100 Mr amp Mrs Daniel W OCoDoshyChor Bishop Joseph Eid nell Dr amp Mrs James J Sabra

$25 SANTO CHRiSTO Rev Kenneth A Michael Mrs August Badway $50

ST ANTHONY OF PADUA $125

Rev Josephmiddot M Ferreira $100

Atty amp Mrs Milton R Silva

StVincent de Paul Society $30

Rev Ernesto R Borges $26

Mr amp Mrs Alfred 1 Cam~ $25

$50 Franco Family Singersmiddot

$25 Mrs Sofia Pacheco Antonio T Cabral

Mary amp Beatrice Costa~ SilD

CnristO Credit Union Manuel Medeiros Laureano Silva

AFriendFrank B Olivei

YDUR SONTHE PRIEST

HI HOLY PATHERS MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL DMURDH

A FUTURE

PRIEST NEEDS

bull SOMEONES HELP

TRAiN ASfSTER

Tau

HUNGER CANT

WAIT

Deai MonBr~orNolam

Please

return couponwith your

offering

Have you ever wished you had a son a priest Now you can hlilve a priest of your own-and ahare forever In all the good he does _ _ Throughout the Near East this month grateful bishops ara ordainlng new priests trained by people like youbullbullbullbull Their own families are toe poor to support them In training but good catholics In America adopted these semIshynarians encouraged them all the way to ordinashytionbullbullbullbull Insome Inspiring cases this support was given at personal sacrifice How can youbegln7 Write to us now Well ~end you the name of ~ young seminarian who needs you and he will write to you Make the payments for his training to suit your convenlence ($850 a month or $100 a year or the total $600 all at once) Join your sacrifices to his and at every Sacrifice of the Mass he will always remember who made It possible

4

Native Sisters In our 18 developingcountries are teaching children of the poor preparing them for First Communion giving medical care to leplrs cal)cer sufferers the aging A SisterS training Ialts two years costs $1250 a month $150 a year or $300 altogetherbullbullbullbull Well send you the name of a Sister you can train as soon as we receive your first payment She will pray for you and write toyou

n An9 day now you may receive a letter contalnn the Holy Fathers appeal for the forgotten Arab refugees-l4 million people without a country bullbullbull most of them destitute bullbullbull more thari half of them childrenbullbullbullbull By trelnlng these children foi middotfuture selfsufflcel]cy we can help brln peace and new selfmiddothelp to the Holy Land atlll divided by warbullbullbullbull But why walt for your mal Hunger cant walt Neither can peace Send your amplIft now in any amount ($500 $200 $100 $75 $50 $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 $2 $1) and the Holy Fathercan put It to work right away Qril1 $10 wlllleed family for a monthl -----~-~---~~---~-IlNCL08ID PLllAIl PIND $_ c_O~__ rFOR _

NAMI ___~

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MSGR JOHN ClI NOLAN Natlonal5ecretary Write CATHOLIO NIlAR EAST WeLFARE Assoo ~30 Madson Avenue New York NY OOU telephonel 212vtJkon 6middot5840

CATHaLiD

19 DiJoridrrien Ere State r ourlitei

SChoelbOY leag~~Wmrn~regr~ Stii~Pretty Mu~h sampu [j)(Q)Mbt

By PETIm BARJrEK Nmon BitIh ~h

The gehooboy ba8ebaD mmpaignis cllNimatieaDy near- Inlaquo the climax of another spirited seasoo With approxishymately a week of competitioo Nllllaining oontlmdmg teams Me stmggling to keep their pennanf oopes alive while Wtling for the right to rep-JIe8eDt their ll e s pee t i v e leaguesin the nnand-eomin

-y- shy

Btate tournament The Eastshyem Massachusetts ehampionahip

baseball tournamen+ ClIffiMftl-~

tine of the wurney is tiPoDOOred bythe

II a II sac h u~_ lt Iietts Secondary

SChool Princishypals Association bull Par tie i p 8 t _ ing schools have bElen divided i IIl tot h r e e d3ses - A B and C---llccord- Peter iDg to leagues Blrtek r

and comparable independent teams Action tn all three clasampe3 starts Saturday June L

In addition to the three divishyidon3 the baseball tourney amp1shyem radically JIrom the popular

Two Spots for Both BCl (IDnd Marry Five Bristol County League Howard Ferguson which teams

teams Gre still in contention for will represent the circuit in the tourney play ebampionship event

At this writing Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Stang SpaltamJ of Qartmouth who hold a lllim ene-game edge over their rivals are a solid choice to annex one of the two berths to be filled bi BCL teams The second spot 18 un literally up for grabs

Bishop Feehan High of Attieshyboro which led the circuit untll last week Durfee High of Fan River Attleboro and Taunton lire in close pursuit middotof Stang hoping tomiddot overcome the Sparshytans or at least lInish in the league runner-up berth Both the first and second place finshyishers will8utomatically qualify

If either fim OX second place II decided by Monday May 21 league officials w~ have to DOUty the tournament Director

No~tons Lancers in Need cf Help I h e Narragansett league Class B - Southem

whkh got a head start on the its Iud Old Colony champ ft NaITlIlshyv er area Clrcu conc es gansett runner-upleague play today First place

middot Somerset travels to New Bed- Narragansett champ ~ Olcll ford to meet Holy Family High Colony runner-up Case High of Swansea entell-middotmiddot South Shore champ VB Hockshytains Dighton-Rehoboth West- omock runner-up port hoss Msgr Prevost High Hockomock cpamp vs South

middotof Fall River and Dima]l Voce- ShQre runner-up tional nlso of Fall River will 0I Am f N rth E stobe t Se k Iver es 0 0 a n a e o~k

Entering the final week of ac-middot middot tion Somerset and seekonk are in the top two spots in tbe 8tanding They loom the more likely to corral Class B tourney berths But DightOn-Rehoboth Case and Westwrt trail the sec ODd place club by oIl1yone game If the race ends in II tie ]league officials wlll have ample time to schedule play-off games before the tourney deadline

Pairings for Class Bare

Selecting Union PITTSBURGH (NC)-Twentyshy

five maintenance workers at Duquesne University here in Pennsylvania have left their jobs pending a detell1llnation as to which union will represent the workers The remaining 115 members of the maintenance erew lIlre not involved in the atrike which was called by the 2li who are represented by the tJmted Electrical WorkersUnion

Although it occurs infrequentshyly a team does not have to win Its league to represent its league in tourney eompetition

The Bristol County league champion is slated to play the

bull Bay State League runner-up in first round action with the Bay State champs taking on the County runner-up The winners would then meet in second round play

Pairings for Class A are Class A - Southem

Suburban champ w Middleshy8llX runnerup

Middlesex champ ft Suburshyban runner-up Bay state ehamp VB Bristol runner-up

Bristol champ V8 Bay sta~ runnerup

-Tech lxlsketban competition lllll order to qualifyfor the Tech a team mt1BSt win 70 per cent cd its games but onlythe leagu~ champions ond runner-ups M~ eligible ~r playmiddotiImiddotbasebalL

In both Class A andClass B iitOtalof i6 teams will qualify 1lt7middotmiddotmiddotJiY

for the diamond elimination event~ E~~ Will pai1i~ipate in

the nortlHln division and eight in the southern bracllet The winners in each bracket will meet in the Eastern- Massacilushy

llletts fi~ Preliminary games will be played on June 1 4 and 6 The finals are scheduloo June 8

Class C competition will coIi-BiEt of eight clubs in only one division Titlists in seven smallshyDChooI le1gues and one indeshypendent selected by the tournashy

ment coJiunittee Will comprise the field fur this tliil-d group

and Mansfield 1m the Hockoshymock circuit appear to be out of the running this season

Fo~ Class C schools Its Winmiddot or youre out Only the league champions will play in the championships The winner of the Capeway Conference will meet the Cape and Vineyard champ in opening round play Dennis-YarDlQuth and Sandshywich are the likely opponents

The only other school located within the confines of the diocshyesan territorial limits that has an outside ~hance of qualifying for the tournament is Norton of the Tri-Valley Conference The Lancers however will need some outside help if they are to overcome league leading Millis The Tri-Valley champs will take on the Dual County League champions Defending Class C champ Ashland again leading the Dual Co~nty is heavily favored to repeat both in league ond state competition

NOT A BALL-ITS GUM Yem might get the idea that a pitched ban is lodged in the mask of this young Vancouver BC catcher but it isnt a ball This young ma is trying to prove he is just as efficient behillld the plate as he is at blowing bubble gum NC ~middothoto

Stresses Inter~cicdmiddotmiddotPartnership As Solution to Racial Problem

CLEVELAND (NC) - A Nashy world would be better off lr tional ASsociation for Advanceshy iou hadnt gotten involved Jm

ment of Colored People official asserted here interracial part shynership is the key to oolution of the racial problem but it cannot be a partnership dom inated by either race

Dr John A Morrell NAACP assistant nat ion a 1 director speaking at the Cleveland Cathshyltnlic Interracial Councils annual Interracial Justice Awards banshyquet said the nation today is aj an unprecedented crossroads but the interracial way is the democratic part to justice

He spoke in place of Roy Wishydns NAACP national~ director who was with the U S delega- tion at the United Nations con vocation on human rights lin Tehran Iran -

Angry Voices There are angry Negro voiees

raised in protest because develshyopment of opportunity in recent years does not apply to twoshythirds of the Negro population he saidmiddot The kind of jobs they are capable of filling are vanshyishing from the economy he added

But if a fruitful partnership is to continue between the white and Negro the burden of know- ing the truth about Negro hisshytory must be borne by white as well as Negro Dr Morsell said

Vie are all fighting a bitter legacy of generations White people have to know where they stand and why Once you assume the burden of work toward interracial justice you assume the responsibilities be continued

If you are not going to ~

sume them then you and fhe

the first place Informed PariDership

Dr Morsell said a mere sPirit of commitment is not enough to

survive over the hard going Work must be based on a part shynership that is informed intelshyligent understanding and resil shyient he said

The interracial awards were presented to Father Edwan Camille assistant Catholic Charshyities director here and Thom811 C Westropp president of Womshyens Federal Savings and Loan Association

Westropp was cited for his efforts towards opening the

doors of banking and credit 1m the Cleveland area to all ciUshyzens regardless of race creed 011

color while Father CarniDe was cited for his leadership as director of Project Peace (~

irner-city diocesan organizati~ working with the poor mostly Negroes) and for his work as co-chairman of the first tri-faith Greater Cleveland Conference on Religion and Race

ELECTRICAl -Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

SS lPlE1rIEllt amp JgtAIDlj

$103 Womens Club Rose E Sullivan

$50 Joseph P Conaty

$35 Belen M amp William J

De7 $33

Mr amp Mrs James F McMahcm $25

Mrs Margaret Daly amp Mary John Dolan ~illiam Daley amp Mary Esther Mr amp Mrs Stanley M -laniek

~50 In memory of MrsMarga~

W Pow~rs RodneY S DeCecco

$26 Mr amp Mrs John Soula

$25 Edward Healey Mr amp Mrs Michael McCartbiY Mr amp Mrs James Crosson Mrs Gertrude Lomas Mr amp Mrs Norman GagnOOl

ST JOHN TEE BAPTlIS11

$30 St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ampt Jean Baptiste $25

Mr amp Mrs Ovila Caron Henri Demers

In memory of Mr amp lVlrm bullWilliam Sheehan

Open to An PORTLAND (NC)-The seeshy

ond annual Catholic youth conshyvention of the Portland Diocese has opened the convention to all Catholic students of the dioshycese in order to spread the agtOlgto tolate of youth to youth Thll

)faine convention has comprised only students who have takes themiddot youth leadership trainlJnl1 courses

Dont Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH

DO faJse teeth drop slip or wobblo when you talk eat laugh or sneeze Dont be annoyed and embarr1lEsetll lkllh hanl11caps FASTEETH Bamp

e (non-acid) powder to SPr1n~Ikle on your plates keeps false teetb more firmly set Gives confident feel~ Ing Of security and added comfort No gummy gooey taste or feellncr Dentures that 6t are essential to health see your dentist regulorly oet FASTEETH at alll1rug countemJ

o

WYman 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD MASS

IfIIfJltk del1WM

S H~~uO~ Oil

SAVE MONEY 0 OUROILHEATI bull eatt

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

Iritai~ If S)crap SuPPITreg~~5n Acts Of Re~(j[jmlt~oml

LONDON (NC)-It looks as if Britain is at long last glOing to stop suppressing the monasteries-officially that 0

Legal experts sifting through lenturies of forgotten laws clutshyooling the records have found (hat the Suppression of Reli shygious Houses Acts of 1535 and 0039 have never been repealed

They are among 155 statutes weeded out from the statute IJ)ooks between 1239 and 1705middot lmd now to be definitively leshy~aled by a special act of Par-Iliament

These two acts enforced the eosure and pillaging of Catholic monasteries friaries and other religious houses throughout the WINS nsc Chaplain

eountry following King Henry (Captain) Angelo J LitekyVIIIs break with Rome in 1534

assigned to the 199th InfanshyJhey brought vast fortunes On goods property and mog of try Brigade in Vietnam has ell land to the kings favorites been awarded the Distinshyoome of whose families have reshy guished Service Cross forWned their wealth to this day extraordinary heroism SevshyIgnored in Practice

Of course the laws against erely wounded when Viet me Roman Catholic Church Cong ambushed a US infanshyIhave long ago been shelved and try company Ohaplain Lit shyIgnored in practice The reli shy eky braved flying bullets toous houses are back probably

rescue and minister tomore numerous than before iIome have even reoccupied the WQunded and dying meR 0ld sites they hadmiddot before the lReformation

Another notable measure ~ewlfk ~[p)regID Gingled out for repeal is the 1loleration Act of 1688 This act W51f)$ ~WIfltdl although in itself it did not help

NEW YORK (NC)-The Adshy~he Catholics marked the end of

vocate weekly newspaper of1lhe Protestant Reformation and the Newark Archdiocese wont1he beginning of religious tolershythe first-place Silver Medalation in Britain Awarti for weekly newspapersIt allowed freedom of worship in the annual public serviceClgt Protestant Trinitarian Nonshycompetition sponsored by theoonformists provided theiT New York chapter of the Pubiicmeetings were opento the pubshy

Relations Society of AmericaIlk it did not relieve the existing The award was for a five-part

fenaWes of those days against analysis ttl the ills besetting the ~atholics other breakaway Newark public school system lhcnestants or Jews but it was )he analysis was written by a hisberic beginning It has been Advocate news editor Ed Grant ltJeseribed as the Great Oharter and was an examination into ~ religious freedom and the one of the areas of dissatisfacshy~umph ofc9mmon ~ense tion which led to widespread

rioting in Newark last Summer

The series ran lri the newsshylJays Help for Poor paper last september and Octoshy

lPeCice First ~eeds ber The Public Rellitlons SocishyMIAMI (NC)-The Catholic ety award - silver medals are (lihurch in this nation today awarded in each of five cateshy

gories-are given for the mostauast address itself to the presshynoteworthy contributions bullbull 0 toiloing needs of the poor and dis-

~vantaged as well as the better public ~derstanding of ltJnICial issue of peace says the _ community problems in the New

4Tchbishop of Miami York metropolitan area Archbishop Coleman F Calshy New s p a per 8 magazines 0011 following announcement of broadcasting an d television middotGte establishment of the ecclesshy media in the New York-New iastical province of Miami and Jersey-Connecti~ut metropolitan tMs appointment as its first area are eligible for the awards l)rehbishop stressed that the (fhurch must be concerned with ibe problems of the time in Retired ArttlhJboshop S)Vhich we exist Gets College lHlonorThe g~eatest problems at present are the problems of the DUBUQUE ( NC) - Retired disadvantaged the poor and Archbishop Edward D Howard Utase who are in need and of of Portland Ore has been named oourse peace he smiddotaid for Loras Colleges 1968 John

It is more difficult for us to Fitzgerald Kennedy Award The LiOlve in any real way the prob- prelate is a former president of iems that are our concern until the college we have a measure of peace The citation and gold medal And it is the prayer of all of us annual award honoring an out Chat peace will be established as standing Amercian will be preshyiluickly as possible on an honorshy sen ted to the archbishop at the able basis o college commencement cereshy

monies June 2 Camp Directory Archbishop Howard 90 a nashy

Nltlw available from the Nashy ti ve of Cresco Iowa and a Loras lItonal Catholic Camping Assn alumnus was ordained to the ~ 131~ Massachusetts Ave priesthood in 1906middot He became lM- W Washington D C 20005 president of the college in 1921 Is the 1968 Directory of Catholic In 1924 he was consecrated to ~mps which lists all known serve as auxiliary bishop of DavshyearriPs in the U S giving acshy enport He became archbishop of Civities charges dates open and Portland in 1926 and retired in lIbailing addresses 1966

National CYOPlans LeadershipTraining shyImpa~t to Aid Priests Adult Admiddotvisors

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tbe through the introduction of BaWmore June 23-28 ehicagoNational Catholic Youth Organshy leadership methodology which July 1-5 Boston July 14-19 ization Federation will launch a facilitates maximum involveshy Sen Antonio July 28-Aug 3 training program in June called ment 00 the local level and Denver Aug 11-16 and San Impaot be help priests and hence maximum commitment JFaoancisoo Aug 25-30 adults 00 work effectively with The National CYO Federation Dr Donald Ebalt a professhyteenagers in a leisure time proshy will sponsor six sessiOns this lIlional trainbig eonsul1lant of gram summer to train diocesan CYO Washington D c win diiecl

The program was designed in staffs m 1lhe use of the newmiddot ead11ab cooperation with Leadership program lhey win )e held m A pilot Jtudy of the effectiveshyResources Inc a firm _of beshy DeBS of Impact on a group of havior scientists -rolulbteers from the NewarlkAddress Graduates

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishy archdiocese was held at the SOUTH BEND (HC) -Mel-rector of the Youth Department Benedictine Retreat House ill

Jdte-rite Patriarcib Maximoo VUnited States Catholic Confershy jNewton N J ence in announcing ttie new Kakimof Antioch and Dr Ilhirtymiddot persons representashyprogram said tives of youth adult advisorsJames A Perkins of Cornell

The goal 01 Impact is 00 help and priest moderators met withUniversity will be speakers atthe priests who are moderators representattives of the CYO

the 123rd annual cOnW~ncementof CYO the ad~lt advisors and Federation staff and a member youth participating in CYO toshy exerci~ Sundly June 2 at Of Leadership rResources Inc ward maximumpersonal growth Notrlte Dame University 110 assess and to evaluate 1mpaltL

(Cathedral Camp-Resident and Day Camp for Boys

O~ Lady of the L_ke Day Camp fOr Girls

Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON LONG POND ROUTE 18 EAST FREETOWN MAS~

~ RESIDENT CAMP 49th Season June 30 thru August 24 - a Week Season

Diocesan seminar-ians - College Students amp Teachers Under direction StaH of a Diocesan Priest

Saili~g swimming water skiing horseback riding riflery archeryPrograni hiking overnight camping trips ~rts amp crafts Indian crafts camp crafts athletic (team amp individual) competition and inter-camp cOmpetition professional tutorial service available

Private beach large luxurious camphouse dining hall modernfacilities~ washrooms arts and crafts buildings camp store and office first aid and infirmary beautiful chapel overnight and weekend accomodashytions for parents

S WEEK PIERIOD $325 - 4 W~K PERIOD $165 - 2 weEK PERIOD $85

Cathedra~ Day Camp t=or Boys Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period

JULY W- AUGUST 23 Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period fEES INCLUDIE Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Horseback Riding Weekly Cook~Outs amp Milk Daily without Added Cost

--~----------------------------------------Our Lady of the Lake bay Camp For Girls

JULY l _ AUGUST 23 Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period

FEES INCLUD~Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Ilorseback Riding Weekly Cook-Outsmiddot Milk Daily without Added Cost

o

For further information write to

REV WALlER A 5ULLlVANDiredor PO Box 63 - East Freetown Mass 02717

Page 12: 05.23.68

12 -tAE ANCHOR-Diocesa ofFoti Rive~Thurs May 23 1968 l

$copylDfrTht ~$frml 1NJcopy1iU0il Wreg$U9gt[J1 JIl[OlLY CROSS OUIlt LADY OlF GIltACIE

$101 $50 Mr amp Mrs Donald L BergerOlll Rev Rene R Levesque

$100 $25Joseph P Kairys

Mr amp Mrs Orner Duqu~tte$50 Jennie E Overton Mr amp Mrs James R Jones SOWltrlm YIiUililOuii1mDr amp Mrs Thomas Berry Jr Mr amp Mrs John Pilz middotST pros X Mr amp Mrs Robert J Dray $150 John J Smith John F Martin Dr amp Mrs R Earl McLoud $100

$40 Anonymous 1IL F Bergeron $54l

$35 Philip J Hart Frank Ready Ano~ymous (2)

$30 $25 Dr amp Mrs Herbert L Evereti Edward P Hayes John J CarshyLouis Lyne amp Theodore Larishy roll Thomas P McDonough

mere Dorothy Schoonmaker Denis d Brophy Mary Geist Douglas Eo ~

$25 VampJl John Crawford Mr amp Mrs David Gomes M

ampMrs Leo R Schleicher Mr amp Mrs M J Hegarty Thomas F 1fltID01iJil~~ Gentile Mr amp Mrs EdwardlllL Slr JJOSEIPIHILoveday

Mr amp Mrs Robert E Coffey ~150

li$r Francis Welch Mr amp Mrs A Friend Leo F Sullivan Mr amp Mrs Robshy $40

Mr amp Mrs John Aiello I3ehleicher ltUt Downey Mr amp Mrs John E

Mr amp Mrs Gerald Tache $35

Mr amp M~ Arthur LeclairEast FaBmoutlh $30

ST ANTHONY VictormiddotL Brunette $275 Mrs Simonne Fisher

St Vincelllt de Paul Confer- Mr amp Mrs Edwin J Marmk ace Mr amp Mrs William A Olishy

voeira Mr amp Mrs Enos Days $21)

William Bartlett Mr amp Mrs Gerard Benoit Mr amp Mrs Nicholas F Tangshy

~y $25

Mrs Margaret Virgin Alice Bourassa Alexander Perri llIIllll lllli Braley Jr Dr amp Mrs Jell shyorne Brault

Cecile A Daley Mr amp Mra John I)ias Jr Mrs Mary P Gage Mr amp Mrs Ernest RLashysectesse Edward McGrath

Mr amp Mrs Leonard deMeshydeiros Mr amp Mrs Roland L Despres Mrs Irene FitzGeralcll Mr amp Mrs Edward Fitzsimshymons Mary Gogghi

Edmond Goulet Margaret Manghan Joseph C Mello Mrs Carmen Muldoon Mr amp Mrs Paul Murray

Margaret Nickerson Mra Edythe Rankin Mr amp_Mra Frank J Rezendes George Vishyveiros Mr amp Mrs JosephSevigny

Sli MAIlty

$81 St Vincent de Paul Society

$25 Sacred Hearts Association Raymond Dlugosinski Mr amp Mrs Manuel Allua amp

Nancy Mr amp Mrs Antone Costa J1l Mr amp Mrs John A Wojcik

SACRED IHIEARlr $25

St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ST IPATRRCK $iOO

Mr amp Mrs William BrennlUll $75

Anonymous $50

Mr amp Mrs Francis J Flynn Atty amp Mrs Edward Farrell

$30 Mr amp Mrs Albert W Lawrence

bull Major ampMrs Lawrence Uch-shymanowicz

$25 Mrmiddot amp Mrs Edward C Wen Jr John Keohane

Mr~ amp MrS JosephCardeIre Mr amp Mrs Melvin Dolan

Mrmiddotamp Mrs Walter Buguey Mr amp Mrs Robert Costa Mr amp Mrs John Kelliher John Lynch

Mr amp Mrs Thomas Magwre Mr amp Mrs Kenneth Paige

$30 lt $leo~ IJ=1J yltID Uilliil 0$ lllr amp MrsEdward McCarthJ7 lievbull~ 17 ~

Slr FRANCIS XAVlrEllt $2S st ~o Womeno CI~

Holy Name Society COO $450 Mramp RlIra Lee Kingsb~St Vincent de Paul Society $25 Mr amp lVlro Leo Parente

$300 Capitell Mr amp Mrs Richard Dr amp Mrs ~p Sibilll

Charles H McGrath Joan

Mr amp Mrs Larry Newman Sproul lllr amp Mrs Thomas ~$100 Loughlin Mr amp Mrs William Mr amp Mm GeorgeM~Doane Beale amp Ames E Donovan Mr amp lVlm Joseph FalDtoo

$50 Mr amp Mrs Harry SylvesterMr amp Mrs Frank J Dolan Mr amp Mrs Charles Flynn lltlr $25

A Friend Mrs Rockina CaftDoMr amp Mrs Irving Morrissey amp Mrs~ Marshall Field Mr amp amp Family Mr amp Mrs JOQD KmampJ R ~eyburn Mrs Robertmiddot Ryan Vetorlno Mr amp MrS Victor Narciso Mr IIMr amp Mrs John Hart Bros Ipc Fruitland

Scudder amp Taylor Oil Inc CarreiM Florist Mrs John Kinsley Dr amp Mrs Francis ONeil Ilflr amp Moo Wllliam ~

Captains Table Mr lie Mrs John Currivan Mr Bishop Tyler General Assem- McznsfieRdl Mrs Alfred Kuplast Mrs ~

My garet Jordan Mrs Grace Duma Charles J Ardito 8l MARY Mr amp Mrs Fred Taylor Josepla

$ltamp0 $150 E Donovan Jmiddotr Mr amp Mramp W tel Alfieri Catholic Youth Organization st VinceJntt de Paul Society

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The Rig Rever~ Edward TO~MeiJramiddot The IUght Reverehd RiJYlIWnd T CQnsidiRf lVallonarpfreclor Olt Diocesiul Di~ecto i

366 Fifth Avenue 368 North MalnSteet f(eWYork New Yo~k ioooi Fall River Massachuseits027l0 -

1iWJlE ADDRESS

THE sectOClllETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH ~ shy

I

~~ IiUrge Negro La Guidonce Boord ~n K~s~ Cety

KANSAS CJIIIY (NC~-A five-paltish cooperative illl

ner city ministry guided by a Negro lay board has been proposed os a way o~ bridging the gap betWeen the white Catholic CI1urch and the Negro community here in Misouri

A six-person committee headshyed by MrsThelma Work will identify the nee~ of the lComshymunity-Catholic or not-and to propose a structure fur meetshying those needs I

The action came as the result

of a meeting of the Catholie

V ~

Clergy Conference on Inner Oity bullneeds

Father James Lock chairman cited charges of the Black Cathshyolic ClergyCaucus in Detroit in conjunction with the IImnual meeting of the Catholic Clergy Conference on the Interracial Apostolate The Black Caucus statement said the Catholic Church in the United States 1s gtrimarily a white racist insti shytution which is rapidly dying in the black community and to which the black community no longer looks to with hope

On~ Out f li5 The Caucus recommended fha~ Harrison the Bishop Rev William J Hurley Rev DonaiiIll

white priests become supportshy E Messier Rear Rev Cornelu8 F Kiley Rey Robert A ers and learners listening tc McGowan Rev Edmund J Fitzgerald Rev Kevin F TrippNegroes to find out what tbeir lheir assignment~ are Olll page twoneeds are

The Kansas City-St Joseph diocese bas no Negro diocesan priests Ttrore~ DS~th~ Aoee Sl1m~PO rfif~ifflg tedera~ Jb ~~~

We are trying to start the wheels rolling for some kind of

~umlp~JrlMeFrot Nleereg~~rJ fr CmbCBi OW~iff1ychurch structure through which the black people of our diocese can voice opinions and partici shy WASHINGTON (lTC)-SPokesshy ment of public policy ~t Jlorth oommunity-based Social services esnie cultural values of ~hliv

pate in decision making said men for Protestant Catholic and in the Full Employment Act (l(f to meet Human and community country they said are sucll Father Lock Jewish organizations h a V e 1946 which provides for useshy needs Recipients of rondo that work becomes the basis by

backed federal legislation which ful employment opportunities should not conduct sectarian which a persons worth tnFather Dan Howe declared~

We have set up programB would provide one million jobs for all those able willing and programs judged A job not only tends ie i10r the nations unemployed seeking to work n determine an individuals acshygeared to Catholics in our parshy While they acknowledged that

ceptance by society but it alsish whom we have formed rn Their support was given in The Acts emphasis on education passage of this legislation would affects ones attitude abolll~the white mentality Since cl testimony before the House Seshy and training Training s1Mgtuld be no wre-all for the ills ci oneselfbest we are having contact lect Subcommittee on Iabor be open-ended so that the posshy poverty in America the spokesshy

with only about 2000 people out Studies have shown that unshywhi~ is holding hearings on sibility of permanent full-time men said that any attempt to of the 50000 in our area we the Guaranteed Employment employment beyond fIDe presshy combat poverty must provide employed persons have a ve~

can presume that the activities Act of 1968 ent situation is a reality Trainshy meaningful jobs low level of self-esteem anell we have structed as being our that this attitude tends to pro-ing programs of this ~Testifying were Father JohnChristian program of service do vide a self-fulfilling prophesrshould include basic educationMcCarthy assistant director ofnot reflect or reach black thinkshy MO~~U[ij] ~lW] ~O~S since it then becomes more dif~counseling and opportunities tothe Social Action Departmenting ficult to find or hold a joblearn about appearance manshy

E~GJHlll O]RDAllNJEID FOR IllmCJESJE Bishop Qgtnnolly m-dained eight deacons ro the priesthood for service in the Diocese 21t ceremonies oonducted at St Marys Cathedral Fall River Front Rev Edward E Correia Rev George Eo

We need a board of black of the U S Catholic Confershy OrJi1 AA~jjo Foreg[uGagement of income health IImdence Dr Grover Bagby of thelaymen to tell us what the pe0shy NEW YORK (NC)-Answershyother factors affecting personalDepartment of Social Justice ofple want to help change the well-being and development fog an appeal from the Ceylonthe National Council oftone to establish priorities government now fighting a mashyChurches and Rabbi Richard GFather Howe noted there are lWven fl Sellf-lEs~(()nim laria epidemic threatening 16Hirsch director of the Religiousapproximately 9000 Negro million persons the catholicAction Center of the Union of Involvement of private nonshyCatholics on the books but Medical Mission Board nere sentAmencan Hebrew Congrega- profit organizations Such Oll shynot necessarily active in Kansas by air Ifreight 364000 anti-mashytions - ganizations they said will c0shyCity out of a total Negro popu- laria tablets to Colombo Ceyshyoperate with the development ~lation of about 130000 They specifically suppoit4d lons seaport-capital The shipshyHe said that although the three provisions in the bill ment valued at $10746 conshy

structure of the lay board is yet Creation of an Office of Guarshy (cll)f AdldJrell$$ sisted of tablets for both ooults ro be determined it is the conshy anteed Employnient Opportushy and ~hildren sensus of 20 priests and laity at 1r~~regy Meefrolilregnity l8 a eontinued develop Earlier the CMMB respondingthe meeting that at least half

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-Theshythe lay members would be un- oro a plea for help from Indoneshyology must revolutionize it shyder 25 since the young people ~1JJlhJreg~ WODil$ [Q)~f sian authorities shipped 220shyself John Cogley former reshyare the thought-leaders in the 520 anti-malaria tablets ~aluedligion editor of the New Yorkblack community ~ial ~fit1hvllsW Times told the national convenshy at $7306

NeCeSS31lY ApPll03Cln SCOTCH PLAINS (NC) shytion of the College Theology so-A Negro lawyer Leonara BrotherHarold Woods a teacher The Catholic Medical Mission ciety IN the University m- SainHughes told the meeting at Union Catholic High School Board for 40 years has beenmiddot IfmiddotranciscoOne thlng is clear The clos- here in New Jersey has won a oonducting a worldwide mercy

Ing of any Catholic institution months delay to contest lim Cogley DOW a staff member cl program shipping medicines or cut-back in the inner-city order to report to his New York the Center for the Study m Deshy drugs bandages and various says one thing to Negroes We draft board for induction into mocratic Institutions Santa Barshy other hospital supplies and dont want you to be CathoUcs ~e Airmed Fo~ equipment to some 1000 misshybara Cal and editor of the Censhy

Father Vince~t Lovett dir~ BrOther B8rold la member of ter magazine tlgtld delegates that sion hospitals 4000 dispensaries tor of the new Diocesan Social theology must lead- rather than and clinics in developingAction office saidmiddot middotthe Marist BrotheJS had been eoUJlltriesfollow usemiddotits treasureS ratheT It seems to me we a- 4o_1krecJassified ll-A and Cllldered to than hoard them Liberatemiddot it shying about setting up something after rewmfug biB draft eard 011 self from its own prison ~ c0nshylike II couotywith II state goy- April 19 as a protem agaiDst the formity fear imd be dead Dbshyernment - a regional ministry U4o- actionism of th~ pastwithin tile diocese Be said the war VBallam

S~aking on The image off

WI report for Induction em April M

approach seems not so much lim The 22-year-old teachers ease ideal as lh necessitymiddot bas been taken up by the Amer-o Man as Citizenmiddot Cogley said

iean CDvil Uberties Union that the change in the religlO1Ul Which ealled middottbeboardll action mans self-image and the change

Silent Meditation in reclassifying him ~ new in the image of politleal man are TRENJON ~NC)-A bID pr0shy height of wegality Tbe ACLU not unrealated The image of a

viding for a period of silent said Brother Harolds religious free man redeemed from every meditation each day by students status had not collmged since he form of spiritual servitude and attending public schools was WIlI3 originally classified ~D subjugation he said b triumphshyintroduced in the New Jersey and that he hGd DOt ilrlterfered ing over the old image of eccleshyState Legislature by Assembly with the ndministratlon of the sia9Ucal man-a passive creature Speaker Albert B Smitlll 3eleet1ve ~ BWolltem eOOject ~ the Will ca ~thero

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THE At~~C~_ 15 Th M 231968 urs ~y World Communication Day CtmMG(f~ A~V[JK~$ObsecteWGR1CCe on S~ndl~w O[fi) ~copy~o~ A~fDcopy[jf)

WASHINGION (NC)-In response to an appeal by NEW ORLEANS (NC)-ArchshyPope Paul VI to the universal Ohurch the Church in the bishop PhHip M Hannan asshyUnited States will observe the second World Communicashy serted here As far as I am tions Day on Sunday May 26 The National Conference of concerned segregation in the

Church is dead We are past the Catholic Bishops awroved time for statements Now is thefor Motion Pictures and Bishoplast November the observshy time for actionClarence J Issenmann of Cleveshynnc of World Communicashy Tile archQishop of New Orshy

tions Day in this country on USCC Press Department land episcopal chairman of the

leans told delegates at an diocesan and parish levels ampnd archdiocesan conference on st) shy

members of the U S Bishops cial action I assure you we are going forwardCommittee for Social Commu- Senate Rev1ltews

nications have sent to individ- He outlined programs fe ual Ordinaries throughout the Continued from Page One beMer education for adequate country a cOpy of the Prayer lains to be assigned on a funmiddot housing and for recognition of of the Faithful for that Sunday time basis and that the needs the inherent digni ty of all men and a ooP1 of the Holy ~athers of the sick were being adequateshy The Church is exerting itll message issued earlier this ly met under the present arshy influence in every way to assistmonth ran~ement the poorest he said If we

It is recommended that the 3 Recommendations on salshy follow Christ we must begillilobservance in this country ary adjustments Taken into aeshy with the pOor even if thishave both religious and non- count _by Bishop in his direcshy means asking others to wait 0religious aspects The former tives for Aug I 1967 little longerwould highlight a Mass with 4 Meetings open to all clergy Anyone can live poor the

appropriate sermon in the 00- Bishop approved archbishop said The key thingthedral or some convenient 5 Extension of Synod prepshy is dignity This does not mean church to which executives aration time Bishop approved that this dignity is recognized Wld employes of communica- 6 Secretary to be Treasurer by a dole or a handout or eveD tions media would be specially and Senate budget Bishop apshy preferential treatment We are invited proved confusing issues when we talk

The non-religious asp e c t 7 ChOice of other Prayers of of dignity as if it can be bought would feature news conferences the Faithful Bishop approved or paid for he said articles in the press and radio 8 Referral of matters to Passhy - I am totally for equal oppollaand TV interviews and proshy tunity in jobs and for adequate

housing not just open housincgrams toral Council Bishop approved

In his message to the Church 9 Creation of Clergy Person-In human dignity everyone hasPope Paul invited Catholics to Del Board Bishop approved an equal right to education anell

consider the significance of 1() Clergy retirement policy to culture he declaredthe changes that are taking with Bishop accepting ormiddot not

AWARDS CEREMONIES At the annual Awards Day for hospital personnel at St Annes Hospital Fall River Manuel Benevides 38 years of service receives his award while Bertha Janson 42 years of service awaits her presshyentation from trustees Harold K Hudner left and Arthui Guimond right

place in this field (communica- according to diocesan ll1eed tions) under our very eyes and Bishop approved to ponder the serious responsi- 11 In-service training tor bJlities that theSe imply for one newly-ordained priests Bishop and all approved

Clamor forAttentlo~ 12 Various diocesan diredors Until recently the Holy to recommend men for middotpart shy

Father pointed out many did time or full-time further study not have anything more to Btim- Bishojgtmiddot approved 1IIate their inflection than vague 13 Full participation by memories of what they learned Catholics in middotYMCAyWCA ot school or in the family and programs Bishop aPlgtrov~ What they beard in their envi- 14 Rotation among religious ronment eomniunities of their represen-

Now however with the echo Uitives on Senate Bishop ap- r the press motion pictures proved radio and television clamoring 15 Clergy to recommend men lor attention new h~riZons oPenJor episcopacy Bishop applloved wide before them llIndmiddot they are 16 Lay Personnel pension ttuned to the throbbing life of plan study Bishop approved the ~niverse

Who will not rejoice at this 17 Adjustmentin diocesan progress Do we not 1111 see in assessments Bishop approved It a roadmiddotdestined by Providence 18 Clergy retirement study for the advance of themiddot whole Bishop approved of mankind There is room for 19 Bishop announced through all hopes if man learns to mas- Senate exchange of facultieS ter these techniques but every- between Diocese of Fall River thing can be lost if he shirks his and Providence responsibilities Various commfttees have made

Members of the bishops com- studies to implement some of mittee signing the letter to the these considerations Ordinaries included Auxiliarymiddot Senate representatives have Bishop Gerald V McDevitt of participated on a regional and Philadelphia episcopal moder- national basis regarding a nashyator of the United States Catb- tional organization of priests olic Conference Bureau of In- and its constitution and activity formation Bishop John A Donshyovan of Toledo episcopal chairshyman of the National Catholic Cursillo for Men Office for Radio and Television Bishop Christopher J Weldon Starts Tonightshyof Springfield episcopai chairshy

A mens ~ursillo win ~ginman of the Bishops qo~ttee tonight at La Salette C~nter of Christian Livingmiddot At~leboro Dishy

Delegate Recives rectors will be William Barnes of Marion and Rev GilesHonorary Degree Genest middotMS of the center

HONOLULU (NC) ~ Archshy Allmiddot eursillistas are invited to bishop Luigi RaimondiApostolicmiddotmiddot the firstmiddot anniversary of ultleya Delegate in the Unikld States middotmeetingsmiddotin the Fall River area baS received an honorary deshy at 745 Wednesday night May laquoree froIn Charninade College 29 at Sacred Hearts Academy here the only Catholic eollege Prospect Street Fall River A lID the state of Hawaii concelebrated Mass will be folshy In an Dterview with the Hashy lowed by a song session social

waUmiddotCatholic Herald ArehlSishop bour and refreshments Baimondi ~pressed tolerance Ul1reya meetings are schedshylor student activism in the Unishy uled in Attleboro oat Jettes ted States middotIltating Students Funeral Home Friday May 11 8ft adive everywhere Youth Monday May 27 Monday June ill UyiDg find its WBY aoc1 2 Friday June 14 and FridayecJar patterns of tbougbt IlBd June 21 eetioD e DOt lIS set asin pre A eursillo for W4)men is scbedshy paerationfl Cbolees were 1IIed for August and further inshy

-e fiSHthen tbin ~ tit formation is obtainable inla ~ -e LeSalleUe Centerbull --

You Live Better Electrically

trlc range bullbullbull with Iln ingenious oven that cleans Itself Make 8 clean break with the past bullbullbull and graduate to another appliance

that adds to the Joy of Total Electric Uvlng

Graduate to a ~fiameless electric range thatmiddotcleansits own ovenmiddot

Make 8 clean break~ with the past4

Why spend ~ours stooping scrubbing and scouring to clean your oven Why not grad- uate to a modern flarve1ess range bullbull with anoven that cleans itself electrically Its so

easy to use Set the controls and-zingo The oven cleans Itself (And drip pans) All you dois whisk awaya IIttie pOwder

- YOUll notice toothat a flamelessmiddot range keeps your kitchen clean cool a~d ~omshyfortable And because electric cookmg IS so automatic YOUll cook with pleasure So see

yOur appliance dealer about aflameless elecshy

See Yo~r Appliance Dealer or

FAll RIVER ~l~CTRIC LIGHT COMPANY

o

mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 23 196816 I

Mafttl[p)Dsellt $50 Raymond L W Benoit

$5BTANJrlllONY Jos~ph A Tully William J

$300 OLearY Mr ampMrs Alfred Baty ltlJbades McGowan Mr amp Mrs Fred Harney

$100 Mr amp Mrs Michael C ODonshyaarence G Verdi nell Mr amp Mrs ThomaS P Per~ lIugene F Phelan kins Mr amp Mrs John Kozlowski

$15 mosampry Altar Society

$66 Buzzard$ B~y I

iusan A McGowan ST MAJuiAR]ampTWilliam Keane

$SOshy$55 A Friendllohn P Delaney

$6$40 lIlr amp Mrs Thomas Pina

~h G Perry $25$35

Mr amp Mrs Edwin PaytonlInmothy Manning )l amp Mrs John KarlJfudge E C Horrocks J~

$30 Mr amp Mrs Edwin N Rose Wareham Lodge of Elks 15044bullbull Clayton King

Mr amp Mrs David Fannon$~

Mr amp Mrs John OCOnnellJames Downey Romeo Bedarql William Delaneyhnes H Gifford Mary M Chad Mr amp Mrs James Lopes

Wick George Smith Jr Antone Mr amp Mrs Louis Fougereshy-es Edmund Perry $25 Mr amp Mrs Armand Bedard

Mr amp Mrs Michael DelIsMark H McIntyre Teree JeminaBlossom Joseph Farley Robert Mr amp Mrs William BennettGIngras Real Breton Mr amp MrsLouis Eacobaoct

Jobn Tarvis Francis ODri9shyu Holy Nam~ Society Paull Glennon Joseph Zychowicz Central -VUlageIIaomas Renahan Richard SmiUll

ST JOHN THE BAPTIBJl

~50 bullNorth Dighton Mr amp Mrs John DeNadal

ST JOSEPH nolt Rev John P Hogan$156

IlR Vincent de Paul $75 Dr Peter F Piccinini$50

$25amp11 Name Society Florence I Bessette MrSt Josephs Womens Guild

$35 Mrs John J Ardagh Jr llim Raymond Williamsbull amp Mrs Joseph MWTaJ

Me amp Mrs Daniel TebreiN$30 J Jl)r amp Mrs William AcIamI Mr amp Mrs Robert Albanese

o Iohn W Perreira$5 Ch(ltham

Mr amp Mrs Joseph C Amarat 1lIJr amp Mrs Edward M Berobe HOLY ~EJI)EIEMEamp

bullbull amp Mrs Arthur A Ennes Mr $101 A Mm William Johnson Rose Pi Assqc of the SacredHea~ Mello $lOet

Mr amp Mrs Harold Mendoza Mr amp Mrs Robert Han lIffr amp Mrs Bruce Murph) Mr Col amp Mrs John McCa~ bull Mrs Robert Secatore $50

Mrs James Bell Jr St Vincent de Paul Sodeq Mr amp Mrs John J Cavanaup

IIMMACULATE CONCBPJIl[ON $30 $DOO A- Friend

Ambonymous $2-5 $a Chatham Trust Co Mr af

Anonymous MrS E Joseph Geller Dr~ amp MIlII Robert Harned A Friend (~)

Anonymous $75

Mr amp Mrs William Kent Mr amp Mrs Paul reF~vre Mr lIi$it

- Mrs~ Richard Sylva Mr amp MmHelen P Derby Patrick SullivanMr amp Mn Aibert Giordano

A Friend Mr amp Mrs Frank Dresseli Mr amp Mrs Philip S1iel]oA Friend Mr amp Mrs James Griffin shyAnonymous Mr amp Mrs Frank Wing _ImmaCU1ate Conception MenliI

Club $4G North Attleboro

Mr amp Mrs Raymond ~rgerotl SACRED HEART$35

Mr amp Mrs William Condoo $200 $5 Rev JOuter Lussier

Mr amp Mrs William Buchtman $30 Caesar Cardoza Mr amp Mrs RoT Mr amp MrsJeorge Merewe Howard Immaculate Conception $~ Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Joseph A Jette

Mr amp Mrs Co George Knapp $25 McCarthy Coal Co Mrs Fredshy Mr amp Mrs Paul Dion Mrbull elick H Murphy A Friend Mrs Frederick Fortin LionelL

Martineau Mr amp Mrs~ Philippe Rainville amp Florence

Mr amp Mrs George Beaulieu Sl lWAllUf A Friend

STMA-ElY$50 $150Mr amp Mrs Michael Murphy

Nelson GulskiMr amp Mrs Jose FernandesSIl $75$30 Rev Armando A- AnnunziabMr amp Mrs Thomas J Bryanamp

$50 Eva Morowski

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John HaugMr amp Mrs Roland Roberge Mr amp Mrs John StanfordDavid amp Martha Rocha M Veronica Reilly

Mary Cronin George Yefh Mildred Leary A ~riend

BreWSlfreli $4G Dr amp Mrs Domenie BalJiIe

OUR LADY OF TlIIE CAn $35 o $100 Dr amp Mrs Kenneth AtwiIl lllisBionaries of La saleUe jnr amp Mm JosepiL Dona

MONSIGNOR VI[lELSB

Heads Bishop$ Task force

WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr Aloysius J Welsh of Newark N J a recognized authority in race relations and social aclion work has been named to head the Urban Task Force estabshylished by the U S bishops

Bishop Joseph L Bernardin general secretary of the U S Catholic Conference who anshynounced the monsignors apshypointment said the task force was calhd for by the U S blsbshy

ops at theirmiddot April meeting in SL Louis in their statement on the mational racial crisis The bishshy

ops directed the task foree be established by the USCC Social[ Action Department

In this work he will cooperaW with MsgI George G Higgins director and Father John MeshyCartty assistallt director of the Social Action Department the bishop said

$30 Mr amp Mrs Frederick ThOIpG middotMr amp Mrs Clement Sbarolll

$26 Mr amp Mrs Andtew Boisvert Gertrude Cassi~y

Elizabeth Sheals $25

Mr amp Mrs Daniel J Cava- naugh Mr amp Mrs Raymond Bl~hard Mr~ amp Mrs Robert Brunelli A Friend

Mr amp Mrs Robert Gilmore Mrs James P Reynolds Mr amp Mrs John Donleymiddot Mr amp Mm James Battersby Mr Mn Jlohn bullCollins

Virginia G Robinson

AttRehoro BOLY GHOST

$150 Dr amp Mm LoneJglUl

~110 Mr amp Mm John CapoWglo

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$35 Mr amp Mra Joseph BJOdeur

$25 Mr amp Mrs Malcolm ~

Mr~ amp Mrs Harry Dowdall Mr amp Mrs RObert Geddes Mr~ I Mrs Frank Pistolese

ST JOlIN $200

In memory of Dn7 hwlbaDcI JIoseph F ODonn~

$100 Mr amp Mrs Raym9nd ENmlIlilll Anonymous Donor Inmemory of GabriGll lYaBltllloshy

alone bull $75 -

Rev Edwarcl A Ra~

Mr amp Mrs John P I4e $50

MaryL Wilhelm Mr amp Mrs J G WaJEll Jlr Mr amp Mrs Franclll Bo Mr Joseph ODonnell1 ~ amp Mrs Ernest ~

$30 m=teanor Robinqmiddot Alice~

ST JOSEPH $25

Counseil Jeanne DAre No 263

ST MARK $50 ~

Edward J Connors Jr $25

William J Roche Jr Joseph Dias Mrs Michael J Croke

ST MARY $50

Holy Name Society of St Mary Knights of Columbus Seekonk

Council Mrs Leland B Smith

$35 Mr amp Mrs Donald Blake

$~O ~r amp Mrs Henry E Woodcome st Marys Womeno Guild

$25 Mr amp Mrs Frank Padykula

Mr amp Mrs Russell J Sumner ST THERESA

$50 Mr amp Mrs Donald Boardman Mr amp Mrs George LeBeau

$30 William Cauley amp Family Mr amp Mrs George Boyd

0 $25 Mr amp Mrs RobeIt Generenl Mr amp MrsRobert St mlaiN

Taunton -HOLY ROSAILY

$30 Mr amp Mrs Russen Woodward stanley Radwansld

$25 Children of Mary Sodality Richard Januse

SACRED HEARi

$50 Mr amp Mrs Joseph S llosamp Mr amp Mrs Vincent BrimleF

$35 Mr amp MnJ Robert MeClellaml

_ S2i Walter Waltman Mr amp Mm

atephen Crosby The ~ Mr amp MrtI William Vaillan-

OOurt Mr amp Mrs Michael Barber

Mrs Margaret Rose llrtr~ bull II Frederick Reams

o

81 JAMES

$U Armand Desautels Tremblay Moving Iii 8tonlge

00mpany

STMABY $100

Dr~ Charles HoYt $60

GeOrge Dion Jr $51

Mr~ amp Mrs Kenneth $50

Mm A Hoffman Dr Normand ~ Mr amp M1lil J McNilmaN ar Dr John Fenton Mr amp Mrs Kicban sm

$36 ~ B Grant

~O Dr EdmWlld Fitzgerald D4niel A J Doyle

$U

Richard Barrington BIizabeCIa dIt Margaret Brady Mr - Mm kmea Bumtl Dr CarsiDbre e-- IlUOCi -Robert J mn JamesD hcige

Mr amp Mra Llocel IaImDee ftlomas Hoye Merrill lliaynard Jmelen amp Catherine McCariIll7

Alice McKenna Ruth MeshyJUona Susan McKenna II

Plan To B~ild

- See Us About ~

lotyCost Financing

WAuREHAM SAVltfGS BANK

WorehaftI falmouth cr J-3800 II 1-3000

Mrs James McMorrow Franeb Mulholland

Mary Mulholland Ma~ Neenan Joseph ODonnell Eveshylyn Rice Agnes amp Joseph Rose

Mrs Joseph Rowley Robert Sullivan J Roger Torme1 Charles H fripp Rita Baker

Mrs James Bennett William Carney John Gonzals James Holmes Mary E McNamara

Dr Thomas~OBrien Cbarleo OConnell Mr amp Mrs Edwarcll OGara Mr amp Mrs John 00 _ Ilfearne MlJI amp Mrs Edward OKeefe

1he Ralph Reckard Famil1 Cecelia F lfi Mary C Sheerin

ST PAUL $150

St Vincent de Paul st Pauh Taunton 0

$100 Rev Cornelius~ltYNem

$50 Mr amp Mrs Edward Roster

$24 Mr amp Mrs John Medas Jr

$25 Mrs Catherine Campbell Mr

amp Mrs Chester Jackman Mr c1i Mrs Richard Silva Mr amp Mrs Leo Leroux Mr Mrs John Steen

Mr amp Mrs Donald Emond Mr Be Mrs Gordon Seekel Mr amp Mrs Charles Welch Mr MllIl Paul Silva

New Bedford HOLY NAME

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John Hallonm Mr amp Mrs Jacob Teser

ST CASIMIR $150

Beltr cutnir Kwiatkowski $109

Atto~ Ferdinand Sowa $25

Mr amp Mrs Joseph FoUrnier The Poczatek Family Mramp M Antbony Rijo Jr Mr Mrs Stanle Scbkk Eve White

I

ST BYACINTB $100 -

Mr Mrs George Vigeallltl $50

st Vincent de Paul ConferenCe Gf Hyacinth Parisb

Tum to Page Seventeen

CONRAD SEGUIN BODY COMPANY

Aluminum or Steel 944 County Seet

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2-6618

w H RILEY amp SON Inc

CITIES SERVICE IDISTRIBUTORS-

0 Gasoline Fuel and Ra~ge

OILS OIL BURNERS

for Prompt Delivery amp hoy amp Night ~ice

8 IE BOIlER BURNER UNITS

80tItecI G48 Service

61 OOItANNET Sf TAUNTON

AJdeb DfO - No- Attleboro

TountoIamp

(l

SUMY pons Nuns (l)ffi) AifrMdl~$o

Re$M~~e~o trMture D~[freg~UDrru~ WASHINGTON (NC)-Resulto

of a survey of all United States nuns reveals a high ooceptance of post-Vatican II changes anell an eagerness robecome morrc involved in the inner city and poverty apostolates

The B1UVey conducted bythe Conference of Major Superiors of Women dlJring 1966 was the first extensive attempt to assess resources and attitudes of reli shygious communicenties c1 women and their memberll in the United States

The JPecific coal of the surshyvey was to assess the resources and determine 1ampIe responses that Religious are making and ean make to the invitation 13shysued in Vatican Us Decree on the Renewal of Religious ~e

More than 135000 Sisters parshyticipated in the survey respondshying to 649 questionnaire items covering religious beliefs atti shytudes toward change edu~shy

tional background present ocshycupation and future plans comshymunity life and proposals for future ohange

Results were processed by 00 Sister-sociologists across the country with the use of comshyputers

llleason for lIAlavnng The survey showed 1827 oil

the 175000 U S Sisters-107 per cent-left religious life durshying 1966 Of those Sisters only 869 had taken final vows In an interview with the NC News Servicemiddota spokesman for the Conference of Major Superiors of Women (CMSW) said most Sisters who have remained feel that a major reason for the inshy

ltereased number of Sisters leavshymg religious life is an increased ~penness to the idea within the lfcligious community

She said that the increased fucus on personal development has caused many Sisters to see that they are not suited to the religious life and that they will find areater personal fulfillment elsewhere

Statistics on be division of labor among U S Sisters show 72 per cent are teachers eight per cent are involved in health work five per cent in catechetshyill~ and missionary work lmd tbr~ per cenmiddott in welfare work

Seventy per cent of the teachshyem ore in elementary school work 195 per cent in high school education and 68 per

eent teach at the college level Of those involved in health care 18 per cent in health administration and 62 per cent in direct care jobs

lEnter New lFienlll1s The survey showed Sisters

have a strong desire to become involved in adult education inshyner city work pre-school teachshying and other s~ial work and to have greater contact with their local community Nuns expressed eagnerness to enter fieldc where few Sisters are now working In 1966 13 per cent ot U S Sisters were engaged in adult education 82 pel cent in speshycial education 31 per cent in poverty work and 06 per cent in migrant education The surshyvey indicafes that there will be a dramatic change in these figures in the next few years

Father Considine Leaves PC$tr Continued fC0m Page One

man of the U S Bishops Comshymittee for Latin America

Bishop Bernardin prai~ed the work of Father Considine in the Latin America Bureau noting

iota progress under his direction since its inauguration in 1960

It has been a labor of love for Father Considine he saici whose long standing interest in the people of Latin America and of other developing areaa is well known

Maryknon Father Considine will return

to his writing and teaching asshymgnments at Maryknoll Ossinshy

lng N Y where he had served as publications director before becoming director of the IAiltin

America Bureau He holds editorial and advishy

lOry posts with several internashytional organizations and servell DS a member of the Council OIl

Foreign Relations He was amp

member of the National Advishysory Council of the Peace Corps from 1961 to 1966 He also founded and directed Fides Inshyternational Service in Rome an Information and research unit of

the Holy See He was born Oct 9 1897 C1shy

1-

~ATIlGR CONSIDINE

da1ned in 1923 and received II

licentiate in sacred theology from the Catholic University of America in 1924 He has reshyceived honorary degrees from Fordham University Manhatshytsnville St John University St Benedicts Atchison and is the author of 10 books on Latin America Asia and Africa and hall edited several others

L9ng-Range

Father Considine Sllid that he IlIaW the Latin America Bureau as set for the proseution ~ tl

vigorous nation-wide program 10 serve our Latin American eonfreres for the next- generashytion through the year 2000 -and into ~ 21st century He felt lIlllch 11 long-range view was necessarJ because at stake are important socio-religious adshyVDnces among hundreds of milshyHons cd people Latin Americas leaders need time for these advances

Be pointed out thatsome of the best Church leadership tbroughout the Catholic world today is found in Latin AmershyICD In turn he noted our U S bi~hops are quietly acceptshying international responsibiliti~s

as never before Father Considine said that the

program of the U S Bishops Committee for Latin Americn ~ablishes the heavy day-to-day work of the Latin America Bureau

Jgtersonnel Father Considine said that

llIODle 60 per cent of all U S apOstolic personnel overseas throughout the world works in Latin America with more Ulan 600 Latin American parishes served by U S priests Major Superiors of women ha~e 2500 Sisters in Latin America PAVLA has put more than 800 laymen there for three-year terms and U S bishops hnv~

more than 300 priests working in Latin America Annual fundshying for Latin Amerietl by U S Catholics ~~ $1f) millioll

SJJREET SCENE This was a busy street scene in the nations capital at the encampment of the Poor Peoples Campaign near the Washington monument More than 100~OOO- protestors are expected to be in Washington for Memorial Day NC Photo

OUlll lLAIDY OlF ll1HI1amp

ASS1lJMJgtJlJlON $26

Clara Rose amp Family $25

Mr amp-Mrs Jose F Cruz St Martin de Porres G~

Mi CARMEL $100

In memory of Mr amp Mrs J~ ilino Simoes

Rev Antonio P Pinto middotCM $75

Rev Azitonio P Pinto em $60

Mary i Ltuiz $50

Mr amp lVIrs Albino daSilv8 1IIt Carmel Womans Club

$30 Manuel Bettencourt Mr amp Mrs Kenneth lltinu

John Rodrigues $26

Olivia M Luiz $25

Cecelia Bettencourt CbildYeli of Mary Mt Carmel ~ouft

Units James Perry Mr amp lnl Manuel G Souza Jr

Mr amp Mrs Arthur Caetano Mr amp Mrs Charles Frate Mramp Mrs Lauran Silva

OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HE]P

~26

Mrs Amelia E Bariteau $25

Dr amp Mrs Francis Green

OURLADY OFPU~GATOB~ l)1I00

In memory of Alex J Ka1He from Cltpe Coo Sportswear ~

lnc Fairhaven Lumber Co

$30 Atty George R Morad euroJ

Atty ~e E Morad $25

Josephine David 1bl mlE1lllllOllY of George A EI-Hillow Mr ampgt Mra ~rge JThomas Mr amp IIIlm Hykel G Simon

ST KIlldAN nSO

Rev WilMeT J Boekley

U~~ amp Wmeentde PaW ~

~ iWa1 1kntley

$2S AlmgeAo OH1feira

SAClllIampDlHlJEAlltT $25

Alexander Caruso

c S11 JAMES

$55 rulllbull amp lVIrs Francis O Quinn

$50 lilred Kelley

$40 William OMalley

~1 A Friend

$3~

Mr amp Mrs Jr Hugh Barry $25

Mr amp Mrs Andrew ONeil Mr 8 Mrs Robert Arnett

ST JOSEPH

$450 sa Josephs Church Societies

$70 Mr amp Mrs Maurice Dansereau

1130 II Mr amp Mrs Luigi Fiano lk Fmniy

125 Mr amp Mrs Thomas Weaver MI amp Mm Maurice Lamonshy

tagne Mrbull Mrs Raymond Rondel1

ST TBERIESA $100

Eugene Lemieux

Sturtevant 6 Hook lEst 1897

Bude~s Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New ~dforcJ

996-5661

THE ANCHOR- ~ 7 lfhuvs May 23 1968

~regreg [copy~G~ ~O~

Oa1l ~MOO~ []M~Orru NEWARK (NC)-A charge (l(

apparent ~racial discriminatiom in the assignment of tenants 00 public housing here is Oontainoo in s report issued by the New Jersey Advisory Committee 00 the U S Commission em CiWl Rights

It said the Newark Housing Authority follows a policy ef permitting people applying fOlr placement in public housin~ projects to choose the project tm whieh they want to live

lit said this policy has ~

llributed to the segregation Cl1I public housing and recomshymended that t1he policy 00 abandoned in favor of first-come first-serVed basis

The report noted that Q01l1li vast housing projects nre locatell in Newarks Central Ward-tho scene of widespread noting D year ago and of two massiv~ firo disasters this spring-and tll~

they are more thanSO Negf~ ~ccupied

It further charged that them Js U a disparity in maintenanceo between the predominantly N~

gro and the rgtredominantly whi~

projects a complaint lIiTegNgt leadership has frequently medea

It termed living conditiom b the Central Ward projects opshypressive and that the proj~cto

are JIOor)y designed llt recomshymeld~d that additionaI ~ev areas for young children ~Gl

meeting places for odww ~ teenagers be provided

Higher ~arnings

ON YOUR SAVINGS Per Annum

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Assets over $41ooo0llC

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of F~L~ RIVER shy~---__-------------~~~~ First Federal saYIngs bull Loan At ~

1 Borth Main St Fall llliTe1 Ibu ~ ~ Ii 02722 P1Imle 674-4001 ~ ~ ~ke llpplicatlOll oJ phone t1 fOOl wldl ~ o ~ o 0 IlllIivithllll Aceoullt 0 Jont Ac4cwot f)

PIlllse Cl3len II SllVings llCCOUCt blcelaquol

o eAomelamp) = ~ 0 ~ Address 0 ~ l 0 clleck In the amount of e--- ~ ~ 0 ~ _~___~~~_~uuJ

SPECIAL RATES FOR Schoo~ Outings and Picnics

amfACi MANAGERI - UNCOLN PARK 999-6984 636-2744

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs May 23196~

The Parish Parade OUR LADY OF ANGELS SACRED HEART WALL RIVER NORTH ATTLEBORO

Altar bOys willsponsor a cake The CCD program will be lJ81e Sunday May 26 following canonically established Friday Iill1 Masses June 21 the feast of the Sacred

Masses today the feast of the Heart The program will include Ascerision will be at 7 and 9 a 730 evening Mass followed AM and -1215 4 5 and 7 PM by proclamation and reception Confessions will be heard be- of CCD members and a social ~re each Mass hour

The Summer Mass schedule CCD students in grades 6 to will begin Sunday June 2 with 12 will attend a folk Mass and Masses from 6 to noon on the sing-out at La Salefte Shrine hour Monday night May 27 Tnose

Monday May 27 through Fri- participating will leave the ooy May 31 there will be church school yard at 645 and will be services at 7 each evening The returned at 930 living rosary will be sponsored Confirmation ceremonies will by the Holy Rosary Sodality be ~ld at 730 Sunday night Monday night the Council of May 26 Catholic Women on Tuesday ther societies on Wednesday and Thlusday and the Children New Bedford ~ M~~ on lfrIday

ST MARY HOLY NAME $25iALL RIVER Mr amp Mrs Roger Goyette

Contemporary music will acshy The Shea Family company the 1115 Mass Sunday Mrs Vivian Wegrzyniakmorning May 26

New CYO officers are Robert ST LAWRENCE amplois president Paul Durin $200 rice-president Polly Rockett Dr amp Mrs Stanley Koczera eecretary-treasurer A Friend

$125 OUR LADY OF FATIMA Dr amp Mrs Robert Srnan sWANSEA $106

The Womens Guild will hold William E King Its annual penny sale at 730 $100

Monday night May 27 in the Dr amp Mrs William Walsh ehurch hall on Gardners Neck $75 lRoad Rev William F OConnell

A Penny Sale will be held Dr amp Mrs James Bolton MondaYMay 27 at 730 in the $60 dlurch hall A Friend

$50 IMMACULATE CONClEPlIION Teremiddotsa Ruth amp John HarneyNEW BEDFORD Victor T Kondi

Parisnioners will celebrate John L Powell rthe feast of Santo Ohristo this Loretta Lamarre Sunday with a roast beef dinner $45 served from noon to 2 with Mrs Mary B Wheatoil

tickets available at the door $40 lRefreshments and entertainment Mr amp Mrs John Connor will be on the afternoon and Mr amp Mrs Thomas J Longevening program $35

A procession and auction will Mr amp Mrs James M Kearneyfollow the dinner with various Mrmiddot amp Mrs Leo St Aubin Holy Name Society units parti shy $30 cipating in the procession Mr amp Mrs Albert Anderson

Mr amp Mrs Joseph Griffin OUR LADY OF V()T(RY Mr amp Mrs Walter L9veridgeeENTERVILLE Mr camp Mrs Myron Tripp

New officers of the Womens $28amptiild are Mrs John J Pendershy Patricia Connor ~st pre~ident MrS James Murshy $26 phy and Mrs John McBarron Mr amp Mrs Thomas SullivanVoice-president Mrs George Mr amp Mrs Charles BerryReale recording secretary Mrs $25 Richard Griffith treasurer Mr amp Mrs Robert Bedard

A Communion dinner at Mr amp Mrs Albert McMulleneummaquid Inn will follow Mr amp Mrs Theodore J CalnanlB30 Mass Monday night June Mr amp Mrs Alfred Couto Mr amproo Mrs Gilbert Noonan of Falshy Mrs Manuel Guerreira Josephmouth will speak Reservations P Mullen should be made with Mrs Edshy Agnes Proctor Mr amp Misward Welch or Mrs- Stephen Joseph Porter Mr amp MrsOBrien Jr by Thursday June 6 James Ryan Mr amp Mrs Paul

saunders ST THERESA Mr amp Mrs Merton WalkerSOUTH ATTLEBORO Mr amp Mrs John F SullivanMiss Patricia Makin of the

Diocesan CCD Board spoke at the annual Communion breakshy Fall River fast of the Confraternity of

ST MARYS CATHEDRALChristian Mothers Fourteen $50 new members were received at

Gertrude OLoughlinthe monthly meeting arid new officers were installed by Rev $26

In memory of Caroline CasellaGerard J Chabot moderator $25They include Mrs Patricia Helen Burns Mr amp MrsBiziak president Mrs Georshy

George Johnston Corky Rowgette Vachon vice-president Club Rits OLaughlin FrancisMrs Kathy Lamarre treasurer amp Lena MoranMrs Dolores Leedham and Mrs

Mr amp Mrs Carlton GastallBeverly Sousa secretaries Mrs Raymond Reynolds

~CULATE CONC~ON BLESSED SACRAMENTlAUNTON $200A Spring Social and D~nce Rev Herve Jalbert

for the benefit of the church $50sponsored by the Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Michael Felixand the St Vincent de Paul Soshy $36ciety will be held Friday May Mr amp Mrs Richard Hamel24 from 8 to 12 at Lewis Lodge $30Winthrop Street Route 44 A W Root Beer StandTaunton Refreshments will be served Tickets are $200 per lIIIOLY CROSS person and wiU be available at $50 the door Holy Rosary Sodality

lt

PATRIARCH His Holishyness Vazken I of the Armeshynian (Monophysite) Chu~h which comprises five-milli~n communicants in the Soviet Union Near and Far East and the Americas is visiting in the US He paid a visit to the National Shrine of the

Immaculate Conception whilein the nations capital NC Photo

NOTRE DAME $40

The Anne-Marie MasSe fami17 $35

Conrad N Desmarais $25

Norman J A Belanger Rose D Perron

HOLY ROSARY $30

The DePaola Family $25

Mrs Philomena Germane

~CULATE CONCEPTION $50

A Frie~d $40

Mrs Diolinda Wilson $26

In memory of Charlotte DJicholson

$25 Holy Name Society Knights

of the Altar A Friend MlU7 Whitehead John R Burgess In memory of Daniel R Be

Manuel R Pimental Joseph Francoeur

SACRED HEART $l)O ()

~ Katherine D Adams $75

Mr amp Mrs William J Sullivan $5~

Margaret Morriss M~ry V amp Alice C HarrlngtoD Frederick B McD9nald

$31 Frances Mmiddot Cummings Mary C Cummings

$30 Mr amp Mrs John J HarrlngtOil

$28 Florence M Sullivan

$25 Vincent DAndrea Edward

Leary Mr ~ MrsN J Meyer Mary Louise OSullivan John J Sullivan middotMargaret F Lowney

ST MICHAEL $25

Manuel Rogers amp Sons At~

Manuel M Rezendes Henry Leshytendre ~eonardo Cabeceiras

Gerald Mulrooney A Friend edf Catholic Charities

ST ANNE ft JI08ZIII $30

Mrs Rhea Saurette 101at Vincent de Paul ConferenceIrene Theroux leapt amp Mrs Joseph J OCoDshy$26 nellThe Gauthier Family $25

Mr amp Mrs Reginald lerive

A Friend

Belshy $50

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J OCo nell k

$30 St rosephs Mens Club

ST ANTH()NY $25 OF THE DESERT Mr amp Mrs John L Mercer

$100 Mr amp Mrs Daniel W OCoDoshyChor Bishop Joseph Eid nell Dr amp Mrs James J Sabra

$25 SANTO CHRiSTO Rev Kenneth A Michael Mrs August Badway $50

ST ANTHONY OF PADUA $125

Rev Josephmiddot M Ferreira $100

Atty amp Mrs Milton R Silva

StVincent de Paul Society $30

Rev Ernesto R Borges $26

Mr amp Mrs Alfred 1 Cam~ $25

$50 Franco Family Singersmiddot

$25 Mrs Sofia Pacheco Antonio T Cabral

Mary amp Beatrice Costa~ SilD

CnristO Credit Union Manuel Medeiros Laureano Silva

AFriendFrank B Olivei

YDUR SONTHE PRIEST

HI HOLY PATHERS MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL DMURDH

A FUTURE

PRIEST NEEDS

bull SOMEONES HELP

TRAiN ASfSTER

Tau

HUNGER CANT

WAIT

Deai MonBr~orNolam

Please

return couponwith your

offering

Have you ever wished you had a son a priest Now you can hlilve a priest of your own-and ahare forever In all the good he does _ _ Throughout the Near East this month grateful bishops ara ordainlng new priests trained by people like youbullbullbullbull Their own families are toe poor to support them In training but good catholics In America adopted these semIshynarians encouraged them all the way to ordinashytionbullbullbullbull Insome Inspiring cases this support was given at personal sacrifice How can youbegln7 Write to us now Well ~end you the name of ~ young seminarian who needs you and he will write to you Make the payments for his training to suit your convenlence ($850 a month or $100 a year or the total $600 all at once) Join your sacrifices to his and at every Sacrifice of the Mass he will always remember who made It possible

4

Native Sisters In our 18 developingcountries are teaching children of the poor preparing them for First Communion giving medical care to leplrs cal)cer sufferers the aging A SisterS training Ialts two years costs $1250 a month $150 a year or $300 altogetherbullbullbullbull Well send you the name of a Sister you can train as soon as we receive your first payment She will pray for you and write toyou

n An9 day now you may receive a letter contalnn the Holy Fathers appeal for the forgotten Arab refugees-l4 million people without a country bullbullbull most of them destitute bullbullbull more thari half of them childrenbullbullbullbull By trelnlng these children foi middotfuture selfsufflcel]cy we can help brln peace and new selfmiddothelp to the Holy Land atlll divided by warbullbullbullbull But why walt for your mal Hunger cant walt Neither can peace Send your amplIft now in any amount ($500 $200 $100 $75 $50 $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 $2 $1) and the Holy Fathercan put It to work right away Qril1 $10 wlllleed family for a monthl -----~-~---~~---~-IlNCL08ID PLllAIl PIND $_ c_O~__ rFOR _

NAMI ___~

8TRIU ~~=

OlTt ~_eTATIl_lrIp OODII-

NIAll lAST WIILFAAI ASSaDIATtOrlaquo

NEAR EAST MISSIONS J

MSGR JOHN ClI NOLAN Natlonal5ecretary Write CATHOLIO NIlAR EAST WeLFARE Assoo ~30 Madson Avenue New York NY OOU telephonel 212vtJkon 6middot5840

CATHaLiD

19 DiJoridrrien Ere State r ourlitei

SChoelbOY leag~~Wmrn~regr~ Stii~Pretty Mu~h sampu [j)(Q)Mbt

By PETIm BARJrEK Nmon BitIh ~h

The gehooboy ba8ebaD mmpaignis cllNimatieaDy near- Inlaquo the climax of another spirited seasoo With approxishymately a week of competitioo Nllllaining oontlmdmg teams Me stmggling to keep their pennanf oopes alive while Wtling for the right to rep-JIe8eDt their ll e s pee t i v e leaguesin the nnand-eomin

-y- shy

Btate tournament The Eastshyem Massachusetts ehampionahip

baseball tournamen+ ClIffiMftl-~

tine of the wurney is tiPoDOOred bythe

II a II sac h u~_ lt Iietts Secondary

SChool Princishypals Association bull Par tie i p 8 t _ ing schools have bElen divided i IIl tot h r e e d3ses - A B and C---llccord- Peter iDg to leagues Blrtek r

and comparable independent teams Action tn all three clasampe3 starts Saturday June L

In addition to the three divishyidon3 the baseball tourney amp1shyem radically JIrom the popular

Two Spots for Both BCl (IDnd Marry Five Bristol County League Howard Ferguson which teams

teams Gre still in contention for will represent the circuit in the tourney play ebampionship event

At this writing Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Stang SpaltamJ of Qartmouth who hold a lllim ene-game edge over their rivals are a solid choice to annex one of the two berths to be filled bi BCL teams The second spot 18 un literally up for grabs

Bishop Feehan High of Attieshyboro which led the circuit untll last week Durfee High of Fan River Attleboro and Taunton lire in close pursuit middotof Stang hoping tomiddot overcome the Sparshytans or at least lInish in the league runner-up berth Both the first and second place finshyishers will8utomatically qualify

If either fim OX second place II decided by Monday May 21 league officials w~ have to DOUty the tournament Director

No~tons Lancers in Need cf Help I h e Narragansett league Class B - Southem

whkh got a head start on the its Iud Old Colony champ ft NaITlIlshyv er area Clrcu conc es gansett runner-upleague play today First place

middot Somerset travels to New Bed- Narragansett champ ~ Olcll ford to meet Holy Family High Colony runner-up Case High of Swansea entell-middotmiddot South Shore champ VB Hockshytains Dighton-Rehoboth West- omock runner-up port hoss Msgr Prevost High Hockomock cpamp vs South

middotof Fall River and Dima]l Voce- ShQre runner-up tional nlso of Fall River will 0I Am f N rth E stobe t Se k Iver es 0 0 a n a e o~k

Entering the final week of ac-middot middot tion Somerset and seekonk are in the top two spots in tbe 8tanding They loom the more likely to corral Class B tourney berths But DightOn-Rehoboth Case and Westwrt trail the sec ODd place club by oIl1yone game If the race ends in II tie ]league officials wlll have ample time to schedule play-off games before the tourney deadline

Pairings for Class Bare

Selecting Union PITTSBURGH (NC)-Twentyshy

five maintenance workers at Duquesne University here in Pennsylvania have left their jobs pending a detell1llnation as to which union will represent the workers The remaining 115 members of the maintenance erew lIlre not involved in the atrike which was called by the 2li who are represented by the tJmted Electrical WorkersUnion

Although it occurs infrequentshyly a team does not have to win Its league to represent its league in tourney eompetition

The Bristol County league champion is slated to play the

bull Bay State League runner-up in first round action with the Bay State champs taking on the County runner-up The winners would then meet in second round play

Pairings for Class A are Class A - Southem

Suburban champ w Middleshy8llX runnerup

Middlesex champ ft Suburshyban runner-up Bay state ehamp VB Bristol runner-up

Bristol champ V8 Bay sta~ runnerup

-Tech lxlsketban competition lllll order to qualifyfor the Tech a team mt1BSt win 70 per cent cd its games but onlythe leagu~ champions ond runner-ups M~ eligible ~r playmiddotiImiddotbasebalL

In both Class A andClass B iitOtalof i6 teams will qualify 1lt7middotmiddotmiddotJiY

for the diamond elimination event~ E~~ Will pai1i~ipate in

the nortlHln division and eight in the southern bracllet The winners in each bracket will meet in the Eastern- Massacilushy

llletts fi~ Preliminary games will be played on June 1 4 and 6 The finals are scheduloo June 8

Class C competition will coIi-BiEt of eight clubs in only one division Titlists in seven smallshyDChooI le1gues and one indeshypendent selected by the tournashy

ment coJiunittee Will comprise the field fur this tliil-d group

and Mansfield 1m the Hockoshymock circuit appear to be out of the running this season

Fo~ Class C schools Its Winmiddot or youre out Only the league champions will play in the championships The winner of the Capeway Conference will meet the Cape and Vineyard champ in opening round play Dennis-YarDlQuth and Sandshywich are the likely opponents

The only other school located within the confines of the diocshyesan territorial limits that has an outside ~hance of qualifying for the tournament is Norton of the Tri-Valley Conference The Lancers however will need some outside help if they are to overcome league leading Millis The Tri-Valley champs will take on the Dual County League champions Defending Class C champ Ashland again leading the Dual Co~nty is heavily favored to repeat both in league ond state competition

NOT A BALL-ITS GUM Yem might get the idea that a pitched ban is lodged in the mask of this young Vancouver BC catcher but it isnt a ball This young ma is trying to prove he is just as efficient behillld the plate as he is at blowing bubble gum NC ~middothoto

Stresses Inter~cicdmiddotmiddotPartnership As Solution to Racial Problem

CLEVELAND (NC) - A Nashy world would be better off lr tional ASsociation for Advanceshy iou hadnt gotten involved Jm

ment of Colored People official asserted here interracial part shynership is the key to oolution of the racial problem but it cannot be a partnership dom inated by either race

Dr John A Morrell NAACP assistant nat ion a 1 director speaking at the Cleveland Cathshyltnlic Interracial Councils annual Interracial Justice Awards banshyquet said the nation today is aj an unprecedented crossroads but the interracial way is the democratic part to justice

He spoke in place of Roy Wishydns NAACP national~ director who was with the U S delega- tion at the United Nations con vocation on human rights lin Tehran Iran -

Angry Voices There are angry Negro voiees

raised in protest because develshyopment of opportunity in recent years does not apply to twoshythirds of the Negro population he saidmiddot The kind of jobs they are capable of filling are vanshyishing from the economy he added

But if a fruitful partnership is to continue between the white and Negro the burden of know- ing the truth about Negro hisshytory must be borne by white as well as Negro Dr Morsell said

Vie are all fighting a bitter legacy of generations White people have to know where they stand and why Once you assume the burden of work toward interracial justice you assume the responsibilities be continued

If you are not going to ~

sume them then you and fhe

the first place Informed PariDership

Dr Morsell said a mere sPirit of commitment is not enough to

survive over the hard going Work must be based on a part shynership that is informed intelshyligent understanding and resil shyient he said

The interracial awards were presented to Father Edwan Camille assistant Catholic Charshyities director here and Thom811 C Westropp president of Womshyens Federal Savings and Loan Association

Westropp was cited for his efforts towards opening the

doors of banking and credit 1m the Cleveland area to all ciUshyzens regardless of race creed 011

color while Father CarniDe was cited for his leadership as director of Project Peace (~

irner-city diocesan organizati~ working with the poor mostly Negroes) and for his work as co-chairman of the first tri-faith Greater Cleveland Conference on Religion and Race

ELECTRICAl -Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

SS lPlE1rIEllt amp JgtAIDlj

$103 Womens Club Rose E Sullivan

$50 Joseph P Conaty

$35 Belen M amp William J

De7 $33

Mr amp Mrs James F McMahcm $25

Mrs Margaret Daly amp Mary John Dolan ~illiam Daley amp Mary Esther Mr amp Mrs Stanley M -laniek

~50 In memory of MrsMarga~

W Pow~rs RodneY S DeCecco

$26 Mr amp Mrs John Soula

$25 Edward Healey Mr amp Mrs Michael McCartbiY Mr amp Mrs James Crosson Mrs Gertrude Lomas Mr amp Mrs Norman GagnOOl

ST JOHN TEE BAPTlIS11

$30 St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ampt Jean Baptiste $25

Mr amp Mrs Ovila Caron Henri Demers

In memory of Mr amp lVlrm bullWilliam Sheehan

Open to An PORTLAND (NC)-The seeshy

ond annual Catholic youth conshyvention of the Portland Diocese has opened the convention to all Catholic students of the dioshycese in order to spread the agtOlgto tolate of youth to youth Thll

)faine convention has comprised only students who have takes themiddot youth leadership trainlJnl1 courses

Dont Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH

DO faJse teeth drop slip or wobblo when you talk eat laugh or sneeze Dont be annoyed and embarr1lEsetll lkllh hanl11caps FASTEETH Bamp

e (non-acid) powder to SPr1n~Ikle on your plates keeps false teetb more firmly set Gives confident feel~ Ing Of security and added comfort No gummy gooey taste or feellncr Dentures that 6t are essential to health see your dentist regulorly oet FASTEETH at alll1rug countemJ

o

WYman 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD MASS

IfIIfJltk del1WM

S H~~uO~ Oil

SAVE MONEY 0 OUROILHEATI bull eatt

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

Iritai~ If S)crap SuPPITreg~~5n Acts Of Re~(j[jmlt~oml

LONDON (NC)-It looks as if Britain is at long last glOing to stop suppressing the monasteries-officially that 0

Legal experts sifting through lenturies of forgotten laws clutshyooling the records have found (hat the Suppression of Reli shygious Houses Acts of 1535 and 0039 have never been repealed

They are among 155 statutes weeded out from the statute IJ)ooks between 1239 and 1705middot lmd now to be definitively leshy~aled by a special act of Par-Iliament

These two acts enforced the eosure and pillaging of Catholic monasteries friaries and other religious houses throughout the WINS nsc Chaplain

eountry following King Henry (Captain) Angelo J LitekyVIIIs break with Rome in 1534

assigned to the 199th InfanshyJhey brought vast fortunes On goods property and mog of try Brigade in Vietnam has ell land to the kings favorites been awarded the Distinshyoome of whose families have reshy guished Service Cross forWned their wealth to this day extraordinary heroism SevshyIgnored in Practice

Of course the laws against erely wounded when Viet me Roman Catholic Church Cong ambushed a US infanshyIhave long ago been shelved and try company Ohaplain Lit shyIgnored in practice The reli shy eky braved flying bullets toous houses are back probably

rescue and minister tomore numerous than before iIome have even reoccupied the WQunded and dying meR 0ld sites they hadmiddot before the lReformation

Another notable measure ~ewlfk ~[p)regID Gingled out for repeal is the 1loleration Act of 1688 This act W51f)$ ~WIfltdl although in itself it did not help

NEW YORK (NC)-The Adshy~he Catholics marked the end of

vocate weekly newspaper of1lhe Protestant Reformation and the Newark Archdiocese wont1he beginning of religious tolershythe first-place Silver Medalation in Britain Awarti for weekly newspapersIt allowed freedom of worship in the annual public serviceClgt Protestant Trinitarian Nonshycompetition sponsored by theoonformists provided theiT New York chapter of the Pubiicmeetings were opento the pubshy

Relations Society of AmericaIlk it did not relieve the existing The award was for a five-part

fenaWes of those days against analysis ttl the ills besetting the ~atholics other breakaway Newark public school system lhcnestants or Jews but it was )he analysis was written by a hisberic beginning It has been Advocate news editor Ed Grant ltJeseribed as the Great Oharter and was an examination into ~ religious freedom and the one of the areas of dissatisfacshy~umph ofc9mmon ~ense tion which led to widespread

rioting in Newark last Summer

The series ran lri the newsshylJays Help for Poor paper last september and Octoshy

lPeCice First ~eeds ber The Public Rellitlons SocishyMIAMI (NC)-The Catholic ety award - silver medals are (lihurch in this nation today awarded in each of five cateshy

gories-are given for the mostauast address itself to the presshynoteworthy contributions bullbull 0 toiloing needs of the poor and dis-

~vantaged as well as the better public ~derstanding of ltJnICial issue of peace says the _ community problems in the New

4Tchbishop of Miami York metropolitan area Archbishop Coleman F Calshy New s p a per 8 magazines 0011 following announcement of broadcasting an d television middotGte establishment of the ecclesshy media in the New York-New iastical province of Miami and Jersey-Connecti~ut metropolitan tMs appointment as its first area are eligible for the awards l)rehbishop stressed that the (fhurch must be concerned with ibe problems of the time in Retired ArttlhJboshop S)Vhich we exist Gets College lHlonorThe g~eatest problems at present are the problems of the DUBUQUE ( NC) - Retired disadvantaged the poor and Archbishop Edward D Howard Utase who are in need and of of Portland Ore has been named oourse peace he smiddotaid for Loras Colleges 1968 John

It is more difficult for us to Fitzgerald Kennedy Award The LiOlve in any real way the prob- prelate is a former president of iems that are our concern until the college we have a measure of peace The citation and gold medal And it is the prayer of all of us annual award honoring an out Chat peace will be established as standing Amercian will be preshyiluickly as possible on an honorshy sen ted to the archbishop at the able basis o college commencement cereshy

monies June 2 Camp Directory Archbishop Howard 90 a nashy

Nltlw available from the Nashy ti ve of Cresco Iowa and a Loras lItonal Catholic Camping Assn alumnus was ordained to the ~ 131~ Massachusetts Ave priesthood in 1906middot He became lM- W Washington D C 20005 president of the college in 1921 Is the 1968 Directory of Catholic In 1924 he was consecrated to ~mps which lists all known serve as auxiliary bishop of DavshyearriPs in the U S giving acshy enport He became archbishop of Civities charges dates open and Portland in 1926 and retired in lIbailing addresses 1966

National CYOPlans LeadershipTraining shyImpa~t to Aid Priests Adult Admiddotvisors

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tbe through the introduction of BaWmore June 23-28 ehicagoNational Catholic Youth Organshy leadership methodology which July 1-5 Boston July 14-19 ization Federation will launch a facilitates maximum involveshy Sen Antonio July 28-Aug 3 training program in June called ment 00 the local level and Denver Aug 11-16 and San Impaot be help priests and hence maximum commitment JFaoancisoo Aug 25-30 adults 00 work effectively with The National CYO Federation Dr Donald Ebalt a professhyteenagers in a leisure time proshy will sponsor six sessiOns this lIlional trainbig eonsul1lant of gram summer to train diocesan CYO Washington D c win diiecl

The program was designed in staffs m 1lhe use of the newmiddot ead11ab cooperation with Leadership program lhey win )e held m A pilot Jtudy of the effectiveshyResources Inc a firm _of beshy DeBS of Impact on a group of havior scientists -rolulbteers from the NewarlkAddress Graduates

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishy archdiocese was held at the SOUTH BEND (HC) -Mel-rector of the Youth Department Benedictine Retreat House ill

Jdte-rite Patriarcib Maximoo VUnited States Catholic Confershy jNewton N J ence in announcing ttie new Kakimof Antioch and Dr Ilhirtymiddot persons representashyprogram said tives of youth adult advisorsJames A Perkins of Cornell

The goal 01 Impact is 00 help and priest moderators met withUniversity will be speakers atthe priests who are moderators representattives of the CYO

the 123rd annual cOnW~ncementof CYO the ad~lt advisors and Federation staff and a member youth participating in CYO toshy exerci~ Sundly June 2 at Of Leadership rResources Inc ward maximumpersonal growth Notrlte Dame University 110 assess and to evaluate 1mpaltL

(Cathedral Camp-Resident and Day Camp for Boys

O~ Lady of the L_ke Day Camp fOr Girls

Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON LONG POND ROUTE 18 EAST FREETOWN MAS~

~ RESIDENT CAMP 49th Season June 30 thru August 24 - a Week Season

Diocesan seminar-ians - College Students amp Teachers Under direction StaH of a Diocesan Priest

Saili~g swimming water skiing horseback riding riflery archeryPrograni hiking overnight camping trips ~rts amp crafts Indian crafts camp crafts athletic (team amp individual) competition and inter-camp cOmpetition professional tutorial service available

Private beach large luxurious camphouse dining hall modernfacilities~ washrooms arts and crafts buildings camp store and office first aid and infirmary beautiful chapel overnight and weekend accomodashytions for parents

S WEEK PIERIOD $325 - 4 W~K PERIOD $165 - 2 weEK PERIOD $85

Cathedra~ Day Camp t=or Boys Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period

JULY W- AUGUST 23 Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period fEES INCLUDIE Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Horseback Riding Weekly Cook~Outs amp Milk Daily without Added Cost

--~----------------------------------------Our Lady of the Lake bay Camp For Girls

JULY l _ AUGUST 23 Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period

FEES INCLUD~Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Ilorseback Riding Weekly Cook-Outsmiddot Milk Daily without Added Cost

o

For further information write to

REV WALlER A 5ULLlVANDiredor PO Box 63 - East Freetown Mass 02717

Page 13: 05.23.68

I

~~ IiUrge Negro La Guidonce Boord ~n K~s~ Cety

KANSAS CJIIIY (NC~-A five-paltish cooperative illl

ner city ministry guided by a Negro lay board has been proposed os a way o~ bridging the gap betWeen the white Catholic CI1urch and the Negro community here in Misouri

A six-person committee headshyed by MrsThelma Work will identify the nee~ of the lComshymunity-Catholic or not-and to propose a structure fur meetshying those needs I

The action came as the result

of a meeting of the Catholie

V ~

Clergy Conference on Inner Oity bullneeds

Father James Lock chairman cited charges of the Black Cathshyolic ClergyCaucus in Detroit in conjunction with the IImnual meeting of the Catholic Clergy Conference on the Interracial Apostolate The Black Caucus statement said the Catholic Church in the United States 1s gtrimarily a white racist insti shytution which is rapidly dying in the black community and to which the black community no longer looks to with hope

On~ Out f li5 The Caucus recommended fha~ Harrison the Bishop Rev William J Hurley Rev DonaiiIll

white priests become supportshy E Messier Rear Rev Cornelu8 F Kiley Rey Robert A ers and learners listening tc McGowan Rev Edmund J Fitzgerald Rev Kevin F TrippNegroes to find out what tbeir lheir assignment~ are Olll page twoneeds are

The Kansas City-St Joseph diocese bas no Negro diocesan priests Ttrore~ DS~th~ Aoee Sl1m~PO rfif~ifflg tedera~ Jb ~~~

We are trying to start the wheels rolling for some kind of

~umlp~JrlMeFrot Nleereg~~rJ fr CmbCBi OW~iff1ychurch structure through which the black people of our diocese can voice opinions and partici shy WASHINGTON (lTC)-SPokesshy ment of public policy ~t Jlorth oommunity-based Social services esnie cultural values of ~hliv

pate in decision making said men for Protestant Catholic and in the Full Employment Act (l(f to meet Human and community country they said are sucll Father Lock Jewish organizations h a V e 1946 which provides for useshy needs Recipients of rondo that work becomes the basis by

backed federal legislation which ful employment opportunities should not conduct sectarian which a persons worth tnFather Dan Howe declared~

We have set up programB would provide one million jobs for all those able willing and programs judged A job not only tends ie i10r the nations unemployed seeking to work n determine an individuals acshygeared to Catholics in our parshy While they acknowledged that

ceptance by society but it alsish whom we have formed rn Their support was given in The Acts emphasis on education passage of this legislation would affects ones attitude abolll~the white mentality Since cl testimony before the House Seshy and training Training s1Mgtuld be no wre-all for the ills ci oneselfbest we are having contact lect Subcommittee on Iabor be open-ended so that the posshy poverty in America the spokesshy

with only about 2000 people out Studies have shown that unshywhi~ is holding hearings on sibility of permanent full-time men said that any attempt to of the 50000 in our area we the Guaranteed Employment employment beyond fIDe presshy combat poverty must provide employed persons have a ve~

can presume that the activities Act of 1968 ent situation is a reality Trainshy meaningful jobs low level of self-esteem anell we have structed as being our that this attitude tends to pro-ing programs of this ~Testifying were Father JohnChristian program of service do vide a self-fulfilling prophesrshould include basic educationMcCarthy assistant director ofnot reflect or reach black thinkshy MO~~U[ij] ~lW] ~O~S since it then becomes more dif~counseling and opportunities tothe Social Action Departmenting ficult to find or hold a joblearn about appearance manshy

E~GJHlll O]RDAllNJEID FOR IllmCJESJE Bishop Qgtnnolly m-dained eight deacons ro the priesthood for service in the Diocese 21t ceremonies oonducted at St Marys Cathedral Fall River Front Rev Edward E Correia Rev George Eo

We need a board of black of the U S Catholic Confershy OrJi1 AA~jjo Foreg[uGagement of income health IImdence Dr Grover Bagby of thelaymen to tell us what the pe0shy NEW YORK (NC)-Answershyother factors affecting personalDepartment of Social Justice ofple want to help change the well-being and development fog an appeal from the Ceylonthe National Council oftone to establish priorities government now fighting a mashyChurches and Rabbi Richard GFather Howe noted there are lWven fl Sellf-lEs~(()nim laria epidemic threatening 16Hirsch director of the Religiousapproximately 9000 Negro million persons the catholicAction Center of the Union of Involvement of private nonshyCatholics on the books but Medical Mission Board nere sentAmencan Hebrew Congrega- profit organizations Such Oll shynot necessarily active in Kansas by air Ifreight 364000 anti-mashytions - ganizations they said will c0shyCity out of a total Negro popu- laria tablets to Colombo Ceyshyoperate with the development ~lation of about 130000 They specifically suppoit4d lons seaport-capital The shipshyHe said that although the three provisions in the bill ment valued at $10746 conshy

structure of the lay board is yet Creation of an Office of Guarshy (cll)f AdldJrell$$ sisted of tablets for both ooults ro be determined it is the conshy anteed Employnient Opportushy and ~hildren sensus of 20 priests and laity at 1r~~regy Meefrolilregnity l8 a eontinued develop Earlier the CMMB respondingthe meeting that at least half

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-Theshythe lay members would be un- oro a plea for help from Indoneshyology must revolutionize it shyder 25 since the young people ~1JJlhJreg~ WODil$ [Q)~f sian authorities shipped 220shyself John Cogley former reshyare the thought-leaders in the 520 anti-malaria tablets ~aluedligion editor of the New Yorkblack community ~ial ~fit1hvllsW Times told the national convenshy at $7306

NeCeSS31lY ApPll03Cln SCOTCH PLAINS (NC) shytion of the College Theology so-A Negro lawyer Leonara BrotherHarold Woods a teacher The Catholic Medical Mission ciety IN the University m- SainHughes told the meeting at Union Catholic High School Board for 40 years has beenmiddot IfmiddotranciscoOne thlng is clear The clos- here in New Jersey has won a oonducting a worldwide mercy

Ing of any Catholic institution months delay to contest lim Cogley DOW a staff member cl program shipping medicines or cut-back in the inner-city order to report to his New York the Center for the Study m Deshy drugs bandages and various says one thing to Negroes We draft board for induction into mocratic Institutions Santa Barshy other hospital supplies and dont want you to be CathoUcs ~e Airmed Fo~ equipment to some 1000 misshybara Cal and editor of the Censhy

Father Vince~t Lovett dir~ BrOther B8rold la member of ter magazine tlgtld delegates that sion hospitals 4000 dispensaries tor of the new Diocesan Social theology must lead- rather than and clinics in developingAction office saidmiddot middotthe Marist BrotheJS had been eoUJlltriesfollow usemiddotits treasureS ratheT It seems to me we a- 4o_1krecJassified ll-A and Cllldered to than hoard them Liberatemiddot it shying about setting up something after rewmfug biB draft eard 011 self from its own prison ~ c0nshylike II couotywith II state goy- April 19 as a protem agaiDst the formity fear imd be dead Dbshyernment - a regional ministry U4o- actionism of th~ pastwithin tile diocese Be said the war VBallam

S~aking on The image off

WI report for Induction em April M

approach seems not so much lim The 22-year-old teachers ease ideal as lh necessitymiddot bas been taken up by the Amer-o Man as Citizenmiddot Cogley said

iean CDvil Uberties Union that the change in the religlO1Ul Which ealled middottbeboardll action mans self-image and the change

Silent Meditation in reclassifying him ~ new in the image of politleal man are TRENJON ~NC)-A bID pr0shy height of wegality Tbe ACLU not unrealated The image of a

viding for a period of silent said Brother Harolds religious free man redeemed from every meditation each day by students status had not collmged since he form of spiritual servitude and attending public schools was WIlI3 originally classified ~D subjugation he said b triumphshyintroduced in the New Jersey and that he hGd DOt ilrlterfered ing over the old image of eccleshyState Legislature by Assembly with the ndministratlon of the sia9Ucal man-a passive creature Speaker Albert B Smitlll 3eleet1ve ~ BWolltem eOOject ~ the Will ca ~thero

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THE At~~C~_ 15 Th M 231968 urs ~y World Communication Day CtmMG(f~ A~V[JK~$ObsecteWGR1CCe on S~ndl~w O[fi) ~copy~o~ A~fDcopy[jf)

WASHINGION (NC)-In response to an appeal by NEW ORLEANS (NC)-ArchshyPope Paul VI to the universal Ohurch the Church in the bishop PhHip M Hannan asshyUnited States will observe the second World Communicashy serted here As far as I am tions Day on Sunday May 26 The National Conference of concerned segregation in the

Church is dead We are past the Catholic Bishops awroved time for statements Now is thefor Motion Pictures and Bishoplast November the observshy time for actionClarence J Issenmann of Cleveshynnc of World Communicashy Tile archQishop of New Orshy

tions Day in this country on USCC Press Department land episcopal chairman of the

leans told delegates at an diocesan and parish levels ampnd archdiocesan conference on st) shy

members of the U S Bishops cial action I assure you we are going forwardCommittee for Social Commu- Senate Rev1ltews

nications have sent to individ- He outlined programs fe ual Ordinaries throughout the Continued from Page One beMer education for adequate country a cOpy of the Prayer lains to be assigned on a funmiddot housing and for recognition of of the Faithful for that Sunday time basis and that the needs the inherent digni ty of all men and a ooP1 of the Holy ~athers of the sick were being adequateshy The Church is exerting itll message issued earlier this ly met under the present arshy influence in every way to assistmonth ran~ement the poorest he said If we

It is recommended that the 3 Recommendations on salshy follow Christ we must begillilobservance in this country ary adjustments Taken into aeshy with the pOor even if thishave both religious and non- count _by Bishop in his direcshy means asking others to wait 0religious aspects The former tives for Aug I 1967 little longerwould highlight a Mass with 4 Meetings open to all clergy Anyone can live poor the

appropriate sermon in the 00- Bishop approved archbishop said The key thingthedral or some convenient 5 Extension of Synod prepshy is dignity This does not mean church to which executives aration time Bishop approved that this dignity is recognized Wld employes of communica- 6 Secretary to be Treasurer by a dole or a handout or eveD tions media would be specially and Senate budget Bishop apshy preferential treatment We are invited proved confusing issues when we talk

The non-religious asp e c t 7 ChOice of other Prayers of of dignity as if it can be bought would feature news conferences the Faithful Bishop approved or paid for he said articles in the press and radio 8 Referral of matters to Passhy - I am totally for equal oppollaand TV interviews and proshy tunity in jobs and for adequate

housing not just open housincgrams toral Council Bishop approved

In his message to the Church 9 Creation of Clergy Person-In human dignity everyone hasPope Paul invited Catholics to Del Board Bishop approved an equal right to education anell

consider the significance of 1() Clergy retirement policy to culture he declaredthe changes that are taking with Bishop accepting ormiddot not

AWARDS CEREMONIES At the annual Awards Day for hospital personnel at St Annes Hospital Fall River Manuel Benevides 38 years of service receives his award while Bertha Janson 42 years of service awaits her presshyentation from trustees Harold K Hudner left and Arthui Guimond right

place in this field (communica- according to diocesan ll1eed tions) under our very eyes and Bishop approved to ponder the serious responsi- 11 In-service training tor bJlities that theSe imply for one newly-ordained priests Bishop and all approved

Clamor forAttentlo~ 12 Various diocesan diredors Until recently the Holy to recommend men for middotpart shy

Father pointed out many did time or full-time further study not have anything more to Btim- Bishojgtmiddot approved 1IIate their inflection than vague 13 Full participation by memories of what they learned Catholics in middotYMCAyWCA ot school or in the family and programs Bishop aPlgtrov~ What they beard in their envi- 14 Rotation among religious ronment eomniunities of their represen-

Now however with the echo Uitives on Senate Bishop ap- r the press motion pictures proved radio and television clamoring 15 Clergy to recommend men lor attention new h~riZons oPenJor episcopacy Bishop applloved wide before them llIndmiddot they are 16 Lay Personnel pension ttuned to the throbbing life of plan study Bishop approved the ~niverse

Who will not rejoice at this 17 Adjustmentin diocesan progress Do we not 1111 see in assessments Bishop approved It a roadmiddotdestined by Providence 18 Clergy retirement study for the advance of themiddot whole Bishop approved of mankind There is room for 19 Bishop announced through all hopes if man learns to mas- Senate exchange of facultieS ter these techniques but every- between Diocese of Fall River thing can be lost if he shirks his and Providence responsibilities Various commfttees have made

Members of the bishops com- studies to implement some of mittee signing the letter to the these considerations Ordinaries included Auxiliarymiddot Senate representatives have Bishop Gerald V McDevitt of participated on a regional and Philadelphia episcopal moder- national basis regarding a nashyator of the United States Catb- tional organization of priests olic Conference Bureau of In- and its constitution and activity formation Bishop John A Donshyovan of Toledo episcopal chairshyman of the National Catholic Cursillo for Men Office for Radio and Television Bishop Christopher J Weldon Starts Tonightshyof Springfield episcopai chairshy

A mens ~ursillo win ~ginman of the Bishops qo~ttee tonight at La Salette C~nter of Christian Livingmiddot At~leboro Dishy

Delegate Recives rectors will be William Barnes of Marion and Rev GilesHonorary Degree Genest middotMS of the center

HONOLULU (NC) ~ Archshy Allmiddot eursillistas are invited to bishop Luigi RaimondiApostolicmiddotmiddot the firstmiddot anniversary of ultleya Delegate in the Unikld States middotmeetingsmiddotin the Fall River area baS received an honorary deshy at 745 Wednesday night May laquoree froIn Charninade College 29 at Sacred Hearts Academy here the only Catholic eollege Prospect Street Fall River A lID the state of Hawaii concelebrated Mass will be folshy In an Dterview with the Hashy lowed by a song session social

waUmiddotCatholic Herald ArehlSishop bour and refreshments Baimondi ~pressed tolerance Ul1reya meetings are schedshylor student activism in the Unishy uled in Attleboro oat Jettes ted States middotIltating Students Funeral Home Friday May 11 8ft adive everywhere Youth Monday May 27 Monday June ill UyiDg find its WBY aoc1 2 Friday June 14 and FridayecJar patterns of tbougbt IlBd June 21 eetioD e DOt lIS set asin pre A eursillo for W4)men is scbedshy paerationfl Cbolees were 1IIed for August and further inshy

-e fiSHthen tbin ~ tit formation is obtainable inla ~ -e LeSalleUe Centerbull --

You Live Better Electrically

trlc range bullbullbull with Iln ingenious oven that cleans Itself Make 8 clean break with the past bullbullbull and graduate to another appliance

that adds to the Joy of Total Electric Uvlng

Graduate to a ~fiameless electric range thatmiddotcleansits own ovenmiddot

Make 8 clean break~ with the past4

Why spend ~ours stooping scrubbing and scouring to clean your oven Why not grad- uate to a modern flarve1ess range bullbull with anoven that cleans itself electrically Its so

easy to use Set the controls and-zingo The oven cleans Itself (And drip pans) All you dois whisk awaya IIttie pOwder

- YOUll notice toothat a flamelessmiddot range keeps your kitchen clean cool a~d ~omshyfortable And because electric cookmg IS so automatic YOUll cook with pleasure So see

yOur appliance dealer about aflameless elecshy

See Yo~r Appliance Dealer or

FAll RIVER ~l~CTRIC LIGHT COMPANY

o

mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 23 196816 I

Mafttl[p)Dsellt $50 Raymond L W Benoit

$5BTANJrlllONY Jos~ph A Tully William J

$300 OLearY Mr ampMrs Alfred Baty ltlJbades McGowan Mr amp Mrs Fred Harney

$100 Mr amp Mrs Michael C ODonshyaarence G Verdi nell Mr amp Mrs ThomaS P Per~ lIugene F Phelan kins Mr amp Mrs John Kozlowski

$15 mosampry Altar Society

$66 Buzzard$ B~y I

iusan A McGowan ST MAJuiAR]ampTWilliam Keane

$SOshy$55 A Friendllohn P Delaney

$6$40 lIlr amp Mrs Thomas Pina

~h G Perry $25$35

Mr amp Mrs Edwin PaytonlInmothy Manning )l amp Mrs John KarlJfudge E C Horrocks J~

$30 Mr amp Mrs Edwin N Rose Wareham Lodge of Elks 15044bullbull Clayton King

Mr amp Mrs David Fannon$~

Mr amp Mrs John OCOnnellJames Downey Romeo Bedarql William Delaneyhnes H Gifford Mary M Chad Mr amp Mrs James Lopes

Wick George Smith Jr Antone Mr amp Mrs Louis Fougereshy-es Edmund Perry $25 Mr amp Mrs Armand Bedard

Mr amp Mrs Michael DelIsMark H McIntyre Teree JeminaBlossom Joseph Farley Robert Mr amp Mrs William BennettGIngras Real Breton Mr amp MrsLouis Eacobaoct

Jobn Tarvis Francis ODri9shyu Holy Nam~ Society Paull Glennon Joseph Zychowicz Central -VUlageIIaomas Renahan Richard SmiUll

ST JOHN THE BAPTIBJl

~50 bullNorth Dighton Mr amp Mrs John DeNadal

ST JOSEPH nolt Rev John P Hogan$156

IlR Vincent de Paul $75 Dr Peter F Piccinini$50

$25amp11 Name Society Florence I Bessette MrSt Josephs Womens Guild

$35 Mrs John J Ardagh Jr llim Raymond Williamsbull amp Mrs Joseph MWTaJ

Me amp Mrs Daniel TebreiN$30 J Jl)r amp Mrs William AcIamI Mr amp Mrs Robert Albanese

o Iohn W Perreira$5 Ch(ltham

Mr amp Mrs Joseph C Amarat 1lIJr amp Mrs Edward M Berobe HOLY ~EJI)EIEMEamp

bullbull amp Mrs Arthur A Ennes Mr $101 A Mm William Johnson Rose Pi Assqc of the SacredHea~ Mello $lOet

Mr amp Mrs Harold Mendoza Mr amp Mrs Robert Han lIffr amp Mrs Bruce Murph) Mr Col amp Mrs John McCa~ bull Mrs Robert Secatore $50

Mrs James Bell Jr St Vincent de Paul Sodeq Mr amp Mrs John J Cavanaup

IIMMACULATE CONCBPJIl[ON $30 $DOO A- Friend

Ambonymous $2-5 $a Chatham Trust Co Mr af

Anonymous MrS E Joseph Geller Dr~ amp MIlII Robert Harned A Friend (~)

Anonymous $75

Mr amp Mrs William Kent Mr amp Mrs Paul reF~vre Mr lIi$it

- Mrs~ Richard Sylva Mr amp MmHelen P Derby Patrick SullivanMr amp Mn Aibert Giordano

A Friend Mr amp Mrs Frank Dresseli Mr amp Mrs Philip S1iel]oA Friend Mr amp Mrs James Griffin shyAnonymous Mr amp Mrs Frank Wing _ImmaCU1ate Conception MenliI

Club $4G North Attleboro

Mr amp Mrs Raymond ~rgerotl SACRED HEART$35

Mr amp Mrs William Condoo $200 $5 Rev JOuter Lussier

Mr amp Mrs William Buchtman $30 Caesar Cardoza Mr amp Mrs RoT Mr amp MrsJeorge Merewe Howard Immaculate Conception $~ Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Joseph A Jette

Mr amp Mrs Co George Knapp $25 McCarthy Coal Co Mrs Fredshy Mr amp Mrs Paul Dion Mrbull elick H Murphy A Friend Mrs Frederick Fortin LionelL

Martineau Mr amp Mrs~ Philippe Rainville amp Florence

Mr amp Mrs George Beaulieu Sl lWAllUf A Friend

STMA-ElY$50 $150Mr amp Mrs Michael Murphy

Nelson GulskiMr amp Mrs Jose FernandesSIl $75$30 Rev Armando A- AnnunziabMr amp Mrs Thomas J Bryanamp

$50 Eva Morowski

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John HaugMr amp Mrs Roland Roberge Mr amp Mrs John StanfordDavid amp Martha Rocha M Veronica Reilly

Mary Cronin George Yefh Mildred Leary A ~riend

BreWSlfreli $4G Dr amp Mrs Domenie BalJiIe

OUR LADY OF TlIIE CAn $35 o $100 Dr amp Mrs Kenneth AtwiIl lllisBionaries of La saleUe jnr amp Mm JosepiL Dona

MONSIGNOR VI[lELSB

Heads Bishop$ Task force

WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr Aloysius J Welsh of Newark N J a recognized authority in race relations and social aclion work has been named to head the Urban Task Force estabshylished by the U S bishops

Bishop Joseph L Bernardin general secretary of the U S Catholic Conference who anshynounced the monsignors apshypointment said the task force was calhd for by the U S blsbshy

ops at theirmiddot April meeting in SL Louis in their statement on the mational racial crisis The bishshy

ops directed the task foree be established by the USCC Social[ Action Department

In this work he will cooperaW with MsgI George G Higgins director and Father John MeshyCartty assistallt director of the Social Action Department the bishop said

$30 Mr amp Mrs Frederick ThOIpG middotMr amp Mrs Clement Sbarolll

$26 Mr amp Mrs Andtew Boisvert Gertrude Cassi~y

Elizabeth Sheals $25

Mr amp Mrs Daniel J Cava- naugh Mr amp Mrs Raymond Bl~hard Mr~ amp Mrs Robert Brunelli A Friend

Mr amp Mrs Robert Gilmore Mrs James P Reynolds Mr amp Mrs John Donleymiddot Mr amp Mm James Battersby Mr Mn Jlohn bullCollins

Virginia G Robinson

AttRehoro BOLY GHOST

$150 Dr amp Mm LoneJglUl

~110 Mr amp Mm John CapoWglo

$50 Holy Ghost St Vineellllt cle Pail

$35 Mr amp Mra Joseph BJOdeur

$25 Mr amp Mrs Malcolm ~

Mr~ amp Mrs Harry Dowdall Mr amp Mrs RObert Geddes Mr~ I Mrs Frank Pistolese

ST JOlIN $200

In memory of Dn7 hwlbaDcI JIoseph F ODonn~

$100 Mr amp Mrs Raym9nd ENmlIlilll Anonymous Donor Inmemory of GabriGll lYaBltllloshy

alone bull $75 -

Rev Edwarcl A Ra~

Mr amp Mrs John P I4e $50

MaryL Wilhelm Mr amp Mrs J G WaJEll Jlr Mr amp Mrs Franclll Bo Mr Joseph ODonnell1 ~ amp Mrs Ernest ~

$30 m=teanor Robinqmiddot Alice~

ST JOSEPH $25

Counseil Jeanne DAre No 263

ST MARK $50 ~

Edward J Connors Jr $25

William J Roche Jr Joseph Dias Mrs Michael J Croke

ST MARY $50

Holy Name Society of St Mary Knights of Columbus Seekonk

Council Mrs Leland B Smith

$35 Mr amp Mrs Donald Blake

$~O ~r amp Mrs Henry E Woodcome st Marys Womeno Guild

$25 Mr amp Mrs Frank Padykula

Mr amp Mrs Russell J Sumner ST THERESA

$50 Mr amp Mrs Donald Boardman Mr amp Mrs George LeBeau

$30 William Cauley amp Family Mr amp Mrs George Boyd

0 $25 Mr amp Mrs RobeIt Generenl Mr amp MrsRobert St mlaiN

Taunton -HOLY ROSAILY

$30 Mr amp Mrs Russen Woodward stanley Radwansld

$25 Children of Mary Sodality Richard Januse

SACRED HEARi

$50 Mr amp Mrs Joseph S llosamp Mr amp Mrs Vincent BrimleF

$35 Mr amp MnJ Robert MeClellaml

_ S2i Walter Waltman Mr amp Mm

atephen Crosby The ~ Mr amp MrtI William Vaillan-

OOurt Mr amp Mrs Michael Barber

Mrs Margaret Rose llrtr~ bull II Frederick Reams

o

81 JAMES

$U Armand Desautels Tremblay Moving Iii 8tonlge

00mpany

STMABY $100

Dr~ Charles HoYt $60

GeOrge Dion Jr $51

Mr~ amp Mrs Kenneth $50

Mm A Hoffman Dr Normand ~ Mr amp M1lil J McNilmaN ar Dr John Fenton Mr amp Mrs Kicban sm

$36 ~ B Grant

~O Dr EdmWlld Fitzgerald D4niel A J Doyle

$U

Richard Barrington BIizabeCIa dIt Margaret Brady Mr - Mm kmea Bumtl Dr CarsiDbre e-- IlUOCi -Robert J mn JamesD hcige

Mr amp Mra Llocel IaImDee ftlomas Hoye Merrill lliaynard Jmelen amp Catherine McCariIll7

Alice McKenna Ruth MeshyJUona Susan McKenna II

Plan To B~ild

- See Us About ~

lotyCost Financing

WAuREHAM SAVltfGS BANK

WorehaftI falmouth cr J-3800 II 1-3000

Mrs James McMorrow Franeb Mulholland

Mary Mulholland Ma~ Neenan Joseph ODonnell Eveshylyn Rice Agnes amp Joseph Rose

Mrs Joseph Rowley Robert Sullivan J Roger Torme1 Charles H fripp Rita Baker

Mrs James Bennett William Carney John Gonzals James Holmes Mary E McNamara

Dr Thomas~OBrien Cbarleo OConnell Mr amp Mrs Edwarcll OGara Mr amp Mrs John 00 _ Ilfearne MlJI amp Mrs Edward OKeefe

1he Ralph Reckard Famil1 Cecelia F lfi Mary C Sheerin

ST PAUL $150

St Vincent de Paul st Pauh Taunton 0

$100 Rev Cornelius~ltYNem

$50 Mr amp Mrs Edward Roster

$24 Mr amp Mrs John Medas Jr

$25 Mrs Catherine Campbell Mr

amp Mrs Chester Jackman Mr c1i Mrs Richard Silva Mr amp Mrs Leo Leroux Mr Mrs John Steen

Mr amp Mrs Donald Emond Mr Be Mrs Gordon Seekel Mr amp Mrs Charles Welch Mr MllIl Paul Silva

New Bedford HOLY NAME

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John Hallonm Mr amp Mrs Jacob Teser

ST CASIMIR $150

Beltr cutnir Kwiatkowski $109

Atto~ Ferdinand Sowa $25

Mr amp Mrs Joseph FoUrnier The Poczatek Family Mramp M Antbony Rijo Jr Mr Mrs Stanle Scbkk Eve White

I

ST BYACINTB $100 -

Mr Mrs George Vigeallltl $50

st Vincent de Paul ConferenCe Gf Hyacinth Parisb

Tum to Page Seventeen

CONRAD SEGUIN BODY COMPANY

Aluminum or Steel 944 County Seet

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2-6618

w H RILEY amp SON Inc

CITIES SERVICE IDISTRIBUTORS-

0 Gasoline Fuel and Ra~ge

OILS OIL BURNERS

for Prompt Delivery amp hoy amp Night ~ice

8 IE BOIlER BURNER UNITS

80tItecI G48 Service

61 OOItANNET Sf TAUNTON

AJdeb DfO - No- Attleboro

TountoIamp

(l

SUMY pons Nuns (l)ffi) AifrMdl~$o

Re$M~~e~o trMture D~[freg~UDrru~ WASHINGTON (NC)-Resulto

of a survey of all United States nuns reveals a high ooceptance of post-Vatican II changes anell an eagerness robecome morrc involved in the inner city and poverty apostolates

The B1UVey conducted bythe Conference of Major Superiors of Women dlJring 1966 was the first extensive attempt to assess resources and attitudes of reli shygious communicenties c1 women and their memberll in the United States

The JPecific coal of the surshyvey was to assess the resources and determine 1ampIe responses that Religious are making and ean make to the invitation 13shysued in Vatican Us Decree on the Renewal of Religious ~e

More than 135000 Sisters parshyticipated in the survey respondshying to 649 questionnaire items covering religious beliefs atti shytudes toward change edu~shy

tional background present ocshycupation and future plans comshymunity life and proposals for future ohange

Results were processed by 00 Sister-sociologists across the country with the use of comshyputers

llleason for lIAlavnng The survey showed 1827 oil

the 175000 U S Sisters-107 per cent-left religious life durshying 1966 Of those Sisters only 869 had taken final vows In an interview with the NC News Servicemiddota spokesman for the Conference of Major Superiors of Women (CMSW) said most Sisters who have remained feel that a major reason for the inshy

ltereased number of Sisters leavshymg religious life is an increased ~penness to the idea within the lfcligious community

She said that the increased fucus on personal development has caused many Sisters to see that they are not suited to the religious life and that they will find areater personal fulfillment elsewhere

Statistics on be division of labor among U S Sisters show 72 per cent are teachers eight per cent are involved in health work five per cent in catechetshyill~ and missionary work lmd tbr~ per cenmiddott in welfare work

Seventy per cent of the teachshyem ore in elementary school work 195 per cent in high school education and 68 per

eent teach at the college level Of those involved in health care 18 per cent in health administration and 62 per cent in direct care jobs

lEnter New lFienlll1s The survey showed Sisters

have a strong desire to become involved in adult education inshyner city work pre-school teachshying and other s~ial work and to have greater contact with their local community Nuns expressed eagnerness to enter fieldc where few Sisters are now working In 1966 13 per cent ot U S Sisters were engaged in adult education 82 pel cent in speshycial education 31 per cent in poverty work and 06 per cent in migrant education The surshyvey indicafes that there will be a dramatic change in these figures in the next few years

Father Considine Leaves PC$tr Continued fC0m Page One

man of the U S Bishops Comshymittee for Latin America

Bishop Bernardin prai~ed the work of Father Considine in the Latin America Bureau noting

iota progress under his direction since its inauguration in 1960

It has been a labor of love for Father Considine he saici whose long standing interest in the people of Latin America and of other developing areaa is well known

Maryknon Father Considine will return

to his writing and teaching asshymgnments at Maryknoll Ossinshy

lng N Y where he had served as publications director before becoming director of the IAiltin

America Bureau He holds editorial and advishy

lOry posts with several internashytional organizations and servell DS a member of the Council OIl

Foreign Relations He was amp

member of the National Advishysory Council of the Peace Corps from 1961 to 1966 He also founded and directed Fides Inshyternational Service in Rome an Information and research unit of

the Holy See He was born Oct 9 1897 C1shy

1-

~ATIlGR CONSIDINE

da1ned in 1923 and received II

licentiate in sacred theology from the Catholic University of America in 1924 He has reshyceived honorary degrees from Fordham University Manhatshytsnville St John University St Benedicts Atchison and is the author of 10 books on Latin America Asia and Africa and hall edited several others

L9ng-Range

Father Considine Sllid that he IlIaW the Latin America Bureau as set for the proseution ~ tl

vigorous nation-wide program 10 serve our Latin American eonfreres for the next- generashytion through the year 2000 -and into ~ 21st century He felt lIlllch 11 long-range view was necessarJ because at stake are important socio-religious adshyVDnces among hundreds of milshyHons cd people Latin Americas leaders need time for these advances

Be pointed out thatsome of the best Church leadership tbroughout the Catholic world today is found in Latin AmershyICD In turn he noted our U S bi~hops are quietly acceptshying international responsibiliti~s

as never before Father Considine said that the

program of the U S Bishops Committee for Latin Americn ~ablishes the heavy day-to-day work of the Latin America Bureau

Jgtersonnel Father Considine said that

llIODle 60 per cent of all U S apOstolic personnel overseas throughout the world works in Latin America with more Ulan 600 Latin American parishes served by U S priests Major Superiors of women ha~e 2500 Sisters in Latin America PAVLA has put more than 800 laymen there for three-year terms and U S bishops hnv~

more than 300 priests working in Latin America Annual fundshying for Latin Amerietl by U S Catholics ~~ $1f) millioll

SJJREET SCENE This was a busy street scene in the nations capital at the encampment of the Poor Peoples Campaign near the Washington monument More than 100~OOO- protestors are expected to be in Washington for Memorial Day NC Photo

OUlll lLAIDY OlF ll1HI1amp

ASS1lJMJgtJlJlON $26

Clara Rose amp Family $25

Mr amp-Mrs Jose F Cruz St Martin de Porres G~

Mi CARMEL $100

In memory of Mr amp Mrs J~ ilino Simoes

Rev Antonio P Pinto middotCM $75

Rev Azitonio P Pinto em $60

Mary i Ltuiz $50

Mr amp lVIrs Albino daSilv8 1IIt Carmel Womans Club

$30 Manuel Bettencourt Mr amp Mrs Kenneth lltinu

John Rodrigues $26

Olivia M Luiz $25

Cecelia Bettencourt CbildYeli of Mary Mt Carmel ~ouft

Units James Perry Mr amp lnl Manuel G Souza Jr

Mr amp Mrs Arthur Caetano Mr amp Mrs Charles Frate Mramp Mrs Lauran Silva

OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HE]P

~26

Mrs Amelia E Bariteau $25

Dr amp Mrs Francis Green

OURLADY OFPU~GATOB~ l)1I00

In memory of Alex J Ka1He from Cltpe Coo Sportswear ~

lnc Fairhaven Lumber Co

$30 Atty George R Morad euroJ

Atty ~e E Morad $25

Josephine David 1bl mlE1lllllOllY of George A EI-Hillow Mr ampgt Mra ~rge JThomas Mr amp IIIlm Hykel G Simon

ST KIlldAN nSO

Rev WilMeT J Boekley

U~~ amp Wmeentde PaW ~

~ iWa1 1kntley

$2S AlmgeAo OH1feira

SAClllIampDlHlJEAlltT $25

Alexander Caruso

c S11 JAMES

$55 rulllbull amp lVIrs Francis O Quinn

$50 lilred Kelley

$40 William OMalley

~1 A Friend

$3~

Mr amp Mrs Jr Hugh Barry $25

Mr amp Mrs Andrew ONeil Mr 8 Mrs Robert Arnett

ST JOSEPH

$450 sa Josephs Church Societies

$70 Mr amp Mrs Maurice Dansereau

1130 II Mr amp Mrs Luigi Fiano lk Fmniy

125 Mr amp Mrs Thomas Weaver MI amp Mm Maurice Lamonshy

tagne Mrbull Mrs Raymond Rondel1

ST TBERIESA $100

Eugene Lemieux

Sturtevant 6 Hook lEst 1897

Bude~s Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New ~dforcJ

996-5661

THE ANCHOR- ~ 7 lfhuvs May 23 1968

~regreg [copy~G~ ~O~

Oa1l ~MOO~ []M~Orru NEWARK (NC)-A charge (l(

apparent ~racial discriminatiom in the assignment of tenants 00 public housing here is Oontainoo in s report issued by the New Jersey Advisory Committee 00 the U S Commission em CiWl Rights

It said the Newark Housing Authority follows a policy ef permitting people applying fOlr placement in public housin~ projects to choose the project tm whieh they want to live

lit said this policy has ~

llributed to the segregation Cl1I public housing and recomshymended that t1he policy 00 abandoned in favor of first-come first-serVed basis

The report noted that Q01l1li vast housing projects nre locatell in Newarks Central Ward-tho scene of widespread noting D year ago and of two massiv~ firo disasters this spring-and tll~

they are more thanSO Negf~ ~ccupied

It further charged that them Js U a disparity in maintenanceo between the predominantly N~

gro and the rgtredominantly whi~

projects a complaint lIiTegNgt leadership has frequently medea

It termed living conditiom b the Central Ward projects opshypressive and that the proj~cto

are JIOor)y designed llt recomshymeld~d that additionaI ~ev areas for young children ~Gl

meeting places for odww ~ teenagers be provided

Higher ~arnings

ON YOUR SAVINGS Per Annum

I W Ask abow

INVESTMEIlaquo

SAVINGS

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$IlFm - Savings insu~ed safe IIlyJ liII ClEerny of the US Government

IlVAILABIU1Y - No notice VCllIirfpound Your funds available when ooedea

Slllil by MAtL - We pr~e5S pt~ ood pay postage both ways

Assets over $41ooo0llC

FIRST fEDERAL SaYings and Loan Associatio1ll

of F~L~ RIVER shy~---__-------------~~~~ First Federal saYIngs bull Loan At ~

1 Borth Main St Fall llliTe1 Ibu ~ ~ Ii 02722 P1Imle 674-4001 ~ ~ ~ke llpplicatlOll oJ phone t1 fOOl wldl ~ o ~ o 0 IlllIivithllll Aceoullt 0 Jont Ac4cwot f)

PIlllse Cl3len II SllVings llCCOUCt blcelaquol

o eAomelamp) = ~ 0 ~ Address 0 ~ l 0 clleck In the amount of e--- ~ ~ 0 ~ _~___~~~_~uuJ

SPECIAL RATES FOR Schoo~ Outings and Picnics

amfACi MANAGERI - UNCOLN PARK 999-6984 636-2744

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs May 23196~

The Parish Parade OUR LADY OF ANGELS SACRED HEART WALL RIVER NORTH ATTLEBORO

Altar bOys willsponsor a cake The CCD program will be lJ81e Sunday May 26 following canonically established Friday Iill1 Masses June 21 the feast of the Sacred

Masses today the feast of the Heart The program will include Ascerision will be at 7 and 9 a 730 evening Mass followed AM and -1215 4 5 and 7 PM by proclamation and reception Confessions will be heard be- of CCD members and a social ~re each Mass hour

The Summer Mass schedule CCD students in grades 6 to will begin Sunday June 2 with 12 will attend a folk Mass and Masses from 6 to noon on the sing-out at La Salefte Shrine hour Monday night May 27 Tnose

Monday May 27 through Fri- participating will leave the ooy May 31 there will be church school yard at 645 and will be services at 7 each evening The returned at 930 living rosary will be sponsored Confirmation ceremonies will by the Holy Rosary Sodality be ~ld at 730 Sunday night Monday night the Council of May 26 Catholic Women on Tuesday ther societies on Wednesday and Thlusday and the Children New Bedford ~ M~~ on lfrIday

ST MARY HOLY NAME $25iALL RIVER Mr amp Mrs Roger Goyette

Contemporary music will acshy The Shea Family company the 1115 Mass Sunday Mrs Vivian Wegrzyniakmorning May 26

New CYO officers are Robert ST LAWRENCE amplois president Paul Durin $200 rice-president Polly Rockett Dr amp Mrs Stanley Koczera eecretary-treasurer A Friend

$125 OUR LADY OF FATIMA Dr amp Mrs Robert Srnan sWANSEA $106

The Womens Guild will hold William E King Its annual penny sale at 730 $100

Monday night May 27 in the Dr amp Mrs William Walsh ehurch hall on Gardners Neck $75 lRoad Rev William F OConnell

A Penny Sale will be held Dr amp Mrs James Bolton MondaYMay 27 at 730 in the $60 dlurch hall A Friend

$50 IMMACULATE CONClEPlIION Teremiddotsa Ruth amp John HarneyNEW BEDFORD Victor T Kondi

Parisnioners will celebrate John L Powell rthe feast of Santo Ohristo this Loretta Lamarre Sunday with a roast beef dinner $45 served from noon to 2 with Mrs Mary B Wheatoil

tickets available at the door $40 lRefreshments and entertainment Mr amp Mrs John Connor will be on the afternoon and Mr amp Mrs Thomas J Longevening program $35

A procession and auction will Mr amp Mrs James M Kearneyfollow the dinner with various Mrmiddot amp Mrs Leo St Aubin Holy Name Society units parti shy $30 cipating in the procession Mr amp Mrs Albert Anderson

Mr amp Mrs Joseph Griffin OUR LADY OF V()T(RY Mr amp Mrs Walter L9veridgeeENTERVILLE Mr camp Mrs Myron Tripp

New officers of the Womens $28amptiild are Mrs John J Pendershy Patricia Connor ~st pre~ident MrS James Murshy $26 phy and Mrs John McBarron Mr amp Mrs Thomas SullivanVoice-president Mrs George Mr amp Mrs Charles BerryReale recording secretary Mrs $25 Richard Griffith treasurer Mr amp Mrs Robert Bedard

A Communion dinner at Mr amp Mrs Albert McMulleneummaquid Inn will follow Mr amp Mrs Theodore J CalnanlB30 Mass Monday night June Mr amp Mrs Alfred Couto Mr amproo Mrs Gilbert Noonan of Falshy Mrs Manuel Guerreira Josephmouth will speak Reservations P Mullen should be made with Mrs Edshy Agnes Proctor Mr amp Misward Welch or Mrs- Stephen Joseph Porter Mr amp MrsOBrien Jr by Thursday June 6 James Ryan Mr amp Mrs Paul

saunders ST THERESA Mr amp Mrs Merton WalkerSOUTH ATTLEBORO Mr amp Mrs John F SullivanMiss Patricia Makin of the

Diocesan CCD Board spoke at the annual Communion breakshy Fall River fast of the Confraternity of

ST MARYS CATHEDRALChristian Mothers Fourteen $50 new members were received at

Gertrude OLoughlinthe monthly meeting arid new officers were installed by Rev $26

In memory of Caroline CasellaGerard J Chabot moderator $25They include Mrs Patricia Helen Burns Mr amp MrsBiziak president Mrs Georshy

George Johnston Corky Rowgette Vachon vice-president Club Rits OLaughlin FrancisMrs Kathy Lamarre treasurer amp Lena MoranMrs Dolores Leedham and Mrs

Mr amp Mrs Carlton GastallBeverly Sousa secretaries Mrs Raymond Reynolds

~CULATE CONC~ON BLESSED SACRAMENTlAUNTON $200A Spring Social and D~nce Rev Herve Jalbert

for the benefit of the church $50sponsored by the Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Michael Felixand the St Vincent de Paul Soshy $36ciety will be held Friday May Mr amp Mrs Richard Hamel24 from 8 to 12 at Lewis Lodge $30Winthrop Street Route 44 A W Root Beer StandTaunton Refreshments will be served Tickets are $200 per lIIIOLY CROSS person and wiU be available at $50 the door Holy Rosary Sodality

lt

PATRIARCH His Holishyness Vazken I of the Armeshynian (Monophysite) Chu~h which comprises five-milli~n communicants in the Soviet Union Near and Far East and the Americas is visiting in the US He paid a visit to the National Shrine of the

Immaculate Conception whilein the nations capital NC Photo

NOTRE DAME $40

The Anne-Marie MasSe fami17 $35

Conrad N Desmarais $25

Norman J A Belanger Rose D Perron

HOLY ROSARY $30

The DePaola Family $25

Mrs Philomena Germane

~CULATE CONCEPTION $50

A Frie~d $40

Mrs Diolinda Wilson $26

In memory of Charlotte DJicholson

$25 Holy Name Society Knights

of the Altar A Friend MlU7 Whitehead John R Burgess In memory of Daniel R Be

Manuel R Pimental Joseph Francoeur

SACRED HEART $l)O ()

~ Katherine D Adams $75

Mr amp Mrs William J Sullivan $5~

Margaret Morriss M~ry V amp Alice C HarrlngtoD Frederick B McD9nald

$31 Frances Mmiddot Cummings Mary C Cummings

$30 Mr amp Mrs John J HarrlngtOil

$28 Florence M Sullivan

$25 Vincent DAndrea Edward

Leary Mr ~ MrsN J Meyer Mary Louise OSullivan John J Sullivan middotMargaret F Lowney

ST MICHAEL $25

Manuel Rogers amp Sons At~

Manuel M Rezendes Henry Leshytendre ~eonardo Cabeceiras

Gerald Mulrooney A Friend edf Catholic Charities

ST ANNE ft JI08ZIII $30

Mrs Rhea Saurette 101at Vincent de Paul ConferenceIrene Theroux leapt amp Mrs Joseph J OCoDshy$26 nellThe Gauthier Family $25

Mr amp Mrs Reginald lerive

A Friend

Belshy $50

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J OCo nell k

$30 St rosephs Mens Club

ST ANTH()NY $25 OF THE DESERT Mr amp Mrs John L Mercer

$100 Mr amp Mrs Daniel W OCoDoshyChor Bishop Joseph Eid nell Dr amp Mrs James J Sabra

$25 SANTO CHRiSTO Rev Kenneth A Michael Mrs August Badway $50

ST ANTHONY OF PADUA $125

Rev Josephmiddot M Ferreira $100

Atty amp Mrs Milton R Silva

StVincent de Paul Society $30

Rev Ernesto R Borges $26

Mr amp Mrs Alfred 1 Cam~ $25

$50 Franco Family Singersmiddot

$25 Mrs Sofia Pacheco Antonio T Cabral

Mary amp Beatrice Costa~ SilD

CnristO Credit Union Manuel Medeiros Laureano Silva

AFriendFrank B Olivei

YDUR SONTHE PRIEST

HI HOLY PATHERS MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL DMURDH

A FUTURE

PRIEST NEEDS

bull SOMEONES HELP

TRAiN ASfSTER

Tau

HUNGER CANT

WAIT

Deai MonBr~orNolam

Please

return couponwith your

offering

Have you ever wished you had a son a priest Now you can hlilve a priest of your own-and ahare forever In all the good he does _ _ Throughout the Near East this month grateful bishops ara ordainlng new priests trained by people like youbullbullbullbull Their own families are toe poor to support them In training but good catholics In America adopted these semIshynarians encouraged them all the way to ordinashytionbullbullbullbull Insome Inspiring cases this support was given at personal sacrifice How can youbegln7 Write to us now Well ~end you the name of ~ young seminarian who needs you and he will write to you Make the payments for his training to suit your convenlence ($850 a month or $100 a year or the total $600 all at once) Join your sacrifices to his and at every Sacrifice of the Mass he will always remember who made It possible

4

Native Sisters In our 18 developingcountries are teaching children of the poor preparing them for First Communion giving medical care to leplrs cal)cer sufferers the aging A SisterS training Ialts two years costs $1250 a month $150 a year or $300 altogetherbullbullbullbull Well send you the name of a Sister you can train as soon as we receive your first payment She will pray for you and write toyou

n An9 day now you may receive a letter contalnn the Holy Fathers appeal for the forgotten Arab refugees-l4 million people without a country bullbullbull most of them destitute bullbullbull more thari half of them childrenbullbullbullbull By trelnlng these children foi middotfuture selfsufflcel]cy we can help brln peace and new selfmiddothelp to the Holy Land atlll divided by warbullbullbullbull But why walt for your mal Hunger cant walt Neither can peace Send your amplIft now in any amount ($500 $200 $100 $75 $50 $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 $2 $1) and the Holy Fathercan put It to work right away Qril1 $10 wlllleed family for a monthl -----~-~---~~---~-IlNCL08ID PLllAIl PIND $_ c_O~__ rFOR _

NAMI ___~

8TRIU ~~=

OlTt ~_eTATIl_lrIp OODII-

NIAll lAST WIILFAAI ASSaDIATtOrlaquo

NEAR EAST MISSIONS J

MSGR JOHN ClI NOLAN Natlonal5ecretary Write CATHOLIO NIlAR EAST WeLFARE Assoo ~30 Madson Avenue New York NY OOU telephonel 212vtJkon 6middot5840

CATHaLiD

19 DiJoridrrien Ere State r ourlitei

SChoelbOY leag~~Wmrn~regr~ Stii~Pretty Mu~h sampu [j)(Q)Mbt

By PETIm BARJrEK Nmon BitIh ~h

The gehooboy ba8ebaD mmpaignis cllNimatieaDy near- Inlaquo the climax of another spirited seasoo With approxishymately a week of competitioo Nllllaining oontlmdmg teams Me stmggling to keep their pennanf oopes alive while Wtling for the right to rep-JIe8eDt their ll e s pee t i v e leaguesin the nnand-eomin

-y- shy

Btate tournament The Eastshyem Massachusetts ehampionahip

baseball tournamen+ ClIffiMftl-~

tine of the wurney is tiPoDOOred bythe

II a II sac h u~_ lt Iietts Secondary

SChool Princishypals Association bull Par tie i p 8 t _ ing schools have bElen divided i IIl tot h r e e d3ses - A B and C---llccord- Peter iDg to leagues Blrtek r

and comparable independent teams Action tn all three clasampe3 starts Saturday June L

In addition to the three divishyidon3 the baseball tourney amp1shyem radically JIrom the popular

Two Spots for Both BCl (IDnd Marry Five Bristol County League Howard Ferguson which teams

teams Gre still in contention for will represent the circuit in the tourney play ebampionship event

At this writing Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Stang SpaltamJ of Qartmouth who hold a lllim ene-game edge over their rivals are a solid choice to annex one of the two berths to be filled bi BCL teams The second spot 18 un literally up for grabs

Bishop Feehan High of Attieshyboro which led the circuit untll last week Durfee High of Fan River Attleboro and Taunton lire in close pursuit middotof Stang hoping tomiddot overcome the Sparshytans or at least lInish in the league runner-up berth Both the first and second place finshyishers will8utomatically qualify

If either fim OX second place II decided by Monday May 21 league officials w~ have to DOUty the tournament Director

No~tons Lancers in Need cf Help I h e Narragansett league Class B - Southem

whkh got a head start on the its Iud Old Colony champ ft NaITlIlshyv er area Clrcu conc es gansett runner-upleague play today First place

middot Somerset travels to New Bed- Narragansett champ ~ Olcll ford to meet Holy Family High Colony runner-up Case High of Swansea entell-middotmiddot South Shore champ VB Hockshytains Dighton-Rehoboth West- omock runner-up port hoss Msgr Prevost High Hockomock cpamp vs South

middotof Fall River and Dima]l Voce- ShQre runner-up tional nlso of Fall River will 0I Am f N rth E stobe t Se k Iver es 0 0 a n a e o~k

Entering the final week of ac-middot middot tion Somerset and seekonk are in the top two spots in tbe 8tanding They loom the more likely to corral Class B tourney berths But DightOn-Rehoboth Case and Westwrt trail the sec ODd place club by oIl1yone game If the race ends in II tie ]league officials wlll have ample time to schedule play-off games before the tourney deadline

Pairings for Class Bare

Selecting Union PITTSBURGH (NC)-Twentyshy

five maintenance workers at Duquesne University here in Pennsylvania have left their jobs pending a detell1llnation as to which union will represent the workers The remaining 115 members of the maintenance erew lIlre not involved in the atrike which was called by the 2li who are represented by the tJmted Electrical WorkersUnion

Although it occurs infrequentshyly a team does not have to win Its league to represent its league in tourney eompetition

The Bristol County league champion is slated to play the

bull Bay State League runner-up in first round action with the Bay State champs taking on the County runner-up The winners would then meet in second round play

Pairings for Class A are Class A - Southem

Suburban champ w Middleshy8llX runnerup

Middlesex champ ft Suburshyban runner-up Bay state ehamp VB Bristol runner-up

Bristol champ V8 Bay sta~ runnerup

-Tech lxlsketban competition lllll order to qualifyfor the Tech a team mt1BSt win 70 per cent cd its games but onlythe leagu~ champions ond runner-ups M~ eligible ~r playmiddotiImiddotbasebalL

In both Class A andClass B iitOtalof i6 teams will qualify 1lt7middotmiddotmiddotJiY

for the diamond elimination event~ E~~ Will pai1i~ipate in

the nortlHln division and eight in the southern bracllet The winners in each bracket will meet in the Eastern- Massacilushy

llletts fi~ Preliminary games will be played on June 1 4 and 6 The finals are scheduloo June 8

Class C competition will coIi-BiEt of eight clubs in only one division Titlists in seven smallshyDChooI le1gues and one indeshypendent selected by the tournashy

ment coJiunittee Will comprise the field fur this tliil-d group

and Mansfield 1m the Hockoshymock circuit appear to be out of the running this season

Fo~ Class C schools Its Winmiddot or youre out Only the league champions will play in the championships The winner of the Capeway Conference will meet the Cape and Vineyard champ in opening round play Dennis-YarDlQuth and Sandshywich are the likely opponents

The only other school located within the confines of the diocshyesan territorial limits that has an outside ~hance of qualifying for the tournament is Norton of the Tri-Valley Conference The Lancers however will need some outside help if they are to overcome league leading Millis The Tri-Valley champs will take on the Dual County League champions Defending Class C champ Ashland again leading the Dual Co~nty is heavily favored to repeat both in league ond state competition

NOT A BALL-ITS GUM Yem might get the idea that a pitched ban is lodged in the mask of this young Vancouver BC catcher but it isnt a ball This young ma is trying to prove he is just as efficient behillld the plate as he is at blowing bubble gum NC ~middothoto

Stresses Inter~cicdmiddotmiddotPartnership As Solution to Racial Problem

CLEVELAND (NC) - A Nashy world would be better off lr tional ASsociation for Advanceshy iou hadnt gotten involved Jm

ment of Colored People official asserted here interracial part shynership is the key to oolution of the racial problem but it cannot be a partnership dom inated by either race

Dr John A Morrell NAACP assistant nat ion a 1 director speaking at the Cleveland Cathshyltnlic Interracial Councils annual Interracial Justice Awards banshyquet said the nation today is aj an unprecedented crossroads but the interracial way is the democratic part to justice

He spoke in place of Roy Wishydns NAACP national~ director who was with the U S delega- tion at the United Nations con vocation on human rights lin Tehran Iran -

Angry Voices There are angry Negro voiees

raised in protest because develshyopment of opportunity in recent years does not apply to twoshythirds of the Negro population he saidmiddot The kind of jobs they are capable of filling are vanshyishing from the economy he added

But if a fruitful partnership is to continue between the white and Negro the burden of know- ing the truth about Negro hisshytory must be borne by white as well as Negro Dr Morsell said

Vie are all fighting a bitter legacy of generations White people have to know where they stand and why Once you assume the burden of work toward interracial justice you assume the responsibilities be continued

If you are not going to ~

sume them then you and fhe

the first place Informed PariDership

Dr Morsell said a mere sPirit of commitment is not enough to

survive over the hard going Work must be based on a part shynership that is informed intelshyligent understanding and resil shyient he said

The interracial awards were presented to Father Edwan Camille assistant Catholic Charshyities director here and Thom811 C Westropp president of Womshyens Federal Savings and Loan Association

Westropp was cited for his efforts towards opening the

doors of banking and credit 1m the Cleveland area to all ciUshyzens regardless of race creed 011

color while Father CarniDe was cited for his leadership as director of Project Peace (~

irner-city diocesan organizati~ working with the poor mostly Negroes) and for his work as co-chairman of the first tri-faith Greater Cleveland Conference on Religion and Race

ELECTRICAl -Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

SS lPlE1rIEllt amp JgtAIDlj

$103 Womens Club Rose E Sullivan

$50 Joseph P Conaty

$35 Belen M amp William J

De7 $33

Mr amp Mrs James F McMahcm $25

Mrs Margaret Daly amp Mary John Dolan ~illiam Daley amp Mary Esther Mr amp Mrs Stanley M -laniek

~50 In memory of MrsMarga~

W Pow~rs RodneY S DeCecco

$26 Mr amp Mrs John Soula

$25 Edward Healey Mr amp Mrs Michael McCartbiY Mr amp Mrs James Crosson Mrs Gertrude Lomas Mr amp Mrs Norman GagnOOl

ST JOHN TEE BAPTlIS11

$30 St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ampt Jean Baptiste $25

Mr amp Mrs Ovila Caron Henri Demers

In memory of Mr amp lVlrm bullWilliam Sheehan

Open to An PORTLAND (NC)-The seeshy

ond annual Catholic youth conshyvention of the Portland Diocese has opened the convention to all Catholic students of the dioshycese in order to spread the agtOlgto tolate of youth to youth Thll

)faine convention has comprised only students who have takes themiddot youth leadership trainlJnl1 courses

Dont Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH

DO faJse teeth drop slip or wobblo when you talk eat laugh or sneeze Dont be annoyed and embarr1lEsetll lkllh hanl11caps FASTEETH Bamp

e (non-acid) powder to SPr1n~Ikle on your plates keeps false teetb more firmly set Gives confident feel~ Ing Of security and added comfort No gummy gooey taste or feellncr Dentures that 6t are essential to health see your dentist regulorly oet FASTEETH at alll1rug countemJ

o

WYman 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD MASS

IfIIfJltk del1WM

S H~~uO~ Oil

SAVE MONEY 0 OUROILHEATI bull eatt

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

Iritai~ If S)crap SuPPITreg~~5n Acts Of Re~(j[jmlt~oml

LONDON (NC)-It looks as if Britain is at long last glOing to stop suppressing the monasteries-officially that 0

Legal experts sifting through lenturies of forgotten laws clutshyooling the records have found (hat the Suppression of Reli shygious Houses Acts of 1535 and 0039 have never been repealed

They are among 155 statutes weeded out from the statute IJ)ooks between 1239 and 1705middot lmd now to be definitively leshy~aled by a special act of Par-Iliament

These two acts enforced the eosure and pillaging of Catholic monasteries friaries and other religious houses throughout the WINS nsc Chaplain

eountry following King Henry (Captain) Angelo J LitekyVIIIs break with Rome in 1534

assigned to the 199th InfanshyJhey brought vast fortunes On goods property and mog of try Brigade in Vietnam has ell land to the kings favorites been awarded the Distinshyoome of whose families have reshy guished Service Cross forWned their wealth to this day extraordinary heroism SevshyIgnored in Practice

Of course the laws against erely wounded when Viet me Roman Catholic Church Cong ambushed a US infanshyIhave long ago been shelved and try company Ohaplain Lit shyIgnored in practice The reli shy eky braved flying bullets toous houses are back probably

rescue and minister tomore numerous than before iIome have even reoccupied the WQunded and dying meR 0ld sites they hadmiddot before the lReformation

Another notable measure ~ewlfk ~[p)regID Gingled out for repeal is the 1loleration Act of 1688 This act W51f)$ ~WIfltdl although in itself it did not help

NEW YORK (NC)-The Adshy~he Catholics marked the end of

vocate weekly newspaper of1lhe Protestant Reformation and the Newark Archdiocese wont1he beginning of religious tolershythe first-place Silver Medalation in Britain Awarti for weekly newspapersIt allowed freedom of worship in the annual public serviceClgt Protestant Trinitarian Nonshycompetition sponsored by theoonformists provided theiT New York chapter of the Pubiicmeetings were opento the pubshy

Relations Society of AmericaIlk it did not relieve the existing The award was for a five-part

fenaWes of those days against analysis ttl the ills besetting the ~atholics other breakaway Newark public school system lhcnestants or Jews but it was )he analysis was written by a hisberic beginning It has been Advocate news editor Ed Grant ltJeseribed as the Great Oharter and was an examination into ~ religious freedom and the one of the areas of dissatisfacshy~umph ofc9mmon ~ense tion which led to widespread

rioting in Newark last Summer

The series ran lri the newsshylJays Help for Poor paper last september and Octoshy

lPeCice First ~eeds ber The Public Rellitlons SocishyMIAMI (NC)-The Catholic ety award - silver medals are (lihurch in this nation today awarded in each of five cateshy

gories-are given for the mostauast address itself to the presshynoteworthy contributions bullbull 0 toiloing needs of the poor and dis-

~vantaged as well as the better public ~derstanding of ltJnICial issue of peace says the _ community problems in the New

4Tchbishop of Miami York metropolitan area Archbishop Coleman F Calshy New s p a per 8 magazines 0011 following announcement of broadcasting an d television middotGte establishment of the ecclesshy media in the New York-New iastical province of Miami and Jersey-Connecti~ut metropolitan tMs appointment as its first area are eligible for the awards l)rehbishop stressed that the (fhurch must be concerned with ibe problems of the time in Retired ArttlhJboshop S)Vhich we exist Gets College lHlonorThe g~eatest problems at present are the problems of the DUBUQUE ( NC) - Retired disadvantaged the poor and Archbishop Edward D Howard Utase who are in need and of of Portland Ore has been named oourse peace he smiddotaid for Loras Colleges 1968 John

It is more difficult for us to Fitzgerald Kennedy Award The LiOlve in any real way the prob- prelate is a former president of iems that are our concern until the college we have a measure of peace The citation and gold medal And it is the prayer of all of us annual award honoring an out Chat peace will be established as standing Amercian will be preshyiluickly as possible on an honorshy sen ted to the archbishop at the able basis o college commencement cereshy

monies June 2 Camp Directory Archbishop Howard 90 a nashy

Nltlw available from the Nashy ti ve of Cresco Iowa and a Loras lItonal Catholic Camping Assn alumnus was ordained to the ~ 131~ Massachusetts Ave priesthood in 1906middot He became lM- W Washington D C 20005 president of the college in 1921 Is the 1968 Directory of Catholic In 1924 he was consecrated to ~mps which lists all known serve as auxiliary bishop of DavshyearriPs in the U S giving acshy enport He became archbishop of Civities charges dates open and Portland in 1926 and retired in lIbailing addresses 1966

National CYOPlans LeadershipTraining shyImpa~t to Aid Priests Adult Admiddotvisors

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tbe through the introduction of BaWmore June 23-28 ehicagoNational Catholic Youth Organshy leadership methodology which July 1-5 Boston July 14-19 ization Federation will launch a facilitates maximum involveshy Sen Antonio July 28-Aug 3 training program in June called ment 00 the local level and Denver Aug 11-16 and San Impaot be help priests and hence maximum commitment JFaoancisoo Aug 25-30 adults 00 work effectively with The National CYO Federation Dr Donald Ebalt a professhyteenagers in a leisure time proshy will sponsor six sessiOns this lIlional trainbig eonsul1lant of gram summer to train diocesan CYO Washington D c win diiecl

The program was designed in staffs m 1lhe use of the newmiddot ead11ab cooperation with Leadership program lhey win )e held m A pilot Jtudy of the effectiveshyResources Inc a firm _of beshy DeBS of Impact on a group of havior scientists -rolulbteers from the NewarlkAddress Graduates

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishy archdiocese was held at the SOUTH BEND (HC) -Mel-rector of the Youth Department Benedictine Retreat House ill

Jdte-rite Patriarcib Maximoo VUnited States Catholic Confershy jNewton N J ence in announcing ttie new Kakimof Antioch and Dr Ilhirtymiddot persons representashyprogram said tives of youth adult advisorsJames A Perkins of Cornell

The goal 01 Impact is 00 help and priest moderators met withUniversity will be speakers atthe priests who are moderators representattives of the CYO

the 123rd annual cOnW~ncementof CYO the ad~lt advisors and Federation staff and a member youth participating in CYO toshy exerci~ Sundly June 2 at Of Leadership rResources Inc ward maximumpersonal growth Notrlte Dame University 110 assess and to evaluate 1mpaltL

(Cathedral Camp-Resident and Day Camp for Boys

O~ Lady of the L_ke Day Camp fOr Girls

Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON LONG POND ROUTE 18 EAST FREETOWN MAS~

~ RESIDENT CAMP 49th Season June 30 thru August 24 - a Week Season

Diocesan seminar-ians - College Students amp Teachers Under direction StaH of a Diocesan Priest

Saili~g swimming water skiing horseback riding riflery archeryPrograni hiking overnight camping trips ~rts amp crafts Indian crafts camp crafts athletic (team amp individual) competition and inter-camp cOmpetition professional tutorial service available

Private beach large luxurious camphouse dining hall modernfacilities~ washrooms arts and crafts buildings camp store and office first aid and infirmary beautiful chapel overnight and weekend accomodashytions for parents

S WEEK PIERIOD $325 - 4 W~K PERIOD $165 - 2 weEK PERIOD $85

Cathedra~ Day Camp t=or Boys Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period

JULY W- AUGUST 23 Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period fEES INCLUDIE Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Horseback Riding Weekly Cook~Outs amp Milk Daily without Added Cost

--~----------------------------------------Our Lady of the Lake bay Camp For Girls

JULY l _ AUGUST 23 Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period

FEES INCLUD~Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Ilorseback Riding Weekly Cook-Outsmiddot Milk Daily without Added Cost

o

For further information write to

REV WALlER A 5ULLlVANDiredor PO Box 63 - East Freetown Mass 02717

Page 14: 05.23.68

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THE At~~C~_ 15 Th M 231968 urs ~y World Communication Day CtmMG(f~ A~V[JK~$ObsecteWGR1CCe on S~ndl~w O[fi) ~copy~o~ A~fDcopy[jf)

WASHINGION (NC)-In response to an appeal by NEW ORLEANS (NC)-ArchshyPope Paul VI to the universal Ohurch the Church in the bishop PhHip M Hannan asshyUnited States will observe the second World Communicashy serted here As far as I am tions Day on Sunday May 26 The National Conference of concerned segregation in the

Church is dead We are past the Catholic Bishops awroved time for statements Now is thefor Motion Pictures and Bishoplast November the observshy time for actionClarence J Issenmann of Cleveshynnc of World Communicashy Tile archQishop of New Orshy

tions Day in this country on USCC Press Department land episcopal chairman of the

leans told delegates at an diocesan and parish levels ampnd archdiocesan conference on st) shy

members of the U S Bishops cial action I assure you we are going forwardCommittee for Social Commu- Senate Rev1ltews

nications have sent to individ- He outlined programs fe ual Ordinaries throughout the Continued from Page One beMer education for adequate country a cOpy of the Prayer lains to be assigned on a funmiddot housing and for recognition of of the Faithful for that Sunday time basis and that the needs the inherent digni ty of all men and a ooP1 of the Holy ~athers of the sick were being adequateshy The Church is exerting itll message issued earlier this ly met under the present arshy influence in every way to assistmonth ran~ement the poorest he said If we

It is recommended that the 3 Recommendations on salshy follow Christ we must begillilobservance in this country ary adjustments Taken into aeshy with the pOor even if thishave both religious and non- count _by Bishop in his direcshy means asking others to wait 0religious aspects The former tives for Aug I 1967 little longerwould highlight a Mass with 4 Meetings open to all clergy Anyone can live poor the

appropriate sermon in the 00- Bishop approved archbishop said The key thingthedral or some convenient 5 Extension of Synod prepshy is dignity This does not mean church to which executives aration time Bishop approved that this dignity is recognized Wld employes of communica- 6 Secretary to be Treasurer by a dole or a handout or eveD tions media would be specially and Senate budget Bishop apshy preferential treatment We are invited proved confusing issues when we talk

The non-religious asp e c t 7 ChOice of other Prayers of of dignity as if it can be bought would feature news conferences the Faithful Bishop approved or paid for he said articles in the press and radio 8 Referral of matters to Passhy - I am totally for equal oppollaand TV interviews and proshy tunity in jobs and for adequate

housing not just open housincgrams toral Council Bishop approved

In his message to the Church 9 Creation of Clergy Person-In human dignity everyone hasPope Paul invited Catholics to Del Board Bishop approved an equal right to education anell

consider the significance of 1() Clergy retirement policy to culture he declaredthe changes that are taking with Bishop accepting ormiddot not

AWARDS CEREMONIES At the annual Awards Day for hospital personnel at St Annes Hospital Fall River Manuel Benevides 38 years of service receives his award while Bertha Janson 42 years of service awaits her presshyentation from trustees Harold K Hudner left and Arthui Guimond right

place in this field (communica- according to diocesan ll1eed tions) under our very eyes and Bishop approved to ponder the serious responsi- 11 In-service training tor bJlities that theSe imply for one newly-ordained priests Bishop and all approved

Clamor forAttentlo~ 12 Various diocesan diredors Until recently the Holy to recommend men for middotpart shy

Father pointed out many did time or full-time further study not have anything more to Btim- Bishojgtmiddot approved 1IIate their inflection than vague 13 Full participation by memories of what they learned Catholics in middotYMCAyWCA ot school or in the family and programs Bishop aPlgtrov~ What they beard in their envi- 14 Rotation among religious ronment eomniunities of their represen-

Now however with the echo Uitives on Senate Bishop ap- r the press motion pictures proved radio and television clamoring 15 Clergy to recommend men lor attention new h~riZons oPenJor episcopacy Bishop applloved wide before them llIndmiddot they are 16 Lay Personnel pension ttuned to the throbbing life of plan study Bishop approved the ~niverse

Who will not rejoice at this 17 Adjustmentin diocesan progress Do we not 1111 see in assessments Bishop approved It a roadmiddotdestined by Providence 18 Clergy retirement study for the advance of themiddot whole Bishop approved of mankind There is room for 19 Bishop announced through all hopes if man learns to mas- Senate exchange of facultieS ter these techniques but every- between Diocese of Fall River thing can be lost if he shirks his and Providence responsibilities Various commfttees have made

Members of the bishops com- studies to implement some of mittee signing the letter to the these considerations Ordinaries included Auxiliarymiddot Senate representatives have Bishop Gerald V McDevitt of participated on a regional and Philadelphia episcopal moder- national basis regarding a nashyator of the United States Catb- tional organization of priests olic Conference Bureau of In- and its constitution and activity formation Bishop John A Donshyovan of Toledo episcopal chairshyman of the National Catholic Cursillo for Men Office for Radio and Television Bishop Christopher J Weldon Starts Tonightshyof Springfield episcopai chairshy

A mens ~ursillo win ~ginman of the Bishops qo~ttee tonight at La Salette C~nter of Christian Livingmiddot At~leboro Dishy

Delegate Recives rectors will be William Barnes of Marion and Rev GilesHonorary Degree Genest middotMS of the center

HONOLULU (NC) ~ Archshy Allmiddot eursillistas are invited to bishop Luigi RaimondiApostolicmiddotmiddot the firstmiddot anniversary of ultleya Delegate in the Unikld States middotmeetingsmiddotin the Fall River area baS received an honorary deshy at 745 Wednesday night May laquoree froIn Charninade College 29 at Sacred Hearts Academy here the only Catholic eollege Prospect Street Fall River A lID the state of Hawaii concelebrated Mass will be folshy In an Dterview with the Hashy lowed by a song session social

waUmiddotCatholic Herald ArehlSishop bour and refreshments Baimondi ~pressed tolerance Ul1reya meetings are schedshylor student activism in the Unishy uled in Attleboro oat Jettes ted States middotIltating Students Funeral Home Friday May 11 8ft adive everywhere Youth Monday May 27 Monday June ill UyiDg find its WBY aoc1 2 Friday June 14 and FridayecJar patterns of tbougbt IlBd June 21 eetioD e DOt lIS set asin pre A eursillo for W4)men is scbedshy paerationfl Cbolees were 1IIed for August and further inshy

-e fiSHthen tbin ~ tit formation is obtainable inla ~ -e LeSalleUe Centerbull --

You Live Better Electrically

trlc range bullbullbull with Iln ingenious oven that cleans Itself Make 8 clean break with the past bullbullbull and graduate to another appliance

that adds to the Joy of Total Electric Uvlng

Graduate to a ~fiameless electric range thatmiddotcleansits own ovenmiddot

Make 8 clean break~ with the past4

Why spend ~ours stooping scrubbing and scouring to clean your oven Why not grad- uate to a modern flarve1ess range bullbull with anoven that cleans itself electrically Its so

easy to use Set the controls and-zingo The oven cleans Itself (And drip pans) All you dois whisk awaya IIttie pOwder

- YOUll notice toothat a flamelessmiddot range keeps your kitchen clean cool a~d ~omshyfortable And because electric cookmg IS so automatic YOUll cook with pleasure So see

yOur appliance dealer about aflameless elecshy

See Yo~r Appliance Dealer or

FAll RIVER ~l~CTRIC LIGHT COMPANY

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mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 23 196816 I

Mafttl[p)Dsellt $50 Raymond L W Benoit

$5BTANJrlllONY Jos~ph A Tully William J

$300 OLearY Mr ampMrs Alfred Baty ltlJbades McGowan Mr amp Mrs Fred Harney

$100 Mr amp Mrs Michael C ODonshyaarence G Verdi nell Mr amp Mrs ThomaS P Per~ lIugene F Phelan kins Mr amp Mrs John Kozlowski

$15 mosampry Altar Society

$66 Buzzard$ B~y I

iusan A McGowan ST MAJuiAR]ampTWilliam Keane

$SOshy$55 A Friendllohn P Delaney

$6$40 lIlr amp Mrs Thomas Pina

~h G Perry $25$35

Mr amp Mrs Edwin PaytonlInmothy Manning )l amp Mrs John KarlJfudge E C Horrocks J~

$30 Mr amp Mrs Edwin N Rose Wareham Lodge of Elks 15044bullbull Clayton King

Mr amp Mrs David Fannon$~

Mr amp Mrs John OCOnnellJames Downey Romeo Bedarql William Delaneyhnes H Gifford Mary M Chad Mr amp Mrs James Lopes

Wick George Smith Jr Antone Mr amp Mrs Louis Fougereshy-es Edmund Perry $25 Mr amp Mrs Armand Bedard

Mr amp Mrs Michael DelIsMark H McIntyre Teree JeminaBlossom Joseph Farley Robert Mr amp Mrs William BennettGIngras Real Breton Mr amp MrsLouis Eacobaoct

Jobn Tarvis Francis ODri9shyu Holy Nam~ Society Paull Glennon Joseph Zychowicz Central -VUlageIIaomas Renahan Richard SmiUll

ST JOHN THE BAPTIBJl

~50 bullNorth Dighton Mr amp Mrs John DeNadal

ST JOSEPH nolt Rev John P Hogan$156

IlR Vincent de Paul $75 Dr Peter F Piccinini$50

$25amp11 Name Society Florence I Bessette MrSt Josephs Womens Guild

$35 Mrs John J Ardagh Jr llim Raymond Williamsbull amp Mrs Joseph MWTaJ

Me amp Mrs Daniel TebreiN$30 J Jl)r amp Mrs William AcIamI Mr amp Mrs Robert Albanese

o Iohn W Perreira$5 Ch(ltham

Mr amp Mrs Joseph C Amarat 1lIJr amp Mrs Edward M Berobe HOLY ~EJI)EIEMEamp

bullbull amp Mrs Arthur A Ennes Mr $101 A Mm William Johnson Rose Pi Assqc of the SacredHea~ Mello $lOet

Mr amp Mrs Harold Mendoza Mr amp Mrs Robert Han lIffr amp Mrs Bruce Murph) Mr Col amp Mrs John McCa~ bull Mrs Robert Secatore $50

Mrs James Bell Jr St Vincent de Paul Sodeq Mr amp Mrs John J Cavanaup

IIMMACULATE CONCBPJIl[ON $30 $DOO A- Friend

Ambonymous $2-5 $a Chatham Trust Co Mr af

Anonymous MrS E Joseph Geller Dr~ amp MIlII Robert Harned A Friend (~)

Anonymous $75

Mr amp Mrs William Kent Mr amp Mrs Paul reF~vre Mr lIi$it

- Mrs~ Richard Sylva Mr amp MmHelen P Derby Patrick SullivanMr amp Mn Aibert Giordano

A Friend Mr amp Mrs Frank Dresseli Mr amp Mrs Philip S1iel]oA Friend Mr amp Mrs James Griffin shyAnonymous Mr amp Mrs Frank Wing _ImmaCU1ate Conception MenliI

Club $4G North Attleboro

Mr amp Mrs Raymond ~rgerotl SACRED HEART$35

Mr amp Mrs William Condoo $200 $5 Rev JOuter Lussier

Mr amp Mrs William Buchtman $30 Caesar Cardoza Mr amp Mrs RoT Mr amp MrsJeorge Merewe Howard Immaculate Conception $~ Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Joseph A Jette

Mr amp Mrs Co George Knapp $25 McCarthy Coal Co Mrs Fredshy Mr amp Mrs Paul Dion Mrbull elick H Murphy A Friend Mrs Frederick Fortin LionelL

Martineau Mr amp Mrs~ Philippe Rainville amp Florence

Mr amp Mrs George Beaulieu Sl lWAllUf A Friend

STMA-ElY$50 $150Mr amp Mrs Michael Murphy

Nelson GulskiMr amp Mrs Jose FernandesSIl $75$30 Rev Armando A- AnnunziabMr amp Mrs Thomas J Bryanamp

$50 Eva Morowski

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John HaugMr amp Mrs Roland Roberge Mr amp Mrs John StanfordDavid amp Martha Rocha M Veronica Reilly

Mary Cronin George Yefh Mildred Leary A ~riend

BreWSlfreli $4G Dr amp Mrs Domenie BalJiIe

OUR LADY OF TlIIE CAn $35 o $100 Dr amp Mrs Kenneth AtwiIl lllisBionaries of La saleUe jnr amp Mm JosepiL Dona

MONSIGNOR VI[lELSB

Heads Bishop$ Task force

WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr Aloysius J Welsh of Newark N J a recognized authority in race relations and social aclion work has been named to head the Urban Task Force estabshylished by the U S bishops

Bishop Joseph L Bernardin general secretary of the U S Catholic Conference who anshynounced the monsignors apshypointment said the task force was calhd for by the U S blsbshy

ops at theirmiddot April meeting in SL Louis in their statement on the mational racial crisis The bishshy

ops directed the task foree be established by the USCC Social[ Action Department

In this work he will cooperaW with MsgI George G Higgins director and Father John MeshyCartty assistallt director of the Social Action Department the bishop said

$30 Mr amp Mrs Frederick ThOIpG middotMr amp Mrs Clement Sbarolll

$26 Mr amp Mrs Andtew Boisvert Gertrude Cassi~y

Elizabeth Sheals $25

Mr amp Mrs Daniel J Cava- naugh Mr amp Mrs Raymond Bl~hard Mr~ amp Mrs Robert Brunelli A Friend

Mr amp Mrs Robert Gilmore Mrs James P Reynolds Mr amp Mrs John Donleymiddot Mr amp Mm James Battersby Mr Mn Jlohn bullCollins

Virginia G Robinson

AttRehoro BOLY GHOST

$150 Dr amp Mm LoneJglUl

~110 Mr amp Mm John CapoWglo

$50 Holy Ghost St Vineellllt cle Pail

$35 Mr amp Mra Joseph BJOdeur

$25 Mr amp Mrs Malcolm ~

Mr~ amp Mrs Harry Dowdall Mr amp Mrs RObert Geddes Mr~ I Mrs Frank Pistolese

ST JOlIN $200

In memory of Dn7 hwlbaDcI JIoseph F ODonn~

$100 Mr amp Mrs Raym9nd ENmlIlilll Anonymous Donor Inmemory of GabriGll lYaBltllloshy

alone bull $75 -

Rev Edwarcl A Ra~

Mr amp Mrs John P I4e $50

MaryL Wilhelm Mr amp Mrs J G WaJEll Jlr Mr amp Mrs Franclll Bo Mr Joseph ODonnell1 ~ amp Mrs Ernest ~

$30 m=teanor Robinqmiddot Alice~

ST JOSEPH $25

Counseil Jeanne DAre No 263

ST MARK $50 ~

Edward J Connors Jr $25

William J Roche Jr Joseph Dias Mrs Michael J Croke

ST MARY $50

Holy Name Society of St Mary Knights of Columbus Seekonk

Council Mrs Leland B Smith

$35 Mr amp Mrs Donald Blake

$~O ~r amp Mrs Henry E Woodcome st Marys Womeno Guild

$25 Mr amp Mrs Frank Padykula

Mr amp Mrs Russell J Sumner ST THERESA

$50 Mr amp Mrs Donald Boardman Mr amp Mrs George LeBeau

$30 William Cauley amp Family Mr amp Mrs George Boyd

0 $25 Mr amp Mrs RobeIt Generenl Mr amp MrsRobert St mlaiN

Taunton -HOLY ROSAILY

$30 Mr amp Mrs Russen Woodward stanley Radwansld

$25 Children of Mary Sodality Richard Januse

SACRED HEARi

$50 Mr amp Mrs Joseph S llosamp Mr amp Mrs Vincent BrimleF

$35 Mr amp MnJ Robert MeClellaml

_ S2i Walter Waltman Mr amp Mm

atephen Crosby The ~ Mr amp MrtI William Vaillan-

OOurt Mr amp Mrs Michael Barber

Mrs Margaret Rose llrtr~ bull II Frederick Reams

o

81 JAMES

$U Armand Desautels Tremblay Moving Iii 8tonlge

00mpany

STMABY $100

Dr~ Charles HoYt $60

GeOrge Dion Jr $51

Mr~ amp Mrs Kenneth $50

Mm A Hoffman Dr Normand ~ Mr amp M1lil J McNilmaN ar Dr John Fenton Mr amp Mrs Kicban sm

$36 ~ B Grant

~O Dr EdmWlld Fitzgerald D4niel A J Doyle

$U

Richard Barrington BIizabeCIa dIt Margaret Brady Mr - Mm kmea Bumtl Dr CarsiDbre e-- IlUOCi -Robert J mn JamesD hcige

Mr amp Mra Llocel IaImDee ftlomas Hoye Merrill lliaynard Jmelen amp Catherine McCariIll7

Alice McKenna Ruth MeshyJUona Susan McKenna II

Plan To B~ild

- See Us About ~

lotyCost Financing

WAuREHAM SAVltfGS BANK

WorehaftI falmouth cr J-3800 II 1-3000

Mrs James McMorrow Franeb Mulholland

Mary Mulholland Ma~ Neenan Joseph ODonnell Eveshylyn Rice Agnes amp Joseph Rose

Mrs Joseph Rowley Robert Sullivan J Roger Torme1 Charles H fripp Rita Baker

Mrs James Bennett William Carney John Gonzals James Holmes Mary E McNamara

Dr Thomas~OBrien Cbarleo OConnell Mr amp Mrs Edwarcll OGara Mr amp Mrs John 00 _ Ilfearne MlJI amp Mrs Edward OKeefe

1he Ralph Reckard Famil1 Cecelia F lfi Mary C Sheerin

ST PAUL $150

St Vincent de Paul st Pauh Taunton 0

$100 Rev Cornelius~ltYNem

$50 Mr amp Mrs Edward Roster

$24 Mr amp Mrs John Medas Jr

$25 Mrs Catherine Campbell Mr

amp Mrs Chester Jackman Mr c1i Mrs Richard Silva Mr amp Mrs Leo Leroux Mr Mrs John Steen

Mr amp Mrs Donald Emond Mr Be Mrs Gordon Seekel Mr amp Mrs Charles Welch Mr MllIl Paul Silva

New Bedford HOLY NAME

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John Hallonm Mr amp Mrs Jacob Teser

ST CASIMIR $150

Beltr cutnir Kwiatkowski $109

Atto~ Ferdinand Sowa $25

Mr amp Mrs Joseph FoUrnier The Poczatek Family Mramp M Antbony Rijo Jr Mr Mrs Stanle Scbkk Eve White

I

ST BYACINTB $100 -

Mr Mrs George Vigeallltl $50

st Vincent de Paul ConferenCe Gf Hyacinth Parisb

Tum to Page Seventeen

CONRAD SEGUIN BODY COMPANY

Aluminum or Steel 944 County Seet

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2-6618

w H RILEY amp SON Inc

CITIES SERVICE IDISTRIBUTORS-

0 Gasoline Fuel and Ra~ge

OILS OIL BURNERS

for Prompt Delivery amp hoy amp Night ~ice

8 IE BOIlER BURNER UNITS

80tItecI G48 Service

61 OOItANNET Sf TAUNTON

AJdeb DfO - No- Attleboro

TountoIamp

(l

SUMY pons Nuns (l)ffi) AifrMdl~$o

Re$M~~e~o trMture D~[freg~UDrru~ WASHINGTON (NC)-Resulto

of a survey of all United States nuns reveals a high ooceptance of post-Vatican II changes anell an eagerness robecome morrc involved in the inner city and poverty apostolates

The B1UVey conducted bythe Conference of Major Superiors of Women dlJring 1966 was the first extensive attempt to assess resources and attitudes of reli shygious communicenties c1 women and their memberll in the United States

The JPecific coal of the surshyvey was to assess the resources and determine 1ampIe responses that Religious are making and ean make to the invitation 13shysued in Vatican Us Decree on the Renewal of Religious ~e

More than 135000 Sisters parshyticipated in the survey respondshying to 649 questionnaire items covering religious beliefs atti shytudes toward change edu~shy

tional background present ocshycupation and future plans comshymunity life and proposals for future ohange

Results were processed by 00 Sister-sociologists across the country with the use of comshyputers

llleason for lIAlavnng The survey showed 1827 oil

the 175000 U S Sisters-107 per cent-left religious life durshying 1966 Of those Sisters only 869 had taken final vows In an interview with the NC News Servicemiddota spokesman for the Conference of Major Superiors of Women (CMSW) said most Sisters who have remained feel that a major reason for the inshy

ltereased number of Sisters leavshymg religious life is an increased ~penness to the idea within the lfcligious community

She said that the increased fucus on personal development has caused many Sisters to see that they are not suited to the religious life and that they will find areater personal fulfillment elsewhere

Statistics on be division of labor among U S Sisters show 72 per cent are teachers eight per cent are involved in health work five per cent in catechetshyill~ and missionary work lmd tbr~ per cenmiddott in welfare work

Seventy per cent of the teachshyem ore in elementary school work 195 per cent in high school education and 68 per

eent teach at the college level Of those involved in health care 18 per cent in health administration and 62 per cent in direct care jobs

lEnter New lFienlll1s The survey showed Sisters

have a strong desire to become involved in adult education inshyner city work pre-school teachshying and other s~ial work and to have greater contact with their local community Nuns expressed eagnerness to enter fieldc where few Sisters are now working In 1966 13 per cent ot U S Sisters were engaged in adult education 82 pel cent in speshycial education 31 per cent in poverty work and 06 per cent in migrant education The surshyvey indicafes that there will be a dramatic change in these figures in the next few years

Father Considine Leaves PC$tr Continued fC0m Page One

man of the U S Bishops Comshymittee for Latin America

Bishop Bernardin prai~ed the work of Father Considine in the Latin America Bureau noting

iota progress under his direction since its inauguration in 1960

It has been a labor of love for Father Considine he saici whose long standing interest in the people of Latin America and of other developing areaa is well known

Maryknon Father Considine will return

to his writing and teaching asshymgnments at Maryknoll Ossinshy

lng N Y where he had served as publications director before becoming director of the IAiltin

America Bureau He holds editorial and advishy

lOry posts with several internashytional organizations and servell DS a member of the Council OIl

Foreign Relations He was amp

member of the National Advishysory Council of the Peace Corps from 1961 to 1966 He also founded and directed Fides Inshyternational Service in Rome an Information and research unit of

the Holy See He was born Oct 9 1897 C1shy

1-

~ATIlGR CONSIDINE

da1ned in 1923 and received II

licentiate in sacred theology from the Catholic University of America in 1924 He has reshyceived honorary degrees from Fordham University Manhatshytsnville St John University St Benedicts Atchison and is the author of 10 books on Latin America Asia and Africa and hall edited several others

L9ng-Range

Father Considine Sllid that he IlIaW the Latin America Bureau as set for the proseution ~ tl

vigorous nation-wide program 10 serve our Latin American eonfreres for the next- generashytion through the year 2000 -and into ~ 21st century He felt lIlllch 11 long-range view was necessarJ because at stake are important socio-religious adshyVDnces among hundreds of milshyHons cd people Latin Americas leaders need time for these advances

Be pointed out thatsome of the best Church leadership tbroughout the Catholic world today is found in Latin AmershyICD In turn he noted our U S bi~hops are quietly acceptshying international responsibiliti~s

as never before Father Considine said that the

program of the U S Bishops Committee for Latin Americn ~ablishes the heavy day-to-day work of the Latin America Bureau

Jgtersonnel Father Considine said that

llIODle 60 per cent of all U S apOstolic personnel overseas throughout the world works in Latin America with more Ulan 600 Latin American parishes served by U S priests Major Superiors of women ha~e 2500 Sisters in Latin America PAVLA has put more than 800 laymen there for three-year terms and U S bishops hnv~

more than 300 priests working in Latin America Annual fundshying for Latin Amerietl by U S Catholics ~~ $1f) millioll

SJJREET SCENE This was a busy street scene in the nations capital at the encampment of the Poor Peoples Campaign near the Washington monument More than 100~OOO- protestors are expected to be in Washington for Memorial Day NC Photo

OUlll lLAIDY OlF ll1HI1amp

ASS1lJMJgtJlJlON $26

Clara Rose amp Family $25

Mr amp-Mrs Jose F Cruz St Martin de Porres G~

Mi CARMEL $100

In memory of Mr amp Mrs J~ ilino Simoes

Rev Antonio P Pinto middotCM $75

Rev Azitonio P Pinto em $60

Mary i Ltuiz $50

Mr amp lVIrs Albino daSilv8 1IIt Carmel Womans Club

$30 Manuel Bettencourt Mr amp Mrs Kenneth lltinu

John Rodrigues $26

Olivia M Luiz $25

Cecelia Bettencourt CbildYeli of Mary Mt Carmel ~ouft

Units James Perry Mr amp lnl Manuel G Souza Jr

Mr amp Mrs Arthur Caetano Mr amp Mrs Charles Frate Mramp Mrs Lauran Silva

OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HE]P

~26

Mrs Amelia E Bariteau $25

Dr amp Mrs Francis Green

OURLADY OFPU~GATOB~ l)1I00

In memory of Alex J Ka1He from Cltpe Coo Sportswear ~

lnc Fairhaven Lumber Co

$30 Atty George R Morad euroJ

Atty ~e E Morad $25

Josephine David 1bl mlE1lllllOllY of George A EI-Hillow Mr ampgt Mra ~rge JThomas Mr amp IIIlm Hykel G Simon

ST KIlldAN nSO

Rev WilMeT J Boekley

U~~ amp Wmeentde PaW ~

~ iWa1 1kntley

$2S AlmgeAo OH1feira

SAClllIampDlHlJEAlltT $25

Alexander Caruso

c S11 JAMES

$55 rulllbull amp lVIrs Francis O Quinn

$50 lilred Kelley

$40 William OMalley

~1 A Friend

$3~

Mr amp Mrs Jr Hugh Barry $25

Mr amp Mrs Andrew ONeil Mr 8 Mrs Robert Arnett

ST JOSEPH

$450 sa Josephs Church Societies

$70 Mr amp Mrs Maurice Dansereau

1130 II Mr amp Mrs Luigi Fiano lk Fmniy

125 Mr amp Mrs Thomas Weaver MI amp Mm Maurice Lamonshy

tagne Mrbull Mrs Raymond Rondel1

ST TBERIESA $100

Eugene Lemieux

Sturtevant 6 Hook lEst 1897

Bude~s Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New ~dforcJ

996-5661

THE ANCHOR- ~ 7 lfhuvs May 23 1968

~regreg [copy~G~ ~O~

Oa1l ~MOO~ []M~Orru NEWARK (NC)-A charge (l(

apparent ~racial discriminatiom in the assignment of tenants 00 public housing here is Oontainoo in s report issued by the New Jersey Advisory Committee 00 the U S Commission em CiWl Rights

It said the Newark Housing Authority follows a policy ef permitting people applying fOlr placement in public housin~ projects to choose the project tm whieh they want to live

lit said this policy has ~

llributed to the segregation Cl1I public housing and recomshymended that t1he policy 00 abandoned in favor of first-come first-serVed basis

The report noted that Q01l1li vast housing projects nre locatell in Newarks Central Ward-tho scene of widespread noting D year ago and of two massiv~ firo disasters this spring-and tll~

they are more thanSO Negf~ ~ccupied

It further charged that them Js U a disparity in maintenanceo between the predominantly N~

gro and the rgtredominantly whi~

projects a complaint lIiTegNgt leadership has frequently medea

It termed living conditiom b the Central Ward projects opshypressive and that the proj~cto

are JIOor)y designed llt recomshymeld~d that additionaI ~ev areas for young children ~Gl

meeting places for odww ~ teenagers be provided

Higher ~arnings

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of F~L~ RIVER shy~---__-------------~~~~ First Federal saYIngs bull Loan At ~

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PIlllse Cl3len II SllVings llCCOUCt blcelaquol

o eAomelamp) = ~ 0 ~ Address 0 ~ l 0 clleck In the amount of e--- ~ ~ 0 ~ _~___~~~_~uuJ

SPECIAL RATES FOR Schoo~ Outings and Picnics

amfACi MANAGERI - UNCOLN PARK 999-6984 636-2744

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs May 23196~

The Parish Parade OUR LADY OF ANGELS SACRED HEART WALL RIVER NORTH ATTLEBORO

Altar bOys willsponsor a cake The CCD program will be lJ81e Sunday May 26 following canonically established Friday Iill1 Masses June 21 the feast of the Sacred

Masses today the feast of the Heart The program will include Ascerision will be at 7 and 9 a 730 evening Mass followed AM and -1215 4 5 and 7 PM by proclamation and reception Confessions will be heard be- of CCD members and a social ~re each Mass hour

The Summer Mass schedule CCD students in grades 6 to will begin Sunday June 2 with 12 will attend a folk Mass and Masses from 6 to noon on the sing-out at La Salefte Shrine hour Monday night May 27 Tnose

Monday May 27 through Fri- participating will leave the ooy May 31 there will be church school yard at 645 and will be services at 7 each evening The returned at 930 living rosary will be sponsored Confirmation ceremonies will by the Holy Rosary Sodality be ~ld at 730 Sunday night Monday night the Council of May 26 Catholic Women on Tuesday ther societies on Wednesday and Thlusday and the Children New Bedford ~ M~~ on lfrIday

ST MARY HOLY NAME $25iALL RIVER Mr amp Mrs Roger Goyette

Contemporary music will acshy The Shea Family company the 1115 Mass Sunday Mrs Vivian Wegrzyniakmorning May 26

New CYO officers are Robert ST LAWRENCE amplois president Paul Durin $200 rice-president Polly Rockett Dr amp Mrs Stanley Koczera eecretary-treasurer A Friend

$125 OUR LADY OF FATIMA Dr amp Mrs Robert Srnan sWANSEA $106

The Womens Guild will hold William E King Its annual penny sale at 730 $100

Monday night May 27 in the Dr amp Mrs William Walsh ehurch hall on Gardners Neck $75 lRoad Rev William F OConnell

A Penny Sale will be held Dr amp Mrs James Bolton MondaYMay 27 at 730 in the $60 dlurch hall A Friend

$50 IMMACULATE CONClEPlIION Teremiddotsa Ruth amp John HarneyNEW BEDFORD Victor T Kondi

Parisnioners will celebrate John L Powell rthe feast of Santo Ohristo this Loretta Lamarre Sunday with a roast beef dinner $45 served from noon to 2 with Mrs Mary B Wheatoil

tickets available at the door $40 lRefreshments and entertainment Mr amp Mrs John Connor will be on the afternoon and Mr amp Mrs Thomas J Longevening program $35

A procession and auction will Mr amp Mrs James M Kearneyfollow the dinner with various Mrmiddot amp Mrs Leo St Aubin Holy Name Society units parti shy $30 cipating in the procession Mr amp Mrs Albert Anderson

Mr amp Mrs Joseph Griffin OUR LADY OF V()T(RY Mr amp Mrs Walter L9veridgeeENTERVILLE Mr camp Mrs Myron Tripp

New officers of the Womens $28amptiild are Mrs John J Pendershy Patricia Connor ~st pre~ident MrS James Murshy $26 phy and Mrs John McBarron Mr amp Mrs Thomas SullivanVoice-president Mrs George Mr amp Mrs Charles BerryReale recording secretary Mrs $25 Richard Griffith treasurer Mr amp Mrs Robert Bedard

A Communion dinner at Mr amp Mrs Albert McMulleneummaquid Inn will follow Mr amp Mrs Theodore J CalnanlB30 Mass Monday night June Mr amp Mrs Alfred Couto Mr amproo Mrs Gilbert Noonan of Falshy Mrs Manuel Guerreira Josephmouth will speak Reservations P Mullen should be made with Mrs Edshy Agnes Proctor Mr amp Misward Welch or Mrs- Stephen Joseph Porter Mr amp MrsOBrien Jr by Thursday June 6 James Ryan Mr amp Mrs Paul

saunders ST THERESA Mr amp Mrs Merton WalkerSOUTH ATTLEBORO Mr amp Mrs John F SullivanMiss Patricia Makin of the

Diocesan CCD Board spoke at the annual Communion breakshy Fall River fast of the Confraternity of

ST MARYS CATHEDRALChristian Mothers Fourteen $50 new members were received at

Gertrude OLoughlinthe monthly meeting arid new officers were installed by Rev $26

In memory of Caroline CasellaGerard J Chabot moderator $25They include Mrs Patricia Helen Burns Mr amp MrsBiziak president Mrs Georshy

George Johnston Corky Rowgette Vachon vice-president Club Rits OLaughlin FrancisMrs Kathy Lamarre treasurer amp Lena MoranMrs Dolores Leedham and Mrs

Mr amp Mrs Carlton GastallBeverly Sousa secretaries Mrs Raymond Reynolds

~CULATE CONC~ON BLESSED SACRAMENTlAUNTON $200A Spring Social and D~nce Rev Herve Jalbert

for the benefit of the church $50sponsored by the Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Michael Felixand the St Vincent de Paul Soshy $36ciety will be held Friday May Mr amp Mrs Richard Hamel24 from 8 to 12 at Lewis Lodge $30Winthrop Street Route 44 A W Root Beer StandTaunton Refreshments will be served Tickets are $200 per lIIIOLY CROSS person and wiU be available at $50 the door Holy Rosary Sodality

lt

PATRIARCH His Holishyness Vazken I of the Armeshynian (Monophysite) Chu~h which comprises five-milli~n communicants in the Soviet Union Near and Far East and the Americas is visiting in the US He paid a visit to the National Shrine of the

Immaculate Conception whilein the nations capital NC Photo

NOTRE DAME $40

The Anne-Marie MasSe fami17 $35

Conrad N Desmarais $25

Norman J A Belanger Rose D Perron

HOLY ROSARY $30

The DePaola Family $25

Mrs Philomena Germane

~CULATE CONCEPTION $50

A Frie~d $40

Mrs Diolinda Wilson $26

In memory of Charlotte DJicholson

$25 Holy Name Society Knights

of the Altar A Friend MlU7 Whitehead John R Burgess In memory of Daniel R Be

Manuel R Pimental Joseph Francoeur

SACRED HEART $l)O ()

~ Katherine D Adams $75

Mr amp Mrs William J Sullivan $5~

Margaret Morriss M~ry V amp Alice C HarrlngtoD Frederick B McD9nald

$31 Frances Mmiddot Cummings Mary C Cummings

$30 Mr amp Mrs John J HarrlngtOil

$28 Florence M Sullivan

$25 Vincent DAndrea Edward

Leary Mr ~ MrsN J Meyer Mary Louise OSullivan John J Sullivan middotMargaret F Lowney

ST MICHAEL $25

Manuel Rogers amp Sons At~

Manuel M Rezendes Henry Leshytendre ~eonardo Cabeceiras

Gerald Mulrooney A Friend edf Catholic Charities

ST ANNE ft JI08ZIII $30

Mrs Rhea Saurette 101at Vincent de Paul ConferenceIrene Theroux leapt amp Mrs Joseph J OCoDshy$26 nellThe Gauthier Family $25

Mr amp Mrs Reginald lerive

A Friend

Belshy $50

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J OCo nell k

$30 St rosephs Mens Club

ST ANTH()NY $25 OF THE DESERT Mr amp Mrs John L Mercer

$100 Mr amp Mrs Daniel W OCoDoshyChor Bishop Joseph Eid nell Dr amp Mrs James J Sabra

$25 SANTO CHRiSTO Rev Kenneth A Michael Mrs August Badway $50

ST ANTHONY OF PADUA $125

Rev Josephmiddot M Ferreira $100

Atty amp Mrs Milton R Silva

StVincent de Paul Society $30

Rev Ernesto R Borges $26

Mr amp Mrs Alfred 1 Cam~ $25

$50 Franco Family Singersmiddot

$25 Mrs Sofia Pacheco Antonio T Cabral

Mary amp Beatrice Costa~ SilD

CnristO Credit Union Manuel Medeiros Laureano Silva

AFriendFrank B Olivei

YDUR SONTHE PRIEST

HI HOLY PATHERS MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL DMURDH

A FUTURE

PRIEST NEEDS

bull SOMEONES HELP

TRAiN ASfSTER

Tau

HUNGER CANT

WAIT

Deai MonBr~orNolam

Please

return couponwith your

offering

Have you ever wished you had a son a priest Now you can hlilve a priest of your own-and ahare forever In all the good he does _ _ Throughout the Near East this month grateful bishops ara ordainlng new priests trained by people like youbullbullbullbull Their own families are toe poor to support them In training but good catholics In America adopted these semIshynarians encouraged them all the way to ordinashytionbullbullbullbull Insome Inspiring cases this support was given at personal sacrifice How can youbegln7 Write to us now Well ~end you the name of ~ young seminarian who needs you and he will write to you Make the payments for his training to suit your convenlence ($850 a month or $100 a year or the total $600 all at once) Join your sacrifices to his and at every Sacrifice of the Mass he will always remember who made It possible

4

Native Sisters In our 18 developingcountries are teaching children of the poor preparing them for First Communion giving medical care to leplrs cal)cer sufferers the aging A SisterS training Ialts two years costs $1250 a month $150 a year or $300 altogetherbullbullbullbull Well send you the name of a Sister you can train as soon as we receive your first payment She will pray for you and write toyou

n An9 day now you may receive a letter contalnn the Holy Fathers appeal for the forgotten Arab refugees-l4 million people without a country bullbullbull most of them destitute bullbullbull more thari half of them childrenbullbullbullbull By trelnlng these children foi middotfuture selfsufflcel]cy we can help brln peace and new selfmiddothelp to the Holy Land atlll divided by warbullbullbullbull But why walt for your mal Hunger cant walt Neither can peace Send your amplIft now in any amount ($500 $200 $100 $75 $50 $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 $2 $1) and the Holy Fathercan put It to work right away Qril1 $10 wlllleed family for a monthl -----~-~---~~---~-IlNCL08ID PLllAIl PIND $_ c_O~__ rFOR _

NAMI ___~

8TRIU ~~=

OlTt ~_eTATIl_lrIp OODII-

NIAll lAST WIILFAAI ASSaDIATtOrlaquo

NEAR EAST MISSIONS J

MSGR JOHN ClI NOLAN Natlonal5ecretary Write CATHOLIO NIlAR EAST WeLFARE Assoo ~30 Madson Avenue New York NY OOU telephonel 212vtJkon 6middot5840

CATHaLiD

19 DiJoridrrien Ere State r ourlitei

SChoelbOY leag~~Wmrn~regr~ Stii~Pretty Mu~h sampu [j)(Q)Mbt

By PETIm BARJrEK Nmon BitIh ~h

The gehooboy ba8ebaD mmpaignis cllNimatieaDy near- Inlaquo the climax of another spirited seasoo With approxishymately a week of competitioo Nllllaining oontlmdmg teams Me stmggling to keep their pennanf oopes alive while Wtling for the right to rep-JIe8eDt their ll e s pee t i v e leaguesin the nnand-eomin

-y- shy

Btate tournament The Eastshyem Massachusetts ehampionahip

baseball tournamen+ ClIffiMftl-~

tine of the wurney is tiPoDOOred bythe

II a II sac h u~_ lt Iietts Secondary

SChool Princishypals Association bull Par tie i p 8 t _ ing schools have bElen divided i IIl tot h r e e d3ses - A B and C---llccord- Peter iDg to leagues Blrtek r

and comparable independent teams Action tn all three clasampe3 starts Saturday June L

In addition to the three divishyidon3 the baseball tourney amp1shyem radically JIrom the popular

Two Spots for Both BCl (IDnd Marry Five Bristol County League Howard Ferguson which teams

teams Gre still in contention for will represent the circuit in the tourney play ebampionship event

At this writing Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Stang SpaltamJ of Qartmouth who hold a lllim ene-game edge over their rivals are a solid choice to annex one of the two berths to be filled bi BCL teams The second spot 18 un literally up for grabs

Bishop Feehan High of Attieshyboro which led the circuit untll last week Durfee High of Fan River Attleboro and Taunton lire in close pursuit middotof Stang hoping tomiddot overcome the Sparshytans or at least lInish in the league runner-up berth Both the first and second place finshyishers will8utomatically qualify

If either fim OX second place II decided by Monday May 21 league officials w~ have to DOUty the tournament Director

No~tons Lancers in Need cf Help I h e Narragansett league Class B - Southem

whkh got a head start on the its Iud Old Colony champ ft NaITlIlshyv er area Clrcu conc es gansett runner-upleague play today First place

middot Somerset travels to New Bed- Narragansett champ ~ Olcll ford to meet Holy Family High Colony runner-up Case High of Swansea entell-middotmiddot South Shore champ VB Hockshytains Dighton-Rehoboth West- omock runner-up port hoss Msgr Prevost High Hockomock cpamp vs South

middotof Fall River and Dima]l Voce- ShQre runner-up tional nlso of Fall River will 0I Am f N rth E stobe t Se k Iver es 0 0 a n a e o~k

Entering the final week of ac-middot middot tion Somerset and seekonk are in the top two spots in tbe 8tanding They loom the more likely to corral Class B tourney berths But DightOn-Rehoboth Case and Westwrt trail the sec ODd place club by oIl1yone game If the race ends in II tie ]league officials wlll have ample time to schedule play-off games before the tourney deadline

Pairings for Class Bare

Selecting Union PITTSBURGH (NC)-Twentyshy

five maintenance workers at Duquesne University here in Pennsylvania have left their jobs pending a detell1llnation as to which union will represent the workers The remaining 115 members of the maintenance erew lIlre not involved in the atrike which was called by the 2li who are represented by the tJmted Electrical WorkersUnion

Although it occurs infrequentshyly a team does not have to win Its league to represent its league in tourney eompetition

The Bristol County league champion is slated to play the

bull Bay State League runner-up in first round action with the Bay State champs taking on the County runner-up The winners would then meet in second round play

Pairings for Class A are Class A - Southem

Suburban champ w Middleshy8llX runnerup

Middlesex champ ft Suburshyban runner-up Bay state ehamp VB Bristol runner-up

Bristol champ V8 Bay sta~ runnerup

-Tech lxlsketban competition lllll order to qualifyfor the Tech a team mt1BSt win 70 per cent cd its games but onlythe leagu~ champions ond runner-ups M~ eligible ~r playmiddotiImiddotbasebalL

In both Class A andClass B iitOtalof i6 teams will qualify 1lt7middotmiddotmiddotJiY

for the diamond elimination event~ E~~ Will pai1i~ipate in

the nortlHln division and eight in the southern bracllet The winners in each bracket will meet in the Eastern- Massacilushy

llletts fi~ Preliminary games will be played on June 1 4 and 6 The finals are scheduloo June 8

Class C competition will coIi-BiEt of eight clubs in only one division Titlists in seven smallshyDChooI le1gues and one indeshypendent selected by the tournashy

ment coJiunittee Will comprise the field fur this tliil-d group

and Mansfield 1m the Hockoshymock circuit appear to be out of the running this season

Fo~ Class C schools Its Winmiddot or youre out Only the league champions will play in the championships The winner of the Capeway Conference will meet the Cape and Vineyard champ in opening round play Dennis-YarDlQuth and Sandshywich are the likely opponents

The only other school located within the confines of the diocshyesan territorial limits that has an outside ~hance of qualifying for the tournament is Norton of the Tri-Valley Conference The Lancers however will need some outside help if they are to overcome league leading Millis The Tri-Valley champs will take on the Dual County League champions Defending Class C champ Ashland again leading the Dual Co~nty is heavily favored to repeat both in league ond state competition

NOT A BALL-ITS GUM Yem might get the idea that a pitched ban is lodged in the mask of this young Vancouver BC catcher but it isnt a ball This young ma is trying to prove he is just as efficient behillld the plate as he is at blowing bubble gum NC ~middothoto

Stresses Inter~cicdmiddotmiddotPartnership As Solution to Racial Problem

CLEVELAND (NC) - A Nashy world would be better off lr tional ASsociation for Advanceshy iou hadnt gotten involved Jm

ment of Colored People official asserted here interracial part shynership is the key to oolution of the racial problem but it cannot be a partnership dom inated by either race

Dr John A Morrell NAACP assistant nat ion a 1 director speaking at the Cleveland Cathshyltnlic Interracial Councils annual Interracial Justice Awards banshyquet said the nation today is aj an unprecedented crossroads but the interracial way is the democratic part to justice

He spoke in place of Roy Wishydns NAACP national~ director who was with the U S delega- tion at the United Nations con vocation on human rights lin Tehran Iran -

Angry Voices There are angry Negro voiees

raised in protest because develshyopment of opportunity in recent years does not apply to twoshythirds of the Negro population he saidmiddot The kind of jobs they are capable of filling are vanshyishing from the economy he added

But if a fruitful partnership is to continue between the white and Negro the burden of know- ing the truth about Negro hisshytory must be borne by white as well as Negro Dr Morsell said

Vie are all fighting a bitter legacy of generations White people have to know where they stand and why Once you assume the burden of work toward interracial justice you assume the responsibilities be continued

If you are not going to ~

sume them then you and fhe

the first place Informed PariDership

Dr Morsell said a mere sPirit of commitment is not enough to

survive over the hard going Work must be based on a part shynership that is informed intelshyligent understanding and resil shyient he said

The interracial awards were presented to Father Edwan Camille assistant Catholic Charshyities director here and Thom811 C Westropp president of Womshyens Federal Savings and Loan Association

Westropp was cited for his efforts towards opening the

doors of banking and credit 1m the Cleveland area to all ciUshyzens regardless of race creed 011

color while Father CarniDe was cited for his leadership as director of Project Peace (~

irner-city diocesan organizati~ working with the poor mostly Negroes) and for his work as co-chairman of the first tri-faith Greater Cleveland Conference on Religion and Race

ELECTRICAl -Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

SS lPlE1rIEllt amp JgtAIDlj

$103 Womens Club Rose E Sullivan

$50 Joseph P Conaty

$35 Belen M amp William J

De7 $33

Mr amp Mrs James F McMahcm $25

Mrs Margaret Daly amp Mary John Dolan ~illiam Daley amp Mary Esther Mr amp Mrs Stanley M -laniek

~50 In memory of MrsMarga~

W Pow~rs RodneY S DeCecco

$26 Mr amp Mrs John Soula

$25 Edward Healey Mr amp Mrs Michael McCartbiY Mr amp Mrs James Crosson Mrs Gertrude Lomas Mr amp Mrs Norman GagnOOl

ST JOHN TEE BAPTlIS11

$30 St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ampt Jean Baptiste $25

Mr amp Mrs Ovila Caron Henri Demers

In memory of Mr amp lVlrm bullWilliam Sheehan

Open to An PORTLAND (NC)-The seeshy

ond annual Catholic youth conshyvention of the Portland Diocese has opened the convention to all Catholic students of the dioshycese in order to spread the agtOlgto tolate of youth to youth Thll

)faine convention has comprised only students who have takes themiddot youth leadership trainlJnl1 courses

Dont Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH

DO faJse teeth drop slip or wobblo when you talk eat laugh or sneeze Dont be annoyed and embarr1lEsetll lkllh hanl11caps FASTEETH Bamp

e (non-acid) powder to SPr1n~Ikle on your plates keeps false teetb more firmly set Gives confident feel~ Ing Of security and added comfort No gummy gooey taste or feellncr Dentures that 6t are essential to health see your dentist regulorly oet FASTEETH at alll1rug countemJ

o

WYman 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD MASS

IfIIfJltk del1WM

S H~~uO~ Oil

SAVE MONEY 0 OUROILHEATI bull eatt

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

Iritai~ If S)crap SuPPITreg~~5n Acts Of Re~(j[jmlt~oml

LONDON (NC)-It looks as if Britain is at long last glOing to stop suppressing the monasteries-officially that 0

Legal experts sifting through lenturies of forgotten laws clutshyooling the records have found (hat the Suppression of Reli shygious Houses Acts of 1535 and 0039 have never been repealed

They are among 155 statutes weeded out from the statute IJ)ooks between 1239 and 1705middot lmd now to be definitively leshy~aled by a special act of Par-Iliament

These two acts enforced the eosure and pillaging of Catholic monasteries friaries and other religious houses throughout the WINS nsc Chaplain

eountry following King Henry (Captain) Angelo J LitekyVIIIs break with Rome in 1534

assigned to the 199th InfanshyJhey brought vast fortunes On goods property and mog of try Brigade in Vietnam has ell land to the kings favorites been awarded the Distinshyoome of whose families have reshy guished Service Cross forWned their wealth to this day extraordinary heroism SevshyIgnored in Practice

Of course the laws against erely wounded when Viet me Roman Catholic Church Cong ambushed a US infanshyIhave long ago been shelved and try company Ohaplain Lit shyIgnored in practice The reli shy eky braved flying bullets toous houses are back probably

rescue and minister tomore numerous than before iIome have even reoccupied the WQunded and dying meR 0ld sites they hadmiddot before the lReformation

Another notable measure ~ewlfk ~[p)regID Gingled out for repeal is the 1loleration Act of 1688 This act W51f)$ ~WIfltdl although in itself it did not help

NEW YORK (NC)-The Adshy~he Catholics marked the end of

vocate weekly newspaper of1lhe Protestant Reformation and the Newark Archdiocese wont1he beginning of religious tolershythe first-place Silver Medalation in Britain Awarti for weekly newspapersIt allowed freedom of worship in the annual public serviceClgt Protestant Trinitarian Nonshycompetition sponsored by theoonformists provided theiT New York chapter of the Pubiicmeetings were opento the pubshy

Relations Society of AmericaIlk it did not relieve the existing The award was for a five-part

fenaWes of those days against analysis ttl the ills besetting the ~atholics other breakaway Newark public school system lhcnestants or Jews but it was )he analysis was written by a hisberic beginning It has been Advocate news editor Ed Grant ltJeseribed as the Great Oharter and was an examination into ~ religious freedom and the one of the areas of dissatisfacshy~umph ofc9mmon ~ense tion which led to widespread

rioting in Newark last Summer

The series ran lri the newsshylJays Help for Poor paper last september and Octoshy

lPeCice First ~eeds ber The Public Rellitlons SocishyMIAMI (NC)-The Catholic ety award - silver medals are (lihurch in this nation today awarded in each of five cateshy

gories-are given for the mostauast address itself to the presshynoteworthy contributions bullbull 0 toiloing needs of the poor and dis-

~vantaged as well as the better public ~derstanding of ltJnICial issue of peace says the _ community problems in the New

4Tchbishop of Miami York metropolitan area Archbishop Coleman F Calshy New s p a per 8 magazines 0011 following announcement of broadcasting an d television middotGte establishment of the ecclesshy media in the New York-New iastical province of Miami and Jersey-Connecti~ut metropolitan tMs appointment as its first area are eligible for the awards l)rehbishop stressed that the (fhurch must be concerned with ibe problems of the time in Retired ArttlhJboshop S)Vhich we exist Gets College lHlonorThe g~eatest problems at present are the problems of the DUBUQUE ( NC) - Retired disadvantaged the poor and Archbishop Edward D Howard Utase who are in need and of of Portland Ore has been named oourse peace he smiddotaid for Loras Colleges 1968 John

It is more difficult for us to Fitzgerald Kennedy Award The LiOlve in any real way the prob- prelate is a former president of iems that are our concern until the college we have a measure of peace The citation and gold medal And it is the prayer of all of us annual award honoring an out Chat peace will be established as standing Amercian will be preshyiluickly as possible on an honorshy sen ted to the archbishop at the able basis o college commencement cereshy

monies June 2 Camp Directory Archbishop Howard 90 a nashy

Nltlw available from the Nashy ti ve of Cresco Iowa and a Loras lItonal Catholic Camping Assn alumnus was ordained to the ~ 131~ Massachusetts Ave priesthood in 1906middot He became lM- W Washington D C 20005 president of the college in 1921 Is the 1968 Directory of Catholic In 1924 he was consecrated to ~mps which lists all known serve as auxiliary bishop of DavshyearriPs in the U S giving acshy enport He became archbishop of Civities charges dates open and Portland in 1926 and retired in lIbailing addresses 1966

National CYOPlans LeadershipTraining shyImpa~t to Aid Priests Adult Admiddotvisors

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tbe through the introduction of BaWmore June 23-28 ehicagoNational Catholic Youth Organshy leadership methodology which July 1-5 Boston July 14-19 ization Federation will launch a facilitates maximum involveshy Sen Antonio July 28-Aug 3 training program in June called ment 00 the local level and Denver Aug 11-16 and San Impaot be help priests and hence maximum commitment JFaoancisoo Aug 25-30 adults 00 work effectively with The National CYO Federation Dr Donald Ebalt a professhyteenagers in a leisure time proshy will sponsor six sessiOns this lIlional trainbig eonsul1lant of gram summer to train diocesan CYO Washington D c win diiecl

The program was designed in staffs m 1lhe use of the newmiddot ead11ab cooperation with Leadership program lhey win )e held m A pilot Jtudy of the effectiveshyResources Inc a firm _of beshy DeBS of Impact on a group of havior scientists -rolulbteers from the NewarlkAddress Graduates

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishy archdiocese was held at the SOUTH BEND (HC) -Mel-rector of the Youth Department Benedictine Retreat House ill

Jdte-rite Patriarcib Maximoo VUnited States Catholic Confershy jNewton N J ence in announcing ttie new Kakimof Antioch and Dr Ilhirtymiddot persons representashyprogram said tives of youth adult advisorsJames A Perkins of Cornell

The goal 01 Impact is 00 help and priest moderators met withUniversity will be speakers atthe priests who are moderators representattives of the CYO

the 123rd annual cOnW~ncementof CYO the ad~lt advisors and Federation staff and a member youth participating in CYO toshy exerci~ Sundly June 2 at Of Leadership rResources Inc ward maximumpersonal growth Notrlte Dame University 110 assess and to evaluate 1mpaltL

(Cathedral Camp-Resident and Day Camp for Boys

O~ Lady of the L_ke Day Camp fOr Girls

Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON LONG POND ROUTE 18 EAST FREETOWN MAS~

~ RESIDENT CAMP 49th Season June 30 thru August 24 - a Week Season

Diocesan seminar-ians - College Students amp Teachers Under direction StaH of a Diocesan Priest

Saili~g swimming water skiing horseback riding riflery archeryPrograni hiking overnight camping trips ~rts amp crafts Indian crafts camp crafts athletic (team amp individual) competition and inter-camp cOmpetition professional tutorial service available

Private beach large luxurious camphouse dining hall modernfacilities~ washrooms arts and crafts buildings camp store and office first aid and infirmary beautiful chapel overnight and weekend accomodashytions for parents

S WEEK PIERIOD $325 - 4 W~K PERIOD $165 - 2 weEK PERIOD $85

Cathedra~ Day Camp t=or Boys Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period

JULY W- AUGUST 23 Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period fEES INCLUDIE Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Horseback Riding Weekly Cook~Outs amp Milk Daily without Added Cost

--~----------------------------------------Our Lady of the Lake bay Camp For Girls

JULY l _ AUGUST 23 Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period

FEES INCLUD~Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Ilorseback Riding Weekly Cook-Outsmiddot Milk Daily without Added Cost

o

For further information write to

REV WALlER A 5ULLlVANDiredor PO Box 63 - East Freetown Mass 02717

Page 15: 05.23.68

THE At~~C~_ 15 Th M 231968 urs ~y World Communication Day CtmMG(f~ A~V[JK~$ObsecteWGR1CCe on S~ndl~w O[fi) ~copy~o~ A~fDcopy[jf)

WASHINGION (NC)-In response to an appeal by NEW ORLEANS (NC)-ArchshyPope Paul VI to the universal Ohurch the Church in the bishop PhHip M Hannan asshyUnited States will observe the second World Communicashy serted here As far as I am tions Day on Sunday May 26 The National Conference of concerned segregation in the

Church is dead We are past the Catholic Bishops awroved time for statements Now is thefor Motion Pictures and Bishoplast November the observshy time for actionClarence J Issenmann of Cleveshynnc of World Communicashy Tile archQishop of New Orshy

tions Day in this country on USCC Press Department land episcopal chairman of the

leans told delegates at an diocesan and parish levels ampnd archdiocesan conference on st) shy

members of the U S Bishops cial action I assure you we are going forwardCommittee for Social Commu- Senate Rev1ltews

nications have sent to individ- He outlined programs fe ual Ordinaries throughout the Continued from Page One beMer education for adequate country a cOpy of the Prayer lains to be assigned on a funmiddot housing and for recognition of of the Faithful for that Sunday time basis and that the needs the inherent digni ty of all men and a ooP1 of the Holy ~athers of the sick were being adequateshy The Church is exerting itll message issued earlier this ly met under the present arshy influence in every way to assistmonth ran~ement the poorest he said If we

It is recommended that the 3 Recommendations on salshy follow Christ we must begillilobservance in this country ary adjustments Taken into aeshy with the pOor even if thishave both religious and non- count _by Bishop in his direcshy means asking others to wait 0religious aspects The former tives for Aug I 1967 little longerwould highlight a Mass with 4 Meetings open to all clergy Anyone can live poor the

appropriate sermon in the 00- Bishop approved archbishop said The key thingthedral or some convenient 5 Extension of Synod prepshy is dignity This does not mean church to which executives aration time Bishop approved that this dignity is recognized Wld employes of communica- 6 Secretary to be Treasurer by a dole or a handout or eveD tions media would be specially and Senate budget Bishop apshy preferential treatment We are invited proved confusing issues when we talk

The non-religious asp e c t 7 ChOice of other Prayers of of dignity as if it can be bought would feature news conferences the Faithful Bishop approved or paid for he said articles in the press and radio 8 Referral of matters to Passhy - I am totally for equal oppollaand TV interviews and proshy tunity in jobs and for adequate

housing not just open housincgrams toral Council Bishop approved

In his message to the Church 9 Creation of Clergy Person-In human dignity everyone hasPope Paul invited Catholics to Del Board Bishop approved an equal right to education anell

consider the significance of 1() Clergy retirement policy to culture he declaredthe changes that are taking with Bishop accepting ormiddot not

AWARDS CEREMONIES At the annual Awards Day for hospital personnel at St Annes Hospital Fall River Manuel Benevides 38 years of service receives his award while Bertha Janson 42 years of service awaits her presshyentation from trustees Harold K Hudner left and Arthui Guimond right

place in this field (communica- according to diocesan ll1eed tions) under our very eyes and Bishop approved to ponder the serious responsi- 11 In-service training tor bJlities that theSe imply for one newly-ordained priests Bishop and all approved

Clamor forAttentlo~ 12 Various diocesan diredors Until recently the Holy to recommend men for middotpart shy

Father pointed out many did time or full-time further study not have anything more to Btim- Bishojgtmiddot approved 1IIate their inflection than vague 13 Full participation by memories of what they learned Catholics in middotYMCAyWCA ot school or in the family and programs Bishop aPlgtrov~ What they beard in their envi- 14 Rotation among religious ronment eomniunities of their represen-

Now however with the echo Uitives on Senate Bishop ap- r the press motion pictures proved radio and television clamoring 15 Clergy to recommend men lor attention new h~riZons oPenJor episcopacy Bishop applloved wide before them llIndmiddot they are 16 Lay Personnel pension ttuned to the throbbing life of plan study Bishop approved the ~niverse

Who will not rejoice at this 17 Adjustmentin diocesan progress Do we not 1111 see in assessments Bishop approved It a roadmiddotdestined by Providence 18 Clergy retirement study for the advance of themiddot whole Bishop approved of mankind There is room for 19 Bishop announced through all hopes if man learns to mas- Senate exchange of facultieS ter these techniques but every- between Diocese of Fall River thing can be lost if he shirks his and Providence responsibilities Various commfttees have made

Members of the bishops com- studies to implement some of mittee signing the letter to the these considerations Ordinaries included Auxiliarymiddot Senate representatives have Bishop Gerald V McDevitt of participated on a regional and Philadelphia episcopal moder- national basis regarding a nashyator of the United States Catb- tional organization of priests olic Conference Bureau of In- and its constitution and activity formation Bishop John A Donshyovan of Toledo episcopal chairshyman of the National Catholic Cursillo for Men Office for Radio and Television Bishop Christopher J Weldon Starts Tonightshyof Springfield episcopai chairshy

A mens ~ursillo win ~ginman of the Bishops qo~ttee tonight at La Salette C~nter of Christian Livingmiddot At~leboro Dishy

Delegate Recives rectors will be William Barnes of Marion and Rev GilesHonorary Degree Genest middotMS of the center

HONOLULU (NC) ~ Archshy Allmiddot eursillistas are invited to bishop Luigi RaimondiApostolicmiddotmiddot the firstmiddot anniversary of ultleya Delegate in the Unikld States middotmeetingsmiddotin the Fall River area baS received an honorary deshy at 745 Wednesday night May laquoree froIn Charninade College 29 at Sacred Hearts Academy here the only Catholic eollege Prospect Street Fall River A lID the state of Hawaii concelebrated Mass will be folshy In an Dterview with the Hashy lowed by a song session social

waUmiddotCatholic Herald ArehlSishop bour and refreshments Baimondi ~pressed tolerance Ul1reya meetings are schedshylor student activism in the Unishy uled in Attleboro oat Jettes ted States middotIltating Students Funeral Home Friday May 11 8ft adive everywhere Youth Monday May 27 Monday June ill UyiDg find its WBY aoc1 2 Friday June 14 and FridayecJar patterns of tbougbt IlBd June 21 eetioD e DOt lIS set asin pre A eursillo for W4)men is scbedshy paerationfl Cbolees were 1IIed for August and further inshy

-e fiSHthen tbin ~ tit formation is obtainable inla ~ -e LeSalleUe Centerbull --

You Live Better Electrically

trlc range bullbullbull with Iln ingenious oven that cleans Itself Make 8 clean break with the past bullbullbull and graduate to another appliance

that adds to the Joy of Total Electric Uvlng

Graduate to a ~fiameless electric range thatmiddotcleansits own ovenmiddot

Make 8 clean break~ with the past4

Why spend ~ours stooping scrubbing and scouring to clean your oven Why not grad- uate to a modern flarve1ess range bullbull with anoven that cleans itself electrically Its so

easy to use Set the controls and-zingo The oven cleans Itself (And drip pans) All you dois whisk awaya IIttie pOwder

- YOUll notice toothat a flamelessmiddot range keeps your kitchen clean cool a~d ~omshyfortable And because electric cookmg IS so automatic YOUll cook with pleasure So see

yOur appliance dealer about aflameless elecshy

See Yo~r Appliance Dealer or

FAll RIVER ~l~CTRIC LIGHT COMPANY

o

mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 23 196816 I

Mafttl[p)Dsellt $50 Raymond L W Benoit

$5BTANJrlllONY Jos~ph A Tully William J

$300 OLearY Mr ampMrs Alfred Baty ltlJbades McGowan Mr amp Mrs Fred Harney

$100 Mr amp Mrs Michael C ODonshyaarence G Verdi nell Mr amp Mrs ThomaS P Per~ lIugene F Phelan kins Mr amp Mrs John Kozlowski

$15 mosampry Altar Society

$66 Buzzard$ B~y I

iusan A McGowan ST MAJuiAR]ampTWilliam Keane

$SOshy$55 A Friendllohn P Delaney

$6$40 lIlr amp Mrs Thomas Pina

~h G Perry $25$35

Mr amp Mrs Edwin PaytonlInmothy Manning )l amp Mrs John KarlJfudge E C Horrocks J~

$30 Mr amp Mrs Edwin N Rose Wareham Lodge of Elks 15044bullbull Clayton King

Mr amp Mrs David Fannon$~

Mr amp Mrs John OCOnnellJames Downey Romeo Bedarql William Delaneyhnes H Gifford Mary M Chad Mr amp Mrs James Lopes

Wick George Smith Jr Antone Mr amp Mrs Louis Fougereshy-es Edmund Perry $25 Mr amp Mrs Armand Bedard

Mr amp Mrs Michael DelIsMark H McIntyre Teree JeminaBlossom Joseph Farley Robert Mr amp Mrs William BennettGIngras Real Breton Mr amp MrsLouis Eacobaoct

Jobn Tarvis Francis ODri9shyu Holy Nam~ Society Paull Glennon Joseph Zychowicz Central -VUlageIIaomas Renahan Richard SmiUll

ST JOHN THE BAPTIBJl

~50 bullNorth Dighton Mr amp Mrs John DeNadal

ST JOSEPH nolt Rev John P Hogan$156

IlR Vincent de Paul $75 Dr Peter F Piccinini$50

$25amp11 Name Society Florence I Bessette MrSt Josephs Womens Guild

$35 Mrs John J Ardagh Jr llim Raymond Williamsbull amp Mrs Joseph MWTaJ

Me amp Mrs Daniel TebreiN$30 J Jl)r amp Mrs William AcIamI Mr amp Mrs Robert Albanese

o Iohn W Perreira$5 Ch(ltham

Mr amp Mrs Joseph C Amarat 1lIJr amp Mrs Edward M Berobe HOLY ~EJI)EIEMEamp

bullbull amp Mrs Arthur A Ennes Mr $101 A Mm William Johnson Rose Pi Assqc of the SacredHea~ Mello $lOet

Mr amp Mrs Harold Mendoza Mr amp Mrs Robert Han lIffr amp Mrs Bruce Murph) Mr Col amp Mrs John McCa~ bull Mrs Robert Secatore $50

Mrs James Bell Jr St Vincent de Paul Sodeq Mr amp Mrs John J Cavanaup

IIMMACULATE CONCBPJIl[ON $30 $DOO A- Friend

Ambonymous $2-5 $a Chatham Trust Co Mr af

Anonymous MrS E Joseph Geller Dr~ amp MIlII Robert Harned A Friend (~)

Anonymous $75

Mr amp Mrs William Kent Mr amp Mrs Paul reF~vre Mr lIi$it

- Mrs~ Richard Sylva Mr amp MmHelen P Derby Patrick SullivanMr amp Mn Aibert Giordano

A Friend Mr amp Mrs Frank Dresseli Mr amp Mrs Philip S1iel]oA Friend Mr amp Mrs James Griffin shyAnonymous Mr amp Mrs Frank Wing _ImmaCU1ate Conception MenliI

Club $4G North Attleboro

Mr amp Mrs Raymond ~rgerotl SACRED HEART$35

Mr amp Mrs William Condoo $200 $5 Rev JOuter Lussier

Mr amp Mrs William Buchtman $30 Caesar Cardoza Mr amp Mrs RoT Mr amp MrsJeorge Merewe Howard Immaculate Conception $~ Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Joseph A Jette

Mr amp Mrs Co George Knapp $25 McCarthy Coal Co Mrs Fredshy Mr amp Mrs Paul Dion Mrbull elick H Murphy A Friend Mrs Frederick Fortin LionelL

Martineau Mr amp Mrs~ Philippe Rainville amp Florence

Mr amp Mrs George Beaulieu Sl lWAllUf A Friend

STMA-ElY$50 $150Mr amp Mrs Michael Murphy

Nelson GulskiMr amp Mrs Jose FernandesSIl $75$30 Rev Armando A- AnnunziabMr amp Mrs Thomas J Bryanamp

$50 Eva Morowski

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John HaugMr amp Mrs Roland Roberge Mr amp Mrs John StanfordDavid amp Martha Rocha M Veronica Reilly

Mary Cronin George Yefh Mildred Leary A ~riend

BreWSlfreli $4G Dr amp Mrs Domenie BalJiIe

OUR LADY OF TlIIE CAn $35 o $100 Dr amp Mrs Kenneth AtwiIl lllisBionaries of La saleUe jnr amp Mm JosepiL Dona

MONSIGNOR VI[lELSB

Heads Bishop$ Task force

WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr Aloysius J Welsh of Newark N J a recognized authority in race relations and social aclion work has been named to head the Urban Task Force estabshylished by the U S bishops

Bishop Joseph L Bernardin general secretary of the U S Catholic Conference who anshynounced the monsignors apshypointment said the task force was calhd for by the U S blsbshy

ops at theirmiddot April meeting in SL Louis in their statement on the mational racial crisis The bishshy

ops directed the task foree be established by the USCC Social[ Action Department

In this work he will cooperaW with MsgI George G Higgins director and Father John MeshyCartty assistallt director of the Social Action Department the bishop said

$30 Mr amp Mrs Frederick ThOIpG middotMr amp Mrs Clement Sbarolll

$26 Mr amp Mrs Andtew Boisvert Gertrude Cassi~y

Elizabeth Sheals $25

Mr amp Mrs Daniel J Cava- naugh Mr amp Mrs Raymond Bl~hard Mr~ amp Mrs Robert Brunelli A Friend

Mr amp Mrs Robert Gilmore Mrs James P Reynolds Mr amp Mrs John Donleymiddot Mr amp Mm James Battersby Mr Mn Jlohn bullCollins

Virginia G Robinson

AttRehoro BOLY GHOST

$150 Dr amp Mm LoneJglUl

~110 Mr amp Mm John CapoWglo

$50 Holy Ghost St Vineellllt cle Pail

$35 Mr amp Mra Joseph BJOdeur

$25 Mr amp Mrs Malcolm ~

Mr~ amp Mrs Harry Dowdall Mr amp Mrs RObert Geddes Mr~ I Mrs Frank Pistolese

ST JOlIN $200

In memory of Dn7 hwlbaDcI JIoseph F ODonn~

$100 Mr amp Mrs Raym9nd ENmlIlilll Anonymous Donor Inmemory of GabriGll lYaBltllloshy

alone bull $75 -

Rev Edwarcl A Ra~

Mr amp Mrs John P I4e $50

MaryL Wilhelm Mr amp Mrs J G WaJEll Jlr Mr amp Mrs Franclll Bo Mr Joseph ODonnell1 ~ amp Mrs Ernest ~

$30 m=teanor Robinqmiddot Alice~

ST JOSEPH $25

Counseil Jeanne DAre No 263

ST MARK $50 ~

Edward J Connors Jr $25

William J Roche Jr Joseph Dias Mrs Michael J Croke

ST MARY $50

Holy Name Society of St Mary Knights of Columbus Seekonk

Council Mrs Leland B Smith

$35 Mr amp Mrs Donald Blake

$~O ~r amp Mrs Henry E Woodcome st Marys Womeno Guild

$25 Mr amp Mrs Frank Padykula

Mr amp Mrs Russell J Sumner ST THERESA

$50 Mr amp Mrs Donald Boardman Mr amp Mrs George LeBeau

$30 William Cauley amp Family Mr amp Mrs George Boyd

0 $25 Mr amp Mrs RobeIt Generenl Mr amp MrsRobert St mlaiN

Taunton -HOLY ROSAILY

$30 Mr amp Mrs Russen Woodward stanley Radwansld

$25 Children of Mary Sodality Richard Januse

SACRED HEARi

$50 Mr amp Mrs Joseph S llosamp Mr amp Mrs Vincent BrimleF

$35 Mr amp MnJ Robert MeClellaml

_ S2i Walter Waltman Mr amp Mm

atephen Crosby The ~ Mr amp MrtI William Vaillan-

OOurt Mr amp Mrs Michael Barber

Mrs Margaret Rose llrtr~ bull II Frederick Reams

o

81 JAMES

$U Armand Desautels Tremblay Moving Iii 8tonlge

00mpany

STMABY $100

Dr~ Charles HoYt $60

GeOrge Dion Jr $51

Mr~ amp Mrs Kenneth $50

Mm A Hoffman Dr Normand ~ Mr amp M1lil J McNilmaN ar Dr John Fenton Mr amp Mrs Kicban sm

$36 ~ B Grant

~O Dr EdmWlld Fitzgerald D4niel A J Doyle

$U

Richard Barrington BIizabeCIa dIt Margaret Brady Mr - Mm kmea Bumtl Dr CarsiDbre e-- IlUOCi -Robert J mn JamesD hcige

Mr amp Mra Llocel IaImDee ftlomas Hoye Merrill lliaynard Jmelen amp Catherine McCariIll7

Alice McKenna Ruth MeshyJUona Susan McKenna II

Plan To B~ild

- See Us About ~

lotyCost Financing

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Mrs James McMorrow Franeb Mulholland

Mary Mulholland Ma~ Neenan Joseph ODonnell Eveshylyn Rice Agnes amp Joseph Rose

Mrs Joseph Rowley Robert Sullivan J Roger Torme1 Charles H fripp Rita Baker

Mrs James Bennett William Carney John Gonzals James Holmes Mary E McNamara

Dr Thomas~OBrien Cbarleo OConnell Mr amp Mrs Edwarcll OGara Mr amp Mrs John 00 _ Ilfearne MlJI amp Mrs Edward OKeefe

1he Ralph Reckard Famil1 Cecelia F lfi Mary C Sheerin

ST PAUL $150

St Vincent de Paul st Pauh Taunton 0

$100 Rev Cornelius~ltYNem

$50 Mr amp Mrs Edward Roster

$24 Mr amp Mrs John Medas Jr

$25 Mrs Catherine Campbell Mr

amp Mrs Chester Jackman Mr c1i Mrs Richard Silva Mr amp Mrs Leo Leroux Mr Mrs John Steen

Mr amp Mrs Donald Emond Mr Be Mrs Gordon Seekel Mr amp Mrs Charles Welch Mr MllIl Paul Silva

New Bedford HOLY NAME

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John Hallonm Mr amp Mrs Jacob Teser

ST CASIMIR $150

Beltr cutnir Kwiatkowski $109

Atto~ Ferdinand Sowa $25

Mr amp Mrs Joseph FoUrnier The Poczatek Family Mramp M Antbony Rijo Jr Mr Mrs Stanle Scbkk Eve White

I

ST BYACINTB $100 -

Mr Mrs George Vigeallltl $50

st Vincent de Paul ConferenCe Gf Hyacinth Parisb

Tum to Page Seventeen

CONRAD SEGUIN BODY COMPANY

Aluminum or Steel 944 County Seet

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2-6618

w H RILEY amp SON Inc

CITIES SERVICE IDISTRIBUTORS-

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for Prompt Delivery amp hoy amp Night ~ice

8 IE BOIlER BURNER UNITS

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61 OOItANNET Sf TAUNTON

AJdeb DfO - No- Attleboro

TountoIamp

(l

SUMY pons Nuns (l)ffi) AifrMdl~$o

Re$M~~e~o trMture D~[freg~UDrru~ WASHINGTON (NC)-Resulto

of a survey of all United States nuns reveals a high ooceptance of post-Vatican II changes anell an eagerness robecome morrc involved in the inner city and poverty apostolates

The B1UVey conducted bythe Conference of Major Superiors of Women dlJring 1966 was the first extensive attempt to assess resources and attitudes of reli shygious communicenties c1 women and their memberll in the United States

The JPecific coal of the surshyvey was to assess the resources and determine 1ampIe responses that Religious are making and ean make to the invitation 13shysued in Vatican Us Decree on the Renewal of Religious ~e

More than 135000 Sisters parshyticipated in the survey respondshying to 649 questionnaire items covering religious beliefs atti shytudes toward change edu~shy

tional background present ocshycupation and future plans comshymunity life and proposals for future ohange

Results were processed by 00 Sister-sociologists across the country with the use of comshyputers

llleason for lIAlavnng The survey showed 1827 oil

the 175000 U S Sisters-107 per cent-left religious life durshying 1966 Of those Sisters only 869 had taken final vows In an interview with the NC News Servicemiddota spokesman for the Conference of Major Superiors of Women (CMSW) said most Sisters who have remained feel that a major reason for the inshy

ltereased number of Sisters leavshymg religious life is an increased ~penness to the idea within the lfcligious community

She said that the increased fucus on personal development has caused many Sisters to see that they are not suited to the religious life and that they will find areater personal fulfillment elsewhere

Statistics on be division of labor among U S Sisters show 72 per cent are teachers eight per cent are involved in health work five per cent in catechetshyill~ and missionary work lmd tbr~ per cenmiddott in welfare work

Seventy per cent of the teachshyem ore in elementary school work 195 per cent in high school education and 68 per

eent teach at the college level Of those involved in health care 18 per cent in health administration and 62 per cent in direct care jobs

lEnter New lFienlll1s The survey showed Sisters

have a strong desire to become involved in adult education inshyner city work pre-school teachshying and other s~ial work and to have greater contact with their local community Nuns expressed eagnerness to enter fieldc where few Sisters are now working In 1966 13 per cent ot U S Sisters were engaged in adult education 82 pel cent in speshycial education 31 per cent in poverty work and 06 per cent in migrant education The surshyvey indicafes that there will be a dramatic change in these figures in the next few years

Father Considine Leaves PC$tr Continued fC0m Page One

man of the U S Bishops Comshymittee for Latin America

Bishop Bernardin prai~ed the work of Father Considine in the Latin America Bureau noting

iota progress under his direction since its inauguration in 1960

It has been a labor of love for Father Considine he saici whose long standing interest in the people of Latin America and of other developing areaa is well known

Maryknon Father Considine will return

to his writing and teaching asshymgnments at Maryknoll Ossinshy

lng N Y where he had served as publications director before becoming director of the IAiltin

America Bureau He holds editorial and advishy

lOry posts with several internashytional organizations and servell DS a member of the Council OIl

Foreign Relations He was amp

member of the National Advishysory Council of the Peace Corps from 1961 to 1966 He also founded and directed Fides Inshyternational Service in Rome an Information and research unit of

the Holy See He was born Oct 9 1897 C1shy

1-

~ATIlGR CONSIDINE

da1ned in 1923 and received II

licentiate in sacred theology from the Catholic University of America in 1924 He has reshyceived honorary degrees from Fordham University Manhatshytsnville St John University St Benedicts Atchison and is the author of 10 books on Latin America Asia and Africa and hall edited several others

L9ng-Range

Father Considine Sllid that he IlIaW the Latin America Bureau as set for the proseution ~ tl

vigorous nation-wide program 10 serve our Latin American eonfreres for the next- generashytion through the year 2000 -and into ~ 21st century He felt lIlllch 11 long-range view was necessarJ because at stake are important socio-religious adshyVDnces among hundreds of milshyHons cd people Latin Americas leaders need time for these advances

Be pointed out thatsome of the best Church leadership tbroughout the Catholic world today is found in Latin AmershyICD In turn he noted our U S bi~hops are quietly acceptshying international responsibiliti~s

as never before Father Considine said that the

program of the U S Bishops Committee for Latin Americn ~ablishes the heavy day-to-day work of the Latin America Bureau

Jgtersonnel Father Considine said that

llIODle 60 per cent of all U S apOstolic personnel overseas throughout the world works in Latin America with more Ulan 600 Latin American parishes served by U S priests Major Superiors of women ha~e 2500 Sisters in Latin America PAVLA has put more than 800 laymen there for three-year terms and U S bishops hnv~

more than 300 priests working in Latin America Annual fundshying for Latin Amerietl by U S Catholics ~~ $1f) millioll

SJJREET SCENE This was a busy street scene in the nations capital at the encampment of the Poor Peoples Campaign near the Washington monument More than 100~OOO- protestors are expected to be in Washington for Memorial Day NC Photo

OUlll lLAIDY OlF ll1HI1amp

ASS1lJMJgtJlJlON $26

Clara Rose amp Family $25

Mr amp-Mrs Jose F Cruz St Martin de Porres G~

Mi CARMEL $100

In memory of Mr amp Mrs J~ ilino Simoes

Rev Antonio P Pinto middotCM $75

Rev Azitonio P Pinto em $60

Mary i Ltuiz $50

Mr amp lVIrs Albino daSilv8 1IIt Carmel Womans Club

$30 Manuel Bettencourt Mr amp Mrs Kenneth lltinu

John Rodrigues $26

Olivia M Luiz $25

Cecelia Bettencourt CbildYeli of Mary Mt Carmel ~ouft

Units James Perry Mr amp lnl Manuel G Souza Jr

Mr amp Mrs Arthur Caetano Mr amp Mrs Charles Frate Mramp Mrs Lauran Silva

OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HE]P

~26

Mrs Amelia E Bariteau $25

Dr amp Mrs Francis Green

OURLADY OFPU~GATOB~ l)1I00

In memory of Alex J Ka1He from Cltpe Coo Sportswear ~

lnc Fairhaven Lumber Co

$30 Atty George R Morad euroJ

Atty ~e E Morad $25

Josephine David 1bl mlE1lllllOllY of George A EI-Hillow Mr ampgt Mra ~rge JThomas Mr amp IIIlm Hykel G Simon

ST KIlldAN nSO

Rev WilMeT J Boekley

U~~ amp Wmeentde PaW ~

~ iWa1 1kntley

$2S AlmgeAo OH1feira

SAClllIampDlHlJEAlltT $25

Alexander Caruso

c S11 JAMES

$55 rulllbull amp lVIrs Francis O Quinn

$50 lilred Kelley

$40 William OMalley

~1 A Friend

$3~

Mr amp Mrs Jr Hugh Barry $25

Mr amp Mrs Andrew ONeil Mr 8 Mrs Robert Arnett

ST JOSEPH

$450 sa Josephs Church Societies

$70 Mr amp Mrs Maurice Dansereau

1130 II Mr amp Mrs Luigi Fiano lk Fmniy

125 Mr amp Mrs Thomas Weaver MI amp Mm Maurice Lamonshy

tagne Mrbull Mrs Raymond Rondel1

ST TBERIESA $100

Eugene Lemieux

Sturtevant 6 Hook lEst 1897

Bude~s Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New ~dforcJ

996-5661

THE ANCHOR- ~ 7 lfhuvs May 23 1968

~regreg [copy~G~ ~O~

Oa1l ~MOO~ []M~Orru NEWARK (NC)-A charge (l(

apparent ~racial discriminatiom in the assignment of tenants 00 public housing here is Oontainoo in s report issued by the New Jersey Advisory Committee 00 the U S Commission em CiWl Rights

It said the Newark Housing Authority follows a policy ef permitting people applying fOlr placement in public housin~ projects to choose the project tm whieh they want to live

lit said this policy has ~

llributed to the segregation Cl1I public housing and recomshymended that t1he policy 00 abandoned in favor of first-come first-serVed basis

The report noted that Q01l1li vast housing projects nre locatell in Newarks Central Ward-tho scene of widespread noting D year ago and of two massiv~ firo disasters this spring-and tll~

they are more thanSO Negf~ ~ccupied

It further charged that them Js U a disparity in maintenanceo between the predominantly N~

gro and the rgtredominantly whi~

projects a complaint lIiTegNgt leadership has frequently medea

It termed living conditiom b the Central Ward projects opshypressive and that the proj~cto

are JIOor)y designed llt recomshymeld~d that additionaI ~ev areas for young children ~Gl

meeting places for odww ~ teenagers be provided

Higher ~arnings

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amfACi MANAGERI - UNCOLN PARK 999-6984 636-2744

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs May 23196~

The Parish Parade OUR LADY OF ANGELS SACRED HEART WALL RIVER NORTH ATTLEBORO

Altar bOys willsponsor a cake The CCD program will be lJ81e Sunday May 26 following canonically established Friday Iill1 Masses June 21 the feast of the Sacred

Masses today the feast of the Heart The program will include Ascerision will be at 7 and 9 a 730 evening Mass followed AM and -1215 4 5 and 7 PM by proclamation and reception Confessions will be heard be- of CCD members and a social ~re each Mass hour

The Summer Mass schedule CCD students in grades 6 to will begin Sunday June 2 with 12 will attend a folk Mass and Masses from 6 to noon on the sing-out at La Salefte Shrine hour Monday night May 27 Tnose

Monday May 27 through Fri- participating will leave the ooy May 31 there will be church school yard at 645 and will be services at 7 each evening The returned at 930 living rosary will be sponsored Confirmation ceremonies will by the Holy Rosary Sodality be ~ld at 730 Sunday night Monday night the Council of May 26 Catholic Women on Tuesday ther societies on Wednesday and Thlusday and the Children New Bedford ~ M~~ on lfrIday

ST MARY HOLY NAME $25iALL RIVER Mr amp Mrs Roger Goyette

Contemporary music will acshy The Shea Family company the 1115 Mass Sunday Mrs Vivian Wegrzyniakmorning May 26

New CYO officers are Robert ST LAWRENCE amplois president Paul Durin $200 rice-president Polly Rockett Dr amp Mrs Stanley Koczera eecretary-treasurer A Friend

$125 OUR LADY OF FATIMA Dr amp Mrs Robert Srnan sWANSEA $106

The Womens Guild will hold William E King Its annual penny sale at 730 $100

Monday night May 27 in the Dr amp Mrs William Walsh ehurch hall on Gardners Neck $75 lRoad Rev William F OConnell

A Penny Sale will be held Dr amp Mrs James Bolton MondaYMay 27 at 730 in the $60 dlurch hall A Friend

$50 IMMACULATE CONClEPlIION Teremiddotsa Ruth amp John HarneyNEW BEDFORD Victor T Kondi

Parisnioners will celebrate John L Powell rthe feast of Santo Ohristo this Loretta Lamarre Sunday with a roast beef dinner $45 served from noon to 2 with Mrs Mary B Wheatoil

tickets available at the door $40 lRefreshments and entertainment Mr amp Mrs John Connor will be on the afternoon and Mr amp Mrs Thomas J Longevening program $35

A procession and auction will Mr amp Mrs James M Kearneyfollow the dinner with various Mrmiddot amp Mrs Leo St Aubin Holy Name Society units parti shy $30 cipating in the procession Mr amp Mrs Albert Anderson

Mr amp Mrs Joseph Griffin OUR LADY OF V()T(RY Mr amp Mrs Walter L9veridgeeENTERVILLE Mr camp Mrs Myron Tripp

New officers of the Womens $28amptiild are Mrs John J Pendershy Patricia Connor ~st pre~ident MrS James Murshy $26 phy and Mrs John McBarron Mr amp Mrs Thomas SullivanVoice-president Mrs George Mr amp Mrs Charles BerryReale recording secretary Mrs $25 Richard Griffith treasurer Mr amp Mrs Robert Bedard

A Communion dinner at Mr amp Mrs Albert McMulleneummaquid Inn will follow Mr amp Mrs Theodore J CalnanlB30 Mass Monday night June Mr amp Mrs Alfred Couto Mr amproo Mrs Gilbert Noonan of Falshy Mrs Manuel Guerreira Josephmouth will speak Reservations P Mullen should be made with Mrs Edshy Agnes Proctor Mr amp Misward Welch or Mrs- Stephen Joseph Porter Mr amp MrsOBrien Jr by Thursday June 6 James Ryan Mr amp Mrs Paul

saunders ST THERESA Mr amp Mrs Merton WalkerSOUTH ATTLEBORO Mr amp Mrs John F SullivanMiss Patricia Makin of the

Diocesan CCD Board spoke at the annual Communion breakshy Fall River fast of the Confraternity of

ST MARYS CATHEDRALChristian Mothers Fourteen $50 new members were received at

Gertrude OLoughlinthe monthly meeting arid new officers were installed by Rev $26

In memory of Caroline CasellaGerard J Chabot moderator $25They include Mrs Patricia Helen Burns Mr amp MrsBiziak president Mrs Georshy

George Johnston Corky Rowgette Vachon vice-president Club Rits OLaughlin FrancisMrs Kathy Lamarre treasurer amp Lena MoranMrs Dolores Leedham and Mrs

Mr amp Mrs Carlton GastallBeverly Sousa secretaries Mrs Raymond Reynolds

~CULATE CONC~ON BLESSED SACRAMENTlAUNTON $200A Spring Social and D~nce Rev Herve Jalbert

for the benefit of the church $50sponsored by the Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Michael Felixand the St Vincent de Paul Soshy $36ciety will be held Friday May Mr amp Mrs Richard Hamel24 from 8 to 12 at Lewis Lodge $30Winthrop Street Route 44 A W Root Beer StandTaunton Refreshments will be served Tickets are $200 per lIIIOLY CROSS person and wiU be available at $50 the door Holy Rosary Sodality

lt

PATRIARCH His Holishyness Vazken I of the Armeshynian (Monophysite) Chu~h which comprises five-milli~n communicants in the Soviet Union Near and Far East and the Americas is visiting in the US He paid a visit to the National Shrine of the

Immaculate Conception whilein the nations capital NC Photo

NOTRE DAME $40

The Anne-Marie MasSe fami17 $35

Conrad N Desmarais $25

Norman J A Belanger Rose D Perron

HOLY ROSARY $30

The DePaola Family $25

Mrs Philomena Germane

~CULATE CONCEPTION $50

A Frie~d $40

Mrs Diolinda Wilson $26

In memory of Charlotte DJicholson

$25 Holy Name Society Knights

of the Altar A Friend MlU7 Whitehead John R Burgess In memory of Daniel R Be

Manuel R Pimental Joseph Francoeur

SACRED HEART $l)O ()

~ Katherine D Adams $75

Mr amp Mrs William J Sullivan $5~

Margaret Morriss M~ry V amp Alice C HarrlngtoD Frederick B McD9nald

$31 Frances Mmiddot Cummings Mary C Cummings

$30 Mr amp Mrs John J HarrlngtOil

$28 Florence M Sullivan

$25 Vincent DAndrea Edward

Leary Mr ~ MrsN J Meyer Mary Louise OSullivan John J Sullivan middotMargaret F Lowney

ST MICHAEL $25

Manuel Rogers amp Sons At~

Manuel M Rezendes Henry Leshytendre ~eonardo Cabeceiras

Gerald Mulrooney A Friend edf Catholic Charities

ST ANNE ft JI08ZIII $30

Mrs Rhea Saurette 101at Vincent de Paul ConferenceIrene Theroux leapt amp Mrs Joseph J OCoDshy$26 nellThe Gauthier Family $25

Mr amp Mrs Reginald lerive

A Friend

Belshy $50

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J OCo nell k

$30 St rosephs Mens Club

ST ANTH()NY $25 OF THE DESERT Mr amp Mrs John L Mercer

$100 Mr amp Mrs Daniel W OCoDoshyChor Bishop Joseph Eid nell Dr amp Mrs James J Sabra

$25 SANTO CHRiSTO Rev Kenneth A Michael Mrs August Badway $50

ST ANTHONY OF PADUA $125

Rev Josephmiddot M Ferreira $100

Atty amp Mrs Milton R Silva

StVincent de Paul Society $30

Rev Ernesto R Borges $26

Mr amp Mrs Alfred 1 Cam~ $25

$50 Franco Family Singersmiddot

$25 Mrs Sofia Pacheco Antonio T Cabral

Mary amp Beatrice Costa~ SilD

CnristO Credit Union Manuel Medeiros Laureano Silva

AFriendFrank B Olivei

YDUR SONTHE PRIEST

HI HOLY PATHERS MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL DMURDH

A FUTURE

PRIEST NEEDS

bull SOMEONES HELP

TRAiN ASfSTER

Tau

HUNGER CANT

WAIT

Deai MonBr~orNolam

Please

return couponwith your

offering

Have you ever wished you had a son a priest Now you can hlilve a priest of your own-and ahare forever In all the good he does _ _ Throughout the Near East this month grateful bishops ara ordainlng new priests trained by people like youbullbullbullbull Their own families are toe poor to support them In training but good catholics In America adopted these semIshynarians encouraged them all the way to ordinashytionbullbullbullbull Insome Inspiring cases this support was given at personal sacrifice How can youbegln7 Write to us now Well ~end you the name of ~ young seminarian who needs you and he will write to you Make the payments for his training to suit your convenlence ($850 a month or $100 a year or the total $600 all at once) Join your sacrifices to his and at every Sacrifice of the Mass he will always remember who made It possible

4

Native Sisters In our 18 developingcountries are teaching children of the poor preparing them for First Communion giving medical care to leplrs cal)cer sufferers the aging A SisterS training Ialts two years costs $1250 a month $150 a year or $300 altogetherbullbullbullbull Well send you the name of a Sister you can train as soon as we receive your first payment She will pray for you and write toyou

n An9 day now you may receive a letter contalnn the Holy Fathers appeal for the forgotten Arab refugees-l4 million people without a country bullbullbull most of them destitute bullbullbull more thari half of them childrenbullbullbullbull By trelnlng these children foi middotfuture selfsufflcel]cy we can help brln peace and new selfmiddothelp to the Holy Land atlll divided by warbullbullbullbull But why walt for your mal Hunger cant walt Neither can peace Send your amplIft now in any amount ($500 $200 $100 $75 $50 $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 $2 $1) and the Holy Fathercan put It to work right away Qril1 $10 wlllleed family for a monthl -----~-~---~~---~-IlNCL08ID PLllAIl PIND $_ c_O~__ rFOR _

NAMI ___~

8TRIU ~~=

OlTt ~_eTATIl_lrIp OODII-

NIAll lAST WIILFAAI ASSaDIATtOrlaquo

NEAR EAST MISSIONS J

MSGR JOHN ClI NOLAN Natlonal5ecretary Write CATHOLIO NIlAR EAST WeLFARE Assoo ~30 Madson Avenue New York NY OOU telephonel 212vtJkon 6middot5840

CATHaLiD

19 DiJoridrrien Ere State r ourlitei

SChoelbOY leag~~Wmrn~regr~ Stii~Pretty Mu~h sampu [j)(Q)Mbt

By PETIm BARJrEK Nmon BitIh ~h

The gehooboy ba8ebaD mmpaignis cllNimatieaDy near- Inlaquo the climax of another spirited seasoo With approxishymately a week of competitioo Nllllaining oontlmdmg teams Me stmggling to keep their pennanf oopes alive while Wtling for the right to rep-JIe8eDt their ll e s pee t i v e leaguesin the nnand-eomin

-y- shy

Btate tournament The Eastshyem Massachusetts ehampionahip

baseball tournamen+ ClIffiMftl-~

tine of the wurney is tiPoDOOred bythe

II a II sac h u~_ lt Iietts Secondary

SChool Princishypals Association bull Par tie i p 8 t _ ing schools have bElen divided i IIl tot h r e e d3ses - A B and C---llccord- Peter iDg to leagues Blrtek r

and comparable independent teams Action tn all three clasampe3 starts Saturday June L

In addition to the three divishyidon3 the baseball tourney amp1shyem radically JIrom the popular

Two Spots for Both BCl (IDnd Marry Five Bristol County League Howard Ferguson which teams

teams Gre still in contention for will represent the circuit in the tourney play ebampionship event

At this writing Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Stang SpaltamJ of Qartmouth who hold a lllim ene-game edge over their rivals are a solid choice to annex one of the two berths to be filled bi BCL teams The second spot 18 un literally up for grabs

Bishop Feehan High of Attieshyboro which led the circuit untll last week Durfee High of Fan River Attleboro and Taunton lire in close pursuit middotof Stang hoping tomiddot overcome the Sparshytans or at least lInish in the league runner-up berth Both the first and second place finshyishers will8utomatically qualify

If either fim OX second place II decided by Monday May 21 league officials w~ have to DOUty the tournament Director

No~tons Lancers in Need cf Help I h e Narragansett league Class B - Southem

whkh got a head start on the its Iud Old Colony champ ft NaITlIlshyv er area Clrcu conc es gansett runner-upleague play today First place

middot Somerset travels to New Bed- Narragansett champ ~ Olcll ford to meet Holy Family High Colony runner-up Case High of Swansea entell-middotmiddot South Shore champ VB Hockshytains Dighton-Rehoboth West- omock runner-up port hoss Msgr Prevost High Hockomock cpamp vs South

middotof Fall River and Dima]l Voce- ShQre runner-up tional nlso of Fall River will 0I Am f N rth E stobe t Se k Iver es 0 0 a n a e o~k

Entering the final week of ac-middot middot tion Somerset and seekonk are in the top two spots in tbe 8tanding They loom the more likely to corral Class B tourney berths But DightOn-Rehoboth Case and Westwrt trail the sec ODd place club by oIl1yone game If the race ends in II tie ]league officials wlll have ample time to schedule play-off games before the tourney deadline

Pairings for Class Bare

Selecting Union PITTSBURGH (NC)-Twentyshy

five maintenance workers at Duquesne University here in Pennsylvania have left their jobs pending a detell1llnation as to which union will represent the workers The remaining 115 members of the maintenance erew lIlre not involved in the atrike which was called by the 2li who are represented by the tJmted Electrical WorkersUnion

Although it occurs infrequentshyly a team does not have to win Its league to represent its league in tourney eompetition

The Bristol County league champion is slated to play the

bull Bay State League runner-up in first round action with the Bay State champs taking on the County runner-up The winners would then meet in second round play

Pairings for Class A are Class A - Southem

Suburban champ w Middleshy8llX runnerup

Middlesex champ ft Suburshyban runner-up Bay state ehamp VB Bristol runner-up

Bristol champ V8 Bay sta~ runnerup

-Tech lxlsketban competition lllll order to qualifyfor the Tech a team mt1BSt win 70 per cent cd its games but onlythe leagu~ champions ond runner-ups M~ eligible ~r playmiddotiImiddotbasebalL

In both Class A andClass B iitOtalof i6 teams will qualify 1lt7middotmiddotmiddotJiY

for the diamond elimination event~ E~~ Will pai1i~ipate in

the nortlHln division and eight in the southern bracllet The winners in each bracket will meet in the Eastern- Massacilushy

llletts fi~ Preliminary games will be played on June 1 4 and 6 The finals are scheduloo June 8

Class C competition will coIi-BiEt of eight clubs in only one division Titlists in seven smallshyDChooI le1gues and one indeshypendent selected by the tournashy

ment coJiunittee Will comprise the field fur this tliil-d group

and Mansfield 1m the Hockoshymock circuit appear to be out of the running this season

Fo~ Class C schools Its Winmiddot or youre out Only the league champions will play in the championships The winner of the Capeway Conference will meet the Cape and Vineyard champ in opening round play Dennis-YarDlQuth and Sandshywich are the likely opponents

The only other school located within the confines of the diocshyesan territorial limits that has an outside ~hance of qualifying for the tournament is Norton of the Tri-Valley Conference The Lancers however will need some outside help if they are to overcome league leading Millis The Tri-Valley champs will take on the Dual County League champions Defending Class C champ Ashland again leading the Dual Co~nty is heavily favored to repeat both in league ond state competition

NOT A BALL-ITS GUM Yem might get the idea that a pitched ban is lodged in the mask of this young Vancouver BC catcher but it isnt a ball This young ma is trying to prove he is just as efficient behillld the plate as he is at blowing bubble gum NC ~middothoto

Stresses Inter~cicdmiddotmiddotPartnership As Solution to Racial Problem

CLEVELAND (NC) - A Nashy world would be better off lr tional ASsociation for Advanceshy iou hadnt gotten involved Jm

ment of Colored People official asserted here interracial part shynership is the key to oolution of the racial problem but it cannot be a partnership dom inated by either race

Dr John A Morrell NAACP assistant nat ion a 1 director speaking at the Cleveland Cathshyltnlic Interracial Councils annual Interracial Justice Awards banshyquet said the nation today is aj an unprecedented crossroads but the interracial way is the democratic part to justice

He spoke in place of Roy Wishydns NAACP national~ director who was with the U S delega- tion at the United Nations con vocation on human rights lin Tehran Iran -

Angry Voices There are angry Negro voiees

raised in protest because develshyopment of opportunity in recent years does not apply to twoshythirds of the Negro population he saidmiddot The kind of jobs they are capable of filling are vanshyishing from the economy he added

But if a fruitful partnership is to continue between the white and Negro the burden of know- ing the truth about Negro hisshytory must be borne by white as well as Negro Dr Morsell said

Vie are all fighting a bitter legacy of generations White people have to know where they stand and why Once you assume the burden of work toward interracial justice you assume the responsibilities be continued

If you are not going to ~

sume them then you and fhe

the first place Informed PariDership

Dr Morsell said a mere sPirit of commitment is not enough to

survive over the hard going Work must be based on a part shynership that is informed intelshyligent understanding and resil shyient he said

The interracial awards were presented to Father Edwan Camille assistant Catholic Charshyities director here and Thom811 C Westropp president of Womshyens Federal Savings and Loan Association

Westropp was cited for his efforts towards opening the

doors of banking and credit 1m the Cleveland area to all ciUshyzens regardless of race creed 011

color while Father CarniDe was cited for his leadership as director of Project Peace (~

irner-city diocesan organizati~ working with the poor mostly Negroes) and for his work as co-chairman of the first tri-faith Greater Cleveland Conference on Religion and Race

ELECTRICAl -Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

SS lPlE1rIEllt amp JgtAIDlj

$103 Womens Club Rose E Sullivan

$50 Joseph P Conaty

$35 Belen M amp William J

De7 $33

Mr amp Mrs James F McMahcm $25

Mrs Margaret Daly amp Mary John Dolan ~illiam Daley amp Mary Esther Mr amp Mrs Stanley M -laniek

~50 In memory of MrsMarga~

W Pow~rs RodneY S DeCecco

$26 Mr amp Mrs John Soula

$25 Edward Healey Mr amp Mrs Michael McCartbiY Mr amp Mrs James Crosson Mrs Gertrude Lomas Mr amp Mrs Norman GagnOOl

ST JOHN TEE BAPTlIS11

$30 St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ampt Jean Baptiste $25

Mr amp Mrs Ovila Caron Henri Demers

In memory of Mr amp lVlrm bullWilliam Sheehan

Open to An PORTLAND (NC)-The seeshy

ond annual Catholic youth conshyvention of the Portland Diocese has opened the convention to all Catholic students of the dioshycese in order to spread the agtOlgto tolate of youth to youth Thll

)faine convention has comprised only students who have takes themiddot youth leadership trainlJnl1 courses

Dont Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH

DO faJse teeth drop slip or wobblo when you talk eat laugh or sneeze Dont be annoyed and embarr1lEsetll lkllh hanl11caps FASTEETH Bamp

e (non-acid) powder to SPr1n~Ikle on your plates keeps false teetb more firmly set Gives confident feel~ Ing Of security and added comfort No gummy gooey taste or feellncr Dentures that 6t are essential to health see your dentist regulorly oet FASTEETH at alll1rug countemJ

o

WYman 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD MASS

IfIIfJltk del1WM

S H~~uO~ Oil

SAVE MONEY 0 OUROILHEATI bull eatt

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

Iritai~ If S)crap SuPPITreg~~5n Acts Of Re~(j[jmlt~oml

LONDON (NC)-It looks as if Britain is at long last glOing to stop suppressing the monasteries-officially that 0

Legal experts sifting through lenturies of forgotten laws clutshyooling the records have found (hat the Suppression of Reli shygious Houses Acts of 1535 and 0039 have never been repealed

They are among 155 statutes weeded out from the statute IJ)ooks between 1239 and 1705middot lmd now to be definitively leshy~aled by a special act of Par-Iliament

These two acts enforced the eosure and pillaging of Catholic monasteries friaries and other religious houses throughout the WINS nsc Chaplain

eountry following King Henry (Captain) Angelo J LitekyVIIIs break with Rome in 1534

assigned to the 199th InfanshyJhey brought vast fortunes On goods property and mog of try Brigade in Vietnam has ell land to the kings favorites been awarded the Distinshyoome of whose families have reshy guished Service Cross forWned their wealth to this day extraordinary heroism SevshyIgnored in Practice

Of course the laws against erely wounded when Viet me Roman Catholic Church Cong ambushed a US infanshyIhave long ago been shelved and try company Ohaplain Lit shyIgnored in practice The reli shy eky braved flying bullets toous houses are back probably

rescue and minister tomore numerous than before iIome have even reoccupied the WQunded and dying meR 0ld sites they hadmiddot before the lReformation

Another notable measure ~ewlfk ~[p)regID Gingled out for repeal is the 1loleration Act of 1688 This act W51f)$ ~WIfltdl although in itself it did not help

NEW YORK (NC)-The Adshy~he Catholics marked the end of

vocate weekly newspaper of1lhe Protestant Reformation and the Newark Archdiocese wont1he beginning of religious tolershythe first-place Silver Medalation in Britain Awarti for weekly newspapersIt allowed freedom of worship in the annual public serviceClgt Protestant Trinitarian Nonshycompetition sponsored by theoonformists provided theiT New York chapter of the Pubiicmeetings were opento the pubshy

Relations Society of AmericaIlk it did not relieve the existing The award was for a five-part

fenaWes of those days against analysis ttl the ills besetting the ~atholics other breakaway Newark public school system lhcnestants or Jews but it was )he analysis was written by a hisberic beginning It has been Advocate news editor Ed Grant ltJeseribed as the Great Oharter and was an examination into ~ religious freedom and the one of the areas of dissatisfacshy~umph ofc9mmon ~ense tion which led to widespread

rioting in Newark last Summer

The series ran lri the newsshylJays Help for Poor paper last september and Octoshy

lPeCice First ~eeds ber The Public Rellitlons SocishyMIAMI (NC)-The Catholic ety award - silver medals are (lihurch in this nation today awarded in each of five cateshy

gories-are given for the mostauast address itself to the presshynoteworthy contributions bullbull 0 toiloing needs of the poor and dis-

~vantaged as well as the better public ~derstanding of ltJnICial issue of peace says the _ community problems in the New

4Tchbishop of Miami York metropolitan area Archbishop Coleman F Calshy New s p a per 8 magazines 0011 following announcement of broadcasting an d television middotGte establishment of the ecclesshy media in the New York-New iastical province of Miami and Jersey-Connecti~ut metropolitan tMs appointment as its first area are eligible for the awards l)rehbishop stressed that the (fhurch must be concerned with ibe problems of the time in Retired ArttlhJboshop S)Vhich we exist Gets College lHlonorThe g~eatest problems at present are the problems of the DUBUQUE ( NC) - Retired disadvantaged the poor and Archbishop Edward D Howard Utase who are in need and of of Portland Ore has been named oourse peace he smiddotaid for Loras Colleges 1968 John

It is more difficult for us to Fitzgerald Kennedy Award The LiOlve in any real way the prob- prelate is a former president of iems that are our concern until the college we have a measure of peace The citation and gold medal And it is the prayer of all of us annual award honoring an out Chat peace will be established as standing Amercian will be preshyiluickly as possible on an honorshy sen ted to the archbishop at the able basis o college commencement cereshy

monies June 2 Camp Directory Archbishop Howard 90 a nashy

Nltlw available from the Nashy ti ve of Cresco Iowa and a Loras lItonal Catholic Camping Assn alumnus was ordained to the ~ 131~ Massachusetts Ave priesthood in 1906middot He became lM- W Washington D C 20005 president of the college in 1921 Is the 1968 Directory of Catholic In 1924 he was consecrated to ~mps which lists all known serve as auxiliary bishop of DavshyearriPs in the U S giving acshy enport He became archbishop of Civities charges dates open and Portland in 1926 and retired in lIbailing addresses 1966

National CYOPlans LeadershipTraining shyImpa~t to Aid Priests Adult Admiddotvisors

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tbe through the introduction of BaWmore June 23-28 ehicagoNational Catholic Youth Organshy leadership methodology which July 1-5 Boston July 14-19 ization Federation will launch a facilitates maximum involveshy Sen Antonio July 28-Aug 3 training program in June called ment 00 the local level and Denver Aug 11-16 and San Impaot be help priests and hence maximum commitment JFaoancisoo Aug 25-30 adults 00 work effectively with The National CYO Federation Dr Donald Ebalt a professhyteenagers in a leisure time proshy will sponsor six sessiOns this lIlional trainbig eonsul1lant of gram summer to train diocesan CYO Washington D c win diiecl

The program was designed in staffs m 1lhe use of the newmiddot ead11ab cooperation with Leadership program lhey win )e held m A pilot Jtudy of the effectiveshyResources Inc a firm _of beshy DeBS of Impact on a group of havior scientists -rolulbteers from the NewarlkAddress Graduates

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishy archdiocese was held at the SOUTH BEND (HC) -Mel-rector of the Youth Department Benedictine Retreat House ill

Jdte-rite Patriarcib Maximoo VUnited States Catholic Confershy jNewton N J ence in announcing ttie new Kakimof Antioch and Dr Ilhirtymiddot persons representashyprogram said tives of youth adult advisorsJames A Perkins of Cornell

The goal 01 Impact is 00 help and priest moderators met withUniversity will be speakers atthe priests who are moderators representattives of the CYO

the 123rd annual cOnW~ncementof CYO the ad~lt advisors and Federation staff and a member youth participating in CYO toshy exerci~ Sundly June 2 at Of Leadership rResources Inc ward maximumpersonal growth Notrlte Dame University 110 assess and to evaluate 1mpaltL

(Cathedral Camp-Resident and Day Camp for Boys

O~ Lady of the L_ke Day Camp fOr Girls

Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON LONG POND ROUTE 18 EAST FREETOWN MAS~

~ RESIDENT CAMP 49th Season June 30 thru August 24 - a Week Season

Diocesan seminar-ians - College Students amp Teachers Under direction StaH of a Diocesan Priest

Saili~g swimming water skiing horseback riding riflery archeryPrograni hiking overnight camping trips ~rts amp crafts Indian crafts camp crafts athletic (team amp individual) competition and inter-camp cOmpetition professional tutorial service available

Private beach large luxurious camphouse dining hall modernfacilities~ washrooms arts and crafts buildings camp store and office first aid and infirmary beautiful chapel overnight and weekend accomodashytions for parents

S WEEK PIERIOD $325 - 4 W~K PERIOD $165 - 2 weEK PERIOD $85

Cathedra~ Day Camp t=or Boys Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period

JULY W- AUGUST 23 Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period fEES INCLUDIE Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Horseback Riding Weekly Cook~Outs amp Milk Daily without Added Cost

--~----------------------------------------Our Lady of the Lake bay Camp For Girls

JULY l _ AUGUST 23 Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period

FEES INCLUD~Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Ilorseback Riding Weekly Cook-Outsmiddot Milk Daily without Added Cost

o

For further information write to

REV WALlER A 5ULLlVANDiredor PO Box 63 - East Freetown Mass 02717

Page 16: 05.23.68

mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs May 23 196816 I

Mafttl[p)Dsellt $50 Raymond L W Benoit

$5BTANJrlllONY Jos~ph A Tully William J

$300 OLearY Mr ampMrs Alfred Baty ltlJbades McGowan Mr amp Mrs Fred Harney

$100 Mr amp Mrs Michael C ODonshyaarence G Verdi nell Mr amp Mrs ThomaS P Per~ lIugene F Phelan kins Mr amp Mrs John Kozlowski

$15 mosampry Altar Society

$66 Buzzard$ B~y I

iusan A McGowan ST MAJuiAR]ampTWilliam Keane

$SOshy$55 A Friendllohn P Delaney

$6$40 lIlr amp Mrs Thomas Pina

~h G Perry $25$35

Mr amp Mrs Edwin PaytonlInmothy Manning )l amp Mrs John KarlJfudge E C Horrocks J~

$30 Mr amp Mrs Edwin N Rose Wareham Lodge of Elks 15044bullbull Clayton King

Mr amp Mrs David Fannon$~

Mr amp Mrs John OCOnnellJames Downey Romeo Bedarql William Delaneyhnes H Gifford Mary M Chad Mr amp Mrs James Lopes

Wick George Smith Jr Antone Mr amp Mrs Louis Fougereshy-es Edmund Perry $25 Mr amp Mrs Armand Bedard

Mr amp Mrs Michael DelIsMark H McIntyre Teree JeminaBlossom Joseph Farley Robert Mr amp Mrs William BennettGIngras Real Breton Mr amp MrsLouis Eacobaoct

Jobn Tarvis Francis ODri9shyu Holy Nam~ Society Paull Glennon Joseph Zychowicz Central -VUlageIIaomas Renahan Richard SmiUll

ST JOHN THE BAPTIBJl

~50 bullNorth Dighton Mr amp Mrs John DeNadal

ST JOSEPH nolt Rev John P Hogan$156

IlR Vincent de Paul $75 Dr Peter F Piccinini$50

$25amp11 Name Society Florence I Bessette MrSt Josephs Womens Guild

$35 Mrs John J Ardagh Jr llim Raymond Williamsbull amp Mrs Joseph MWTaJ

Me amp Mrs Daniel TebreiN$30 J Jl)r amp Mrs William AcIamI Mr amp Mrs Robert Albanese

o Iohn W Perreira$5 Ch(ltham

Mr amp Mrs Joseph C Amarat 1lIJr amp Mrs Edward M Berobe HOLY ~EJI)EIEMEamp

bullbull amp Mrs Arthur A Ennes Mr $101 A Mm William Johnson Rose Pi Assqc of the SacredHea~ Mello $lOet

Mr amp Mrs Harold Mendoza Mr amp Mrs Robert Han lIffr amp Mrs Bruce Murph) Mr Col amp Mrs John McCa~ bull Mrs Robert Secatore $50

Mrs James Bell Jr St Vincent de Paul Sodeq Mr amp Mrs John J Cavanaup

IIMMACULATE CONCBPJIl[ON $30 $DOO A- Friend

Ambonymous $2-5 $a Chatham Trust Co Mr af

Anonymous MrS E Joseph Geller Dr~ amp MIlII Robert Harned A Friend (~)

Anonymous $75

Mr amp Mrs William Kent Mr amp Mrs Paul reF~vre Mr lIi$it

- Mrs~ Richard Sylva Mr amp MmHelen P Derby Patrick SullivanMr amp Mn Aibert Giordano

A Friend Mr amp Mrs Frank Dresseli Mr amp Mrs Philip S1iel]oA Friend Mr amp Mrs James Griffin shyAnonymous Mr amp Mrs Frank Wing _ImmaCU1ate Conception MenliI

Club $4G North Attleboro

Mr amp Mrs Raymond ~rgerotl SACRED HEART$35

Mr amp Mrs William Condoo $200 $5 Rev JOuter Lussier

Mr amp Mrs William Buchtman $30 Caesar Cardoza Mr amp Mrs RoT Mr amp MrsJeorge Merewe Howard Immaculate Conception $~ Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Joseph A Jette

Mr amp Mrs Co George Knapp $25 McCarthy Coal Co Mrs Fredshy Mr amp Mrs Paul Dion Mrbull elick H Murphy A Friend Mrs Frederick Fortin LionelL

Martineau Mr amp Mrs~ Philippe Rainville amp Florence

Mr amp Mrs George Beaulieu Sl lWAllUf A Friend

STMA-ElY$50 $150Mr amp Mrs Michael Murphy

Nelson GulskiMr amp Mrs Jose FernandesSIl $75$30 Rev Armando A- AnnunziabMr amp Mrs Thomas J Bryanamp

$50 Eva Morowski

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John HaugMr amp Mrs Roland Roberge Mr amp Mrs John StanfordDavid amp Martha Rocha M Veronica Reilly

Mary Cronin George Yefh Mildred Leary A ~riend

BreWSlfreli $4G Dr amp Mrs Domenie BalJiIe

OUR LADY OF TlIIE CAn $35 o $100 Dr amp Mrs Kenneth AtwiIl lllisBionaries of La saleUe jnr amp Mm JosepiL Dona

MONSIGNOR VI[lELSB

Heads Bishop$ Task force

WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr Aloysius J Welsh of Newark N J a recognized authority in race relations and social aclion work has been named to head the Urban Task Force estabshylished by the U S bishops

Bishop Joseph L Bernardin general secretary of the U S Catholic Conference who anshynounced the monsignors apshypointment said the task force was calhd for by the U S blsbshy

ops at theirmiddot April meeting in SL Louis in their statement on the mational racial crisis The bishshy

ops directed the task foree be established by the USCC Social[ Action Department

In this work he will cooperaW with MsgI George G Higgins director and Father John MeshyCartty assistallt director of the Social Action Department the bishop said

$30 Mr amp Mrs Frederick ThOIpG middotMr amp Mrs Clement Sbarolll

$26 Mr amp Mrs Andtew Boisvert Gertrude Cassi~y

Elizabeth Sheals $25

Mr amp Mrs Daniel J Cava- naugh Mr amp Mrs Raymond Bl~hard Mr~ amp Mrs Robert Brunelli A Friend

Mr amp Mrs Robert Gilmore Mrs James P Reynolds Mr amp Mrs John Donleymiddot Mr amp Mm James Battersby Mr Mn Jlohn bullCollins

Virginia G Robinson

AttRehoro BOLY GHOST

$150 Dr amp Mm LoneJglUl

~110 Mr amp Mm John CapoWglo

$50 Holy Ghost St Vineellllt cle Pail

$35 Mr amp Mra Joseph BJOdeur

$25 Mr amp Mrs Malcolm ~

Mr~ amp Mrs Harry Dowdall Mr amp Mrs RObert Geddes Mr~ I Mrs Frank Pistolese

ST JOlIN $200

In memory of Dn7 hwlbaDcI JIoseph F ODonn~

$100 Mr amp Mrs Raym9nd ENmlIlilll Anonymous Donor Inmemory of GabriGll lYaBltllloshy

alone bull $75 -

Rev Edwarcl A Ra~

Mr amp Mrs John P I4e $50

MaryL Wilhelm Mr amp Mrs J G WaJEll Jlr Mr amp Mrs Franclll Bo Mr Joseph ODonnell1 ~ amp Mrs Ernest ~

$30 m=teanor Robinqmiddot Alice~

ST JOSEPH $25

Counseil Jeanne DAre No 263

ST MARK $50 ~

Edward J Connors Jr $25

William J Roche Jr Joseph Dias Mrs Michael J Croke

ST MARY $50

Holy Name Society of St Mary Knights of Columbus Seekonk

Council Mrs Leland B Smith

$35 Mr amp Mrs Donald Blake

$~O ~r amp Mrs Henry E Woodcome st Marys Womeno Guild

$25 Mr amp Mrs Frank Padykula

Mr amp Mrs Russell J Sumner ST THERESA

$50 Mr amp Mrs Donald Boardman Mr amp Mrs George LeBeau

$30 William Cauley amp Family Mr amp Mrs George Boyd

0 $25 Mr amp Mrs RobeIt Generenl Mr amp MrsRobert St mlaiN

Taunton -HOLY ROSAILY

$30 Mr amp Mrs Russen Woodward stanley Radwansld

$25 Children of Mary Sodality Richard Januse

SACRED HEARi

$50 Mr amp Mrs Joseph S llosamp Mr amp Mrs Vincent BrimleF

$35 Mr amp MnJ Robert MeClellaml

_ S2i Walter Waltman Mr amp Mm

atephen Crosby The ~ Mr amp MrtI William Vaillan-

OOurt Mr amp Mrs Michael Barber

Mrs Margaret Rose llrtr~ bull II Frederick Reams

o

81 JAMES

$U Armand Desautels Tremblay Moving Iii 8tonlge

00mpany

STMABY $100

Dr~ Charles HoYt $60

GeOrge Dion Jr $51

Mr~ amp Mrs Kenneth $50

Mm A Hoffman Dr Normand ~ Mr amp M1lil J McNilmaN ar Dr John Fenton Mr amp Mrs Kicban sm

$36 ~ B Grant

~O Dr EdmWlld Fitzgerald D4niel A J Doyle

$U

Richard Barrington BIizabeCIa dIt Margaret Brady Mr - Mm kmea Bumtl Dr CarsiDbre e-- IlUOCi -Robert J mn JamesD hcige

Mr amp Mra Llocel IaImDee ftlomas Hoye Merrill lliaynard Jmelen amp Catherine McCariIll7

Alice McKenna Ruth MeshyJUona Susan McKenna II

Plan To B~ild

- See Us About ~

lotyCost Financing

WAuREHAM SAVltfGS BANK

WorehaftI falmouth cr J-3800 II 1-3000

Mrs James McMorrow Franeb Mulholland

Mary Mulholland Ma~ Neenan Joseph ODonnell Eveshylyn Rice Agnes amp Joseph Rose

Mrs Joseph Rowley Robert Sullivan J Roger Torme1 Charles H fripp Rita Baker

Mrs James Bennett William Carney John Gonzals James Holmes Mary E McNamara

Dr Thomas~OBrien Cbarleo OConnell Mr amp Mrs Edwarcll OGara Mr amp Mrs John 00 _ Ilfearne MlJI amp Mrs Edward OKeefe

1he Ralph Reckard Famil1 Cecelia F lfi Mary C Sheerin

ST PAUL $150

St Vincent de Paul st Pauh Taunton 0

$100 Rev Cornelius~ltYNem

$50 Mr amp Mrs Edward Roster

$24 Mr amp Mrs John Medas Jr

$25 Mrs Catherine Campbell Mr

amp Mrs Chester Jackman Mr c1i Mrs Richard Silva Mr amp Mrs Leo Leroux Mr Mrs John Steen

Mr amp Mrs Donald Emond Mr Be Mrs Gordon Seekel Mr amp Mrs Charles Welch Mr MllIl Paul Silva

New Bedford HOLY NAME

$Z5 Mr amp Mrs John Hallonm Mr amp Mrs Jacob Teser

ST CASIMIR $150

Beltr cutnir Kwiatkowski $109

Atto~ Ferdinand Sowa $25

Mr amp Mrs Joseph FoUrnier The Poczatek Family Mramp M Antbony Rijo Jr Mr Mrs Stanle Scbkk Eve White

I

ST BYACINTB $100 -

Mr Mrs George Vigeallltl $50

st Vincent de Paul ConferenCe Gf Hyacinth Parisb

Tum to Page Seventeen

CONRAD SEGUIN BODY COMPANY

Aluminum or Steel 944 County Seet

NEW BEDFORD MASS WY 2-6618

w H RILEY amp SON Inc

CITIES SERVICE IDISTRIBUTORS-

0 Gasoline Fuel and Ra~ge

OILS OIL BURNERS

for Prompt Delivery amp hoy amp Night ~ice

8 IE BOIlER BURNER UNITS

80tItecI G48 Service

61 OOItANNET Sf TAUNTON

AJdeb DfO - No- Attleboro

TountoIamp

(l

SUMY pons Nuns (l)ffi) AifrMdl~$o

Re$M~~e~o trMture D~[freg~UDrru~ WASHINGTON (NC)-Resulto

of a survey of all United States nuns reveals a high ooceptance of post-Vatican II changes anell an eagerness robecome morrc involved in the inner city and poverty apostolates

The B1UVey conducted bythe Conference of Major Superiors of Women dlJring 1966 was the first extensive attempt to assess resources and attitudes of reli shygious communicenties c1 women and their memberll in the United States

The JPecific coal of the surshyvey was to assess the resources and determine 1ampIe responses that Religious are making and ean make to the invitation 13shysued in Vatican Us Decree on the Renewal of Religious ~e

More than 135000 Sisters parshyticipated in the survey respondshying to 649 questionnaire items covering religious beliefs atti shytudes toward change edu~shy

tional background present ocshycupation and future plans comshymunity life and proposals for future ohange

Results were processed by 00 Sister-sociologists across the country with the use of comshyputers

llleason for lIAlavnng The survey showed 1827 oil

the 175000 U S Sisters-107 per cent-left religious life durshying 1966 Of those Sisters only 869 had taken final vows In an interview with the NC News Servicemiddota spokesman for the Conference of Major Superiors of Women (CMSW) said most Sisters who have remained feel that a major reason for the inshy

ltereased number of Sisters leavshymg religious life is an increased ~penness to the idea within the lfcligious community

She said that the increased fucus on personal development has caused many Sisters to see that they are not suited to the religious life and that they will find areater personal fulfillment elsewhere

Statistics on be division of labor among U S Sisters show 72 per cent are teachers eight per cent are involved in health work five per cent in catechetshyill~ and missionary work lmd tbr~ per cenmiddott in welfare work

Seventy per cent of the teachshyem ore in elementary school work 195 per cent in high school education and 68 per

eent teach at the college level Of those involved in health care 18 per cent in health administration and 62 per cent in direct care jobs

lEnter New lFienlll1s The survey showed Sisters

have a strong desire to become involved in adult education inshyner city work pre-school teachshying and other s~ial work and to have greater contact with their local community Nuns expressed eagnerness to enter fieldc where few Sisters are now working In 1966 13 per cent ot U S Sisters were engaged in adult education 82 pel cent in speshycial education 31 per cent in poverty work and 06 per cent in migrant education The surshyvey indicafes that there will be a dramatic change in these figures in the next few years

Father Considine Leaves PC$tr Continued fC0m Page One

man of the U S Bishops Comshymittee for Latin America

Bishop Bernardin prai~ed the work of Father Considine in the Latin America Bureau noting

iota progress under his direction since its inauguration in 1960

It has been a labor of love for Father Considine he saici whose long standing interest in the people of Latin America and of other developing areaa is well known

Maryknon Father Considine will return

to his writing and teaching asshymgnments at Maryknoll Ossinshy

lng N Y where he had served as publications director before becoming director of the IAiltin

America Bureau He holds editorial and advishy

lOry posts with several internashytional organizations and servell DS a member of the Council OIl

Foreign Relations He was amp

member of the National Advishysory Council of the Peace Corps from 1961 to 1966 He also founded and directed Fides Inshyternational Service in Rome an Information and research unit of

the Holy See He was born Oct 9 1897 C1shy

1-

~ATIlGR CONSIDINE

da1ned in 1923 and received II

licentiate in sacred theology from the Catholic University of America in 1924 He has reshyceived honorary degrees from Fordham University Manhatshytsnville St John University St Benedicts Atchison and is the author of 10 books on Latin America Asia and Africa and hall edited several others

L9ng-Range

Father Considine Sllid that he IlIaW the Latin America Bureau as set for the proseution ~ tl

vigorous nation-wide program 10 serve our Latin American eonfreres for the next- generashytion through the year 2000 -and into ~ 21st century He felt lIlllch 11 long-range view was necessarJ because at stake are important socio-religious adshyVDnces among hundreds of milshyHons cd people Latin Americas leaders need time for these advances

Be pointed out thatsome of the best Church leadership tbroughout the Catholic world today is found in Latin AmershyICD In turn he noted our U S bi~hops are quietly acceptshying international responsibiliti~s

as never before Father Considine said that the

program of the U S Bishops Committee for Latin Americn ~ablishes the heavy day-to-day work of the Latin America Bureau

Jgtersonnel Father Considine said that

llIODle 60 per cent of all U S apOstolic personnel overseas throughout the world works in Latin America with more Ulan 600 Latin American parishes served by U S priests Major Superiors of women ha~e 2500 Sisters in Latin America PAVLA has put more than 800 laymen there for three-year terms and U S bishops hnv~

more than 300 priests working in Latin America Annual fundshying for Latin Amerietl by U S Catholics ~~ $1f) millioll

SJJREET SCENE This was a busy street scene in the nations capital at the encampment of the Poor Peoples Campaign near the Washington monument More than 100~OOO- protestors are expected to be in Washington for Memorial Day NC Photo

OUlll lLAIDY OlF ll1HI1amp

ASS1lJMJgtJlJlON $26

Clara Rose amp Family $25

Mr amp-Mrs Jose F Cruz St Martin de Porres G~

Mi CARMEL $100

In memory of Mr amp Mrs J~ ilino Simoes

Rev Antonio P Pinto middotCM $75

Rev Azitonio P Pinto em $60

Mary i Ltuiz $50

Mr amp lVIrs Albino daSilv8 1IIt Carmel Womans Club

$30 Manuel Bettencourt Mr amp Mrs Kenneth lltinu

John Rodrigues $26

Olivia M Luiz $25

Cecelia Bettencourt CbildYeli of Mary Mt Carmel ~ouft

Units James Perry Mr amp lnl Manuel G Souza Jr

Mr amp Mrs Arthur Caetano Mr amp Mrs Charles Frate Mramp Mrs Lauran Silva

OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HE]P

~26

Mrs Amelia E Bariteau $25

Dr amp Mrs Francis Green

OURLADY OFPU~GATOB~ l)1I00

In memory of Alex J Ka1He from Cltpe Coo Sportswear ~

lnc Fairhaven Lumber Co

$30 Atty George R Morad euroJ

Atty ~e E Morad $25

Josephine David 1bl mlE1lllllOllY of George A EI-Hillow Mr ampgt Mra ~rge JThomas Mr amp IIIlm Hykel G Simon

ST KIlldAN nSO

Rev WilMeT J Boekley

U~~ amp Wmeentde PaW ~

~ iWa1 1kntley

$2S AlmgeAo OH1feira

SAClllIampDlHlJEAlltT $25

Alexander Caruso

c S11 JAMES

$55 rulllbull amp lVIrs Francis O Quinn

$50 lilred Kelley

$40 William OMalley

~1 A Friend

$3~

Mr amp Mrs Jr Hugh Barry $25

Mr amp Mrs Andrew ONeil Mr 8 Mrs Robert Arnett

ST JOSEPH

$450 sa Josephs Church Societies

$70 Mr amp Mrs Maurice Dansereau

1130 II Mr amp Mrs Luigi Fiano lk Fmniy

125 Mr amp Mrs Thomas Weaver MI amp Mm Maurice Lamonshy

tagne Mrbull Mrs Raymond Rondel1

ST TBERIESA $100

Eugene Lemieux

Sturtevant 6 Hook lEst 1897

Bude~s Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New ~dforcJ

996-5661

THE ANCHOR- ~ 7 lfhuvs May 23 1968

~regreg [copy~G~ ~O~

Oa1l ~MOO~ []M~Orru NEWARK (NC)-A charge (l(

apparent ~racial discriminatiom in the assignment of tenants 00 public housing here is Oontainoo in s report issued by the New Jersey Advisory Committee 00 the U S Commission em CiWl Rights

It said the Newark Housing Authority follows a policy ef permitting people applying fOlr placement in public housin~ projects to choose the project tm whieh they want to live

lit said this policy has ~

llributed to the segregation Cl1I public housing and recomshymended that t1he policy 00 abandoned in favor of first-come first-serVed basis

The report noted that Q01l1li vast housing projects nre locatell in Newarks Central Ward-tho scene of widespread noting D year ago and of two massiv~ firo disasters this spring-and tll~

they are more thanSO Negf~ ~ccupied

It further charged that them Js U a disparity in maintenanceo between the predominantly N~

gro and the rgtredominantly whi~

projects a complaint lIiTegNgt leadership has frequently medea

It termed living conditiom b the Central Ward projects opshypressive and that the proj~cto

are JIOor)y designed llt recomshymeld~d that additionaI ~ev areas for young children ~Gl

meeting places for odww ~ teenagers be provided

Higher ~arnings

ON YOUR SAVINGS Per Annum

I W Ask abow

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SAVINGS

CERTIFICATES

$IlFm - Savings insu~ed safe IIlyJ liII ClEerny of the US Government

IlVAILABIU1Y - No notice VCllIirfpound Your funds available when ooedea

Slllil by MAtL - We pr~e5S pt~ ood pay postage both ways

Assets over $41ooo0llC

FIRST fEDERAL SaYings and Loan Associatio1ll

of F~L~ RIVER shy~---__-------------~~~~ First Federal saYIngs bull Loan At ~

1 Borth Main St Fall llliTe1 Ibu ~ ~ Ii 02722 P1Imle 674-4001 ~ ~ ~ke llpplicatlOll oJ phone t1 fOOl wldl ~ o ~ o 0 IlllIivithllll Aceoullt 0 Jont Ac4cwot f)

PIlllse Cl3len II SllVings llCCOUCt blcelaquol

o eAomelamp) = ~ 0 ~ Address 0 ~ l 0 clleck In the amount of e--- ~ ~ 0 ~ _~___~~~_~uuJ

SPECIAL RATES FOR Schoo~ Outings and Picnics

amfACi MANAGERI - UNCOLN PARK 999-6984 636-2744

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs May 23196~

The Parish Parade OUR LADY OF ANGELS SACRED HEART WALL RIVER NORTH ATTLEBORO

Altar bOys willsponsor a cake The CCD program will be lJ81e Sunday May 26 following canonically established Friday Iill1 Masses June 21 the feast of the Sacred

Masses today the feast of the Heart The program will include Ascerision will be at 7 and 9 a 730 evening Mass followed AM and -1215 4 5 and 7 PM by proclamation and reception Confessions will be heard be- of CCD members and a social ~re each Mass hour

The Summer Mass schedule CCD students in grades 6 to will begin Sunday June 2 with 12 will attend a folk Mass and Masses from 6 to noon on the sing-out at La Salefte Shrine hour Monday night May 27 Tnose

Monday May 27 through Fri- participating will leave the ooy May 31 there will be church school yard at 645 and will be services at 7 each evening The returned at 930 living rosary will be sponsored Confirmation ceremonies will by the Holy Rosary Sodality be ~ld at 730 Sunday night Monday night the Council of May 26 Catholic Women on Tuesday ther societies on Wednesday and Thlusday and the Children New Bedford ~ M~~ on lfrIday

ST MARY HOLY NAME $25iALL RIVER Mr amp Mrs Roger Goyette

Contemporary music will acshy The Shea Family company the 1115 Mass Sunday Mrs Vivian Wegrzyniakmorning May 26

New CYO officers are Robert ST LAWRENCE amplois president Paul Durin $200 rice-president Polly Rockett Dr amp Mrs Stanley Koczera eecretary-treasurer A Friend

$125 OUR LADY OF FATIMA Dr amp Mrs Robert Srnan sWANSEA $106

The Womens Guild will hold William E King Its annual penny sale at 730 $100

Monday night May 27 in the Dr amp Mrs William Walsh ehurch hall on Gardners Neck $75 lRoad Rev William F OConnell

A Penny Sale will be held Dr amp Mrs James Bolton MondaYMay 27 at 730 in the $60 dlurch hall A Friend

$50 IMMACULATE CONClEPlIION Teremiddotsa Ruth amp John HarneyNEW BEDFORD Victor T Kondi

Parisnioners will celebrate John L Powell rthe feast of Santo Ohristo this Loretta Lamarre Sunday with a roast beef dinner $45 served from noon to 2 with Mrs Mary B Wheatoil

tickets available at the door $40 lRefreshments and entertainment Mr amp Mrs John Connor will be on the afternoon and Mr amp Mrs Thomas J Longevening program $35

A procession and auction will Mr amp Mrs James M Kearneyfollow the dinner with various Mrmiddot amp Mrs Leo St Aubin Holy Name Society units parti shy $30 cipating in the procession Mr amp Mrs Albert Anderson

Mr amp Mrs Joseph Griffin OUR LADY OF V()T(RY Mr amp Mrs Walter L9veridgeeENTERVILLE Mr camp Mrs Myron Tripp

New officers of the Womens $28amptiild are Mrs John J Pendershy Patricia Connor ~st pre~ident MrS James Murshy $26 phy and Mrs John McBarron Mr amp Mrs Thomas SullivanVoice-president Mrs George Mr amp Mrs Charles BerryReale recording secretary Mrs $25 Richard Griffith treasurer Mr amp Mrs Robert Bedard

A Communion dinner at Mr amp Mrs Albert McMulleneummaquid Inn will follow Mr amp Mrs Theodore J CalnanlB30 Mass Monday night June Mr amp Mrs Alfred Couto Mr amproo Mrs Gilbert Noonan of Falshy Mrs Manuel Guerreira Josephmouth will speak Reservations P Mullen should be made with Mrs Edshy Agnes Proctor Mr amp Misward Welch or Mrs- Stephen Joseph Porter Mr amp MrsOBrien Jr by Thursday June 6 James Ryan Mr amp Mrs Paul

saunders ST THERESA Mr amp Mrs Merton WalkerSOUTH ATTLEBORO Mr amp Mrs John F SullivanMiss Patricia Makin of the

Diocesan CCD Board spoke at the annual Communion breakshy Fall River fast of the Confraternity of

ST MARYS CATHEDRALChristian Mothers Fourteen $50 new members were received at

Gertrude OLoughlinthe monthly meeting arid new officers were installed by Rev $26

In memory of Caroline CasellaGerard J Chabot moderator $25They include Mrs Patricia Helen Burns Mr amp MrsBiziak president Mrs Georshy

George Johnston Corky Rowgette Vachon vice-president Club Rits OLaughlin FrancisMrs Kathy Lamarre treasurer amp Lena MoranMrs Dolores Leedham and Mrs

Mr amp Mrs Carlton GastallBeverly Sousa secretaries Mrs Raymond Reynolds

~CULATE CONC~ON BLESSED SACRAMENTlAUNTON $200A Spring Social and D~nce Rev Herve Jalbert

for the benefit of the church $50sponsored by the Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Michael Felixand the St Vincent de Paul Soshy $36ciety will be held Friday May Mr amp Mrs Richard Hamel24 from 8 to 12 at Lewis Lodge $30Winthrop Street Route 44 A W Root Beer StandTaunton Refreshments will be served Tickets are $200 per lIIIOLY CROSS person and wiU be available at $50 the door Holy Rosary Sodality

lt

PATRIARCH His Holishyness Vazken I of the Armeshynian (Monophysite) Chu~h which comprises five-milli~n communicants in the Soviet Union Near and Far East and the Americas is visiting in the US He paid a visit to the National Shrine of the

Immaculate Conception whilein the nations capital NC Photo

NOTRE DAME $40

The Anne-Marie MasSe fami17 $35

Conrad N Desmarais $25

Norman J A Belanger Rose D Perron

HOLY ROSARY $30

The DePaola Family $25

Mrs Philomena Germane

~CULATE CONCEPTION $50

A Frie~d $40

Mrs Diolinda Wilson $26

In memory of Charlotte DJicholson

$25 Holy Name Society Knights

of the Altar A Friend MlU7 Whitehead John R Burgess In memory of Daniel R Be

Manuel R Pimental Joseph Francoeur

SACRED HEART $l)O ()

~ Katherine D Adams $75

Mr amp Mrs William J Sullivan $5~

Margaret Morriss M~ry V amp Alice C HarrlngtoD Frederick B McD9nald

$31 Frances Mmiddot Cummings Mary C Cummings

$30 Mr amp Mrs John J HarrlngtOil

$28 Florence M Sullivan

$25 Vincent DAndrea Edward

Leary Mr ~ MrsN J Meyer Mary Louise OSullivan John J Sullivan middotMargaret F Lowney

ST MICHAEL $25

Manuel Rogers amp Sons At~

Manuel M Rezendes Henry Leshytendre ~eonardo Cabeceiras

Gerald Mulrooney A Friend edf Catholic Charities

ST ANNE ft JI08ZIII $30

Mrs Rhea Saurette 101at Vincent de Paul ConferenceIrene Theroux leapt amp Mrs Joseph J OCoDshy$26 nellThe Gauthier Family $25

Mr amp Mrs Reginald lerive

A Friend

Belshy $50

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J OCo nell k

$30 St rosephs Mens Club

ST ANTH()NY $25 OF THE DESERT Mr amp Mrs John L Mercer

$100 Mr amp Mrs Daniel W OCoDoshyChor Bishop Joseph Eid nell Dr amp Mrs James J Sabra

$25 SANTO CHRiSTO Rev Kenneth A Michael Mrs August Badway $50

ST ANTHONY OF PADUA $125

Rev Josephmiddot M Ferreira $100

Atty amp Mrs Milton R Silva

StVincent de Paul Society $30

Rev Ernesto R Borges $26

Mr amp Mrs Alfred 1 Cam~ $25

$50 Franco Family Singersmiddot

$25 Mrs Sofia Pacheco Antonio T Cabral

Mary amp Beatrice Costa~ SilD

CnristO Credit Union Manuel Medeiros Laureano Silva

AFriendFrank B Olivei

YDUR SONTHE PRIEST

HI HOLY PATHERS MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL DMURDH

A FUTURE

PRIEST NEEDS

bull SOMEONES HELP

TRAiN ASfSTER

Tau

HUNGER CANT

WAIT

Deai MonBr~orNolam

Please

return couponwith your

offering

Have you ever wished you had a son a priest Now you can hlilve a priest of your own-and ahare forever In all the good he does _ _ Throughout the Near East this month grateful bishops ara ordainlng new priests trained by people like youbullbullbullbull Their own families are toe poor to support them In training but good catholics In America adopted these semIshynarians encouraged them all the way to ordinashytionbullbullbullbull Insome Inspiring cases this support was given at personal sacrifice How can youbegln7 Write to us now Well ~end you the name of ~ young seminarian who needs you and he will write to you Make the payments for his training to suit your convenlence ($850 a month or $100 a year or the total $600 all at once) Join your sacrifices to his and at every Sacrifice of the Mass he will always remember who made It possible

4

Native Sisters In our 18 developingcountries are teaching children of the poor preparing them for First Communion giving medical care to leplrs cal)cer sufferers the aging A SisterS training Ialts two years costs $1250 a month $150 a year or $300 altogetherbullbullbullbull Well send you the name of a Sister you can train as soon as we receive your first payment She will pray for you and write toyou

n An9 day now you may receive a letter contalnn the Holy Fathers appeal for the forgotten Arab refugees-l4 million people without a country bullbullbull most of them destitute bullbullbull more thari half of them childrenbullbullbullbull By trelnlng these children foi middotfuture selfsufflcel]cy we can help brln peace and new selfmiddothelp to the Holy Land atlll divided by warbullbullbullbull But why walt for your mal Hunger cant walt Neither can peace Send your amplIft now in any amount ($500 $200 $100 $75 $50 $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 $2 $1) and the Holy Fathercan put It to work right away Qril1 $10 wlllleed family for a monthl -----~-~---~~---~-IlNCL08ID PLllAIl PIND $_ c_O~__ rFOR _

NAMI ___~

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MSGR JOHN ClI NOLAN Natlonal5ecretary Write CATHOLIO NIlAR EAST WeLFARE Assoo ~30 Madson Avenue New York NY OOU telephonel 212vtJkon 6middot5840

CATHaLiD

19 DiJoridrrien Ere State r ourlitei

SChoelbOY leag~~Wmrn~regr~ Stii~Pretty Mu~h sampu [j)(Q)Mbt

By PETIm BARJrEK Nmon BitIh ~h

The gehooboy ba8ebaD mmpaignis cllNimatieaDy near- Inlaquo the climax of another spirited seasoo With approxishymately a week of competitioo Nllllaining oontlmdmg teams Me stmggling to keep their pennanf oopes alive while Wtling for the right to rep-JIe8eDt their ll e s pee t i v e leaguesin the nnand-eomin

-y- shy

Btate tournament The Eastshyem Massachusetts ehampionahip

baseball tournamen+ ClIffiMftl-~

tine of the wurney is tiPoDOOred bythe

II a II sac h u~_ lt Iietts Secondary

SChool Princishypals Association bull Par tie i p 8 t _ ing schools have bElen divided i IIl tot h r e e d3ses - A B and C---llccord- Peter iDg to leagues Blrtek r

and comparable independent teams Action tn all three clasampe3 starts Saturday June L

In addition to the three divishyidon3 the baseball tourney amp1shyem radically JIrom the popular

Two Spots for Both BCl (IDnd Marry Five Bristol County League Howard Ferguson which teams

teams Gre still in contention for will represent the circuit in the tourney play ebampionship event

At this writing Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Stang SpaltamJ of Qartmouth who hold a lllim ene-game edge over their rivals are a solid choice to annex one of the two berths to be filled bi BCL teams The second spot 18 un literally up for grabs

Bishop Feehan High of Attieshyboro which led the circuit untll last week Durfee High of Fan River Attleboro and Taunton lire in close pursuit middotof Stang hoping tomiddot overcome the Sparshytans or at least lInish in the league runner-up berth Both the first and second place finshyishers will8utomatically qualify

If either fim OX second place II decided by Monday May 21 league officials w~ have to DOUty the tournament Director

No~tons Lancers in Need cf Help I h e Narragansett league Class B - Southem

whkh got a head start on the its Iud Old Colony champ ft NaITlIlshyv er area Clrcu conc es gansett runner-upleague play today First place

middot Somerset travels to New Bed- Narragansett champ ~ Olcll ford to meet Holy Family High Colony runner-up Case High of Swansea entell-middotmiddot South Shore champ VB Hockshytains Dighton-Rehoboth West- omock runner-up port hoss Msgr Prevost High Hockomock cpamp vs South

middotof Fall River and Dima]l Voce- ShQre runner-up tional nlso of Fall River will 0I Am f N rth E stobe t Se k Iver es 0 0 a n a e o~k

Entering the final week of ac-middot middot tion Somerset and seekonk are in the top two spots in tbe 8tanding They loom the more likely to corral Class B tourney berths But DightOn-Rehoboth Case and Westwrt trail the sec ODd place club by oIl1yone game If the race ends in II tie ]league officials wlll have ample time to schedule play-off games before the tourney deadline

Pairings for Class Bare

Selecting Union PITTSBURGH (NC)-Twentyshy

five maintenance workers at Duquesne University here in Pennsylvania have left their jobs pending a detell1llnation as to which union will represent the workers The remaining 115 members of the maintenance erew lIlre not involved in the atrike which was called by the 2li who are represented by the tJmted Electrical WorkersUnion

Although it occurs infrequentshyly a team does not have to win Its league to represent its league in tourney eompetition

The Bristol County league champion is slated to play the

bull Bay State League runner-up in first round action with the Bay State champs taking on the County runner-up The winners would then meet in second round play

Pairings for Class A are Class A - Southem

Suburban champ w Middleshy8llX runnerup

Middlesex champ ft Suburshyban runner-up Bay state ehamp VB Bristol runner-up

Bristol champ V8 Bay sta~ runnerup

-Tech lxlsketban competition lllll order to qualifyfor the Tech a team mt1BSt win 70 per cent cd its games but onlythe leagu~ champions ond runner-ups M~ eligible ~r playmiddotiImiddotbasebalL

In both Class A andClass B iitOtalof i6 teams will qualify 1lt7middotmiddotmiddotJiY

for the diamond elimination event~ E~~ Will pai1i~ipate in

the nortlHln division and eight in the southern bracllet The winners in each bracket will meet in the Eastern- Massacilushy

llletts fi~ Preliminary games will be played on June 1 4 and 6 The finals are scheduloo June 8

Class C competition will coIi-BiEt of eight clubs in only one division Titlists in seven smallshyDChooI le1gues and one indeshypendent selected by the tournashy

ment coJiunittee Will comprise the field fur this tliil-d group

and Mansfield 1m the Hockoshymock circuit appear to be out of the running this season

Fo~ Class C schools Its Winmiddot or youre out Only the league champions will play in the championships The winner of the Capeway Conference will meet the Cape and Vineyard champ in opening round play Dennis-YarDlQuth and Sandshywich are the likely opponents

The only other school located within the confines of the diocshyesan territorial limits that has an outside ~hance of qualifying for the tournament is Norton of the Tri-Valley Conference The Lancers however will need some outside help if they are to overcome league leading Millis The Tri-Valley champs will take on the Dual County League champions Defending Class C champ Ashland again leading the Dual Co~nty is heavily favored to repeat both in league ond state competition

NOT A BALL-ITS GUM Yem might get the idea that a pitched ban is lodged in the mask of this young Vancouver BC catcher but it isnt a ball This young ma is trying to prove he is just as efficient behillld the plate as he is at blowing bubble gum NC ~middothoto

Stresses Inter~cicdmiddotmiddotPartnership As Solution to Racial Problem

CLEVELAND (NC) - A Nashy world would be better off lr tional ASsociation for Advanceshy iou hadnt gotten involved Jm

ment of Colored People official asserted here interracial part shynership is the key to oolution of the racial problem but it cannot be a partnership dom inated by either race

Dr John A Morrell NAACP assistant nat ion a 1 director speaking at the Cleveland Cathshyltnlic Interracial Councils annual Interracial Justice Awards banshyquet said the nation today is aj an unprecedented crossroads but the interracial way is the democratic part to justice

He spoke in place of Roy Wishydns NAACP national~ director who was with the U S delega- tion at the United Nations con vocation on human rights lin Tehran Iran -

Angry Voices There are angry Negro voiees

raised in protest because develshyopment of opportunity in recent years does not apply to twoshythirds of the Negro population he saidmiddot The kind of jobs they are capable of filling are vanshyishing from the economy he added

But if a fruitful partnership is to continue between the white and Negro the burden of know- ing the truth about Negro hisshytory must be borne by white as well as Negro Dr Morsell said

Vie are all fighting a bitter legacy of generations White people have to know where they stand and why Once you assume the burden of work toward interracial justice you assume the responsibilities be continued

If you are not going to ~

sume them then you and fhe

the first place Informed PariDership

Dr Morsell said a mere sPirit of commitment is not enough to

survive over the hard going Work must be based on a part shynership that is informed intelshyligent understanding and resil shyient he said

The interracial awards were presented to Father Edwan Camille assistant Catholic Charshyities director here and Thom811 C Westropp president of Womshyens Federal Savings and Loan Association

Westropp was cited for his efforts towards opening the

doors of banking and credit 1m the Cleveland area to all ciUshyzens regardless of race creed 011

color while Father CarniDe was cited for his leadership as director of Project Peace (~

irner-city diocesan organizati~ working with the poor mostly Negroes) and for his work as co-chairman of the first tri-faith Greater Cleveland Conference on Religion and Race

ELECTRICAl -Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

SS lPlE1rIEllt amp JgtAIDlj

$103 Womens Club Rose E Sullivan

$50 Joseph P Conaty

$35 Belen M amp William J

De7 $33

Mr amp Mrs James F McMahcm $25

Mrs Margaret Daly amp Mary John Dolan ~illiam Daley amp Mary Esther Mr amp Mrs Stanley M -laniek

~50 In memory of MrsMarga~

W Pow~rs RodneY S DeCecco

$26 Mr amp Mrs John Soula

$25 Edward Healey Mr amp Mrs Michael McCartbiY Mr amp Mrs James Crosson Mrs Gertrude Lomas Mr amp Mrs Norman GagnOOl

ST JOHN TEE BAPTlIS11

$30 St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ampt Jean Baptiste $25

Mr amp Mrs Ovila Caron Henri Demers

In memory of Mr amp lVlrm bullWilliam Sheehan

Open to An PORTLAND (NC)-The seeshy

ond annual Catholic youth conshyvention of the Portland Diocese has opened the convention to all Catholic students of the dioshycese in order to spread the agtOlgto tolate of youth to youth Thll

)faine convention has comprised only students who have takes themiddot youth leadership trainlJnl1 courses

Dont Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH

DO faJse teeth drop slip or wobblo when you talk eat laugh or sneeze Dont be annoyed and embarr1lEsetll lkllh hanl11caps FASTEETH Bamp

e (non-acid) powder to SPr1n~Ikle on your plates keeps false teetb more firmly set Gives confident feel~ Ing Of security and added comfort No gummy gooey taste or feellncr Dentures that 6t are essential to health see your dentist regulorly oet FASTEETH at alll1rug countemJ

o

WYman 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD MASS

IfIIfJltk del1WM

S H~~uO~ Oil

SAVE MONEY 0 OUROILHEATI bull eatt

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

Iritai~ If S)crap SuPPITreg~~5n Acts Of Re~(j[jmlt~oml

LONDON (NC)-It looks as if Britain is at long last glOing to stop suppressing the monasteries-officially that 0

Legal experts sifting through lenturies of forgotten laws clutshyooling the records have found (hat the Suppression of Reli shygious Houses Acts of 1535 and 0039 have never been repealed

They are among 155 statutes weeded out from the statute IJ)ooks between 1239 and 1705middot lmd now to be definitively leshy~aled by a special act of Par-Iliament

These two acts enforced the eosure and pillaging of Catholic monasteries friaries and other religious houses throughout the WINS nsc Chaplain

eountry following King Henry (Captain) Angelo J LitekyVIIIs break with Rome in 1534

assigned to the 199th InfanshyJhey brought vast fortunes On goods property and mog of try Brigade in Vietnam has ell land to the kings favorites been awarded the Distinshyoome of whose families have reshy guished Service Cross forWned their wealth to this day extraordinary heroism SevshyIgnored in Practice

Of course the laws against erely wounded when Viet me Roman Catholic Church Cong ambushed a US infanshyIhave long ago been shelved and try company Ohaplain Lit shyIgnored in practice The reli shy eky braved flying bullets toous houses are back probably

rescue and minister tomore numerous than before iIome have even reoccupied the WQunded and dying meR 0ld sites they hadmiddot before the lReformation

Another notable measure ~ewlfk ~[p)regID Gingled out for repeal is the 1loleration Act of 1688 This act W51f)$ ~WIfltdl although in itself it did not help

NEW YORK (NC)-The Adshy~he Catholics marked the end of

vocate weekly newspaper of1lhe Protestant Reformation and the Newark Archdiocese wont1he beginning of religious tolershythe first-place Silver Medalation in Britain Awarti for weekly newspapersIt allowed freedom of worship in the annual public serviceClgt Protestant Trinitarian Nonshycompetition sponsored by theoonformists provided theiT New York chapter of the Pubiicmeetings were opento the pubshy

Relations Society of AmericaIlk it did not relieve the existing The award was for a five-part

fenaWes of those days against analysis ttl the ills besetting the ~atholics other breakaway Newark public school system lhcnestants or Jews but it was )he analysis was written by a hisberic beginning It has been Advocate news editor Ed Grant ltJeseribed as the Great Oharter and was an examination into ~ religious freedom and the one of the areas of dissatisfacshy~umph ofc9mmon ~ense tion which led to widespread

rioting in Newark last Summer

The series ran lri the newsshylJays Help for Poor paper last september and Octoshy

lPeCice First ~eeds ber The Public Rellitlons SocishyMIAMI (NC)-The Catholic ety award - silver medals are (lihurch in this nation today awarded in each of five cateshy

gories-are given for the mostauast address itself to the presshynoteworthy contributions bullbull 0 toiloing needs of the poor and dis-

~vantaged as well as the better public ~derstanding of ltJnICial issue of peace says the _ community problems in the New

4Tchbishop of Miami York metropolitan area Archbishop Coleman F Calshy New s p a per 8 magazines 0011 following announcement of broadcasting an d television middotGte establishment of the ecclesshy media in the New York-New iastical province of Miami and Jersey-Connecti~ut metropolitan tMs appointment as its first area are eligible for the awards l)rehbishop stressed that the (fhurch must be concerned with ibe problems of the time in Retired ArttlhJboshop S)Vhich we exist Gets College lHlonorThe g~eatest problems at present are the problems of the DUBUQUE ( NC) - Retired disadvantaged the poor and Archbishop Edward D Howard Utase who are in need and of of Portland Ore has been named oourse peace he smiddotaid for Loras Colleges 1968 John

It is more difficult for us to Fitzgerald Kennedy Award The LiOlve in any real way the prob- prelate is a former president of iems that are our concern until the college we have a measure of peace The citation and gold medal And it is the prayer of all of us annual award honoring an out Chat peace will be established as standing Amercian will be preshyiluickly as possible on an honorshy sen ted to the archbishop at the able basis o college commencement cereshy

monies June 2 Camp Directory Archbishop Howard 90 a nashy

Nltlw available from the Nashy ti ve of Cresco Iowa and a Loras lItonal Catholic Camping Assn alumnus was ordained to the ~ 131~ Massachusetts Ave priesthood in 1906middot He became lM- W Washington D C 20005 president of the college in 1921 Is the 1968 Directory of Catholic In 1924 he was consecrated to ~mps which lists all known serve as auxiliary bishop of DavshyearriPs in the U S giving acshy enport He became archbishop of Civities charges dates open and Portland in 1926 and retired in lIbailing addresses 1966

National CYOPlans LeadershipTraining shyImpa~t to Aid Priests Adult Admiddotvisors

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tbe through the introduction of BaWmore June 23-28 ehicagoNational Catholic Youth Organshy leadership methodology which July 1-5 Boston July 14-19 ization Federation will launch a facilitates maximum involveshy Sen Antonio July 28-Aug 3 training program in June called ment 00 the local level and Denver Aug 11-16 and San Impaot be help priests and hence maximum commitment JFaoancisoo Aug 25-30 adults 00 work effectively with The National CYO Federation Dr Donald Ebalt a professhyteenagers in a leisure time proshy will sponsor six sessiOns this lIlional trainbig eonsul1lant of gram summer to train diocesan CYO Washington D c win diiecl

The program was designed in staffs m 1lhe use of the newmiddot ead11ab cooperation with Leadership program lhey win )e held m A pilot Jtudy of the effectiveshyResources Inc a firm _of beshy DeBS of Impact on a group of havior scientists -rolulbteers from the NewarlkAddress Graduates

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishy archdiocese was held at the SOUTH BEND (HC) -Mel-rector of the Youth Department Benedictine Retreat House ill

Jdte-rite Patriarcib Maximoo VUnited States Catholic Confershy jNewton N J ence in announcing ttie new Kakimof Antioch and Dr Ilhirtymiddot persons representashyprogram said tives of youth adult advisorsJames A Perkins of Cornell

The goal 01 Impact is 00 help and priest moderators met withUniversity will be speakers atthe priests who are moderators representattives of the CYO

the 123rd annual cOnW~ncementof CYO the ad~lt advisors and Federation staff and a member youth participating in CYO toshy exerci~ Sundly June 2 at Of Leadership rResources Inc ward maximumpersonal growth Notrlte Dame University 110 assess and to evaluate 1mpaltL

(Cathedral Camp-Resident and Day Camp for Boys

O~ Lady of the L_ke Day Camp fOr Girls

Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON LONG POND ROUTE 18 EAST FREETOWN MAS~

~ RESIDENT CAMP 49th Season June 30 thru August 24 - a Week Season

Diocesan seminar-ians - College Students amp Teachers Under direction StaH of a Diocesan Priest

Saili~g swimming water skiing horseback riding riflery archeryPrograni hiking overnight camping trips ~rts amp crafts Indian crafts camp crafts athletic (team amp individual) competition and inter-camp cOmpetition professional tutorial service available

Private beach large luxurious camphouse dining hall modernfacilities~ washrooms arts and crafts buildings camp store and office first aid and infirmary beautiful chapel overnight and weekend accomodashytions for parents

S WEEK PIERIOD $325 - 4 W~K PERIOD $165 - 2 weEK PERIOD $85

Cathedra~ Day Camp t=or Boys Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period

JULY W- AUGUST 23 Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period fEES INCLUDIE Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Horseback Riding Weekly Cook~Outs amp Milk Daily without Added Cost

--~----------------------------------------Our Lady of the Lake bay Camp For Girls

JULY l _ AUGUST 23 Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period

FEES INCLUD~Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Ilorseback Riding Weekly Cook-Outsmiddot Milk Daily without Added Cost

o

For further information write to

REV WALlER A 5ULLlVANDiredor PO Box 63 - East Freetown Mass 02717

Page 17: 05.23.68

SUMY pons Nuns (l)ffi) AifrMdl~$o

Re$M~~e~o trMture D~[freg~UDrru~ WASHINGTON (NC)-Resulto

of a survey of all United States nuns reveals a high ooceptance of post-Vatican II changes anell an eagerness robecome morrc involved in the inner city and poverty apostolates

The B1UVey conducted bythe Conference of Major Superiors of Women dlJring 1966 was the first extensive attempt to assess resources and attitudes of reli shygious communicenties c1 women and their memberll in the United States

The JPecific coal of the surshyvey was to assess the resources and determine 1ampIe responses that Religious are making and ean make to the invitation 13shysued in Vatican Us Decree on the Renewal of Religious ~e

More than 135000 Sisters parshyticipated in the survey respondshying to 649 questionnaire items covering religious beliefs atti shytudes toward change edu~shy

tional background present ocshycupation and future plans comshymunity life and proposals for future ohange

Results were processed by 00 Sister-sociologists across the country with the use of comshyputers

llleason for lIAlavnng The survey showed 1827 oil

the 175000 U S Sisters-107 per cent-left religious life durshying 1966 Of those Sisters only 869 had taken final vows In an interview with the NC News Servicemiddota spokesman for the Conference of Major Superiors of Women (CMSW) said most Sisters who have remained feel that a major reason for the inshy

ltereased number of Sisters leavshymg religious life is an increased ~penness to the idea within the lfcligious community

She said that the increased fucus on personal development has caused many Sisters to see that they are not suited to the religious life and that they will find areater personal fulfillment elsewhere

Statistics on be division of labor among U S Sisters show 72 per cent are teachers eight per cent are involved in health work five per cent in catechetshyill~ and missionary work lmd tbr~ per cenmiddott in welfare work

Seventy per cent of the teachshyem ore in elementary school work 195 per cent in high school education and 68 per

eent teach at the college level Of those involved in health care 18 per cent in health administration and 62 per cent in direct care jobs

lEnter New lFienlll1s The survey showed Sisters

have a strong desire to become involved in adult education inshyner city work pre-school teachshying and other s~ial work and to have greater contact with their local community Nuns expressed eagnerness to enter fieldc where few Sisters are now working In 1966 13 per cent ot U S Sisters were engaged in adult education 82 pel cent in speshycial education 31 per cent in poverty work and 06 per cent in migrant education The surshyvey indicafes that there will be a dramatic change in these figures in the next few years

Father Considine Leaves PC$tr Continued fC0m Page One

man of the U S Bishops Comshymittee for Latin America

Bishop Bernardin prai~ed the work of Father Considine in the Latin America Bureau noting

iota progress under his direction since its inauguration in 1960

It has been a labor of love for Father Considine he saici whose long standing interest in the people of Latin America and of other developing areaa is well known

Maryknon Father Considine will return

to his writing and teaching asshymgnments at Maryknoll Ossinshy

lng N Y where he had served as publications director before becoming director of the IAiltin

America Bureau He holds editorial and advishy

lOry posts with several internashytional organizations and servell DS a member of the Council OIl

Foreign Relations He was amp

member of the National Advishysory Council of the Peace Corps from 1961 to 1966 He also founded and directed Fides Inshyternational Service in Rome an Information and research unit of

the Holy See He was born Oct 9 1897 C1shy

1-

~ATIlGR CONSIDINE

da1ned in 1923 and received II

licentiate in sacred theology from the Catholic University of America in 1924 He has reshyceived honorary degrees from Fordham University Manhatshytsnville St John University St Benedicts Atchison and is the author of 10 books on Latin America Asia and Africa and hall edited several others

L9ng-Range

Father Considine Sllid that he IlIaW the Latin America Bureau as set for the proseution ~ tl

vigorous nation-wide program 10 serve our Latin American eonfreres for the next- generashytion through the year 2000 -and into ~ 21st century He felt lIlllch 11 long-range view was necessarJ because at stake are important socio-religious adshyVDnces among hundreds of milshyHons cd people Latin Americas leaders need time for these advances

Be pointed out thatsome of the best Church leadership tbroughout the Catholic world today is found in Latin AmershyICD In turn he noted our U S bi~hops are quietly acceptshying international responsibiliti~s

as never before Father Considine said that the

program of the U S Bishops Committee for Latin Americn ~ablishes the heavy day-to-day work of the Latin America Bureau

Jgtersonnel Father Considine said that

llIODle 60 per cent of all U S apOstolic personnel overseas throughout the world works in Latin America with more Ulan 600 Latin American parishes served by U S priests Major Superiors of women ha~e 2500 Sisters in Latin America PAVLA has put more than 800 laymen there for three-year terms and U S bishops hnv~

more than 300 priests working in Latin America Annual fundshying for Latin Amerietl by U S Catholics ~~ $1f) millioll

SJJREET SCENE This was a busy street scene in the nations capital at the encampment of the Poor Peoples Campaign near the Washington monument More than 100~OOO- protestors are expected to be in Washington for Memorial Day NC Photo

OUlll lLAIDY OlF ll1HI1amp

ASS1lJMJgtJlJlON $26

Clara Rose amp Family $25

Mr amp-Mrs Jose F Cruz St Martin de Porres G~

Mi CARMEL $100

In memory of Mr amp Mrs J~ ilino Simoes

Rev Antonio P Pinto middotCM $75

Rev Azitonio P Pinto em $60

Mary i Ltuiz $50

Mr amp lVIrs Albino daSilv8 1IIt Carmel Womans Club

$30 Manuel Bettencourt Mr amp Mrs Kenneth lltinu

John Rodrigues $26

Olivia M Luiz $25

Cecelia Bettencourt CbildYeli of Mary Mt Carmel ~ouft

Units James Perry Mr amp lnl Manuel G Souza Jr

Mr amp Mrs Arthur Caetano Mr amp Mrs Charles Frate Mramp Mrs Lauran Silva

OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HE]P

~26

Mrs Amelia E Bariteau $25

Dr amp Mrs Francis Green

OURLADY OFPU~GATOB~ l)1I00

In memory of Alex J Ka1He from Cltpe Coo Sportswear ~

lnc Fairhaven Lumber Co

$30 Atty George R Morad euroJ

Atty ~e E Morad $25

Josephine David 1bl mlE1lllllOllY of George A EI-Hillow Mr ampgt Mra ~rge JThomas Mr amp IIIlm Hykel G Simon

ST KIlldAN nSO

Rev WilMeT J Boekley

U~~ amp Wmeentde PaW ~

~ iWa1 1kntley

$2S AlmgeAo OH1feira

SAClllIampDlHlJEAlltT $25

Alexander Caruso

c S11 JAMES

$55 rulllbull amp lVIrs Francis O Quinn

$50 lilred Kelley

$40 William OMalley

~1 A Friend

$3~

Mr amp Mrs Jr Hugh Barry $25

Mr amp Mrs Andrew ONeil Mr 8 Mrs Robert Arnett

ST JOSEPH

$450 sa Josephs Church Societies

$70 Mr amp Mrs Maurice Dansereau

1130 II Mr amp Mrs Luigi Fiano lk Fmniy

125 Mr amp Mrs Thomas Weaver MI amp Mm Maurice Lamonshy

tagne Mrbull Mrs Raymond Rondel1

ST TBERIESA $100

Eugene Lemieux

Sturtevant 6 Hook lEst 1897

Bude~s Supplies 2343 Purchase Street

New ~dforcJ

996-5661

THE ANCHOR- ~ 7 lfhuvs May 23 1968

~regreg [copy~G~ ~O~

Oa1l ~MOO~ []M~Orru NEWARK (NC)-A charge (l(

apparent ~racial discriminatiom in the assignment of tenants 00 public housing here is Oontainoo in s report issued by the New Jersey Advisory Committee 00 the U S Commission em CiWl Rights

It said the Newark Housing Authority follows a policy ef permitting people applying fOlr placement in public housin~ projects to choose the project tm whieh they want to live

lit said this policy has ~

llributed to the segregation Cl1I public housing and recomshymended that t1he policy 00 abandoned in favor of first-come first-serVed basis

The report noted that Q01l1li vast housing projects nre locatell in Newarks Central Ward-tho scene of widespread noting D year ago and of two massiv~ firo disasters this spring-and tll~

they are more thanSO Negf~ ~ccupied

It further charged that them Js U a disparity in maintenanceo between the predominantly N~

gro and the rgtredominantly whi~

projects a complaint lIiTegNgt leadership has frequently medea

It termed living conditiom b the Central Ward projects opshypressive and that the proj~cto

are JIOor)y designed llt recomshymeld~d that additionaI ~ev areas for young children ~Gl

meeting places for odww ~ teenagers be provided

Higher ~arnings

ON YOUR SAVINGS Per Annum

I W Ask abow

INVESTMEIlaquo

SAVINGS

CERTIFICATES

$IlFm - Savings insu~ed safe IIlyJ liII ClEerny of the US Government

IlVAILABIU1Y - No notice VCllIirfpound Your funds available when ooedea

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Assets over $41ooo0llC

FIRST fEDERAL SaYings and Loan Associatio1ll

of F~L~ RIVER shy~---__-------------~~~~ First Federal saYIngs bull Loan At ~

1 Borth Main St Fall llliTe1 Ibu ~ ~ Ii 02722 P1Imle 674-4001 ~ ~ ~ke llpplicatlOll oJ phone t1 fOOl wldl ~ o ~ o 0 IlllIivithllll Aceoullt 0 Jont Ac4cwot f)

PIlllse Cl3len II SllVings llCCOUCt blcelaquol

o eAomelamp) = ~ 0 ~ Address 0 ~ l 0 clleck In the amount of e--- ~ ~ 0 ~ _~___~~~_~uuJ

SPECIAL RATES FOR Schoo~ Outings and Picnics

amfACi MANAGERI - UNCOLN PARK 999-6984 636-2744

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs May 23196~

The Parish Parade OUR LADY OF ANGELS SACRED HEART WALL RIVER NORTH ATTLEBORO

Altar bOys willsponsor a cake The CCD program will be lJ81e Sunday May 26 following canonically established Friday Iill1 Masses June 21 the feast of the Sacred

Masses today the feast of the Heart The program will include Ascerision will be at 7 and 9 a 730 evening Mass followed AM and -1215 4 5 and 7 PM by proclamation and reception Confessions will be heard be- of CCD members and a social ~re each Mass hour

The Summer Mass schedule CCD students in grades 6 to will begin Sunday June 2 with 12 will attend a folk Mass and Masses from 6 to noon on the sing-out at La Salefte Shrine hour Monday night May 27 Tnose

Monday May 27 through Fri- participating will leave the ooy May 31 there will be church school yard at 645 and will be services at 7 each evening The returned at 930 living rosary will be sponsored Confirmation ceremonies will by the Holy Rosary Sodality be ~ld at 730 Sunday night Monday night the Council of May 26 Catholic Women on Tuesday ther societies on Wednesday and Thlusday and the Children New Bedford ~ M~~ on lfrIday

ST MARY HOLY NAME $25iALL RIVER Mr amp Mrs Roger Goyette

Contemporary music will acshy The Shea Family company the 1115 Mass Sunday Mrs Vivian Wegrzyniakmorning May 26

New CYO officers are Robert ST LAWRENCE amplois president Paul Durin $200 rice-president Polly Rockett Dr amp Mrs Stanley Koczera eecretary-treasurer A Friend

$125 OUR LADY OF FATIMA Dr amp Mrs Robert Srnan sWANSEA $106

The Womens Guild will hold William E King Its annual penny sale at 730 $100

Monday night May 27 in the Dr amp Mrs William Walsh ehurch hall on Gardners Neck $75 lRoad Rev William F OConnell

A Penny Sale will be held Dr amp Mrs James Bolton MondaYMay 27 at 730 in the $60 dlurch hall A Friend

$50 IMMACULATE CONClEPlIION Teremiddotsa Ruth amp John HarneyNEW BEDFORD Victor T Kondi

Parisnioners will celebrate John L Powell rthe feast of Santo Ohristo this Loretta Lamarre Sunday with a roast beef dinner $45 served from noon to 2 with Mrs Mary B Wheatoil

tickets available at the door $40 lRefreshments and entertainment Mr amp Mrs John Connor will be on the afternoon and Mr amp Mrs Thomas J Longevening program $35

A procession and auction will Mr amp Mrs James M Kearneyfollow the dinner with various Mrmiddot amp Mrs Leo St Aubin Holy Name Society units parti shy $30 cipating in the procession Mr amp Mrs Albert Anderson

Mr amp Mrs Joseph Griffin OUR LADY OF V()T(RY Mr amp Mrs Walter L9veridgeeENTERVILLE Mr camp Mrs Myron Tripp

New officers of the Womens $28amptiild are Mrs John J Pendershy Patricia Connor ~st pre~ident MrS James Murshy $26 phy and Mrs John McBarron Mr amp Mrs Thomas SullivanVoice-president Mrs George Mr amp Mrs Charles BerryReale recording secretary Mrs $25 Richard Griffith treasurer Mr amp Mrs Robert Bedard

A Communion dinner at Mr amp Mrs Albert McMulleneummaquid Inn will follow Mr amp Mrs Theodore J CalnanlB30 Mass Monday night June Mr amp Mrs Alfred Couto Mr amproo Mrs Gilbert Noonan of Falshy Mrs Manuel Guerreira Josephmouth will speak Reservations P Mullen should be made with Mrs Edshy Agnes Proctor Mr amp Misward Welch or Mrs- Stephen Joseph Porter Mr amp MrsOBrien Jr by Thursday June 6 James Ryan Mr amp Mrs Paul

saunders ST THERESA Mr amp Mrs Merton WalkerSOUTH ATTLEBORO Mr amp Mrs John F SullivanMiss Patricia Makin of the

Diocesan CCD Board spoke at the annual Communion breakshy Fall River fast of the Confraternity of

ST MARYS CATHEDRALChristian Mothers Fourteen $50 new members were received at

Gertrude OLoughlinthe monthly meeting arid new officers were installed by Rev $26

In memory of Caroline CasellaGerard J Chabot moderator $25They include Mrs Patricia Helen Burns Mr amp MrsBiziak president Mrs Georshy

George Johnston Corky Rowgette Vachon vice-president Club Rits OLaughlin FrancisMrs Kathy Lamarre treasurer amp Lena MoranMrs Dolores Leedham and Mrs

Mr amp Mrs Carlton GastallBeverly Sousa secretaries Mrs Raymond Reynolds

~CULATE CONC~ON BLESSED SACRAMENTlAUNTON $200A Spring Social and D~nce Rev Herve Jalbert

for the benefit of the church $50sponsored by the Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Michael Felixand the St Vincent de Paul Soshy $36ciety will be held Friday May Mr amp Mrs Richard Hamel24 from 8 to 12 at Lewis Lodge $30Winthrop Street Route 44 A W Root Beer StandTaunton Refreshments will be served Tickets are $200 per lIIIOLY CROSS person and wiU be available at $50 the door Holy Rosary Sodality

lt

PATRIARCH His Holishyness Vazken I of the Armeshynian (Monophysite) Chu~h which comprises five-milli~n communicants in the Soviet Union Near and Far East and the Americas is visiting in the US He paid a visit to the National Shrine of the

Immaculate Conception whilein the nations capital NC Photo

NOTRE DAME $40

The Anne-Marie MasSe fami17 $35

Conrad N Desmarais $25

Norman J A Belanger Rose D Perron

HOLY ROSARY $30

The DePaola Family $25

Mrs Philomena Germane

~CULATE CONCEPTION $50

A Frie~d $40

Mrs Diolinda Wilson $26

In memory of Charlotte DJicholson

$25 Holy Name Society Knights

of the Altar A Friend MlU7 Whitehead John R Burgess In memory of Daniel R Be

Manuel R Pimental Joseph Francoeur

SACRED HEART $l)O ()

~ Katherine D Adams $75

Mr amp Mrs William J Sullivan $5~

Margaret Morriss M~ry V amp Alice C HarrlngtoD Frederick B McD9nald

$31 Frances Mmiddot Cummings Mary C Cummings

$30 Mr amp Mrs John J HarrlngtOil

$28 Florence M Sullivan

$25 Vincent DAndrea Edward

Leary Mr ~ MrsN J Meyer Mary Louise OSullivan John J Sullivan middotMargaret F Lowney

ST MICHAEL $25

Manuel Rogers amp Sons At~

Manuel M Rezendes Henry Leshytendre ~eonardo Cabeceiras

Gerald Mulrooney A Friend edf Catholic Charities

ST ANNE ft JI08ZIII $30

Mrs Rhea Saurette 101at Vincent de Paul ConferenceIrene Theroux leapt amp Mrs Joseph J OCoDshy$26 nellThe Gauthier Family $25

Mr amp Mrs Reginald lerive

A Friend

Belshy $50

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J OCo nell k

$30 St rosephs Mens Club

ST ANTH()NY $25 OF THE DESERT Mr amp Mrs John L Mercer

$100 Mr amp Mrs Daniel W OCoDoshyChor Bishop Joseph Eid nell Dr amp Mrs James J Sabra

$25 SANTO CHRiSTO Rev Kenneth A Michael Mrs August Badway $50

ST ANTHONY OF PADUA $125

Rev Josephmiddot M Ferreira $100

Atty amp Mrs Milton R Silva

StVincent de Paul Society $30

Rev Ernesto R Borges $26

Mr amp Mrs Alfred 1 Cam~ $25

$50 Franco Family Singersmiddot

$25 Mrs Sofia Pacheco Antonio T Cabral

Mary amp Beatrice Costa~ SilD

CnristO Credit Union Manuel Medeiros Laureano Silva

AFriendFrank B Olivei

YDUR SONTHE PRIEST

HI HOLY PATHERS MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL DMURDH

A FUTURE

PRIEST NEEDS

bull SOMEONES HELP

TRAiN ASfSTER

Tau

HUNGER CANT

WAIT

Deai MonBr~orNolam

Please

return couponwith your

offering

Have you ever wished you had a son a priest Now you can hlilve a priest of your own-and ahare forever In all the good he does _ _ Throughout the Near East this month grateful bishops ara ordainlng new priests trained by people like youbullbullbullbull Their own families are toe poor to support them In training but good catholics In America adopted these semIshynarians encouraged them all the way to ordinashytionbullbullbullbull Insome Inspiring cases this support was given at personal sacrifice How can youbegln7 Write to us now Well ~end you the name of ~ young seminarian who needs you and he will write to you Make the payments for his training to suit your convenlence ($850 a month or $100 a year or the total $600 all at once) Join your sacrifices to his and at every Sacrifice of the Mass he will always remember who made It possible

4

Native Sisters In our 18 developingcountries are teaching children of the poor preparing them for First Communion giving medical care to leplrs cal)cer sufferers the aging A SisterS training Ialts two years costs $1250 a month $150 a year or $300 altogetherbullbullbullbull Well send you the name of a Sister you can train as soon as we receive your first payment She will pray for you and write toyou

n An9 day now you may receive a letter contalnn the Holy Fathers appeal for the forgotten Arab refugees-l4 million people without a country bullbullbull most of them destitute bullbullbull more thari half of them childrenbullbullbullbull By trelnlng these children foi middotfuture selfsufflcel]cy we can help brln peace and new selfmiddothelp to the Holy Land atlll divided by warbullbullbullbull But why walt for your mal Hunger cant walt Neither can peace Send your amplIft now in any amount ($500 $200 $100 $75 $50 $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 $2 $1) and the Holy Fathercan put It to work right away Qril1 $10 wlllleed family for a monthl -----~-~---~~---~-IlNCL08ID PLllAIl PIND $_ c_O~__ rFOR _

NAMI ___~

8TRIU ~~=

OlTt ~_eTATIl_lrIp OODII-

NIAll lAST WIILFAAI ASSaDIATtOrlaquo

NEAR EAST MISSIONS J

MSGR JOHN ClI NOLAN Natlonal5ecretary Write CATHOLIO NIlAR EAST WeLFARE Assoo ~30 Madson Avenue New York NY OOU telephonel 212vtJkon 6middot5840

CATHaLiD

19 DiJoridrrien Ere State r ourlitei

SChoelbOY leag~~Wmrn~regr~ Stii~Pretty Mu~h sampu [j)(Q)Mbt

By PETIm BARJrEK Nmon BitIh ~h

The gehooboy ba8ebaD mmpaignis cllNimatieaDy near- Inlaquo the climax of another spirited seasoo With approxishymately a week of competitioo Nllllaining oontlmdmg teams Me stmggling to keep their pennanf oopes alive while Wtling for the right to rep-JIe8eDt their ll e s pee t i v e leaguesin the nnand-eomin

-y- shy

Btate tournament The Eastshyem Massachusetts ehampionahip

baseball tournamen+ ClIffiMftl-~

tine of the wurney is tiPoDOOred bythe

II a II sac h u~_ lt Iietts Secondary

SChool Princishypals Association bull Par tie i p 8 t _ ing schools have bElen divided i IIl tot h r e e d3ses - A B and C---llccord- Peter iDg to leagues Blrtek r

and comparable independent teams Action tn all three clasampe3 starts Saturday June L

In addition to the three divishyidon3 the baseball tourney amp1shyem radically JIrom the popular

Two Spots for Both BCl (IDnd Marry Five Bristol County League Howard Ferguson which teams

teams Gre still in contention for will represent the circuit in the tourney play ebampionship event

At this writing Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Stang SpaltamJ of Qartmouth who hold a lllim ene-game edge over their rivals are a solid choice to annex one of the two berths to be filled bi BCL teams The second spot 18 un literally up for grabs

Bishop Feehan High of Attieshyboro which led the circuit untll last week Durfee High of Fan River Attleboro and Taunton lire in close pursuit middotof Stang hoping tomiddot overcome the Sparshytans or at least lInish in the league runner-up berth Both the first and second place finshyishers will8utomatically qualify

If either fim OX second place II decided by Monday May 21 league officials w~ have to DOUty the tournament Director

No~tons Lancers in Need cf Help I h e Narragansett league Class B - Southem

whkh got a head start on the its Iud Old Colony champ ft NaITlIlshyv er area Clrcu conc es gansett runner-upleague play today First place

middot Somerset travels to New Bed- Narragansett champ ~ Olcll ford to meet Holy Family High Colony runner-up Case High of Swansea entell-middotmiddot South Shore champ VB Hockshytains Dighton-Rehoboth West- omock runner-up port hoss Msgr Prevost High Hockomock cpamp vs South

middotof Fall River and Dima]l Voce- ShQre runner-up tional nlso of Fall River will 0I Am f N rth E stobe t Se k Iver es 0 0 a n a e o~k

Entering the final week of ac-middot middot tion Somerset and seekonk are in the top two spots in tbe 8tanding They loom the more likely to corral Class B tourney berths But DightOn-Rehoboth Case and Westwrt trail the sec ODd place club by oIl1yone game If the race ends in II tie ]league officials wlll have ample time to schedule play-off games before the tourney deadline

Pairings for Class Bare

Selecting Union PITTSBURGH (NC)-Twentyshy

five maintenance workers at Duquesne University here in Pennsylvania have left their jobs pending a detell1llnation as to which union will represent the workers The remaining 115 members of the maintenance erew lIlre not involved in the atrike which was called by the 2li who are represented by the tJmted Electrical WorkersUnion

Although it occurs infrequentshyly a team does not have to win Its league to represent its league in tourney eompetition

The Bristol County league champion is slated to play the

bull Bay State League runner-up in first round action with the Bay State champs taking on the County runner-up The winners would then meet in second round play

Pairings for Class A are Class A - Southem

Suburban champ w Middleshy8llX runnerup

Middlesex champ ft Suburshyban runner-up Bay state ehamp VB Bristol runner-up

Bristol champ V8 Bay sta~ runnerup

-Tech lxlsketban competition lllll order to qualifyfor the Tech a team mt1BSt win 70 per cent cd its games but onlythe leagu~ champions ond runner-ups M~ eligible ~r playmiddotiImiddotbasebalL

In both Class A andClass B iitOtalof i6 teams will qualify 1lt7middotmiddotmiddotJiY

for the diamond elimination event~ E~~ Will pai1i~ipate in

the nortlHln division and eight in the southern bracllet The winners in each bracket will meet in the Eastern- Massacilushy

llletts fi~ Preliminary games will be played on June 1 4 and 6 The finals are scheduloo June 8

Class C competition will coIi-BiEt of eight clubs in only one division Titlists in seven smallshyDChooI le1gues and one indeshypendent selected by the tournashy

ment coJiunittee Will comprise the field fur this tliil-d group

and Mansfield 1m the Hockoshymock circuit appear to be out of the running this season

Fo~ Class C schools Its Winmiddot or youre out Only the league champions will play in the championships The winner of the Capeway Conference will meet the Cape and Vineyard champ in opening round play Dennis-YarDlQuth and Sandshywich are the likely opponents

The only other school located within the confines of the diocshyesan territorial limits that has an outside ~hance of qualifying for the tournament is Norton of the Tri-Valley Conference The Lancers however will need some outside help if they are to overcome league leading Millis The Tri-Valley champs will take on the Dual County League champions Defending Class C champ Ashland again leading the Dual Co~nty is heavily favored to repeat both in league ond state competition

NOT A BALL-ITS GUM Yem might get the idea that a pitched ban is lodged in the mask of this young Vancouver BC catcher but it isnt a ball This young ma is trying to prove he is just as efficient behillld the plate as he is at blowing bubble gum NC ~middothoto

Stresses Inter~cicdmiddotmiddotPartnership As Solution to Racial Problem

CLEVELAND (NC) - A Nashy world would be better off lr tional ASsociation for Advanceshy iou hadnt gotten involved Jm

ment of Colored People official asserted here interracial part shynership is the key to oolution of the racial problem but it cannot be a partnership dom inated by either race

Dr John A Morrell NAACP assistant nat ion a 1 director speaking at the Cleveland Cathshyltnlic Interracial Councils annual Interracial Justice Awards banshyquet said the nation today is aj an unprecedented crossroads but the interracial way is the democratic part to justice

He spoke in place of Roy Wishydns NAACP national~ director who was with the U S delega- tion at the United Nations con vocation on human rights lin Tehran Iran -

Angry Voices There are angry Negro voiees

raised in protest because develshyopment of opportunity in recent years does not apply to twoshythirds of the Negro population he saidmiddot The kind of jobs they are capable of filling are vanshyishing from the economy he added

But if a fruitful partnership is to continue between the white and Negro the burden of know- ing the truth about Negro hisshytory must be borne by white as well as Negro Dr Morsell said

Vie are all fighting a bitter legacy of generations White people have to know where they stand and why Once you assume the burden of work toward interracial justice you assume the responsibilities be continued

If you are not going to ~

sume them then you and fhe

the first place Informed PariDership

Dr Morsell said a mere sPirit of commitment is not enough to

survive over the hard going Work must be based on a part shynership that is informed intelshyligent understanding and resil shyient he said

The interracial awards were presented to Father Edwan Camille assistant Catholic Charshyities director here and Thom811 C Westropp president of Womshyens Federal Savings and Loan Association

Westropp was cited for his efforts towards opening the

doors of banking and credit 1m the Cleveland area to all ciUshyzens regardless of race creed 011

color while Father CarniDe was cited for his leadership as director of Project Peace (~

irner-city diocesan organizati~ working with the poor mostly Negroes) and for his work as co-chairman of the first tri-faith Greater Cleveland Conference on Religion and Race

ELECTRICAl -Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

SS lPlE1rIEllt amp JgtAIDlj

$103 Womens Club Rose E Sullivan

$50 Joseph P Conaty

$35 Belen M amp William J

De7 $33

Mr amp Mrs James F McMahcm $25

Mrs Margaret Daly amp Mary John Dolan ~illiam Daley amp Mary Esther Mr amp Mrs Stanley M -laniek

~50 In memory of MrsMarga~

W Pow~rs RodneY S DeCecco

$26 Mr amp Mrs John Soula

$25 Edward Healey Mr amp Mrs Michael McCartbiY Mr amp Mrs James Crosson Mrs Gertrude Lomas Mr amp Mrs Norman GagnOOl

ST JOHN TEE BAPTlIS11

$30 St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ampt Jean Baptiste $25

Mr amp Mrs Ovila Caron Henri Demers

In memory of Mr amp lVlrm bullWilliam Sheehan

Open to An PORTLAND (NC)-The seeshy

ond annual Catholic youth conshyvention of the Portland Diocese has opened the convention to all Catholic students of the dioshycese in order to spread the agtOlgto tolate of youth to youth Thll

)faine convention has comprised only students who have takes themiddot youth leadership trainlJnl1 courses

Dont Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH

DO faJse teeth drop slip or wobblo when you talk eat laugh or sneeze Dont be annoyed and embarr1lEsetll lkllh hanl11caps FASTEETH Bamp

e (non-acid) powder to SPr1n~Ikle on your plates keeps false teetb more firmly set Gives confident feel~ Ing Of security and added comfort No gummy gooey taste or feellncr Dentures that 6t are essential to health see your dentist regulorly oet FASTEETH at alll1rug countemJ

o

WYman 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD MASS

IfIIfJltk del1WM

S H~~uO~ Oil

SAVE MONEY 0 OUROILHEATI bull eatt

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

Iritai~ If S)crap SuPPITreg~~5n Acts Of Re~(j[jmlt~oml

LONDON (NC)-It looks as if Britain is at long last glOing to stop suppressing the monasteries-officially that 0

Legal experts sifting through lenturies of forgotten laws clutshyooling the records have found (hat the Suppression of Reli shygious Houses Acts of 1535 and 0039 have never been repealed

They are among 155 statutes weeded out from the statute IJ)ooks between 1239 and 1705middot lmd now to be definitively leshy~aled by a special act of Par-Iliament

These two acts enforced the eosure and pillaging of Catholic monasteries friaries and other religious houses throughout the WINS nsc Chaplain

eountry following King Henry (Captain) Angelo J LitekyVIIIs break with Rome in 1534

assigned to the 199th InfanshyJhey brought vast fortunes On goods property and mog of try Brigade in Vietnam has ell land to the kings favorites been awarded the Distinshyoome of whose families have reshy guished Service Cross forWned their wealth to this day extraordinary heroism SevshyIgnored in Practice

Of course the laws against erely wounded when Viet me Roman Catholic Church Cong ambushed a US infanshyIhave long ago been shelved and try company Ohaplain Lit shyIgnored in practice The reli shy eky braved flying bullets toous houses are back probably

rescue and minister tomore numerous than before iIome have even reoccupied the WQunded and dying meR 0ld sites they hadmiddot before the lReformation

Another notable measure ~ewlfk ~[p)regID Gingled out for repeal is the 1loleration Act of 1688 This act W51f)$ ~WIfltdl although in itself it did not help

NEW YORK (NC)-The Adshy~he Catholics marked the end of

vocate weekly newspaper of1lhe Protestant Reformation and the Newark Archdiocese wont1he beginning of religious tolershythe first-place Silver Medalation in Britain Awarti for weekly newspapersIt allowed freedom of worship in the annual public serviceClgt Protestant Trinitarian Nonshycompetition sponsored by theoonformists provided theiT New York chapter of the Pubiicmeetings were opento the pubshy

Relations Society of AmericaIlk it did not relieve the existing The award was for a five-part

fenaWes of those days against analysis ttl the ills besetting the ~atholics other breakaway Newark public school system lhcnestants or Jews but it was )he analysis was written by a hisberic beginning It has been Advocate news editor Ed Grant ltJeseribed as the Great Oharter and was an examination into ~ religious freedom and the one of the areas of dissatisfacshy~umph ofc9mmon ~ense tion which led to widespread

rioting in Newark last Summer

The series ran lri the newsshylJays Help for Poor paper last september and Octoshy

lPeCice First ~eeds ber The Public Rellitlons SocishyMIAMI (NC)-The Catholic ety award - silver medals are (lihurch in this nation today awarded in each of five cateshy

gories-are given for the mostauast address itself to the presshynoteworthy contributions bullbull 0 toiloing needs of the poor and dis-

~vantaged as well as the better public ~derstanding of ltJnICial issue of peace says the _ community problems in the New

4Tchbishop of Miami York metropolitan area Archbishop Coleman F Calshy New s p a per 8 magazines 0011 following announcement of broadcasting an d television middotGte establishment of the ecclesshy media in the New York-New iastical province of Miami and Jersey-Connecti~ut metropolitan tMs appointment as its first area are eligible for the awards l)rehbishop stressed that the (fhurch must be concerned with ibe problems of the time in Retired ArttlhJboshop S)Vhich we exist Gets College lHlonorThe g~eatest problems at present are the problems of the DUBUQUE ( NC) - Retired disadvantaged the poor and Archbishop Edward D Howard Utase who are in need and of of Portland Ore has been named oourse peace he smiddotaid for Loras Colleges 1968 John

It is more difficult for us to Fitzgerald Kennedy Award The LiOlve in any real way the prob- prelate is a former president of iems that are our concern until the college we have a measure of peace The citation and gold medal And it is the prayer of all of us annual award honoring an out Chat peace will be established as standing Amercian will be preshyiluickly as possible on an honorshy sen ted to the archbishop at the able basis o college commencement cereshy

monies June 2 Camp Directory Archbishop Howard 90 a nashy

Nltlw available from the Nashy ti ve of Cresco Iowa and a Loras lItonal Catholic Camping Assn alumnus was ordained to the ~ 131~ Massachusetts Ave priesthood in 1906middot He became lM- W Washington D C 20005 president of the college in 1921 Is the 1968 Directory of Catholic In 1924 he was consecrated to ~mps which lists all known serve as auxiliary bishop of DavshyearriPs in the U S giving acshy enport He became archbishop of Civities charges dates open and Portland in 1926 and retired in lIbailing addresses 1966

National CYOPlans LeadershipTraining shyImpa~t to Aid Priests Adult Admiddotvisors

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tbe through the introduction of BaWmore June 23-28 ehicagoNational Catholic Youth Organshy leadership methodology which July 1-5 Boston July 14-19 ization Federation will launch a facilitates maximum involveshy Sen Antonio July 28-Aug 3 training program in June called ment 00 the local level and Denver Aug 11-16 and San Impaot be help priests and hence maximum commitment JFaoancisoo Aug 25-30 adults 00 work effectively with The National CYO Federation Dr Donald Ebalt a professhyteenagers in a leisure time proshy will sponsor six sessiOns this lIlional trainbig eonsul1lant of gram summer to train diocesan CYO Washington D c win diiecl

The program was designed in staffs m 1lhe use of the newmiddot ead11ab cooperation with Leadership program lhey win )e held m A pilot Jtudy of the effectiveshyResources Inc a firm _of beshy DeBS of Impact on a group of havior scientists -rolulbteers from the NewarlkAddress Graduates

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishy archdiocese was held at the SOUTH BEND (HC) -Mel-rector of the Youth Department Benedictine Retreat House ill

Jdte-rite Patriarcib Maximoo VUnited States Catholic Confershy jNewton N J ence in announcing ttie new Kakimof Antioch and Dr Ilhirtymiddot persons representashyprogram said tives of youth adult advisorsJames A Perkins of Cornell

The goal 01 Impact is 00 help and priest moderators met withUniversity will be speakers atthe priests who are moderators representattives of the CYO

the 123rd annual cOnW~ncementof CYO the ad~lt advisors and Federation staff and a member youth participating in CYO toshy exerci~ Sundly June 2 at Of Leadership rResources Inc ward maximumpersonal growth Notrlte Dame University 110 assess and to evaluate 1mpaltL

(Cathedral Camp-Resident and Day Camp for Boys

O~ Lady of the L_ke Day Camp fOr Girls

Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON LONG POND ROUTE 18 EAST FREETOWN MAS~

~ RESIDENT CAMP 49th Season June 30 thru August 24 - a Week Season

Diocesan seminar-ians - College Students amp Teachers Under direction StaH of a Diocesan Priest

Saili~g swimming water skiing horseback riding riflery archeryPrograni hiking overnight camping trips ~rts amp crafts Indian crafts camp crafts athletic (team amp individual) competition and inter-camp cOmpetition professional tutorial service available

Private beach large luxurious camphouse dining hall modernfacilities~ washrooms arts and crafts buildings camp store and office first aid and infirmary beautiful chapel overnight and weekend accomodashytions for parents

S WEEK PIERIOD $325 - 4 W~K PERIOD $165 - 2 weEK PERIOD $85

Cathedra~ Day Camp t=or Boys Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period

JULY W- AUGUST 23 Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period fEES INCLUDIE Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Horseback Riding Weekly Cook~Outs amp Milk Daily without Added Cost

--~----------------------------------------Our Lady of the Lake bay Camp For Girls

JULY l _ AUGUST 23 Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period

FEES INCLUD~Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Ilorseback Riding Weekly Cook-Outsmiddot Milk Daily without Added Cost

o

For further information write to

REV WALlER A 5ULLlVANDiredor PO Box 63 - East Freetown Mass 02717

Page 18: 05.23.68

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fait River-Thurs May 23196~

The Parish Parade OUR LADY OF ANGELS SACRED HEART WALL RIVER NORTH ATTLEBORO

Altar bOys willsponsor a cake The CCD program will be lJ81e Sunday May 26 following canonically established Friday Iill1 Masses June 21 the feast of the Sacred

Masses today the feast of the Heart The program will include Ascerision will be at 7 and 9 a 730 evening Mass followed AM and -1215 4 5 and 7 PM by proclamation and reception Confessions will be heard be- of CCD members and a social ~re each Mass hour

The Summer Mass schedule CCD students in grades 6 to will begin Sunday June 2 with 12 will attend a folk Mass and Masses from 6 to noon on the sing-out at La Salefte Shrine hour Monday night May 27 Tnose

Monday May 27 through Fri- participating will leave the ooy May 31 there will be church school yard at 645 and will be services at 7 each evening The returned at 930 living rosary will be sponsored Confirmation ceremonies will by the Holy Rosary Sodality be ~ld at 730 Sunday night Monday night the Council of May 26 Catholic Women on Tuesday ther societies on Wednesday and Thlusday and the Children New Bedford ~ M~~ on lfrIday

ST MARY HOLY NAME $25iALL RIVER Mr amp Mrs Roger Goyette

Contemporary music will acshy The Shea Family company the 1115 Mass Sunday Mrs Vivian Wegrzyniakmorning May 26

New CYO officers are Robert ST LAWRENCE amplois president Paul Durin $200 rice-president Polly Rockett Dr amp Mrs Stanley Koczera eecretary-treasurer A Friend

$125 OUR LADY OF FATIMA Dr amp Mrs Robert Srnan sWANSEA $106

The Womens Guild will hold William E King Its annual penny sale at 730 $100

Monday night May 27 in the Dr amp Mrs William Walsh ehurch hall on Gardners Neck $75 lRoad Rev William F OConnell

A Penny Sale will be held Dr amp Mrs James Bolton MondaYMay 27 at 730 in the $60 dlurch hall A Friend

$50 IMMACULATE CONClEPlIION Teremiddotsa Ruth amp John HarneyNEW BEDFORD Victor T Kondi

Parisnioners will celebrate John L Powell rthe feast of Santo Ohristo this Loretta Lamarre Sunday with a roast beef dinner $45 served from noon to 2 with Mrs Mary B Wheatoil

tickets available at the door $40 lRefreshments and entertainment Mr amp Mrs John Connor will be on the afternoon and Mr amp Mrs Thomas J Longevening program $35

A procession and auction will Mr amp Mrs James M Kearneyfollow the dinner with various Mrmiddot amp Mrs Leo St Aubin Holy Name Society units parti shy $30 cipating in the procession Mr amp Mrs Albert Anderson

Mr amp Mrs Joseph Griffin OUR LADY OF V()T(RY Mr amp Mrs Walter L9veridgeeENTERVILLE Mr camp Mrs Myron Tripp

New officers of the Womens $28amptiild are Mrs John J Pendershy Patricia Connor ~st pre~ident MrS James Murshy $26 phy and Mrs John McBarron Mr amp Mrs Thomas SullivanVoice-president Mrs George Mr amp Mrs Charles BerryReale recording secretary Mrs $25 Richard Griffith treasurer Mr amp Mrs Robert Bedard

A Communion dinner at Mr amp Mrs Albert McMulleneummaquid Inn will follow Mr amp Mrs Theodore J CalnanlB30 Mass Monday night June Mr amp Mrs Alfred Couto Mr amproo Mrs Gilbert Noonan of Falshy Mrs Manuel Guerreira Josephmouth will speak Reservations P Mullen should be made with Mrs Edshy Agnes Proctor Mr amp Misward Welch or Mrs- Stephen Joseph Porter Mr amp MrsOBrien Jr by Thursday June 6 James Ryan Mr amp Mrs Paul

saunders ST THERESA Mr amp Mrs Merton WalkerSOUTH ATTLEBORO Mr amp Mrs John F SullivanMiss Patricia Makin of the

Diocesan CCD Board spoke at the annual Communion breakshy Fall River fast of the Confraternity of

ST MARYS CATHEDRALChristian Mothers Fourteen $50 new members were received at

Gertrude OLoughlinthe monthly meeting arid new officers were installed by Rev $26

In memory of Caroline CasellaGerard J Chabot moderator $25They include Mrs Patricia Helen Burns Mr amp MrsBiziak president Mrs Georshy

George Johnston Corky Rowgette Vachon vice-president Club Rits OLaughlin FrancisMrs Kathy Lamarre treasurer amp Lena MoranMrs Dolores Leedham and Mrs

Mr amp Mrs Carlton GastallBeverly Sousa secretaries Mrs Raymond Reynolds

~CULATE CONC~ON BLESSED SACRAMENTlAUNTON $200A Spring Social and D~nce Rev Herve Jalbert

for the benefit of the church $50sponsored by the Womens Guild Mr amp Mrs Michael Felixand the St Vincent de Paul Soshy $36ciety will be held Friday May Mr amp Mrs Richard Hamel24 from 8 to 12 at Lewis Lodge $30Winthrop Street Route 44 A W Root Beer StandTaunton Refreshments will be served Tickets are $200 per lIIIOLY CROSS person and wiU be available at $50 the door Holy Rosary Sodality

lt

PATRIARCH His Holishyness Vazken I of the Armeshynian (Monophysite) Chu~h which comprises five-milli~n communicants in the Soviet Union Near and Far East and the Americas is visiting in the US He paid a visit to the National Shrine of the

Immaculate Conception whilein the nations capital NC Photo

NOTRE DAME $40

The Anne-Marie MasSe fami17 $35

Conrad N Desmarais $25

Norman J A Belanger Rose D Perron

HOLY ROSARY $30

The DePaola Family $25

Mrs Philomena Germane

~CULATE CONCEPTION $50

A Frie~d $40

Mrs Diolinda Wilson $26

In memory of Charlotte DJicholson

$25 Holy Name Society Knights

of the Altar A Friend MlU7 Whitehead John R Burgess In memory of Daniel R Be

Manuel R Pimental Joseph Francoeur

SACRED HEART $l)O ()

~ Katherine D Adams $75

Mr amp Mrs William J Sullivan $5~

Margaret Morriss M~ry V amp Alice C HarrlngtoD Frederick B McD9nald

$31 Frances Mmiddot Cummings Mary C Cummings

$30 Mr amp Mrs John J HarrlngtOil

$28 Florence M Sullivan

$25 Vincent DAndrea Edward

Leary Mr ~ MrsN J Meyer Mary Louise OSullivan John J Sullivan middotMargaret F Lowney

ST MICHAEL $25

Manuel Rogers amp Sons At~

Manuel M Rezendes Henry Leshytendre ~eonardo Cabeceiras

Gerald Mulrooney A Friend edf Catholic Charities

ST ANNE ft JI08ZIII $30

Mrs Rhea Saurette 101at Vincent de Paul ConferenceIrene Theroux leapt amp Mrs Joseph J OCoDshy$26 nellThe Gauthier Family $25

Mr amp Mrs Reginald lerive

A Friend

Belshy $50

Mr amp Mrs Joseph J OCo nell k

$30 St rosephs Mens Club

ST ANTH()NY $25 OF THE DESERT Mr amp Mrs John L Mercer

$100 Mr amp Mrs Daniel W OCoDoshyChor Bishop Joseph Eid nell Dr amp Mrs James J Sabra

$25 SANTO CHRiSTO Rev Kenneth A Michael Mrs August Badway $50

ST ANTHONY OF PADUA $125

Rev Josephmiddot M Ferreira $100

Atty amp Mrs Milton R Silva

StVincent de Paul Society $30

Rev Ernesto R Borges $26

Mr amp Mrs Alfred 1 Cam~ $25

$50 Franco Family Singersmiddot

$25 Mrs Sofia Pacheco Antonio T Cabral

Mary amp Beatrice Costa~ SilD

CnristO Credit Union Manuel Medeiros Laureano Silva

AFriendFrank B Olivei

YDUR SONTHE PRIEST

HI HOLY PATHERS MISSION AID TO THE ORIENTAL DMURDH

A FUTURE

PRIEST NEEDS

bull SOMEONES HELP

TRAiN ASfSTER

Tau

HUNGER CANT

WAIT

Deai MonBr~orNolam

Please

return couponwith your

offering

Have you ever wished you had a son a priest Now you can hlilve a priest of your own-and ahare forever In all the good he does _ _ Throughout the Near East this month grateful bishops ara ordainlng new priests trained by people like youbullbullbullbull Their own families are toe poor to support them In training but good catholics In America adopted these semIshynarians encouraged them all the way to ordinashytionbullbullbullbull Insome Inspiring cases this support was given at personal sacrifice How can youbegln7 Write to us now Well ~end you the name of ~ young seminarian who needs you and he will write to you Make the payments for his training to suit your convenlence ($850 a month or $100 a year or the total $600 all at once) Join your sacrifices to his and at every Sacrifice of the Mass he will always remember who made It possible

4

Native Sisters In our 18 developingcountries are teaching children of the poor preparing them for First Communion giving medical care to leplrs cal)cer sufferers the aging A SisterS training Ialts two years costs $1250 a month $150 a year or $300 altogetherbullbullbullbull Well send you the name of a Sister you can train as soon as we receive your first payment She will pray for you and write toyou

n An9 day now you may receive a letter contalnn the Holy Fathers appeal for the forgotten Arab refugees-l4 million people without a country bullbullbull most of them destitute bullbullbull more thari half of them childrenbullbullbullbull By trelnlng these children foi middotfuture selfsufflcel]cy we can help brln peace and new selfmiddothelp to the Holy Land atlll divided by warbullbullbullbull But why walt for your mal Hunger cant walt Neither can peace Send your amplIft now in any amount ($500 $200 $100 $75 $50 $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 $2 $1) and the Holy Fathercan put It to work right away Qril1 $10 wlllleed family for a monthl -----~-~---~~---~-IlNCL08ID PLllAIl PIND $_ c_O~__ rFOR _

NAMI ___~

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NIAll lAST WIILFAAI ASSaDIATtOrlaquo

NEAR EAST MISSIONS J

MSGR JOHN ClI NOLAN Natlonal5ecretary Write CATHOLIO NIlAR EAST WeLFARE Assoo ~30 Madson Avenue New York NY OOU telephonel 212vtJkon 6middot5840

CATHaLiD

19 DiJoridrrien Ere State r ourlitei

SChoelbOY leag~~Wmrn~regr~ Stii~Pretty Mu~h sampu [j)(Q)Mbt

By PETIm BARJrEK Nmon BitIh ~h

The gehooboy ba8ebaD mmpaignis cllNimatieaDy near- Inlaquo the climax of another spirited seasoo With approxishymately a week of competitioo Nllllaining oontlmdmg teams Me stmggling to keep their pennanf oopes alive while Wtling for the right to rep-JIe8eDt their ll e s pee t i v e leaguesin the nnand-eomin

-y- shy

Btate tournament The Eastshyem Massachusetts ehampionahip

baseball tournamen+ ClIffiMftl-~

tine of the wurney is tiPoDOOred bythe

II a II sac h u~_ lt Iietts Secondary

SChool Princishypals Association bull Par tie i p 8 t _ ing schools have bElen divided i IIl tot h r e e d3ses - A B and C---llccord- Peter iDg to leagues Blrtek r

and comparable independent teams Action tn all three clasampe3 starts Saturday June L

In addition to the three divishyidon3 the baseball tourney amp1shyem radically JIrom the popular

Two Spots for Both BCl (IDnd Marry Five Bristol County League Howard Ferguson which teams

teams Gre still in contention for will represent the circuit in the tourney play ebampionship event

At this writing Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Stang SpaltamJ of Qartmouth who hold a lllim ene-game edge over their rivals are a solid choice to annex one of the two berths to be filled bi BCL teams The second spot 18 un literally up for grabs

Bishop Feehan High of Attieshyboro which led the circuit untll last week Durfee High of Fan River Attleboro and Taunton lire in close pursuit middotof Stang hoping tomiddot overcome the Sparshytans or at least lInish in the league runner-up berth Both the first and second place finshyishers will8utomatically qualify

If either fim OX second place II decided by Monday May 21 league officials w~ have to DOUty the tournament Director

No~tons Lancers in Need cf Help I h e Narragansett league Class B - Southem

whkh got a head start on the its Iud Old Colony champ ft NaITlIlshyv er area Clrcu conc es gansett runner-upleague play today First place

middot Somerset travels to New Bed- Narragansett champ ~ Olcll ford to meet Holy Family High Colony runner-up Case High of Swansea entell-middotmiddot South Shore champ VB Hockshytains Dighton-Rehoboth West- omock runner-up port hoss Msgr Prevost High Hockomock cpamp vs South

middotof Fall River and Dima]l Voce- ShQre runner-up tional nlso of Fall River will 0I Am f N rth E stobe t Se k Iver es 0 0 a n a e o~k

Entering the final week of ac-middot middot tion Somerset and seekonk are in the top two spots in tbe 8tanding They loom the more likely to corral Class B tourney berths But DightOn-Rehoboth Case and Westwrt trail the sec ODd place club by oIl1yone game If the race ends in II tie ]league officials wlll have ample time to schedule play-off games before the tourney deadline

Pairings for Class Bare

Selecting Union PITTSBURGH (NC)-Twentyshy

five maintenance workers at Duquesne University here in Pennsylvania have left their jobs pending a detell1llnation as to which union will represent the workers The remaining 115 members of the maintenance erew lIlre not involved in the atrike which was called by the 2li who are represented by the tJmted Electrical WorkersUnion

Although it occurs infrequentshyly a team does not have to win Its league to represent its league in tourney eompetition

The Bristol County league champion is slated to play the

bull Bay State League runner-up in first round action with the Bay State champs taking on the County runner-up The winners would then meet in second round play

Pairings for Class A are Class A - Southem

Suburban champ w Middleshy8llX runnerup

Middlesex champ ft Suburshyban runner-up Bay state ehamp VB Bristol runner-up

Bristol champ V8 Bay sta~ runnerup

-Tech lxlsketban competition lllll order to qualifyfor the Tech a team mt1BSt win 70 per cent cd its games but onlythe leagu~ champions ond runner-ups M~ eligible ~r playmiddotiImiddotbasebalL

In both Class A andClass B iitOtalof i6 teams will qualify 1lt7middotmiddotmiddotJiY

for the diamond elimination event~ E~~ Will pai1i~ipate in

the nortlHln division and eight in the southern bracllet The winners in each bracket will meet in the Eastern- Massacilushy

llletts fi~ Preliminary games will be played on June 1 4 and 6 The finals are scheduloo June 8

Class C competition will coIi-BiEt of eight clubs in only one division Titlists in seven smallshyDChooI le1gues and one indeshypendent selected by the tournashy

ment coJiunittee Will comprise the field fur this tliil-d group

and Mansfield 1m the Hockoshymock circuit appear to be out of the running this season

Fo~ Class C schools Its Winmiddot or youre out Only the league champions will play in the championships The winner of the Capeway Conference will meet the Cape and Vineyard champ in opening round play Dennis-YarDlQuth and Sandshywich are the likely opponents

The only other school located within the confines of the diocshyesan territorial limits that has an outside ~hance of qualifying for the tournament is Norton of the Tri-Valley Conference The Lancers however will need some outside help if they are to overcome league leading Millis The Tri-Valley champs will take on the Dual County League champions Defending Class C champ Ashland again leading the Dual Co~nty is heavily favored to repeat both in league ond state competition

NOT A BALL-ITS GUM Yem might get the idea that a pitched ban is lodged in the mask of this young Vancouver BC catcher but it isnt a ball This young ma is trying to prove he is just as efficient behillld the plate as he is at blowing bubble gum NC ~middothoto

Stresses Inter~cicdmiddotmiddotPartnership As Solution to Racial Problem

CLEVELAND (NC) - A Nashy world would be better off lr tional ASsociation for Advanceshy iou hadnt gotten involved Jm

ment of Colored People official asserted here interracial part shynership is the key to oolution of the racial problem but it cannot be a partnership dom inated by either race

Dr John A Morrell NAACP assistant nat ion a 1 director speaking at the Cleveland Cathshyltnlic Interracial Councils annual Interracial Justice Awards banshyquet said the nation today is aj an unprecedented crossroads but the interracial way is the democratic part to justice

He spoke in place of Roy Wishydns NAACP national~ director who was with the U S delega- tion at the United Nations con vocation on human rights lin Tehran Iran -

Angry Voices There are angry Negro voiees

raised in protest because develshyopment of opportunity in recent years does not apply to twoshythirds of the Negro population he saidmiddot The kind of jobs they are capable of filling are vanshyishing from the economy he added

But if a fruitful partnership is to continue between the white and Negro the burden of know- ing the truth about Negro hisshytory must be borne by white as well as Negro Dr Morsell said

Vie are all fighting a bitter legacy of generations White people have to know where they stand and why Once you assume the burden of work toward interracial justice you assume the responsibilities be continued

If you are not going to ~

sume them then you and fhe

the first place Informed PariDership

Dr Morsell said a mere sPirit of commitment is not enough to

survive over the hard going Work must be based on a part shynership that is informed intelshyligent understanding and resil shyient he said

The interracial awards were presented to Father Edwan Camille assistant Catholic Charshyities director here and Thom811 C Westropp president of Womshyens Federal Savings and Loan Association

Westropp was cited for his efforts towards opening the

doors of banking and credit 1m the Cleveland area to all ciUshyzens regardless of race creed 011

color while Father CarniDe was cited for his leadership as director of Project Peace (~

irner-city diocesan organizati~ working with the poor mostly Negroes) and for his work as co-chairman of the first tri-faith Greater Cleveland Conference on Religion and Race

ELECTRICAl -Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

SS lPlE1rIEllt amp JgtAIDlj

$103 Womens Club Rose E Sullivan

$50 Joseph P Conaty

$35 Belen M amp William J

De7 $33

Mr amp Mrs James F McMahcm $25

Mrs Margaret Daly amp Mary John Dolan ~illiam Daley amp Mary Esther Mr amp Mrs Stanley M -laniek

~50 In memory of MrsMarga~

W Pow~rs RodneY S DeCecco

$26 Mr amp Mrs John Soula

$25 Edward Healey Mr amp Mrs Michael McCartbiY Mr amp Mrs James Crosson Mrs Gertrude Lomas Mr amp Mrs Norman GagnOOl

ST JOHN TEE BAPTlIS11

$30 St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ampt Jean Baptiste $25

Mr amp Mrs Ovila Caron Henri Demers

In memory of Mr amp lVlrm bullWilliam Sheehan

Open to An PORTLAND (NC)-The seeshy

ond annual Catholic youth conshyvention of the Portland Diocese has opened the convention to all Catholic students of the dioshycese in order to spread the agtOlgto tolate of youth to youth Thll

)faine convention has comprised only students who have takes themiddot youth leadership trainlJnl1 courses

Dont Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH

DO faJse teeth drop slip or wobblo when you talk eat laugh or sneeze Dont be annoyed and embarr1lEsetll lkllh hanl11caps FASTEETH Bamp

e (non-acid) powder to SPr1n~Ikle on your plates keeps false teetb more firmly set Gives confident feel~ Ing Of security and added comfort No gummy gooey taste or feellncr Dentures that 6t are essential to health see your dentist regulorly oet FASTEETH at alll1rug countemJ

o

WYman 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD MASS

IfIIfJltk del1WM

S H~~uO~ Oil

SAVE MONEY 0 OUROILHEATI bull eatt

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

Iritai~ If S)crap SuPPITreg~~5n Acts Of Re~(j[jmlt~oml

LONDON (NC)-It looks as if Britain is at long last glOing to stop suppressing the monasteries-officially that 0

Legal experts sifting through lenturies of forgotten laws clutshyooling the records have found (hat the Suppression of Reli shygious Houses Acts of 1535 and 0039 have never been repealed

They are among 155 statutes weeded out from the statute IJ)ooks between 1239 and 1705middot lmd now to be definitively leshy~aled by a special act of Par-Iliament

These two acts enforced the eosure and pillaging of Catholic monasteries friaries and other religious houses throughout the WINS nsc Chaplain

eountry following King Henry (Captain) Angelo J LitekyVIIIs break with Rome in 1534

assigned to the 199th InfanshyJhey brought vast fortunes On goods property and mog of try Brigade in Vietnam has ell land to the kings favorites been awarded the Distinshyoome of whose families have reshy guished Service Cross forWned their wealth to this day extraordinary heroism SevshyIgnored in Practice

Of course the laws against erely wounded when Viet me Roman Catholic Church Cong ambushed a US infanshyIhave long ago been shelved and try company Ohaplain Lit shyIgnored in practice The reli shy eky braved flying bullets toous houses are back probably

rescue and minister tomore numerous than before iIome have even reoccupied the WQunded and dying meR 0ld sites they hadmiddot before the lReformation

Another notable measure ~ewlfk ~[p)regID Gingled out for repeal is the 1loleration Act of 1688 This act W51f)$ ~WIfltdl although in itself it did not help

NEW YORK (NC)-The Adshy~he Catholics marked the end of

vocate weekly newspaper of1lhe Protestant Reformation and the Newark Archdiocese wont1he beginning of religious tolershythe first-place Silver Medalation in Britain Awarti for weekly newspapersIt allowed freedom of worship in the annual public serviceClgt Protestant Trinitarian Nonshycompetition sponsored by theoonformists provided theiT New York chapter of the Pubiicmeetings were opento the pubshy

Relations Society of AmericaIlk it did not relieve the existing The award was for a five-part

fenaWes of those days against analysis ttl the ills besetting the ~atholics other breakaway Newark public school system lhcnestants or Jews but it was )he analysis was written by a hisberic beginning It has been Advocate news editor Ed Grant ltJeseribed as the Great Oharter and was an examination into ~ religious freedom and the one of the areas of dissatisfacshy~umph ofc9mmon ~ense tion which led to widespread

rioting in Newark last Summer

The series ran lri the newsshylJays Help for Poor paper last september and Octoshy

lPeCice First ~eeds ber The Public Rellitlons SocishyMIAMI (NC)-The Catholic ety award - silver medals are (lihurch in this nation today awarded in each of five cateshy

gories-are given for the mostauast address itself to the presshynoteworthy contributions bullbull 0 toiloing needs of the poor and dis-

~vantaged as well as the better public ~derstanding of ltJnICial issue of peace says the _ community problems in the New

4Tchbishop of Miami York metropolitan area Archbishop Coleman F Calshy New s p a per 8 magazines 0011 following announcement of broadcasting an d television middotGte establishment of the ecclesshy media in the New York-New iastical province of Miami and Jersey-Connecti~ut metropolitan tMs appointment as its first area are eligible for the awards l)rehbishop stressed that the (fhurch must be concerned with ibe problems of the time in Retired ArttlhJboshop S)Vhich we exist Gets College lHlonorThe g~eatest problems at present are the problems of the DUBUQUE ( NC) - Retired disadvantaged the poor and Archbishop Edward D Howard Utase who are in need and of of Portland Ore has been named oourse peace he smiddotaid for Loras Colleges 1968 John

It is more difficult for us to Fitzgerald Kennedy Award The LiOlve in any real way the prob- prelate is a former president of iems that are our concern until the college we have a measure of peace The citation and gold medal And it is the prayer of all of us annual award honoring an out Chat peace will be established as standing Amercian will be preshyiluickly as possible on an honorshy sen ted to the archbishop at the able basis o college commencement cereshy

monies June 2 Camp Directory Archbishop Howard 90 a nashy

Nltlw available from the Nashy ti ve of Cresco Iowa and a Loras lItonal Catholic Camping Assn alumnus was ordained to the ~ 131~ Massachusetts Ave priesthood in 1906middot He became lM- W Washington D C 20005 president of the college in 1921 Is the 1968 Directory of Catholic In 1924 he was consecrated to ~mps which lists all known serve as auxiliary bishop of DavshyearriPs in the U S giving acshy enport He became archbishop of Civities charges dates open and Portland in 1926 and retired in lIbailing addresses 1966

National CYOPlans LeadershipTraining shyImpa~t to Aid Priests Adult Admiddotvisors

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tbe through the introduction of BaWmore June 23-28 ehicagoNational Catholic Youth Organshy leadership methodology which July 1-5 Boston July 14-19 ization Federation will launch a facilitates maximum involveshy Sen Antonio July 28-Aug 3 training program in June called ment 00 the local level and Denver Aug 11-16 and San Impaot be help priests and hence maximum commitment JFaoancisoo Aug 25-30 adults 00 work effectively with The National CYO Federation Dr Donald Ebalt a professhyteenagers in a leisure time proshy will sponsor six sessiOns this lIlional trainbig eonsul1lant of gram summer to train diocesan CYO Washington D c win diiecl

The program was designed in staffs m 1lhe use of the newmiddot ead11ab cooperation with Leadership program lhey win )e held m A pilot Jtudy of the effectiveshyResources Inc a firm _of beshy DeBS of Impact on a group of havior scientists -rolulbteers from the NewarlkAddress Graduates

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishy archdiocese was held at the SOUTH BEND (HC) -Mel-rector of the Youth Department Benedictine Retreat House ill

Jdte-rite Patriarcib Maximoo VUnited States Catholic Confershy jNewton N J ence in announcing ttie new Kakimof Antioch and Dr Ilhirtymiddot persons representashyprogram said tives of youth adult advisorsJames A Perkins of Cornell

The goal 01 Impact is 00 help and priest moderators met withUniversity will be speakers atthe priests who are moderators representattives of the CYO

the 123rd annual cOnW~ncementof CYO the ad~lt advisors and Federation staff and a member youth participating in CYO toshy exerci~ Sundly June 2 at Of Leadership rResources Inc ward maximumpersonal growth Notrlte Dame University 110 assess and to evaluate 1mpaltL

(Cathedral Camp-Resident and Day Camp for Boys

O~ Lady of the L_ke Day Camp fOr Girls

Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON LONG POND ROUTE 18 EAST FREETOWN MAS~

~ RESIDENT CAMP 49th Season June 30 thru August 24 - a Week Season

Diocesan seminar-ians - College Students amp Teachers Under direction StaH of a Diocesan Priest

Saili~g swimming water skiing horseback riding riflery archeryPrograni hiking overnight camping trips ~rts amp crafts Indian crafts camp crafts athletic (team amp individual) competition and inter-camp cOmpetition professional tutorial service available

Private beach large luxurious camphouse dining hall modernfacilities~ washrooms arts and crafts buildings camp store and office first aid and infirmary beautiful chapel overnight and weekend accomodashytions for parents

S WEEK PIERIOD $325 - 4 W~K PERIOD $165 - 2 weEK PERIOD $85

Cathedra~ Day Camp t=or Boys Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period

JULY W- AUGUST 23 Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period fEES INCLUDIE Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Horseback Riding Weekly Cook~Outs amp Milk Daily without Added Cost

--~----------------------------------------Our Lady of the Lake bay Camp For Girls

JULY l _ AUGUST 23 Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period

FEES INCLUD~Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Ilorseback Riding Weekly Cook-Outsmiddot Milk Daily without Added Cost

o

For further information write to

REV WALlER A 5ULLlVANDiredor PO Box 63 - East Freetown Mass 02717

Page 19: 05.23.68

19 DiJoridrrien Ere State r ourlitei

SChoelbOY leag~~Wmrn~regr~ Stii~Pretty Mu~h sampu [j)(Q)Mbt

By PETIm BARJrEK Nmon BitIh ~h

The gehooboy ba8ebaD mmpaignis cllNimatieaDy near- Inlaquo the climax of another spirited seasoo With approxishymately a week of competitioo Nllllaining oontlmdmg teams Me stmggling to keep their pennanf oopes alive while Wtling for the right to rep-JIe8eDt their ll e s pee t i v e leaguesin the nnand-eomin

-y- shy

Btate tournament The Eastshyem Massachusetts ehampionahip

baseball tournamen+ ClIffiMftl-~

tine of the wurney is tiPoDOOred bythe

II a II sac h u~_ lt Iietts Secondary

SChool Princishypals Association bull Par tie i p 8 t _ ing schools have bElen divided i IIl tot h r e e d3ses - A B and C---llccord- Peter iDg to leagues Blrtek r

and comparable independent teams Action tn all three clasampe3 starts Saturday June L

In addition to the three divishyidon3 the baseball tourney amp1shyem radically JIrom the popular

Two Spots for Both BCl (IDnd Marry Five Bristol County League Howard Ferguson which teams

teams Gre still in contention for will represent the circuit in the tourney play ebampionship event

At this writing Coach Jerry Hickeys Bishop Stang SpaltamJ of Qartmouth who hold a lllim ene-game edge over their rivals are a solid choice to annex one of the two berths to be filled bi BCL teams The second spot 18 un literally up for grabs

Bishop Feehan High of Attieshyboro which led the circuit untll last week Durfee High of Fan River Attleboro and Taunton lire in close pursuit middotof Stang hoping tomiddot overcome the Sparshytans or at least lInish in the league runner-up berth Both the first and second place finshyishers will8utomatically qualify

If either fim OX second place II decided by Monday May 21 league officials w~ have to DOUty the tournament Director

No~tons Lancers in Need cf Help I h e Narragansett league Class B - Southem

whkh got a head start on the its Iud Old Colony champ ft NaITlIlshyv er area Clrcu conc es gansett runner-upleague play today First place

middot Somerset travels to New Bed- Narragansett champ ~ Olcll ford to meet Holy Family High Colony runner-up Case High of Swansea entell-middotmiddot South Shore champ VB Hockshytains Dighton-Rehoboth West- omock runner-up port hoss Msgr Prevost High Hockomock cpamp vs South

middotof Fall River and Dima]l Voce- ShQre runner-up tional nlso of Fall River will 0I Am f N rth E stobe t Se k Iver es 0 0 a n a e o~k

Entering the final week of ac-middot middot tion Somerset and seekonk are in the top two spots in tbe 8tanding They loom the more likely to corral Class B tourney berths But DightOn-Rehoboth Case and Westwrt trail the sec ODd place club by oIl1yone game If the race ends in II tie ]league officials wlll have ample time to schedule play-off games before the tourney deadline

Pairings for Class Bare

Selecting Union PITTSBURGH (NC)-Twentyshy

five maintenance workers at Duquesne University here in Pennsylvania have left their jobs pending a detell1llnation as to which union will represent the workers The remaining 115 members of the maintenance erew lIlre not involved in the atrike which was called by the 2li who are represented by the tJmted Electrical WorkersUnion

Although it occurs infrequentshyly a team does not have to win Its league to represent its league in tourney eompetition

The Bristol County league champion is slated to play the

bull Bay State League runner-up in first round action with the Bay State champs taking on the County runner-up The winners would then meet in second round play

Pairings for Class A are Class A - Southem

Suburban champ w Middleshy8llX runnerup

Middlesex champ ft Suburshyban runner-up Bay state ehamp VB Bristol runner-up

Bristol champ V8 Bay sta~ runnerup

-Tech lxlsketban competition lllll order to qualifyfor the Tech a team mt1BSt win 70 per cent cd its games but onlythe leagu~ champions ond runner-ups M~ eligible ~r playmiddotiImiddotbasebalL

In both Class A andClass B iitOtalof i6 teams will qualify 1lt7middotmiddotmiddotJiY

for the diamond elimination event~ E~~ Will pai1i~ipate in

the nortlHln division and eight in the southern bracllet The winners in each bracket will meet in the Eastern- Massacilushy

llletts fi~ Preliminary games will be played on June 1 4 and 6 The finals are scheduloo June 8

Class C competition will coIi-BiEt of eight clubs in only one division Titlists in seven smallshyDChooI le1gues and one indeshypendent selected by the tournashy

ment coJiunittee Will comprise the field fur this tliil-d group

and Mansfield 1m the Hockoshymock circuit appear to be out of the running this season

Fo~ Class C schools Its Winmiddot or youre out Only the league champions will play in the championships The winner of the Capeway Conference will meet the Cape and Vineyard champ in opening round play Dennis-YarDlQuth and Sandshywich are the likely opponents

The only other school located within the confines of the diocshyesan territorial limits that has an outside ~hance of qualifying for the tournament is Norton of the Tri-Valley Conference The Lancers however will need some outside help if they are to overcome league leading Millis The Tri-Valley champs will take on the Dual County League champions Defending Class C champ Ashland again leading the Dual Co~nty is heavily favored to repeat both in league ond state competition

NOT A BALL-ITS GUM Yem might get the idea that a pitched ban is lodged in the mask of this young Vancouver BC catcher but it isnt a ball This young ma is trying to prove he is just as efficient behillld the plate as he is at blowing bubble gum NC ~middothoto

Stresses Inter~cicdmiddotmiddotPartnership As Solution to Racial Problem

CLEVELAND (NC) - A Nashy world would be better off lr tional ASsociation for Advanceshy iou hadnt gotten involved Jm

ment of Colored People official asserted here interracial part shynership is the key to oolution of the racial problem but it cannot be a partnership dom inated by either race

Dr John A Morrell NAACP assistant nat ion a 1 director speaking at the Cleveland Cathshyltnlic Interracial Councils annual Interracial Justice Awards banshyquet said the nation today is aj an unprecedented crossroads but the interracial way is the democratic part to justice

He spoke in place of Roy Wishydns NAACP national~ director who was with the U S delega- tion at the United Nations con vocation on human rights lin Tehran Iran -

Angry Voices There are angry Negro voiees

raised in protest because develshyopment of opportunity in recent years does not apply to twoshythirds of the Negro population he saidmiddot The kind of jobs they are capable of filling are vanshyishing from the economy he added

But if a fruitful partnership is to continue between the white and Negro the burden of know- ing the truth about Negro hisshytory must be borne by white as well as Negro Dr Morsell said

Vie are all fighting a bitter legacy of generations White people have to know where they stand and why Once you assume the burden of work toward interracial justice you assume the responsibilities be continued

If you are not going to ~

sume them then you and fhe

the first place Informed PariDership

Dr Morsell said a mere sPirit of commitment is not enough to

survive over the hard going Work must be based on a part shynership that is informed intelshyligent understanding and resil shyient he said

The interracial awards were presented to Father Edwan Camille assistant Catholic Charshyities director here and Thom811 C Westropp president of Womshyens Federal Savings and Loan Association

Westropp was cited for his efforts towards opening the

doors of banking and credit 1m the Cleveland area to all ciUshyzens regardless of race creed 011

color while Father CarniDe was cited for his leadership as director of Project Peace (~

irner-city diocesan organizati~ working with the poor mostly Negroes) and for his work as co-chairman of the first tri-faith Greater Cleveland Conference on Religion and Race

ELECTRICAl -Contractors

944 County St New Bedford

THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

SS lPlE1rIEllt amp JgtAIDlj

$103 Womens Club Rose E Sullivan

$50 Joseph P Conaty

$35 Belen M amp William J

De7 $33

Mr amp Mrs James F McMahcm $25

Mrs Margaret Daly amp Mary John Dolan ~illiam Daley amp Mary Esther Mr amp Mrs Stanley M -laniek

~50 In memory of MrsMarga~

W Pow~rs RodneY S DeCecco

$26 Mr amp Mrs John Soula

$25 Edward Healey Mr amp Mrs Michael McCartbiY Mr amp Mrs James Crosson Mrs Gertrude Lomas Mr amp Mrs Norman GagnOOl

ST JOHN TEE BAPTlIS11

$30 St Vincent de Paul Soci~

ampt Jean Baptiste $25

Mr amp Mrs Ovila Caron Henri Demers

In memory of Mr amp lVlrm bullWilliam Sheehan

Open to An PORTLAND (NC)-The seeshy

ond annual Catholic youth conshyvention of the Portland Diocese has opened the convention to all Catholic students of the dioshycese in order to spread the agtOlgto tolate of youth to youth Thll

)faine convention has comprised only students who have takes themiddot youth leadership trainlJnl1 courses

Dont Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH

DO faJse teeth drop slip or wobblo when you talk eat laugh or sneeze Dont be annoyed and embarr1lEsetll lkllh hanl11caps FASTEETH Bamp

e (non-acid) powder to SPr1n~Ikle on your plates keeps false teetb more firmly set Gives confident feel~ Ing Of security and added comfort No gummy gooey taste or feellncr Dentures that 6t are essential to health see your dentist regulorly oet FASTEETH at alll1rug countemJ

o

WYman 3-6592

CHARLES F VARGAS

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE

NEW BEDFORD MASS

IfIIfJltk del1WM

S H~~uO~ Oil

SAVE MONEY 0 OUROILHEATI bull eatt

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

Iritai~ If S)crap SuPPITreg~~5n Acts Of Re~(j[jmlt~oml

LONDON (NC)-It looks as if Britain is at long last glOing to stop suppressing the monasteries-officially that 0

Legal experts sifting through lenturies of forgotten laws clutshyooling the records have found (hat the Suppression of Reli shygious Houses Acts of 1535 and 0039 have never been repealed

They are among 155 statutes weeded out from the statute IJ)ooks between 1239 and 1705middot lmd now to be definitively leshy~aled by a special act of Par-Iliament

These two acts enforced the eosure and pillaging of Catholic monasteries friaries and other religious houses throughout the WINS nsc Chaplain

eountry following King Henry (Captain) Angelo J LitekyVIIIs break with Rome in 1534

assigned to the 199th InfanshyJhey brought vast fortunes On goods property and mog of try Brigade in Vietnam has ell land to the kings favorites been awarded the Distinshyoome of whose families have reshy guished Service Cross forWned their wealth to this day extraordinary heroism SevshyIgnored in Practice

Of course the laws against erely wounded when Viet me Roman Catholic Church Cong ambushed a US infanshyIhave long ago been shelved and try company Ohaplain Lit shyIgnored in practice The reli shy eky braved flying bullets toous houses are back probably

rescue and minister tomore numerous than before iIome have even reoccupied the WQunded and dying meR 0ld sites they hadmiddot before the lReformation

Another notable measure ~ewlfk ~[p)regID Gingled out for repeal is the 1loleration Act of 1688 This act W51f)$ ~WIfltdl although in itself it did not help

NEW YORK (NC)-The Adshy~he Catholics marked the end of

vocate weekly newspaper of1lhe Protestant Reformation and the Newark Archdiocese wont1he beginning of religious tolershythe first-place Silver Medalation in Britain Awarti for weekly newspapersIt allowed freedom of worship in the annual public serviceClgt Protestant Trinitarian Nonshycompetition sponsored by theoonformists provided theiT New York chapter of the Pubiicmeetings were opento the pubshy

Relations Society of AmericaIlk it did not relieve the existing The award was for a five-part

fenaWes of those days against analysis ttl the ills besetting the ~atholics other breakaway Newark public school system lhcnestants or Jews but it was )he analysis was written by a hisberic beginning It has been Advocate news editor Ed Grant ltJeseribed as the Great Oharter and was an examination into ~ religious freedom and the one of the areas of dissatisfacshy~umph ofc9mmon ~ense tion which led to widespread

rioting in Newark last Summer

The series ran lri the newsshylJays Help for Poor paper last september and Octoshy

lPeCice First ~eeds ber The Public Rellitlons SocishyMIAMI (NC)-The Catholic ety award - silver medals are (lihurch in this nation today awarded in each of five cateshy

gories-are given for the mostauast address itself to the presshynoteworthy contributions bullbull 0 toiloing needs of the poor and dis-

~vantaged as well as the better public ~derstanding of ltJnICial issue of peace says the _ community problems in the New

4Tchbishop of Miami York metropolitan area Archbishop Coleman F Calshy New s p a per 8 magazines 0011 following announcement of broadcasting an d television middotGte establishment of the ecclesshy media in the New York-New iastical province of Miami and Jersey-Connecti~ut metropolitan tMs appointment as its first area are eligible for the awards l)rehbishop stressed that the (fhurch must be concerned with ibe problems of the time in Retired ArttlhJboshop S)Vhich we exist Gets College lHlonorThe g~eatest problems at present are the problems of the DUBUQUE ( NC) - Retired disadvantaged the poor and Archbishop Edward D Howard Utase who are in need and of of Portland Ore has been named oourse peace he smiddotaid for Loras Colleges 1968 John

It is more difficult for us to Fitzgerald Kennedy Award The LiOlve in any real way the prob- prelate is a former president of iems that are our concern until the college we have a measure of peace The citation and gold medal And it is the prayer of all of us annual award honoring an out Chat peace will be established as standing Amercian will be preshyiluickly as possible on an honorshy sen ted to the archbishop at the able basis o college commencement cereshy

monies June 2 Camp Directory Archbishop Howard 90 a nashy

Nltlw available from the Nashy ti ve of Cresco Iowa and a Loras lItonal Catholic Camping Assn alumnus was ordained to the ~ 131~ Massachusetts Ave priesthood in 1906middot He became lM- W Washington D C 20005 president of the college in 1921 Is the 1968 Directory of Catholic In 1924 he was consecrated to ~mps which lists all known serve as auxiliary bishop of DavshyearriPs in the U S giving acshy enport He became archbishop of Civities charges dates open and Portland in 1926 and retired in lIbailing addresses 1966

National CYOPlans LeadershipTraining shyImpa~t to Aid Priests Adult Admiddotvisors

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tbe through the introduction of BaWmore June 23-28 ehicagoNational Catholic Youth Organshy leadership methodology which July 1-5 Boston July 14-19 ization Federation will launch a facilitates maximum involveshy Sen Antonio July 28-Aug 3 training program in June called ment 00 the local level and Denver Aug 11-16 and San Impaot be help priests and hence maximum commitment JFaoancisoo Aug 25-30 adults 00 work effectively with The National CYO Federation Dr Donald Ebalt a professhyteenagers in a leisure time proshy will sponsor six sessiOns this lIlional trainbig eonsul1lant of gram summer to train diocesan CYO Washington D c win diiecl

The program was designed in staffs m 1lhe use of the newmiddot ead11ab cooperation with Leadership program lhey win )e held m A pilot Jtudy of the effectiveshyResources Inc a firm _of beshy DeBS of Impact on a group of havior scientists -rolulbteers from the NewarlkAddress Graduates

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishy archdiocese was held at the SOUTH BEND (HC) -Mel-rector of the Youth Department Benedictine Retreat House ill

Jdte-rite Patriarcib Maximoo VUnited States Catholic Confershy jNewton N J ence in announcing ttie new Kakimof Antioch and Dr Ilhirtymiddot persons representashyprogram said tives of youth adult advisorsJames A Perkins of Cornell

The goal 01 Impact is 00 help and priest moderators met withUniversity will be speakers atthe priests who are moderators representattives of the CYO

the 123rd annual cOnW~ncementof CYO the ad~lt advisors and Federation staff and a member youth participating in CYO toshy exerci~ Sundly June 2 at Of Leadership rResources Inc ward maximumpersonal growth Notrlte Dame University 110 assess and to evaluate 1mpaltL

(Cathedral Camp-Resident and Day Camp for Boys

O~ Lady of the L_ke Day Camp fOr Girls

Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON LONG POND ROUTE 18 EAST FREETOWN MAS~

~ RESIDENT CAMP 49th Season June 30 thru August 24 - a Week Season

Diocesan seminar-ians - College Students amp Teachers Under direction StaH of a Diocesan Priest

Saili~g swimming water skiing horseback riding riflery archeryPrograni hiking overnight camping trips ~rts amp crafts Indian crafts camp crafts athletic (team amp individual) competition and inter-camp cOmpetition professional tutorial service available

Private beach large luxurious camphouse dining hall modernfacilities~ washrooms arts and crafts buildings camp store and office first aid and infirmary beautiful chapel overnight and weekend accomodashytions for parents

S WEEK PIERIOD $325 - 4 W~K PERIOD $165 - 2 weEK PERIOD $85

Cathedra~ Day Camp t=or Boys Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period

JULY W- AUGUST 23 Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period fEES INCLUDIE Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Horseback Riding Weekly Cook~Outs amp Milk Daily without Added Cost

--~----------------------------------------Our Lady of the Lake bay Camp For Girls

JULY l _ AUGUST 23 Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period

FEES INCLUD~Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Ilorseback Riding Weekly Cook-Outsmiddot Milk Daily without Added Cost

o

For further information write to

REV WALlER A 5ULLlVANDiredor PO Box 63 - East Freetown Mass 02717

Page 20: 05.23.68

20 THE ANCHOR-Thurs May 23 1968

Iritai~ If S)crap SuPPITreg~~5n Acts Of Re~(j[jmlt~oml

LONDON (NC)-It looks as if Britain is at long last glOing to stop suppressing the monasteries-officially that 0

Legal experts sifting through lenturies of forgotten laws clutshyooling the records have found (hat the Suppression of Reli shygious Houses Acts of 1535 and 0039 have never been repealed

They are among 155 statutes weeded out from the statute IJ)ooks between 1239 and 1705middot lmd now to be definitively leshy~aled by a special act of Par-Iliament

These two acts enforced the eosure and pillaging of Catholic monasteries friaries and other religious houses throughout the WINS nsc Chaplain

eountry following King Henry (Captain) Angelo J LitekyVIIIs break with Rome in 1534

assigned to the 199th InfanshyJhey brought vast fortunes On goods property and mog of try Brigade in Vietnam has ell land to the kings favorites been awarded the Distinshyoome of whose families have reshy guished Service Cross forWned their wealth to this day extraordinary heroism SevshyIgnored in Practice

Of course the laws against erely wounded when Viet me Roman Catholic Church Cong ambushed a US infanshyIhave long ago been shelved and try company Ohaplain Lit shyIgnored in practice The reli shy eky braved flying bullets toous houses are back probably

rescue and minister tomore numerous than before iIome have even reoccupied the WQunded and dying meR 0ld sites they hadmiddot before the lReformation

Another notable measure ~ewlfk ~[p)regID Gingled out for repeal is the 1loleration Act of 1688 This act W51f)$ ~WIfltdl although in itself it did not help

NEW YORK (NC)-The Adshy~he Catholics marked the end of

vocate weekly newspaper of1lhe Protestant Reformation and the Newark Archdiocese wont1he beginning of religious tolershythe first-place Silver Medalation in Britain Awarti for weekly newspapersIt allowed freedom of worship in the annual public serviceClgt Protestant Trinitarian Nonshycompetition sponsored by theoonformists provided theiT New York chapter of the Pubiicmeetings were opento the pubshy

Relations Society of AmericaIlk it did not relieve the existing The award was for a five-part

fenaWes of those days against analysis ttl the ills besetting the ~atholics other breakaway Newark public school system lhcnestants or Jews but it was )he analysis was written by a hisberic beginning It has been Advocate news editor Ed Grant ltJeseribed as the Great Oharter and was an examination into ~ religious freedom and the one of the areas of dissatisfacshy~umph ofc9mmon ~ense tion which led to widespread

rioting in Newark last Summer

The series ran lri the newsshylJays Help for Poor paper last september and Octoshy

lPeCice First ~eeds ber The Public Rellitlons SocishyMIAMI (NC)-The Catholic ety award - silver medals are (lihurch in this nation today awarded in each of five cateshy

gories-are given for the mostauast address itself to the presshynoteworthy contributions bullbull 0 toiloing needs of the poor and dis-

~vantaged as well as the better public ~derstanding of ltJnICial issue of peace says the _ community problems in the New

4Tchbishop of Miami York metropolitan area Archbishop Coleman F Calshy New s p a per 8 magazines 0011 following announcement of broadcasting an d television middotGte establishment of the ecclesshy media in the New York-New iastical province of Miami and Jersey-Connecti~ut metropolitan tMs appointment as its first area are eligible for the awards l)rehbishop stressed that the (fhurch must be concerned with ibe problems of the time in Retired ArttlhJboshop S)Vhich we exist Gets College lHlonorThe g~eatest problems at present are the problems of the DUBUQUE ( NC) - Retired disadvantaged the poor and Archbishop Edward D Howard Utase who are in need and of of Portland Ore has been named oourse peace he smiddotaid for Loras Colleges 1968 John

It is more difficult for us to Fitzgerald Kennedy Award The LiOlve in any real way the prob- prelate is a former president of iems that are our concern until the college we have a measure of peace The citation and gold medal And it is the prayer of all of us annual award honoring an out Chat peace will be established as standing Amercian will be preshyiluickly as possible on an honorshy sen ted to the archbishop at the able basis o college commencement cereshy

monies June 2 Camp Directory Archbishop Howard 90 a nashy

Nltlw available from the Nashy ti ve of Cresco Iowa and a Loras lItonal Catholic Camping Assn alumnus was ordained to the ~ 131~ Massachusetts Ave priesthood in 1906middot He became lM- W Washington D C 20005 president of the college in 1921 Is the 1968 Directory of Catholic In 1924 he was consecrated to ~mps which lists all known serve as auxiliary bishop of DavshyearriPs in the U S giving acshy enport He became archbishop of Civities charges dates open and Portland in 1926 and retired in lIbailing addresses 1966

National CYOPlans LeadershipTraining shyImpa~t to Aid Priests Adult Admiddotvisors

WASHINGTON (NC) - Tbe through the introduction of BaWmore June 23-28 ehicagoNational Catholic Youth Organshy leadership methodology which July 1-5 Boston July 14-19 ization Federation will launch a facilitates maximum involveshy Sen Antonio July 28-Aug 3 training program in June called ment 00 the local level and Denver Aug 11-16 and San Impaot be help priests and hence maximum commitment JFaoancisoo Aug 25-30 adults 00 work effectively with The National CYO Federation Dr Donald Ebalt a professhyteenagers in a leisure time proshy will sponsor six sessiOns this lIlional trainbig eonsul1lant of gram summer to train diocesan CYO Washington D c win diiecl

The program was designed in staffs m 1lhe use of the newmiddot ead11ab cooperation with Leadership program lhey win )e held m A pilot Jtudy of the effectiveshyResources Inc a firm _of beshy DeBS of Impact on a group of havior scientists -rolulbteers from the NewarlkAddress Graduates

Msgr Thomas J Leonard dishy archdiocese was held at the SOUTH BEND (HC) -Mel-rector of the Youth Department Benedictine Retreat House ill

Jdte-rite Patriarcib Maximoo VUnited States Catholic Confershy jNewton N J ence in announcing ttie new Kakimof Antioch and Dr Ilhirtymiddot persons representashyprogram said tives of youth adult advisorsJames A Perkins of Cornell

The goal 01 Impact is 00 help and priest moderators met withUniversity will be speakers atthe priests who are moderators representattives of the CYO

the 123rd annual cOnW~ncementof CYO the ad~lt advisors and Federation staff and a member youth participating in CYO toshy exerci~ Sundly June 2 at Of Leadership rResources Inc ward maximumpersonal growth Notrlte Dame University 110 assess and to evaluate 1mpaltL

(Cathedral Camp-Resident and Day Camp for Boys

O~ Lady of the L_ke Day Camp fOr Girls

Sponsored by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fall River LOCATED ON LONG POND ROUTE 18 EAST FREETOWN MAS~

~ RESIDENT CAMP 49th Season June 30 thru August 24 - a Week Season

Diocesan seminar-ians - College Students amp Teachers Under direction StaH of a Diocesan Priest

Saili~g swimming water skiing horseback riding riflery archeryPrograni hiking overnight camping trips ~rts amp crafts Indian crafts camp crafts athletic (team amp individual) competition and inter-camp cOmpetition professional tutorial service available

Private beach large luxurious camphouse dining hall modernfacilities~ washrooms arts and crafts buildings camp store and office first aid and infirmary beautiful chapel overnight and weekend accomodashytions for parents

S WEEK PIERIOD $325 - 4 W~K PERIOD $165 - 2 weEK PERIOD $85

Cathedra~ Day Camp t=or Boys Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period

JULY W- AUGUST 23 Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period fEES INCLUDIE Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Horseback Riding Weekly Cook~Outs amp Milk Daily without Added Cost

--~----------------------------------------Our Lady of the Lake bay Camp For Girls

JULY l _ AUGUST 23 Camp Fee 3500 for 2 wk period Camp Fee $12500 for 8 wk season period

FEES INCLUD~Transportation Insurance Arts amp Crafts Canteen Ilorseback Riding Weekly Cook-Outsmiddot Milk Daily without Added Cost

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For further information write to

REV WALlER A 5ULLlVANDiredor PO Box 63 - East Freetown Mass 02717