20
'- -'- since 1946 and a leading figure in the American Catholie hierarchy, died in De Paul Hos- pital Saturday. a month short of hi$ 75th birthday. ' The 20 years that Cardinal Ritter served the St. Louis arch- diocese were marked as much by his leadership in a changing universal Churoh as by his guidance of the" local People of God. From Oct. 8, 1946, when he left the Archdiocese of Indianap- olis to succeed the late Cardinal John J. Glennon as Archbish()p of St. Louis, through the day of his death, the Church moved for- ward in its own renewal under his leadership and sought a new relevance with issues: of the world. In these years, Cardinal Ritter became a recognized leader in racial justice, ecumenism and the second Vatican Council. The cardinid had a national impact when he integrated St. Louis Catholic schools in 194'7, seven years be- fore the U. S. Supreme Court made school integration the law of the land. During the Vat- ican council, he emerged as a pr 0 g res s i ve leader among Americtan prel- ates and bishops throughout the Turn to Page 12 Card. RuffiDI College of Cardinals Loses Two Illustrious Members Two eminent cardinals--Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St. Louis and Ernesto Cardinal Ruffini of Palermo, Sicily- died within the space of 24 hours and deprived the Church of noted leadership in pastoral application of Vatican II. Not only were Cardinals Ritter and Ruffini from the oPPoJite sides of the world but the American Cardinal was known for his progressive in renewal and relevance with the issues of the world; Cardinal Ruffini, a most active and outspoken participant in the Vatican Council was a leader of the more conservative element in the Council. At home, the U. S. prelate launched many types of renewal to render the Vatican Council more meaningful to his dioc- esans: Operation Renewal, a synod, an archdiocesan council of priests, Religions and laity, an archdiocesan council of priests. In Sicily, the Italian prelate, although he opp!>sed some key proposals eventually adopted by the council, accepted the Coun- cil's decisions wannly as "a great, extraordinary miracle of the moral orde,r. a brilliantly shin- ing proof of the holy Church's fresh vitality and force." A con- celebrated fu- neral Mass was offered t his morning in St. Louis Cathedral for 'Cardinal Ritter; the fu- neral of Cardi- nal Rufini will be held Satur- day. Cardinal Ritter, Arch- bishop of St. Card. BUter Priests throughout the Dioceoe of Fall River will meet ,in the immediate future to witness and l'articipate in the .offering of a accol'ding to the neWl\r rites going into effect on Thursday, June 29. The Masses are scheduled to bring about . uniformity in the offering op Stang High School, North of Mass throughout the Din- Dartmouth, on Thursday, June . cese. The celebrant of the 22, at 3 in the afternoon. Masses will be the Very Rev. Bishop Cassidy High School RObert L. Stanton, Rector of the will be the scene of the Mass ex" Cathedral and Secretary of the emplifying the new rites for Liturgical Commission. the priests of the Taunton-Attie- Queries on the adapted rites bora Area. It will be offered at will be answered by the Very 3 Friday, June 23. Rev. Reginald M. Barrette, Dioc- The new Mass rites will then esan Chancellor. be witnessed by the priests of the The priests from the Fall Cape-Islands Area at St. Francis River-New Bedford Area will at- Xavier Church, Hyannis, at 4 tend the Mass celebrated at Bish- Monday, June 26. Monsignbr Denehy Named School Commandant Rt. :Rev. (Lt. Col.) John F. Denehy of Fall River is the new commandant of Air University's Air Force Chap- lain School, Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama. Monsignor Denehy has been deputy commandant since May of 1966, a few months before ac- tivity was transferred from Lacklana AFB, Texas, to Max- well. ' The Fall River diocesan priest entered the Air Force in 1950. In addition to various assign- ments at Air Force installations in the United States, he has Turn to Page Fourteen ProvinCial Names Brother Richard Coyle Principal Brother John Donoghue, C.S.C., provincial of the Eas tern Province of the Brothers of Holy Cross has announced that Brother Richard Kiniry, C.S.C., presently dean of men at Notre Dame High School, Turin to Page Nineteen BRO. RICHARD KINIRY, C.s.C. For Mass $4.00 pet' Yea' PRICE lOt these are like hy-- relation to estab- by oPinions, potheses in fact." Msgr. Clarke the CCD to a small boat that must $tay· near the shore, near fundamen- tals, for the sake of the children bein'g taught and for the sake of the teachers· being trained. It is necessary. he said. to abide by definite textbooks in - ........ order to teach prescribed mate- rial. He added that he had written .to religion textbook publishers who do not include the text of prayers, asking them to print such prayers as the Our Father, the Creed and the Act of Con- trition. These, he said, are nec- essary to form in children the practice 01 prayer. Turn to Page Twelve Mass., Thursday, June lS, 1967 THREE CURATES IN NEW POSTS A.A ..... ., .. ............ "'11'11'1""':1111-1"'1'1' ..... The ANCHOR Yol. 11, No. 24· @1967 The Anchor LOS ANGELES formation of chil- 4ren .should not be sacrificed for the sake of. senoeless ;- iocperimentation. Teachers of religion should adhere to fun- . "mentals and not become involved in conveying mere epinions. Strongly empha- aized, these twin admonit- ions were voiced here by "Auxiliary Bishop John J. Jvard of Los Ang.eles and" Msg'r. . John K. Clarke at a graduation lweakfast for 1,100 men and '.omen Who had completed 50- IIour to become lay cate- *ists of the Confraternity of .... ristion Doctrine. "You must stay close to fun- "mentals," said Msgr. Clarke, M"Chdiocesan eCD director. Our GCD policy is this: )"ou simply 411m-not afford to experiment be-- ij' ..use you -must- convey the tKndamentals. "The CCD," Msgr. Clarke em- .,ph:as.ized, Uis not concerned with -.pinions. We must allow for the development of dogma, but we- Are not interested in teaching "nions. Do not be scandalized Warns CCO Catechists Experimentation

06.15.67

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lain School, Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama. Monsignor Denehy has been deputy commandant since May of 1966, afewmonthsbeforeac- tivity was transferred from Lacklana AFB, Texas, to Max- well. ' TheFall Riverdiocesanpriest entered the Air Force in 1950. In addition to various assign- ments at Air Force installations in the United States, he has Turn to Page Fourteen River-NewBedfordAreawillat- Xavier Church, Hyannis, at 4 tendthe Mass celebratedatBish- Monday,June 26. Supreme Court made school

Citation preview

'- -'-

Lo~s since 1946 and a leadingfigure in the American Catholiehierarchy, died in De Paul Hos­pital Saturday. a month shortof hi$ 75th birthday. '

The 20 years that CardinalRitter served the St. Louis arch­diocese were marked as muchby his leadership in a changinguniversal Churoh as by hisguidance of the" local People ofGod.

From Oct. 8, 1946, when heleft the Archdiocese of Indianap­olis to succeed the late CardinalJohn J. Glennon as Archbish()pof St. Louis, through the day ofhis death, the Church moved for­ward in its own renewal underhis leadership and sought a newrelevance with issues: of theworld.

In these years, Cardinal Ritterbecame a recognized leader inracial justice, ecumenism andthe second Vatican Council.

The cardinid had a nationalimpact when he integrated St.Louis Catholic schools in 194'7,seven years be­fore the U. S.Supreme Courtmade schoolintegration thelaw of the land.During the Vat­ican council, heemerged as apr 0 g res s i v eleader amongAmerictan prel­ates and bishopsthroughout the

Turn to Page 12 Card. RuffiDI

College of Cardinals LosesTwo Illustrious Members

Two eminent cardinals--Joseph Cardinal Ritter of St.Louis and Ernesto Cardinal Ruffini of Palermo, Sicily­died within the space of 24 hours and deprived the Churchof noted leadership in pastoral application of Vatican II.

Not only were CardinalsRitter and Ruffini from theoPPoJite sides of the worldbut the American Cardinalwas known for his progressiveid~as in renewal and relevancewith the issues of the world;Cardinal Ruffini, a most activeand outspoken participant in theVatican Council was a leader ofthe more conservative elementin the Council.

At home, the U. S. prelatelaunched many types of renewalto render the Vatican Councilmore meaningful to his dioc­esans: Operation Renewal, asynod, an archdiocesan councilof priests, Religions and laity,an archdiocesan council ofpriests.

In Sicily, the Italian prelate,although he opp!>sed some keyproposals eventually adopted bythe council, accepted the Coun­cil's decisions wannly as "a great,extraordinary miracle of themoral orde,r. a brilliantly shin­ing proof of the holy Church's

fresh vitality andforce." A con­celebrated fu­neral Mass wasoffered t hismorning in St.Louis Cathedralfor 'CardinalRitter; the fu­neral of Cardi­nal Rufini willbe held Satur­day. CardinalRitter, Arch­bishop of St.

Card. BUter

Priests throughout the Dioceoe of Fall River will meet,in the immediate future to witness and l'articipate in the.offering of a Masseel~l'ated accol'ding to the neWl\r ritesgoing into effect on Thursday, June 29. The Masses arescheduled to bring about .uniformity in the offering op Stang High School, Northof Mass throughout the Din- Dartmouth, on Thursday, June

. cese. The celebrant of the 22, at 3 in the afternoon.Masses will be the Very Rev. Bishop Cassidy High SchoolRObert L. Stanton, Rector of the will be the scene of the Mass ex"Cathedral and Secretary of the emplifying the new rites forLiturgical Commission. the priests of the Taunton-Attie-

Queries on the adapted rites bora Area. It will be offered atwill be answered by the Very 3 Friday, June 23.Rev. Reginald M. Barrette, Dioc- The new Mass rites will thenesan Chancellor. be witnessed by the priests of the

The priests from the Fall Cape-Islands Area at St. FrancisRiver-New Bedford Area will at- Xavier Church, Hyannis, at 4tend the Mass celebrated at Bish- Monday, June 26.

Monsignbr DenehyNamed SchoolCommandant

Rt. :Rev. (Lt. Col.) JohnF. Denehy of Fall River isthe new commandant of AirUniversity's Air Force Chap­lain School, Maxwell Air ForceBase, Alabama.

Monsignor Denehy has beendeputy commandant since Mayof 1966, a few months before ac­tivity was transferred fromLacklana AFB, Texas, to Max-well. '

The Fall River diocesan priestentered the Air Force in 1950.In addition to various assign­ments at Air Force installationsin the United States, he has

Turn to Page Fourteen

ProvinCial NamesBrother RichardCoyle Principal

Brother John Donoghue,C.S.C., provincial of theEastern Province of theBrothers of Holy Cross hasannounced that Brother RichardKiniry, C.S.C., presently dean ofmen at Notre Dame High School,

Turin to Page Nineteen

BRO. RICHARD KINIRY, C.s.C.

For Mass

$4.00 pet' Yea'PRICE lOt

these are like hy-­relation to estab-

by oPinions,potheses inli~hed, fact."

Msgr. Clarke li~ened the CCDto a small boat that must $tay·near the shore, near fundamen­tals, for the sake of the childrenbein'g taught and for the sake ofthe teachers· being trained.It is necessary. he said. to

abide by definite textbooks in-........order to teach prescribed mate­

rial.

He added that he had written.to religion textbook publisherswho do not include the text ofprayers, asking them to printsuch prayers as the Our Father,the Creed and the Act of Con­trition. These, he said, are nec­essary to form in children thepractice 01 prayer.

Turn to Page Twelve

Mass., Thursday, June lS, 1967

THREE CURATES IN NEW POSTS

A.A......,.. ............ "'11'11'1""':1111-1"'1'1'.....

TheANCHOR

Yol. 11, No. 24· @1967 The Anchor

LOS ANGELES (NC)~Religious formation of chil­4ren . should not be sacrificed for the sake of. senoeless

;- iocperimentation. Teachers of religion should adhere to fun­. "mentals and not become involved in conveying mere

epinions. Strongly empha­aized, these twin admonit­ions were voiced here by"Auxiliary Bishop John J.Jvard of Los Ang.eles and" Msg'r.

. John K. Clarke at a graduationlweakfast for 1,100 men and'.omen Who had completed 50­IIour c~urses to become lay cate-*ists of the Confraternity of....ristion Doctrine.

"You must stay close to fun­"mentals," said Msgr. Clarke,M"Chdiocesan eCD director. OurGCD policy is this: )"ou simply411m-not afford to experiment be--

ij' ..use you -must- convey thetKndamentals.

"The CCD," Msgr. Clarke em­.,ph:as.ized, Uis not concerned with-.pinions. We must allow for thedevelopment of dogma, but we­Are not interested in teaching"nions. Do not be scandalized

Warns CCO Catechists,'~Of Experimentation

2 THE ANCHOR-Diocese..of Fan River-Thurs. June 15, 1967

>

.Druggists Slate NYC Meeting

OFF~CIAL

ASSIGNMENTS

Rev. Paul E. Canuel, from assistant at Blessed Sacrament Church, Fall River, to St. Patrick's Church, Wareham, as assistant.

Rev. John J. Smith, from assistant at St. Patrick's Church, Wareham, tei St. J~es Church, New Bedford, as assistant,

Rev. Harold J. Wilson, assistant at Holy Faptily Church, East .Taunton, to St. William's Church, Fall River,' as ·assistant.

, , '

Assignments effective Thursday, June' 22, 1967.'

Diocese of Fa II River

Chancery An'nounces Transfers, Parish Assistcu1tsOf Three ." .: ",

The Chancery .office today He received an A.B. d~gree announced transfers involving from Provid~nce. College and. three assistants: . completed hi~, prie~t~y tr,~ining ..Rev. PaulE. Canuel, assistant. at St. Mary's Seminary, Balti ­at Blessed .Sacramellt Church, more ,," ., ,. Fall Riv.er, to St. Patrick Church, Ordaiped on ApiiL25!i,959, by

.' Wareham, as assistant., " 'B~sI:top ~~hnollY. i~,~~:¥ary's" '. '. Rev. 'John j. Sriiith', aSsistant '. at st. Patrick Church, Wareham,

ie St. James Church, New Bed­f«lrd, as assistant. .

Rev. Harold J. Wilson, assist ­ant at Holy Family Church, East Taunton, to St. William Church, Fall River, as a·ssistant.

Father Canuel Father Canuel, son of Mr. and

Mrs. Robert M. Canuel, was born ...in Fall River on Dec. 15, 1940. 'Educated .at Assumption',' Col­lege, Worcester, St. Thomas Seminary, Bloomfield, COnll. and, St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore, "h I . d W h(,..,..• e·· new y asslgne ". are.a.m assistant was ordained on May 21, 196!>. i.n~t. Mary's Cat~<lral, . .' . FallR~v,;er,by Bishop. COI;l?:oll~.

He haS 'served as an assistant at the I31esse'd Sacr~llnent~thurch;' F llR" , .', . d" t"

Cathedral" F.all. RIver, F,ather Smith has served as an assistant at the Wareham parish since

. ordination./ . In 1963,"'he received an M.Ed.

degree from Bridgewater Col-. lege. '.

!Father Wilson Father Wilson' was born in

Fall River· on May 22, 1940, the son of HaroldE. and Veronica Griffin Wilson. He' attended the ,. . University of' .'Massachusetts, Amherst, St. Thotnas Sem!nary,' >Bloomfield,Coim>; arid St. John's' Seminary, Brighton. " . . .

Ordained on May 21, .1966 irit' ,.. . l' 1 ' . 'S . Mary's Cathedra, Fill 'River,

Timothy P. Keating, New Bec'il­ford, executive secretary of the National, Catholic Pharmacist!! Guild, announces the organiza­tion's mid-year meeting, to be lleld Friday, June 30 through Sunday, July 2 at the Hotel Com­modore in New York City.

Rev. Albert F. Shovelton, SL Mary's Home, New Bedford, na­tional guild spiritual directo~

will celebrate a eonventicm Mass at St. Agnes Church m New York at 8 Saturday mol'J}oDmg. .

William J. Habig, guild pres).., dent, will preside at a program ie be acted upon at the annual meeting, slated for New OrIea.. in October.

. " • .1

Protestan·f Woman , 'On Seminary Board

NIAGARA FALLS (NC) ­Canadian Secretary of StatAl

AT JESUS-MARY: Graduates at Jesus-Mary Aca­ .Judy LaMarsh, a Protestant\ has demy, Fall River, include, from left, Michele O'Brien, Tb~ been appointed to the board 01 resa St. Pierre, Louise Sherman, Suzanne Berube and trustees of a Roman Catholie

se.m~nary. , 'I ~ ,l' • I Colette Richard.r .: '"~ ; .. ···Father Keith Egan, O.Carm..

. '. ". ".,. ':', ,presi,dent of Mount,Carmel'Col­Ret·.-rem'ent'· ·PO··I.-·cy .. f:. i'" "Jege,saidthat·MissLaMarshwiD , . . . ' . , , .' ,,: , serve on a seven-member. board

,... ',' ..... .,,', ,'.' eftrusiees being. established f(S . Davenport Bishop O'Keefe Asks.,Pastors"Ovet' .. We f~rst time to deal with.policJ(,

- . A " '. , .' . . "'-',' " .. financial affairs,'and other, .proh­75 Years ~.f> g~ to.Tende~,Res!gnq.tlo,ns .\·,Jemsof the -institution, :Mount

. , ' . ...' !.' • .,., ~ €armel College; educates .·:futureI

DAVENPORT. (NC)-Bl,shop has. rese;.v.ed ~I:te rI~ht t<! ,~~~~" . })r-ie~ts of the <;::armelite commu-Gerald O'Keefe of Davenport reS1gnati~ns or to defer 'them;' 'J)iq> . . " ..

·has a~ked all pas~ors in: ~,is d~-·. Th~ se~a~ :0£ pri~sis ~~;ask::.'.'·' F~th~r Ega~: '~bo' wiil",~~t 8fJ

; ocese .who have .re~che~i:thelr 75th bitthday to. resign. .

Resporiding to a request of the senate of priests;' Bishop O'Keefe's letter on retirement, sent to all priests, applied to the Davenport Diocese the retire­ment policies outlined in the Second Vatican Council's Decree on the Pastoral Duties of Bish­ops and. implemented .·by· Pope Paul VI in .his apostolic letter, Ecclesi'ae Sanctae, which:"went into effect last Oct. 15. ,.

by Bishop Co,,"nolly, the newlyS ' ep'res.e,n ,a Ion ' ber,' according 'to Father' Robert· , 'un'e"ra " om'e'"

,. ihe~e'aJ;'e,'fewert~a~ ~lle haU' 'LaBlsfOOpatte' vated. to .the college of cardina1&M~u~~ ~chexnaYder of dozen Davenport ,diocesan pas- ' ye., ". " ,,"" . ..' ". tol'/l 75 or' over., BIshop: O'Keefe .. A ~nstitutiorial asseln'b~y 14)" '. ~""'_-----_"";"";"_---.

. , .', 'fo,rm a.' p,rofessi,onal cle'rg'", as;.,' , .' ,..... '. 0',R'0''U'R'KE''.' ,-.".sociation, is..silited for ·Sep·'.t,em·.:..···A k R,' '. t t"

J

F I H'

.. .. a l~er, SInce or ~na Ion. . Attleboro." 'men. called here. for immediate

" '

. ,~ssigned assis~ant at St. WilhamsOC A

'Parish Fall River. has served n ity Agencies . ' . ' ,

at Holy Family <:hurch, T~un- ELIZABETH (NC) ~ An or­ton, and St. Mary s .Church, No. ganization of Elizabeth clergy':

. ,Father Smith :. Father Smith, the sori:'of ..Nora , ....

Sparrow Smith and the:lilte Ain" .' Mbss .Ordo brose Smith, was born June' 12, 1932 in New Bedford. '..

Necrology JUNE 2~

.Rev. Bernard F. McCahill, 1907 Pastor, SS. Peter and Paul, Fall River.

JUNE 25 Rev. Raymond J. Hamel, 1960,

Chaplain, St. Joseph Orphanage, Fall River.

Rt. Rev. Louis A. ~iitchand, IMl, Pastor, St. Anthony, New 'Bedford. -

JUNE 26 Rev. Cli'arles P. Gaboury, 1931,

Pastor, St. Anne, New ,Bedford. JUNE 27

Rev. John Corry, '1863, Found­er, St. Mary. Taunton; Founder, St. Mary, Fall River. '

Rev. Dario Reposo, 1933, Pas­tor, Our Lady of Lourdes, Taun­ton.

JUNE 28 Rev. Thomas C. Gunning, 1947,'

Assistant, St. Lawrence, New ,Bedford.

. THE ANC'HOIl" ' second Class Postage 'Pald at' Fall RIver,

Mas'~ Publisheoevery Thursday at· 410 Hlshlano Avenue" Fall Rlvel Mass.. 02722 oy the Catholic Press Ol tho Diocese of Fall

. RIver. SUDscriptlon price II, mall. postpakl1" ,".. :$4.00 llernar.. .... '.. .- .,--, .. '.: .,.

FRIDAY-Mass of previous Sun­day. IV Class. Green. Mass Proper; No Glory nor Creed; Common Preface.

SATURDAY-St. Gregory Bar­badici, Bishop and Confesso,r.III Class. White. Mass Proper; Glory; . no .Creed; ; Common Preface. .... .

SUNDAY-V Sunday After Pen­tecost. II Class. Green. Mass Proper,;. Glory; Creed; PrefaCe

, o~ Tririity. :l'dONDJ\Y~t. Juliana FalcO­· nieri;' VirgIn. III Class.. White. ,Mass '. Proper; Glory;' 2nd Prayer 5S. Gervase and PrO­tase, .Martyrs; no Creed; Coni­mon Preface.

TUESD~Y- Mass of previous - Sunday, 'IV Class. Green.

Mass. PJoPer; No Glory; 2nd Prayer St. Silverius, Pope and Martyr; no Creed; Common Preface.

OR St. Silverius; ·pop.eand Martyr.

" Red .. Glory; ',no Creed; Com­· mon Preface. - \' ..

WEDNESDAy...:-st:Aloysius Gon­zaga,' Confessor:,.' III Class.

. White, Mass~ Proper; Glory;' no· Creed; Common Preface.

;T~RSDAY~~.,Pa~linus, Bish­op and Coilfessor;- III Class. White. Mass Proper; Glory; no

·"C;;:r~edj' Common' Preface.. '

and substantial Negro represeJi­tation on city agencies concerned with urban renewal work.

In an open letter to city offi ­cials,' the Concerned Clergy of Elizabeth asked for Negro rep.. resentatives on the ·relocation agency and the housing author­ity. Their letter was in suppOrt

of demands made by Negro groups.·

It 'becomes ever more appar-. ent that Elizabeth Negroes feel that· they .have been scorned and rejected; that they' have .been treated as second-class citizens apd that they lack the' pow'Elr to change their environment in any signific~nt .way.~

P:riest .to. Lecture BOCA RATON (NC)-Father

Jack L. Totty, chaplain at Mary­mount Junior College, will be a' visiting lecturer in theology at Florida Presbyterian College, St. Petersburg, June 18 to 24.

D. Do Suniv(i8l'& Sons FUNERAL' HOME· 469 LOCUST STREET

IFAIl.L ROVE", MAS·S. 672-338.1

Wilfred, C. "James E. Driscoll Sullivan,Jr.

,~.~~e ~lsh~.p. to ma~~:~ state;;,. 'R.OD-voting .. chairman, of.; the mento,," retirement policy. and. . board; said the college plans te to review existing pensio~ and..approach several other nOD­other provisions for retired Catholics, including a Protestani priests. fbeolegian, to serve as trustees.

Or41'no'ry Approves Fl' h R ' Ig t to ome.

Clerg,y.. Association WASmNGTON (NC) - The Was.hington archdiocese is SPOD-

LedAFAYIETTE (NC).t·.A 'prfo-' 88ring a special group flight to ~ c ergy a~ocla 10~ or, flome for the.. consistory sched­priests ,of., the Lafeyette dlOCes~.I.. ,~-~ June 26, ,~.hen Archblsho'"ba d th . -.".. .~

.s , receive. e appr~>val of Patrick A.',O~BoYle will, bel ele-If'

Sibille, cliainna'n of the ihitial ,. '.. . ' . , ," committee. ' .. ", " 571 Second Street

, ~ a l~t~er to diocesan .ciergy~ .. Fall River, Moss.:

the Lowslana prelate expressed' , , .

his approval, of the associa,tion. He said: '''I am not oppo~~d 16. . ·the organization and to its pres­ent purpose~ In fact, I am happy to make it official." .

. JE.FfR.EY. E. SULL,I,VAN. Funeral Dome

550 Locust Street , . Fall River, Mais&.­

~. ': -672-2391 .' .'-

Bose. E; SuinVlUl :. ~ ~effrey. E. Sulliva•.

. .

679-6072 MICHAEL J~ McMAHON

liCensed Funeral Director Registered Embalmer

BROOKLAWN ,FUNERAL HOME, INC. . .

II. Marcel Roy - G. LOrralne·1ler , ROller laFrance'

.FUNEICA~ DIRECTORS 15 .Irvington Ct.

·995-5166 New eedford

CONVENIENT BANKING WITHOUT TRAFFIC & ~ARKING PROBLEMS

at the

SLADE/SFERRY TRUST COMPANY SOMERSET, MASS.

The most friendly, democratic BANK oHering

Complete One-Stop Banking .Club Accounts Auto Loans Checking Accounts· Business Loans Savings Accounts Real Estate Loans

At Somerset 'Shopping' 'Areo--Brightman ·St. 'Bridge

Member ~edera).. ,ri.~~~ii ",~Uranie Corporatiof,l:: ~.

Cathomi~ ConferenceOfficial CriticBs®m In$UrafruCe P~gn

CHICAGO (NC)~.A hospital insurance program which ~as been widely advertised in Catholic newspapers and ID'agazines for the past 18 months has been strongly' criti­cized as "discriminatory" by the director of the bureau of health and hospitals of the vertisement "infers that the non­U. S. Catholic Conference. Catholic hospital does not render Msgr. Harold A. Murray told medical treatment 'in accordance delegates to the annual con­ with the ethical and religious ~ntion of the Catholic Hospi­ directi ves of the Church.' tal Association here that the in­ This has been seriously ques­surance plan's advertising pro­ tioned by many competent hos­gram "brings our ,people back pital administrators, dedicated w the years preceding Vatican physicians, and Catholic chap­€ouncil II, back'into an age of lains in non-Catholic hospitals," ghettoism." he said.

The hospital insurance. pro­ Unfounded Basis ~am is sold by the Mutual Pro­ "What bothers me more thantective Insurance Co. of Omaha, anything else is that the CatholicNeb., and is called the "Catholic press, being the precursors of aH'Ospital Plan." It is advertised new age in the Church, which:Widely in Catholic weeklies and is an ecumenical and non-dis­ntagazines, usually with full ­ criminatory age, are carrying an »age ads. advertisement of this nature

Payment to Parish which, I believe, brings our An advertisement carried in people back to the years preced­

ftle June 2 edition of the Lake ing Vatican Council II, back to Shore Visitor, newspaper of the an age of ghettoism." Erie, Pa. diocese, describes Mu­ "I think the Catholic press,"tual Protective as "The 'Catho­ Msgr. Murray said, "has to exer­lic's Company" and tells·readers cise some discernment and re­~ is to your advantage to go sponsibility in the advertise­flo a Catholic Hospital When ments it carries and in doingldckness or accident strikils." this, may I respectfully suggest

There, says the ad, "you can that they seek the advice and GOunt on receiving medical counsel of those organizations treatment that is in accordance who are competent and can be With the ethical and religibUs di- of assistance. In this matter; the

. BeCtives of the Church." . Catholic Hospital Association In addition to regular' cash and/or the (U.S.C.C.) Bureau of

benefits, the Catholic Hospital Health and Hospitals should have Plan pays $500 to a person's par­ been consulted." ' iSh' in case of accidental death. "This compainy, by placing the !What payment may also be made advertisement in tlieC'atholic tit another if the insured speci­ press implies, but does not say, fies it. that it has the approval and

The ad also asks the reader blessing of the Catholic Church. If "as a Catholic, doesn't it make Because of this, I feel sure that flOod sense for you to be pro­ many of our Catholic people do tected by a Catholic health and will purchase such insurance Dhn?" cmly on this unfounded basIs,"

Msgr. Murray specifically crit ­ he said. . Ie~ed the last two items.

"Quite frankly, I don't know . " the existence of any Catholic Asks Peace bealth plan," be said. 'ehor-BishoP Joseph Eid, pas­

. Inference Questioned' tor of St. Anthony of the Desert "I find it very obnoxious that Church, Fall River, has issued a

Catholic parishes are unwillingly statement in connection with llnd' involuntarily drawn. into. present unreli!t in the ~iddle

'Ibis scheme in which the parish,. East. He notes "We feel it is. part ~ould receive $500," he added. of our obligation to preach calm

He also criticized the adver- and peace among peoples. More­fisement for "discrimination," over, our recourse to prayer is because it advertises for "Catho": our first duty • ... oj, namely to' nes of all ages and Catholic pray the divine Prince of Peace families of all sizes." to deign to restore peace in his

Msgr. Murray said that the ad:- homeland."

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__ .._._i _._..._._.._L~ ..__..,:j TAUNTON G,mLS: Among gmduates at Bishop Cas­

lidy High, Taunton, 'are this quartet. From left, Arlene Benrique, Susan Larivee, Donna Riva, Mcu.-Y Ann Curry.

THE ANCHOR- 3' Thurs., June 15, 1967

Teac[ij®!1'~ Vote To ~f~o~~~~e

With U[ffl~on PHILADELPHIA (NC)­

The Association of Catholic Teachers, which launched 'a brief strike against high schools in the archdiocese of Philadelphia last April, has voted to become a local union of the America Federation of Teachers.

ACT will become the first Catholic teachers group in the. country to unionize. The organi­zation was also the first of its kind to strike a Catholic school system.

Joseph Garvin, AFT regional representatives, told a meeting of the association's house of dele­gates at West Catholic Boys.High School here that ACT· would be accepted as a member local if the teachers approved affiliation.

The vote to affiliate was 241 tc FOUR YEARS OVER: At Bishop Stang High School, 37, with the majority of schools

North Dartmouth, graduation are, left to right, Vice Pres­ responding. The association claims to represent more thanident Donna Severino, Patrick Desmond, Secretary Kath­400 of the 650 lay teachers in theleen Rose, and President Willi'am Muldoon. 28 high schools in the five­county Philadelphia archdiocese.

No-Strike ClauseFour Professors Have New Posts The vote came after the ,arch­

DAYTON (NC)-Two of the trinal'deviations at the univer­ diocese distributed to teachers four University of Dayton phil ­ sity. individual contracts containing lil

.osophy professors who quit in Subsequently a committee no-strike clause. The association protest of the university's hand­ of theologians appointed by said the archdiocese reneged on ling of the lengthy dispute on Archbishop Karl J. Alter of Cin­ the April stl'ike settlement I>,. Catholic teaching have accepted cinnati as a fact-finding group including the clause. posts at Niagal"8 University, Ni­ concluded that the charges made Michael Walsh, ACT lawyel'y agara Falls, N.Y. The institution by Bonnettee and his colleagues said the group's negotiating team is conducted by the Vincentian had some foundation. never agreed to accept a no­Fathers. strike clause in the settlement

that ended the 30-minute strikeProfessors. Dennis Bonnette, at 7:30 A.M. on April 17.28, a key figure in the doctrinal FORTY HOURS But James F. Gallagher Jr..controversy, and Thomas J. Cas­attorney for the archdiocese"DEV01"IONaletto, 32, said they have signed. branded this a "dishonest accu­June 18-St. Theresa, New

to teach in' the Niagara philo­"substantially better" contractS sation." He claimed that the no­

strike clause was contained in., Bedford. Holy Trinity, West Har­sophy department beginning in the contract approved by ACTwich.September. Each will have the officials. The officials deleted it . June 2~t. Mary, Norton.rank of assistant professor. before mailing a sample contractSt. Francis Xavier, Hyan­

. The other two' faculty mem­ to their members, then claimednis. bers who resigned are Hugo A. ignora'nce of the clause, Galla­St. Mary, New Bedford.

gher charged. work on a doctorate in philoso­phy at Ma.rquette University, and Edward W. Harkenrider, now at Western Michigan Uni­versity..

The four men were among a . group of nine-two priests and seven lay faculty members­signing a "declaration of consci­ence" after tile university had cleared four faculty members of the charge of teaching con­trary to Catholic belief. It was Professor Bonnette who earlier had made the charges of doc- Show Dad you're extra glad - because

he's something extra special!

Barbic, who plans to complete

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4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fo_H,~iver-Thurs"J.une15, "96~

W®MM~t Effe~tM@fi~ C~M~(f:h ~@ ~ ® 0[fi) [L@([o [TI) ~®\7@~ MlfO@[[U

!Edited by John J. Considine, M.M. lFrom "Social Revolution in the New !Latin, America"

When we discuss the Church and the social revolution -in Latin America, we are discussing the- Church in the modern world, in that part of the world where one third of her number is to be found, often convulsed and confused

NEW CONSULTANT: Father Laurence ,Murphy, M.M., director of 'the New­man International Office in New York, is the new con­sultant on international ed­ucation with the National Catholic Educational Asso­ciation. He is a 1941 gradu­

-ate of',the U.S. Naval Aca­demy.

fCll"m~ Doccesan IEdhYl«:@U'D@[]'i) S@@ f1'd

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC)­Bishop Walter P. Kell~nberg of R_ockville Centre' has announced ,that a 17-member diocesan board of Catholic edu'cation, with a majority of lay people is being created to advise' him on educa­tional matters. -

The new body, whi~h is being formed on a diocesan-wide basis, is in line with the Second Vati ­can Council~s call for greater lay activity in the Church.

"I wish to look to this board to advise me and the officials of my diocesan Department ofeduca­~ion concerning overall educa­

- tional policies and programs," , the New York prelate said in his

announcement: ' Represented on the board are

pastors, elementary and second­ary school tea~heps, Religious, parents and lay people 'fl'om dif­ferent professions.

,"We wanted a representation from a wide range of interests which ,have some bearing ,on sc~ools," Father Da~id G. Farley, d I 0 C e san supenntendentof schools, s~id. They were selected for . their competence in such varied fields as education itself law, banking, medicine and con~ struction, he noted.

Father Farley added that the lay voting majority on the board stressed the recognition of parents as the prime educators.

by the change which they witness every day. In future' years CICOP, meetings will undoubtedly go into' the more directly religious preoccu­pation of the Church in Latin 'America, the consideration of the Church in herself; in her faith. and in her worship and in her own myste­rious ,life in God. This year we are discuss­ing the Church in the Latin American tem­poral ordcT, in her mcaqing for that world now and for thc future.

To do so, it is obvious that we must speak of aggiornamento, adaptations, bringing up to date of the Church's action through all her mcmbers in Latin Amer­ica. But it is equally obvious that this must not be a merely prag­matic singling out of facilc and immediate solutions. We are called upon to re-think the very naturc and mission of the Church, as proclaimed by Christ, lest we unconsciously falsify His purposcs; and to rc-think the liv­ing out of that mission in circum­stances so changed and changing.

This was obvious to some be­fore the Council; and thcy were responsible in part~ along with their brotl1crs of likc mind in Africa, Asia, North Amcl'ica, Eu­rope and the world, under the guiding spirit of the popes, for the clcar direction taken by the Council. Now, aftcr the Council, U must be obvious to all.

Solid Religious Thinking

Our task is to study and effec­tuate thc Church's role in the social revolution now affecting Latin Amcrica, How must we go about it?

First of all, we must not close our eycs to the change that is taking place, To do so and to pretend that the Church can carry out its pastoral labors ex­actly as she has done dul'ing the first four, centuries of Christian­ity in this area of the globe is to neglect the very, mission of the Church, which is to prolong the teaching and the incarnation of the Word in the different and changing circumstances of time and of place.

Secondly, we must study the facts of change., The thcology of history, the history of our salva­tion, requires an intimate knowl­edge of the facts of history, both divine and human, the signified will of God and the actual state of mankind.

Solid religious thinking about social rcvolution'in Latin Amer­ica requires a continual dialogue between our theologians and the most competent students of all the human sciences - phifoso­phers and litterateurs, as well as historians, economists, sociol-

Fatima Seminar .

WASHINGTON (NC)-Father

ogists and political scientists. , There are times when nothing ,can be more harmful to men and to the Church thim, '3' doctrinal truth uttered with no reference to the real circumstantial context of the man and the moment; -or what is worse, expressed ,from.a point of view corresponding ,to an age and a circumstance lOl}g gene by.

To this purpose, we must .en­courage the organization and op­eration of centers of serious socio-economic research in rela­tion to the circumstances, of the life and work of the Church.

Many of these centers already exist in Latin America, on the spot, where they must fun~tion.

Thcse must be built up and more must be founded.' They must ,be financed and'staffed with trained personnel, even at the cost of building fewer churches, schools' or other institutions.

We will do bettcr in all these areas when we see more clearly what we must do. Social research must be intimately related to'

,theological thinking, within and without our faculties and semi­naries of theology, to bring the illumination of the Divine ,Word to bear upon the mission of the Church here and now. This, too, is being done and must ,be en­couraged.

Imparting Vision This vision of thc Church in

our modern world must -be ,im­parted-to our clergy, to,our re­ligious, to our laity, from the pulpit, through congresses, :gl'eat and small, in the classroom and in specialized pastoral institutes, such as are now functioning in various nations of Latin Amer­ica. '

The Church through its mem­bers must more consciously par­ticipate in the living currents o'f Latin American life, the sources and dynamos of its present revo­lution:, above all, the universi ­ties, so neglected by us, outside of our few Catholic universities so intensively cultivated by th~ communists-since it is in theuni­versities that the future pf Latin ~merica is now being prepared, In thought, and in the formation of those leaders who will be the principal artisans of that future' our Catholic leaders must act i~ the labor unions, in the agrarian movements, cooperatives and others, in all forms of education

M~ssias D. Coelho, professor and - in the Modern World to the edItor of Porh,lguese newspaper Council floor: this text.is not the 365 NORTH FRONT STREETMensagem de Fatima, win come last word, but the first in.3 new .here to New Jersey Aug. 4 to 10' dialogue between the Church NEW 8EDFORD to conduct classes at a national and the Modern world. Our

992-5534seminar of the Bluf' Army'of words are part of this continuing Our Lady. d.i.aloe:.llP

marriage and family orientation: . ,F====;============' and mass communication, as well ' A1YR.IEBORO'S as in politics.

Do we mean to say that

Leading Garden Cente1/'

~©1N[L©1NI f& nothing has been done in these regards? On the contrary, much ©(Q)1N11N1~[L[LV has been done and is being done; but much' more remains to be done. We must not interrupt nor

_South Main 0. Wall Sts.

~uu[LJE:~©[F&.© slow down this action, but we must, as the whole Church did 222-0234 in the Council, and as Pope Paul VI urges us to do, ,for in­

~oooostance in his encyclical Ecclesiam Suam, take pause to think it §DEBROSS OIL gout from its foundations and to continue to do so for all the co. years to come.

. ~s Bish0l,l Wright so aptly said, Heating Oils In mtroducmg-part of the text of the Constitution on the Church and Burners

Priest to Offer Mass in Church Bu~mt by Great-GrandUriC ~@

ELLENSVILLE (NC) - Come June 18 - Father's Day - and Ralph Bennet, C.SS,R., will be­come Father Bennett. He'll be the first native of century-old St. Andrew's parish in this New York community to attain the priesthood.

There's a story .. behind the story of Father-to be Bennett. It goes back to 1849 when brothers Piet, a stonemason, and Archi­bold Otens, a carpenter, landed in New York from their home village of Erp in 'southern Hol­land.

They couldn't speak, English, so they couldn't get work. They ·brought their problem to Father John 'Hespelein, C.SS.R., pastor -of a Manhattari parish. The Re­

. demptorist advised them to ,make ,.a ,trip up 'the Hudson Valley ,to :Ellensville, a predominantly

German settlement, where II church building was planned~'

UJm~le Builds Altar

Pfet and Archbold Otens made the trip here, found work, mali'­ried and settled down. Thelr children and grandchildren have lived here over the last centul'Jto

, Archbold Otens built the wooden St. Andrew's church here in 1851. This Spring, lUi years later, his grandson, Petell' Otens, also a ~arpenter, built the liturgical altar facing the people for the church.

Ralph Bennett will be ordained to ·the Redemptorist 'priesthooo 'June' 18 at the Redemptorist SemiIiary, Esopus, N. Y. Oh Ji.trle 25, F.ather Bennett will offer 'Mass ~n the altar buHt by his uncle in the church built by hie ,great-granduncle.

THIS NUN,~~

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, Have you everwisMd your family had a nun? You know what it means to have your children taught by Sisters. And it's a blessing from God to have a .Sister at your bedside when you're III. •.. Now overseas a girl who wants to be a Sister prays you'll understand.' She's young, mature" and 'much in leve with God. She wants to work, with lepers, orpha~, the blind...• How~an you 'adopt' 'her? For the .next two years she'll need' onIY'$3.J.S a week -for room, board and tralnlna. We'il send you her ,R8me on receipt of your first: 'gift. She'll-write you fr.om overseas to thank you -and you may write to her as often as you wiflh,' ,of oourse. Two years from now, a member 01 your family, she'll be a·full·fledged nunl ••• Shan we send you tier name right now? Make the P81'" melltsatyourewn convenience ($12.50a month.­'$190 a·year, er $'300 in one lump sum). Let'S: near fr-GAl you ,now, anyway. She's praying you'" helpflar;beoome'3 Sister. And God will know that her 'lifetime of good Is really In large part your' family·s.

FATHER'S DAY: NEW IDEAS '8n 'memory-of their fathers, a Long Island couple are -building if1 India a· chapel named for their faUwrs' patr()ns. Sts. James and John. A plaque at the eRtr~rice wiM 2ISk prayers for the families.. ••• Also in li'ldia Archbishop Mar Greaorios Is building. a ~Ilurch, school, rectory and convent

-In a :growing new vUlage, thanks to a $10,000' family llift from Utah. The new parish will serve all villagers, regardless of creed.

MORE IDEAS o For your father. mother, loved ones, our mis­sionary priests can offer Masses immediately., Simply send your intentions. ' o "I've walked with crutches all my life. Hope he or she will do as well."-From a Florida man enclosing $4 for crutches. o For $10 a month your children can feed Q family of refugees. Why not keep a coin·box 11'8 the kitchen?

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NEAR EAST WELFARE ASSDCIATe••

NEAR EAST' IVIISSIONS FRANCtS CARDINAL SPELLMAN, President MSGR. JOHN G. NOLAN, National Secretary I Write: CATHOlIC NEAR 'EAST WELFARE A8800. 1 330 Madison Av~nue.New York, N.Y. l~ Telephone: 212/YUkon 6·5840 '

Canadien Conference to Survey Role o~ Church-Related Col!eges

TORONTO (NC)-The future ity)-that much of the light will role and development of some 45 come through other members, church-related colleges and uni­ clerical and lay members, of the versities in Canada will be the Church.' . oobjeet of a two-year,. $50,000 "I think we're into ..a complete­study authorized by the episco­ ly new era in the Church's inter­pal commission on education of pretation of Us magisterium as the Canadian Catholic Confet' ­ such, of its teaching authority." eRce. With growing recognition, he

The bishops authorized a com­ said·, "that we are all trying to mittee of university presidents to work together in this spirit, the engage a commission of experts problems of academic freedom to make the study and to estab­ from our poInt of view are Hish its format, going to grow less"

The study is expected to con­Hider special needs of the Church Schedule PAVLA tn higher education and make l!'ecommendatjons as to how they Training Centercan best be met.

Also to be considered will be the subject of academic freedom Summer Session and the possible establishment CHICAGO (NC)-The 1961 of procedures to guarantee it Summer session of the nat­within the universities them­tJelves. ional training center for

The possibility of the naming Pa·pal Volunteers for Latin of a full-time national chaplain America- (PAVLA) will be con­fur universities and the special ducted from June 25 through needs of the university commu­ Aug, 11 in Washington, D. C., nity in liturgical renewal will PAVLA national headquarters also be studied. hel'e a.nnounced.

Teacbilllg Authority DUl'ing the six-week sessien, Papal Volunteer candidates fromAddressing the episcopal com­U. S. dioceses will begin prep­mission on education and repre­aration for their assignments inoontatives of the universities at Latin America. Staff members,the meeting at which the including several Latin Ameri­study was approved, Archbishop cans and returned Papal Volun­George B. Flahiff of Winnipeg teers, will share ideas and expe­Giiscussed th~ relation of univer­riences related to developinglrity freedom to the Church's Latin countries.teaching authority.

While clarifying their roles as"Very often," he continued. laymen in inter-American ser:­

"'the deposit t)f faith is regarded vice, the candidates also developlIS some sort of strong box that a background on the country ofis all locked up. Until the time their assignment.of the (Second Vatican) Council, Father Raymond A. Kevane,many of the things in the PAVLA national director, re­Church's teaching were definite­ ported that "the Volunteer­ly considered in a purely static candidates who have enrolled<!)rder." this year to collaborate with the

As a result of Vatican Council Latin peoples, giving of theirn, he noted, the Church "thinks professional skills, will be agentsmuch less now in terms of an as­ for opening up a road to a moresured body of doctrine from human life. We invite them towhich can be deduced all the work with all heart and intelli ­new fOl'mulations and all the new gence toward this goal of ourapplications that are needed." inter-American apostolate."

New lEra Following the Summer train­He recalled that Pope Paul VI ing program, the Papal Volun­

tliJld' the theological congress in teers continue study at a Latin Rome last September of his need American language and cultural lot· theologians to continue to formation center in Latin Amer­speculate in order that he might ica. Upon completion of their !mow how to teach officially language and acculturation train­what needs to be taught today. ing, the Volunteers will begin

"I think," Archbishop Flahiff their project assignments in G81d, "that is a completely dif­ . Brazil, Peru, Mexieo, Chile, Co­li'erent concept of magisterium lombia and several countries in 4ihe Church's teaching .author- Central America.

AT COYLE HIGH: Four Diocesan' communities are ll'epresented among these Coyle High School seniors. From neft, graduates of the Taunton boys' school are Everett McCarthy, Fall River; Patrick Sault, Taunton; Thomas Jamrog, Somerset; Richard Blais. Taunton; Phillip Teves, Swansea.

THE ANCHOR- 5 Thurs., June 15, 1967

Expects 7,000 To Volunteer For JACS

WASHINGTON (NC) ­The Joint Action and Com­munity Service (JACS), new private, non-profit program designed to keep Job Corps graduates from becoming work drop-outs, has already enlisted hundreds of volunteers across the country 'and expects to have nearly 7,000 before the end of the year.

Roger L. Burgess, executive director, said that JACS' seven regional offices. should have 2,750 volunteers working out of 760 centers throughout the na­tion by the end of the Summer, with twice as many centers opened by Dec. 31, when some 6,800 volunteers are expected to be recruited.

JACS held its Mid-Atlantic re­gional meeting here, a day-long conference of church, business.HOLY FAMILY GRADUATES: Capped and gowned community service and war on

for graduation ceremony at Holy Family High, New Bed­ poverty leaders from the District ford, are, from left, Gary Sylvia, France Mukairns, Robert of Columbia, Pennsylvania, Vir­Pariseau, Louise Cayer. ginia, Maryland, West Virginia,

Kentucky and North Carolina. Sargent Shriver, director, Of­

fice of Economic Opportunity,Sound Idea and Job Corps Director William P. Kelly spoke at the luncheon.

ArC'hdiocesan Job Finding Bureau Msgr. Lawrence J. Corcora-n, secretary, National Conference ofAids Workers, Industry Catholic Charities and interim

LOS ANGELES (NC)-Coop­ In reviewing cooperation be­ chairman of a JACS board of di­eration between Church and in­ tweell Lis firm and James Fran­ rectors, also spoke. dustry in the labor market is a cis Cardinal Mclntyre's..job find­sound idea benefiting workers ing bureau, Kulp said he be­and management, according to lieved it "a good idea for the Honor Executive Steward H. Kulp, employment Church to cooperate in the labor NEW YORK (NC) - Arthull' manager at Norris Industries' market." Hull Hayes, who retired last Vernon, Calif" plant. He gave two reasons-the good week after 33 years with the

In the past several months calibre of the applicants referred Columbia Broadcasting System, Norris has hired 200 workers to the employer, and the conse­ received plaudits at a meeting through the Los Angeles Archdi­ quent effect on the firm's reten­ of the Catholic Ap05tolate Radio,

tion rate.ocesan Job Finding Bureau here Television and Advertising for and now has openings for 95 Referring to the 200 hired for his cont.ributions to broad­more workers - including 45 through the archdiocesan bureau, casting for his work in establish­factory trainees who will start Kulp said: "These are good ing the national office and for at $2.45 an hour. . workers. The retention rate on his contl'ibutions to communica­

them is better than on any other tions activities of the Catholic group." Church.rostpone BLDn~ding

WASHINGTON (NC) -Con­ ~1II111""1II111111"1II1111111111111111111111111111111"""1II111""1I"1II1111111111111111111111111111"1II"11II"1II"1II111lII"m~struction of the Catholic Univer­sity of America's new $2 million theater, originally scheduled to I

§ ;Ebegin this Spring, will not start

until September. Father Gilbert V.Hartke, O.P.,

dean of CU's speech and drama department, said architects are still working on plans. I I

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I

THE ANCHOR-pi9cese of Fall River-Thurs. June 15, 1967 CathqrlCS, Jews Proy 'fer Peace With JusticeMiddle East 'Tension

JAMAICA (NG)-As hos-.The television coverage of United Nations debate dur­tili~ies broke out in the Mid­ing this Middle East upheaval has been a source of both , dle East, 60 Catholics andfascination and frustration.

·Jews, m 0 s t 1y clergymeD.pDrama, tension, hostility, prejudice-all came 'through stood shoulder to shoulder ~ with an immediacy that reduced the world to the dimen- Hillcrest Jewish Center helL'\Oi sions of a television screen. . and prayed for peace with j~

tice.One unmistakable impression was how two conflict­They were participants in 0ing interests could take the same set of circumstances conference sponsored by too

and turn these into contradictory conclusions.' The im­ Catholic-Jewish Relations COffip pression was of hearing the same talk twice but from mittee of the Brooklyn diocese different mouths and with a different object of accusa­ and the Anti-Defamation Leagoo

of B'nai B'rith to study the Na­tion. tional Conference of Catholia,Among other things this certainly shows how pas­ Bishops' "Guidelines for Catn..

sions and tensions can distort so-called facts. This 'is as olic-Jewish Relations." true on a family level as it is in the world family of na­ Msgr. George C. Higgins, di­

rector of the Social Action De­tions. How often husbands and wives enter into the same partment, U.S. Catholic 'Con­kind of accusation and counter-accusation with both al­ fe.rence, said that the Vatica~

ledging the same set ~f circumstances to support his/her. Council's 'Declaration on the Re­eause. lationship of the Church to Non­

Christian Religions should bdAnd as in dealing with two indivi~uals the emphasis. not only a final blow to anti ­is on not who is right and who is wrong-a determination Semitism but also the preface to

almost impossible to make and sure to be rejected by one­ a new volume of fraternal dia­but what is right and what is wrong, -the same theme

be one, F~th.r

logue. must be brought to the warring parties. The determination The declaration is a challenge now is what is right, what is wrong. to the United States, which isAward the residence of half the world'sThe Arabs must accept the fact of life that Israel Jews, he said, and particularly, as a nation is in the Middle East to stay. Acceptance is [p(j'<e$o<d!(Sl)II'ilfl' JJ@!lllIl'il~©Iiil HII'ilU'®(j'werrJ(Sl)$ lr«l> And to Brooklyn-Queens area, which the first sign of maturity and the first step toward peace. . has the world's largest' C'atho­

GD(j'~ ~©[j'1I'il 'Wofr!lll ~1I'il@ AB'1mIsraelis must accept the fact that the Arabs,dispossessed lic and Jewish populatiOnS liv­ing side by side as neighbors.from their homes in the creation of Israel-while victims WASHINGTON (NC) -She's "As you receive your award

They bear a heavy responsi­of the common gOOd-must in all justice be provided for 13, a very determined young for physical fitness, I want you '!lility, Msgr. Higgins warnedJ3now Presi­ to klloW you have my petsonaland this in an adequate measure-relocated in peace and' lady, and numbers "If they succeed in building 0dent Lyndon B. Johnson among congratuations and good wishes.

happiness, reimbursed for their lands, incorporated fully I have heard your story, and new spirit of cooperation, they,her fans.and with dignity into a. new world. These orphans of the Her name is Mary Ann Hag- ' I think it will be an inspiration can set an example to the world;

but if they fail, where is thereMid-East have been too long overlooked and ignored by gerty. She was born with one to other young Americans to arm but the handicap hasn't de­ know that you, in spite of 'what to turn? Not to Europe, whose

everyone. . terred her a bit during her many people might call a handi­ Jewish population was greatl3';

Reality is a great teacher. Facts may be distorted depleted during World War II.life. So at St. Jane Frances de cap, have earned this honor. and denied but they are still there. Arabs and Israelis. Chantel school near her home "Our future, quite literally, and surely not to - the Middle

East."must face reality and accept facts and with good will in suburban Bethesda, Md.,' the depends on strength, spirit and Laek of Understandingsit down to base their present position and future course spunky young lady went in for determination .like yours." From the Catholic side, theq;the physical fitness program inon - Haggerty,these. Miss who resides are two main. problems, Ms~a large 'way, despite her handi­ with her mother in Bethesda, Higgins said. First is a lack

plans to'enter Ursuline Academy of knowledge of' how bad re-Commencement cap.

Determined Miss Haggerty' in .Bethesda in September. Be­ · lations have been between Cath­. passed all her tests -with plenty sides the man in the' WhiteThe word "commencement" is a nice word. That is, olics and Jews and of the e-. to spare-all' but o'ne. That re­ House, who directed the com~ tent of anti-Semitism an'd theprecise, accurate. It means exactly what needs to be said. quired she perform a certain' mittee to waive its requirements poor theology which . h'elped

It puts the emphasis where it belongs. number of 'pull-ups, which she' in cases like Miss Haggerty'li, cause it and nourish it.just couldn't do with only one the young lady has a prouderA commencement is a beginning. And the stress is . Second is a' lack of undes>­arm. ,and more avid fan-Lt. CoLnot upon what has been done-in elementary or high standing of 1967 JUdaism;' a li9-

Walter Haggerty, serving withMrs. James Verme; her phy­ · ing religion which did not stopschool or in college '01' university---:"'but on what is to be sical fitness teacher, requested the Air Force in Germany, her its development with the enddone, what .lies ahead. the President's Committee on dad. · of the Old Testament era.

School is not in itself a. career-it is a preparation. Physical Fitness to waive that The main problem from the And as such it· is a transitory phase of a person's life­ one requirement, but the com­ Jewish side, he continued, is . important, vital, but passing. mittee declined. Church Council the fear that Catholics are not

Graduation day was fast com­ serious about dialogue but i haveDuring school years the mind is developed-a person Score Pol ice' ing for the eighth-grade' girl, so ~ hidden motive to make con­learns how to think. Information is accumulated. A cer­ . Mrs. Verme somehow got things versions.BOSTON (NC)-The Commis­tain vocational proficiency is acquired. Basic -values are rolling and the facts of the The necessary basis for Cath­sion on Church and Peace of theformed. And then the person begins - another school, case somehow got the attention Massachusetts Council Churches olic-JewiSh relations, Msgr. Hie­

of the President. . gins said, is that Catholics de­another training period, another calling in life. has charged the Boston Police velop a more profound under­Well, Miss Haggedy received Department wit,h "a major re­And he builds on foundations of home and school her diploma on graduation day­ standing of what Judaism is to­sponsibility" in touching off fourand community and on the sum of ·all the values and also . her coveted physical fit ­ day and that Jews, get a view ofnights of rioting in the predom:' .

standards gained from these. ness award. inantly Roxbury post-conciliar Catholicism, ~'notNegro area here. . as others view it, but as it seet!Co~m~ncement time is a time when nOstalgia touches :President's ~etter itself." '" .. . Police .meth6ds used in hand­the hearts' of many. But it is a time better put. to use' She' also received a letter ling a' demonstration at a local

'in encouraging those who. graduate in their new com-: from her fan· in the White House, welfare office after hich the ri- Anglicans' 'Proposemencement, i~ the new field. into, which they· venture. which read: oting began' escalated "a danger.:.

. It is a time for optimis,m and enthusi~sm and hopes and ous situation unnecessarily,'" a Covenant ~ Unity eommission statement sai~. LONDON (NC) - Aproposailide~ls,since ev~ry l!fe,~o ma~ter.:ho~.s.mall ~nd' seemi,n~ .. , University Trains,

The ch~rge, was immediately for the .unification of ProtestaDI . . I?, mconsequen.tIal, I~tl~e flet: mg m.whIch ~Igh, drama·)lj:···D·· 'bl d',V , ... denied by Mayor John ColliniJ .ehurches 'in' Erigland by ..lIved, the .stuff of )m~ortahty. '. '. . . ISO e etl'erans who defended the local police agreed date has :been made •, WASHINGTON (NC)":-'Twen­and said the commission's a&- the Chur.ch of England.. . '. . '.ty-five' disabled 'veterans have

@eompleted an 'experimental sumptions * • .. however well-in- The proposal was put forwwnl

tended, are erroneOus and diS- ~Y the Church of: England info»­tort the situation unnecessarily." mation office under· the title

The .commission aiso criticized ·"Covenanting for Union." It wiD

:.., . ~. ..', ..t- T'"he': .A-N'C'~ U'OR'..... .~E2;~:~~::B: s:~::~:;~:' WVietnamwar who was seriously "over-reaction: by' the police to . be considered by the 27 membe:rtS

wounded by a Viet Cong sniper situations as they arose" in the - of the British Council of less than a year ago, and veter­ nightly rioting which has fol- Churches the next few months.

OFF'OAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL PiVER ans of the Korean conflict and lowed the welfare department The report suggests that tbll the Second World War•. incident. It also cited the "lack Anglicans, Methodists, Congre­

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River of Negroes not only on the police gationalists anil PresbyteriallllA spokesman for the Veterans'

410 Highland Avenue force but in policy-making posi- work out actual terms of a cove-. Administration said the training

/ tions" in the area as causes for nant for· union which othe.llFall River, Mass. 02722 '675-7151 program prepared the men for increasing tension. English-based churches mightthe position of National ServicePUBLISHER Calling on the Police Depart- join. Such a covenant could ~ officer, and could be the firstMost Rev., James L. Connolly, D.O., PhD. ment to reduce its forces in the confirmed on a specified date afistep in a national program along area as quickly as possible," the a solemn act of worship. Su'" . GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER the same line. commission said the "continued quently. the churches involvEd

ft~. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, M.A. ' Rev. John P. Driscoll A national Service Officer aids presence of large numbers of would be "fully committed •• ~ MANAGING EDITOR veterans in filing claims with the police will tend to incite rather to corporate life, witness and

Hugh J. Golden Veterans' Administration. than redw:e teD.sions." :wol'k together,"

7 THE ANCHOR­*'''',.'!!!'!'t'b4l ;a;;;a~,~, "" .. '$l',;1,"'~ ". 1,:,~,::,;,~_." .. ,. :~ '~_.,.,:: " f:' ",

'Thurs., June 15, 1967 ". -' ",'~'- .' " : -'':;:dP:Y:I_~~;~:;~~~~~~es .. r~'\'7'

,."-"

. I

I

I

!

, ,high school. topi,c. ~e~lved. Fryzel, v:ice~president; Margaret .'date secretary of the N.ational" . That the foreign aid p",og~am OK Mary McIntyre secretary and Catholic Educational Association,

the U .. ~. should. be limited to Paul Healy, tre;lsurer. '. will be the keynote speaker at I!lon-mlhtary. assistance. HF held its annual class day the 13th educational conference

As Classes: \~nd for Summer Well, this is it for the class of '67 and for The Anchor

aehool column, too, as events wind up for the endless SUip­mer (endless for parents, that ns, not gO for students). At Prevost High in Fall River Robert Lambalot received a

trophy for his work as stu­dent council president and National Honor Society head Edmond Tremblay was cited as valedictorian and as an out­standing debater as well as for leading the Christian. Youth Movement.

And a girl also rated an award at the all-boy school. She. was Charlotte Dube, Miss Prevost Cheerleader. Named Mr.' School Spirit was Donald Cummings and Rene Boulay was Kni?ht of' the Altar 1967.

Student of the Year awards for scholastic excellence went to Prevostites Philip Sabra, .Robert ~hibault, and Arthur Yokel.

Gift to Schoon Mt. St. Mary graduates didn't

forget their school on class day. They presented as their class gift .sets of risers for use bY',the glee club and orchestra. Also partici ­pating in the class day prQgram were brothers and sisters' of sen­tors, who were ushers for. attend­fng parents and friends. Summa Qum laude Mount graduate was

Raymo dVeronica Plaziak, our Anchor' n e reporter. Huzzahs!

Highest honors at Dominican' Academy, Fall River, went to Theresa Anne Chouinard and! Denise Therese Turcotte. The two seniors received special rec"'­ognition at class day ceremonies.

At Jesus-Mary Academy in

Fall River, Suzanne Lagarde has merited a general excellence award, and was class vadedicto­·rian. Other awards included Su-' zanne Morrisette, service award as CYM president·, Alice Dumou.... lin, service award as senior clas~ president; Pauline Dumas, Citi ­zens' Scholarship 'Award for

\'With profits going to the news':" iltaper's treasury; and the student G:Ouncil has been active in a petition-signing project.

All graduations save one are lllOW history. Still to go is the co=eremony for st. Joseph's Prep in Fall River.oSaid scllool offi ­

ciaIs modestly, "We waited till the others were over, so no one would have trouble ~itting us in." Time and place: Blessed Sacra­ment parish hall at 2:30 Sunday afternoon.

New Fac~ A clutch of new faces at DA

and SHA, both Fall River, Betty Ann Samson is DA's new head cheerleader and Jeanine Collard will head the Athletic Asociation.

At SHA it's Beverly Therrien and Cynthia Naftygiel for head cheerleading berths and glee club officers will include Kerry

. 'Darcy, president; Jan Torres, librarian.

And scholarships include, at . DA, a Tiverton K of C grant to

Janet Lepage and a Tiverton Lion's Club award to Kathleen Hayden. Also from the Tiverton LioRS: an award to Charlene Warren at SHA Fall River.

At DA bowling champs for the year are Muriel Benoit, Theresa Rocha, Michelle Dion and Diane Ratte Soph badml'nton champs

. ' D . d D'CIare alre esroslers an . emse and Sharon Andrad

and Michele Provost captured ...- ors for the J'u l'Ors Also atnun, n.· DA A M ' Fit 't' d ' nn arle 0 s er men e the Sister Mary Ignatius Award for the student best exemplify-I· g h'gh 'deals wh'l pa tl'C'pat,n I I' I e r I ­ing in varsity sports; and Denise Turcotte received a gold pin as a hl'gh scorer in the nat'onal Lat ' tests I

m con .Freshman Judy Conrad took

the sllotlight at SHA.Fall River h ' t . as s e gave a pnva e plano re-:

cl'tal for facult" members Her I

J' . I rt" I d d c aS~lca repe Olre mc u e' se­lechons from ~ach, Beethoven, Brahms, Chopm, Mozart and

leadership as lltudent' council" ,Schubert. • , Holy Family

president; Yvonne Berger, sall4-:-., , , " ltatorian award. . , , " . , .. '. At New ·Bedford's Holy Fami~y.

Speech Contes~ , ': ,'.: ~i~h juniors have elec~ed: ()ffi.-:.' . .,: ~rs for next year's semor class.,

After, a, cO?1bmaho~ finalist They are: Michael Houghton eontest mcludmg varsltY,·.4ebat~:,'president; William Gushue, vice~ ers and. speech co?test wmrn;rS,. president; Ann Harrington, .'sec­top students at Bishop Cassidy' retary and Claire Sherbino Hig.h in Taunton emerged.as treasu~er. Also the result of th~ Elaine Fletcher, sopholll;ore; Ehz- electien of student council offi ­abeth McAloon;'and Maria S?uza" ~rs were announced. T~ey are:

, T~e debate was on .the nahona~: .Cynthia' Rego, president; Karl.

Organized under direction of at the Kenn,edy Memorial Cath­liJister Paul Elizabeth of Cassidy's.' olic Youth Center. On the previ-English department, the contest ous night the program was pre­was judged by Mrs..Robe~ sented to parents of graduates at Doherty, Joseph Moore and Ed-' Parents' Night, The Holy Family. ward Parr. Mr. Parr, a Stonehi~ .'Junipero Club held its annual College senior, is Cassidy.'s cfe- . Pa~~ts' Night at .t~e high,~chool bate coach. ,; ;..11 !,,,,);>ulldlng. Dr. WIlliam, Downey

At. Sacred Hearts Acade~,,,:!was the guest spe.aker ,~C!.r :fall River, Latin. achie,v.eme~~ ,~~rents' Night .for t~e' parentB-" lllertificates in the AssociatioQ, ,.....(~phe gradll~tes) .. A.ttY·lVI~urice

" '·i!or' the, Promotion 'of, )La~!n p,owney, w~s the gue~t fiP~ake~ I ..... Study. nahonal c~mtEtst ~.~ve been o,t~he, Jumpero ~lub;;.;~llrents ; I'.' . ~erite~ llumma cu~, :la\-\~e b.r". ~!,,:ht, Tom.?r~ow. ~s the 9ate set

I".. ~!1n ~orres and lllagl13; f.=WR- lau~~" (~r ~he M.onSlgIlO~~C~e~~ De­',' .l:»y.~:IE;an.or Du~m,. Bev~,r,ly)VIon~~.;,.~ate Club So Par~m~s .. Nlg~~, \. llnd Marlyln Riley, Thlrtee!\ stu- Newly elected officers of the"

dents' merited cum laude certifl- Marian Chapter of the National ~tes. .. Honor 'Society are: Kathleen'

A recogniti~n. banquet honor-: Kurows~, pre,si~ent;' Cynthia 'Ing Prevost seniors was heid re': '. 'Rego, v~ce-presldent; and '~ath~ . ~ntly, It's slated to become lin . leen Enckson, secretary-treasu-' annual custom. Also" on tile . ·rer. Newly elected Debate Club" school calend~r was a graduation ·officers are: Cypthia Rego, pres­Mass' held jointly with JeSus-' ident; Kevin Harrington, vice­Mary Academy. Undercla~smen president; Margaret Mary Mc~ s't the Fall River school weren't Intyre, se!=retary-treasurer; Dan­idle either. A car wash was 'spon':: iel Dwyer, librarian, and Leslie.

. aored by Maple Leaf ~taffers':'Palmieri, clerk of committee~,

. P~an Blood BOlfillk

CINCINNATI (NC)-The St. Vincent de Paul Society of Cin­cinnati is setting up a blood bank to meet the emergency needs of those who cannot find any means of obtaining aid.

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SHACA])Y· STAFF: Staffers of Sh~cady, school paper at Sacred He~rts Academy, Fall River, are, from left, Bar­bara Dendy, Diane Dziduszko, Pamela Correiro.

C h 10at .0 U: Legal Scholars Support Relg'ious Freedom for Amish

"

BUNKER HILL (NC)-FourCatholic legal scholars have J'oined the National Committee. for Amish Religious Freedom, according to Father Casimir F. Gierut, pastor of St. Mary's Catholic church here.

They are Father Robert Dri­nan, S.J., dean of the Boston College law school,' Prof. Edward J. Murphy of Notre Dame Uni:o' versity school of law; William B. Ball, general counsel for the Pennsylvania Catholic Confer­ence, and T. Raber, Denver at-·

torney.The chairman of the commit­

tee, a Lutheran minister, the Rev. William C. Lindholm of East 'tawas, Mich., said:' "With the strong backing of Catholic 'priests and lawyers" virtually all religious faiths are representedon' this committee which is con.,.

'cerned 'with preserving the reli:: "fr d f th Ami h

~IOUS "ee om 0 e s people,. .

The Nahonal Committee fr~-.,

Brother to Address Nuns' Conference

BALTIMORE (NC) _ Brother' E.Anthony Wallace, F.S.C" asso­

of the School Sisters of Notre Dame here during the week of

L

dom held its first official meet­ing on the campus of the Uni­versity of Chi<:ago. The commit­tee discussed the possibility of submitting an Amish case before the United States Supreme Court•

Life of Simplicity Father Gierut, a committee

member, said here that "when a group of people are forced to leave the United States for British Honduras and other lahds to find freedom to exercise their way of life, it is time for us Americans to think twice of our sincerity when we speak of reli ­gious' freedom in America, and what our soldiers are dying for in Vietnam."

Father Gierut said the Amish sect pursues a life ·of simplicity "as outlined in the Bible and

, according, to the dictates of their conscience."

Recently about 20 Amish families emigrated to . British Hondul'as in', .order to escape a

. ruli!\g that their, children must. attend public school until the age of 16,' . .

A spokesman for the Amish said:· "\We are thankful for the liberty we, have had, but the government is gradually ta~ing

away our :relgious freedom. More and more we're out of line because of our simple way of living and belief. We will fit better in another country."

ELECTRICAL Contradors

I;'.

944 County St. New Bedford

. ~ ,..: ~

A~hel~hriStian Brother, a spe~ cialist in accreditation and the secondary school fields, will spea~ Aug. 16.on the role of the administrator and the school..

the i 'staff in educational leadership.... ' :'; The sessions are expected ili'! attract more than 1,060 nuns, of' , the. community in this countrYl, and, C~nada to the College of Nbtre . Dame of Maryland coq~ d,ucted .by the nU!1s here; Theme ,of the ,l;onference will .~E?:~·Lead-ership in Education."

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MANUFACTURERS NATIONAL BANK

@f B~ISTOn:. COUNTY

THE MtlSA'5 M0511' ACCOMMODATDNlG BANK

ATTLEBORO FALLS

NORTH ATTLEBORO 0 MANSFllELD

National K of C Leader Warns Of D@Hro~~[[~

WASHINGTON (NC) John W. McDevitt, head of the Knights of Columbus, has told graduates of the Catholic University of America here in the nation's capital that the true purpose of education becomes obscured in "an' aca­demic atmosphere bereft of the light of theology and philoso­phy." .

The 1,680 graduates at the 78th annual, commencement heard McDevitt warn that public confUSion, and disunity consti ­tute a seriolls problem for Amer­ican society. Noting that "an objective morality is scoffed at," he asserted that "the idea of freedom is so distorted that it has been' deformed into licenS'> and irresponsibility."

American Campuses

The K of C Supreme KnigM !!aid "there is at work today a potent ferment which will cer­tainly change the face of Cath­olic higher e~ucation."

While remarking that fer­mentation is a sign of vitality, he warned: "The danger in this healthy ferment is that the re­organization of our Catholic ill ­stitutions would go so far all

to deprive them of their special characteristic: the regal place place given to Christian theolo­gy and philosophy."

McDevitt said students need philosophy and theology as the unifying principle tying togeth­er the knowledge at their dis­posal. He praised the advances of education but cautioned that "the all too prevalent disordern on American campuses suggest that the student does not alwaY9 receive with his knowledge the discipline of mind and the con­trol of his will to. channel his

. learning, ability' and energy io­to constructive outlets."

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rn[':~',i Old Red Bank II ,I . Fall River Savings Bank IjI 1'1

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'FHE ANCHOR-Dioc~se of Fan R'iver-Thurs. June 15, 1967 8 'See Considers Tithing Pion

ST. Ir.OUIS (NC) ..:... The sa. Louis archdiocese is considering an archdiocesan - wide tithiDfJ

When in Doubt, Don't Pitch Qut, Donate to Needy plan, according to a letter &eDt

to all pastors recently. By Muy Tinley Daly Father Paul F. Kaletta, direc­

tor of the Archdiocesan ExpaD.,If you at your house are like us at ours, you're still sion Fund office, asked pastOl81tousecleaning--:.and it's early June. We're still Spring 10 hold up on any plans they'

. :housecleaning ·for, as one meteorologist dubbed 1967, it may have' for parish tithing pro.: was "the year without a Spring}' Came normal time to grams'until the archdioceSe

makes a decision. .'take off sriow tires, eaJrie. not to the city dU~p, but to the MAn archdiocesan tithing p~snow ; se~on to set out .many, charitable organizations

gram is being contemplated _:houseplants coincided with a ,willing to pick them up. They' begin some. time in early AQ,.killing freeze. At the usual' are tilen repaired, usually pro­ turoil," he said. '

early-May indication to clean ,viding jobs for, the handicapped, : '" Father KaIetta said such aand store in moth flakes Winter then sold at a minimal figure to ,tithe might 'eliminate' the heedeoats blankets those in ,ne?9' ~ 'for the 'annual expansion fundand ' the like We like to think that our crib, ii'rive; which this yea'r is expect­clown dropped and a lot of other things, even­~ to net more than' $2.5 milii~the thermometer tually land where they can see

to "the early further service. , 20s the late' True, the St. Vincent de Paul Driver Program:tee~s"as the me- Society, the Salvation Army, the

TRENTON (NC) -Private asteorologists like Goodwill and others may 'not be well as public schools can qualify.to put H. Those able to pick up your unused for state assistance under. a;Winter c 0 a t s items pronto, just- the moment

felt good during you're ready to .discard them.. driver-education measure passed by the New Jersey Assembly andthe day, blankets They have problems of pick-up,

cozy at night. trucks and labor. costs being what sent to the Senate. With the furnace snorting they are, but certainly a little

lPWay for part of each day, who patience can be exerted; a few CLASS DAY: Adding to beauty of class day cere­ . wanted to do a ,wholesale Spring more days won't delay that monies at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, are from

"

, CHURCH FUNDS· TRUSTS eleaning job windows open to clear-out hopelessly. left, front, Janice Burgmyer, Nancy Morrell, Meredith air out the ' place, at so much . Fringe Benefit !PENSIONS·ORGANIZATlON,S _Powers; rear, Honora Edward, Kerry Burns, Colleen Mar­per warming Ii{!lllon of oil? . Moreover, a fringe benefit, a

When, at last, Summer is set- not inconsiderable one at that, tin. CORPORATE-PERSONAL ting in, that Spring cleaning deal is to be had by such, donations lias to be coped with done on a in the form of an income tax de­~ .. SAVINGS Mallop, and that time 'is' now.. '. <!uction. By at~aching a note to

.. Unusable Items' the ite~s given to' charitable or~' Going th~ough any house, d~ .. ganizalions, ,a statement' evalu­~pMAR2fR~K~.plESlli· N~S ~i·GH l~n

Ing attic, basement, closets. . a~ing. the ~ppliances:will be fur~ drawers, one comes upon ·iong-..msh~d t~ substantiate the tax de­unused but still usable clot,iiing; .ducho~., ::. ' ' . rUgs, ,mattresses, furniture,- ap-' This is .to be found in line 2 CREWEL. EMBROIDERY pliances, aU sorts of equipment:":"':·; of Part IV. of that 'iFilled~iri· perhaps even electric fans sinc~ ,Return" done so expertly by the Summer is' a time of idleness, they provide a'source of hlspira":

of long lazy days and late twi­ Per.air conditioning has taken 'over.' mythical Frank B.~ and' Evelyn H. tion. and r~~erence for the artist· First inclination is,' of course, ,Jones. of Hometowll, N. Y: iIi that light hours. It is a' too brief pe"; who. designs 'crewel~: patterns :Year

to 'get rid of'-ail the'unused"stuff, bo~k we ,all studied so iriterisive­ riod when our social 'activities today.' ' slow, down· and we have' a bit Erica Wilson .an "out of sight, out of mind'" ly a couple of months ago~ "Your 'more of that precious thingmandaie with the urge "when in 'Federal Income Tax."'Frarik and' One of ~he, most outstandingknown -as lei':'doubt, pitch it out.", Evelyn had $554.50' of contribu­ of Jhese artists, sort of the Julia sure time. Read­And yet, there lingers a cer- tions, all,in cash, in their "Item­ Childs of the needlework set, is oning is one of thetain compunction about discard- ized deductions" but a round Erica Wilson. Miss Wilson, more activities t hating really usable items. We had zero in line 2, "Other than cash." than anyone else ill her field, has . mNVESTMENTcomes to mind been instrumental through herbought these things when. we ' So as we prepare our annual to fill in our va­ patterns, books and needleworkreally neede~ them.. Granted, pitching party, let's think of the SAVINGS.cation days but courses in reviving this ancientsome o! the thmgs are 111 need of handicapped repairers the ulti ­along with art, .especially iIi the Unitedrepair, but with the present cost mate users ot our unu~ables and (ERllneATEScatching up on States. ' of p~ofessional repairers, it's of that Line 2, Part IV of the all the best sell ­often 'more e'conomical to replace. 1967, report to Uncle Sam's IRS. Her books contain clear in­ • $1000 Multiples: held fOr

Yet put them in trash? Send . ~rs that you've structions and easy to. follow _ Six Months or longer,been intendingthem to the city dump, inciner­ diagrams for even the beginner, • Dividends paid twice yearlyator or whatever? , Blessed Sacram.ent Nuns to delve into and she offers a wealth of de­

Empty Crib ". since last Sep- • No Notice Required forsigns and advice. For those who Most poignant at our house re.. T«;) leave Archdiocese' . tember, the' balmy days ahead , Withdrawalare not adept at drawing their

doing with a are a perfect time to learn oneeently was away own designs, this talented wom­ • Dividends not subject toCINCINNATI (NC)-The SiS-of the needlecrafts that can addlong-time family crib utterly un:­ '.an has created kits with instruc- Mass. Income Taxters of the Blessed Sacrament, so much to your home and ward­usable as is and taking up val­ tions, crewel yarn and a stampeddedicated ,to work among Ne.,. robe. One of the most beautiful,uable space in the attic. The poor groes and Indians, will leave the and I think easiest of these crafts . pillow. REGULAR

thing had been rocked to pieces Cincinnati archdiocese this is that of crewe~ embroidery. There are many areas where

by a generation of Dalys. Its rods month"after 53 years of' labor. SAVINGScourses are offered in this fasci­)lad been dislodged by a num­ Crewel work is embroidering nating art. In fact, our own Dioe­Sister Maria Gratia, superior· on almost any firmly woven fab­

removed by older tots seeking ber 'of head-bumpers, its screws

&l. th~ community here, said re- . ric in wool, a firm two-ply vari-' esan island of Nantucket has a Now Earn center of 'instruction staffed byquests for the nuns' services, ety that is called ','crewel" yarn.

Bridge. ' . throughout the country far ex- Some form of decorating gar­ island women to share the secretS ceeded its' ability to provide the .ments has been in use since the

to build another 'B roo k I y n of this ancient art with anyoneBut the crib was sturdy in its

underpinnings, the spring intact, Sisters needed. The Sisters· at days of primitive man when they who wishes. These same women St. Ann's convents here have' used needles made of bone but 'have created in. crewel yameven the mattress, in need of a

bit of waterproof patching, many of the hangings, bedcovers and draperies used and dis-'

been assigned to other missions. 0this art really came into promi­serve other babies if a clever Founded 75 years ago by nence during the 16th century

played in the historic buildingsrepairer would take on the job. Mother, Katherine Drexel, Phila- when the steel needle was in­of Nantucket; many of these areWe're no clever repairer and delphia heiress, the Sisters of the vented. exacting copies of those usedneither are our children, who Blessed Sacrament have their Designs of this period were in­during the early days of thebring their own portable cribs headquarters at Torresdale, Pa.- fluenced by the English trade You may save any amount,island.when grandchildren to a Philadelphia suburb. with India and China which ac- any time when havecome you III

visit. counts for the exotic floral pat­ If you do find yourself inter­ Regular Savings Account. Old­terns, quite stylized in form. ested in trying this drawing withThe crib is but a symbol of all Fashioned' Pass Book flexibility.

the items that could be donated, New Jersey Nun Gets These drawings with Yflrn were thread, you could start with one a far cry from ,the. English coun­ of the kits of Miss Wilson 'or SAVE BY, MAilKennedy Scholarship tryside so the British embroider-' some other designer. These can

We provide Postage-Paid enveJ..Cake Sale . TRENTON (NC)-Sister Mary ess added her own touch of an be found in the needlework de­opes for' cOnvenience. SpecifySt. Cecilia's Mission Club will, Virginelle, C.S.S.F., a member of English deer, strawberry' plants partment of your local stores or

sponsor a cake sale from 9 to 5 the ·faculty of St. Hedwig's or perhaps an oak tree and in specialty shops that cater to lYpe of account. ' Saturday, June 17 at McWhirr's .School here, has been named re­ acorns. In many homes of that the knitter and needleworker•. department store, Fall River. cipient of the Joseph P. Kennedy century a full time woman would Anyone who has a bit of draw­Proceeds will go to the Francis­ Scholarship Grant by the special' be employed in ahousehold to do ingability wiil find it.quite easy can Missionaries of Mary. Mrs. education department of the nothing but repair old embroid­ to create her own designs once Mary Furtado and Mrs. Alserina National Catholic Educational eries and ,make new ones. she has, mastered the stitches. Santos, co-chairmen, announce Association. Families that had many female Whatever way you go about your that cake donations will be ap­ The grant will assist her in members would set aside a,room introduction to this charming preciated and may be left at the continuing professional training where the women could ·retire way of decorating, it, will give Second Street convent of the in work with the mentally re­ and spend' their leisure hours you many hours of joy during Franciscan Missionaries tomor­ tarded at St. Coletta's School for decorating linens and hangings its creation' and years of joy as row night, or at the store on the Exceptional Children, Jefferson, for the household. Many of tltese it graces your house or your day of the sale. Wi$. are preserved in museums and wardrobe.

Per Year

tRorth Main Street ~ 'ALL AM!A

9 Underwatering Preferab~e 1 (Q) ,Q)~@[fw@,if®~oD'Dg ~@[f@eITlO

,By J~I2!!Dllt ~Iilldl lW&ll'nllYIm lRiMlll211'nclk Now that the abnorrm&Uy heavy Spring rains are be..

ili.ind us, most people JI have talked to. lately about their gardens are concerned about, watering. Just how much water, what plants to water, and when to start are ques­tions which come to mind.

There is no simple rule of intention that man may learn to live with and love his fellow

thumb by which you can de- man? termine how much watell' to Flowers and the Blessed give ,your plants. This is one area Mother have seemed to go to­wherf':" .instinct and, observatio~, : gether ever since the early days ~lay a big part in garden,ing",,?f the monasteries when the The on~y generalization wort~ monks tending their altar and m.en:tion'ing is' that most lawns"~, Ititchen gardens placed statues l:leed~ a~out an inch of rainfall.' "of Mary in them, creating the !Jer week. . first Mary Gardens. When Our

As far as lawn's are concerned, 'Lady has appeared on earth, she tibis waterlng should come inho' has always brought heavenly more than two applications for flowers with her. For example, deeper penetration than can ~ when she appeared to St. Berna­achieved by nightly sprinklings. dette each of her feet was No matter how much water has adorned with a blooming rose. lGeen applied to lawns thus far, So it is quite fitting that we keep in mind that they do need. should honor her by placing their weekly watering if they flowers before her 'and with her. are to remain healthy and weed- Our Mary Garden has a great £ree. deal to be done to it, however,

StemqJly SuppUy before i~ can truly be thought There are plants which need of as 'a 'decent tribute to God's

n steady supply of water, among: Mother; Our Mary statue was one them being azaleas, rhododen- of mJi', Mother's Day presents and elrons, 'and most evergree'ns'j I think it is quite lovely. It isn't These should get at least~n? very large, abouf21 inches high, eood soaking a week. In terms 'o~ but the Madonna is very sweet inches of water this would mean and delicate. ubout one inch a week. Most It ,:, is a reproduction of 1lI winterkill in these plants is the Freneh Gothic statue and be­result of dryness in the previous cause, of' its gEmtleness and! Summer. ' , " "peac~~ulness, it is titled "The

After a dry Summer azaleas or ' €hildren's Madonna." We search­r:hododendrons enter the cold ed for many years for the right months completely unprepared statue but we knew immediately and are particularly susceptible that this was the right one when' to winds and extreme cold. 'we found it. Young fruit trees are in the same What' does need more work is eategory as the plants lis,ted the flower situation, now that nbove, needing about an inch Gf the white tulips and daffodils water per week. They too make have passed. At the moment we ~apid growth and need more have a round planter filled with water than other plants be- pansies in varying shades of cause they tend to lose water blue at her feet, and other tiny quickly during hot windy blue and white flowers in the weather.' process of spreading on each side

As for the other plants in the of her, but much more is garden, they are too numerous needed. to mention individually. The Today Joe received a new cat­gardener must use his own judg- alogue from one of our favorite ment in determining how much nurseries so we'll try to order water individual plants require. some flowers that we think she Observation is the best approach would, like in thankfulness to bere. If plants look healthy and her for giving us a spot of vigorous, ,leave them alone. If, serenity in a hectic world. "'hey begin to wilt, give them a 'Jr@1!D of! ,the Stove Rice lP'ulllllliillllg good soaking and then keep ari This .is a perfect pudding reci­eye on them. • , , pe to, tryon a day that you do

Most people have a tendency, have fllittle leisure time. It is ~ over-water. It is better to er£', also a ,good one fora warm Sum­on the side of under-watering, mer day when you don't want llJecause you can always make to use your oven much. It is tIp for any deficiency in a hurry, from Mrs. Raymond Forrest of whereas harm done by over- St. Christopher's parish in 'l'iv­watering is irreparable. Lastly, erton. ' !by all means, if you are going % cup rice to water, do it thoroughly. Let 1 quart milk \llle plant get a good soaking and 2 Tablespoons sugar (YOU can not just a little sprinkling. .add a couple of tablespoons

In tbe Kitchen ,mpre if ,you like your pud-June is ~upposed to be a time ding sweet)

of moonlight and roses but to 1 cup water people With children and an ac- 2 eggs (separated) flive social life it becomes a time pinch of salt of recitals, proms, graduations 1% teaspoons of vanilla OJ!' lem­and banquets. All in all, a most on extract hectic month with very little 1) In the top of your double eime for a peaceful moment and! boiler put the rice and the water quiet thought. Possibly the one and cook over lightly boiling peaceful moment in my day, water until all of the water is this month, is when I do have absorbed by the rice. This takes u smidgin of time to tend my about 15 minutes.. Mary garden and visit with our 2) Add the milk and a pinch of litatue of Our Lady. salt and continue cooking over

Before someone takes me to the lightly boiling water untH task on my knowledge of Cath- the rice is tender. This takes olic customs and reminds me about another 10 minutes. that May, not June, is the month 3) Mix the yolks of the eggs of the Blessed Mother, I want to with the sugar and the flavoring. stress that in these troubled Add this to the above mixture eimes any month should be the and continue cooking until ,it month of tribute to Mary. Didn'~ becomes as thick as'custard. This Pope Paul during his recent visit took quite a while, perhaps 45 to Fatima urge all to pray more minutes over simmering water, !fervently for peace to her; and but the time was well worth it lliidn't he during his historic visit fo£' the pudding is delicious. to the United States advoca~ 4) Beat the egg whites stiff Chat Christians everywhere take adding about 2 tablespoons ef \liP the r0saIT devotion for t!te 1JtAg2lr. aud ~read over the top

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., June 15, 1967

S~sters to C~ose

G~dsu Academy ATLANTA (NO)-The general!

administration of the Grey Nuns of the Sacred Heart announced that because of a teacher short­age D'Youville Academy here will close in June, 1969.

The,Private girls' school which opened in 1960 had an enroll.:' ment of 118 this school year anlll 31 graduates.

Sister Mary Charlotte, princi­pal, said: '~Although the Grey Nuns <ire unab~e to continue at the aca!iemy we will cooperate with any plans which might be ' made regarding its future." ,Archbishop Paul J. Hal.linan

of Atlanta saideftorts are being made by friends of the school to obtain the services of other reli ­gious communities to continue it.

"It is my sincere hope that dur­ing the next two years while the Grey Nuns are continuing the school, the parents and friendS! of D'Youville will be able to in­terest another order to fill thiS! need for our young women. The archdiocese of Atlanta will coop­erate with them in every way," the archbishop said.

F~rst ,'Com'munion Two ,Texas Colleges Nun Is Commentator, at Mass; Parents To Share Professors

SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Under'Accompany Children· to' Altar a pilot project for education here

NORTH' GRAFTON (NC) - had worked closely with the Incarnate Word an~ Our Lady of' It was First Communion time children in a year-long experi­ the Lake colleges have been. for the children of St. Mary's ment preparing them for the awarded a $500,000 grant by tbe ' parish.. It was first in a lot day, Sister Marie recl~ived spe- , Moody Foundation of Galveston. of other things, too. cial permission from Bishop Dr. S. Thomas Greenburg, I'Ve

was the first the president, and Dr. John L. Mc­It time in Bernard Flanagan of Worcester area president,that a nun-Sister Marie to be the commentator. Mahon, OLL jointly

announced the grant, which wi!!of the Eucharist, S.A.S.V.-had Some of the other firsts: be used by the two schools aabeen commentator at a Mass. A While it was their First Com­pilot funds in a cooperative pro­diocesan CCD supervisor who munion, the children had been

going to confession for six gram to establish endowed pro­months, to help emphasize the fessorial chairs at both institVl­

Arkansas High Court separate identity of the two sa­ tions. craments. The two educators said tha~

lllpholds Eviction law Their parents accompanied present plans are to exchange LITTLE ROCK (NC) - The them to the altar for Commu­ chair professors so that each col­

Arkansas Supreme Court has up­ lege will have the service of out­nion, and took part in the en­held the constitutionality of the trance procession. standing faculty members. state's law prohibiting the teach­ And the children helped "set Our Lady of the Lake College ing of evolution in public is conducted by the Sisters oj(the table" !for the sacrifice of schools. Divine Providence. Incarnatethe Mass: two brought the altar

Word College is operated by thiOlThe court called the law a cloth, two brought the candles, Sisters of Charity of the Incali""valid ex~rcise of the state's others brought special gifts of nate Word.power to specify the curriculum toys, school books and food,

in its public schools." still others brought the hosts A similar law-which gave the and water and wine. ' Names DiredCll[j"

world the' famous Scopes "nion­ST. LOUIS (l~:C):'-Edward 3.key trial" 40 years ago--was re;' Advisory Boards Pollock has been named directoll' ' pealed last month by the Ten­

RICHMOND (NC)--A chan­ of the division of publications of(nessee Legislature. cery office survey showed 80 the Catholic Hospital Association.

of the pudding. At this point I per cent of the 116 parishes in He will serve as publisher of( sprinkle the whites with coconut the Richmond diocese have es­ Hospital Progress, the associa­and 'put the pudding under the tablished parish advisory boards tion's monthly magazine, and! broiler for one or two minutes. composed of clergy, Sisters and will direct all other phases r!!? Yummy., laity. CHA publications activities.

Holsnm Bread is mllk l1Ood!

---;"""'~"". t, .• ~

-I

-- --"'-"------------.. ---- ­

~, ~.

BOOK STORE: Patronizing the book store at Bishop Cassidy High School, TauntoI]., are, ,from left, Arlene Good­win, Pat McCann, Michaela Murphy, Barbara Ventura.

@ • ·that good I

THE,A" 'CHOR-Qi~c~~~ ,~f Fall Riv,er-:-Th",rl'.,Jun~ 15,196710

Si$fr®u- S)@Y$ C~@!rng® R~~llIare$

1r©>fr@~~V [2)D~*®U"®U1tr M®UU\l'@~Dty BELMONT (NC) - Seventy­ what has been sanctified through

five delegates at a meeting of the years as the norm of re­the Federation of the Sisters of ligious behavior." Mercy of the Americas heard another nun stress the urgency No Pat Answers of pulling away from struc- Sister Josetta said that youth tures which overshadow the today, "sees itself as autono­needs oi persons. mous since birth, Their educa-

Speaking at the federation's tion has taught them that every­four-day meeting here in North thing is open to question," She Carolina, Sister Mary Josetta said that for young people "there Butler t91d the delegates that is a big why and no pat answers "the inevitable tension between are acceptabie." freedom and authority can be- She continued: "Youth seeks come creative in the context of reality. There is no' room for commullity." dognfatic !finalities. The young

She told the nuns, 'who repre- person is very much aware of sented' soine' 15,000 Sister~ of the constant unfolding of truth. Mercy in the United States, Can- He wants the door left open so

" ada, Latin America, the Philip- that he can penetrate further pines, Lebanon and' India, that and further," "most of us have been formed Sister Joseita told the nuns in a totally different mentality 'that this necessitates a different and it is only with pain that' approach to convent life. She we can open ourselves to under- said that the nuns must reach stand the young and the not-so-: out to the poor of the world, young who view themselves in and not be seen as out of the a manner very diferent' from mainstream of life. '

,,', Gove~nmenfr ()ffici~l. LaudsStu'dent ",Concerrt' for : Foreign 'Affairs

SOUTH, ORANGE (NG)-Stu- ' Archbishop Boland' and :Auxil­tJent COllcel'n for forei'gn' affairs ,iary Bishop 'John;J, Doughel'ty of

", was l~llIded' here by Postm::lster' Newark presided at the day-long General'Lawrencc F. O'Brien in exercises.

.", a commencement address at While hailing' student interest " ',,' Seton Hall University. ' , , in 'foreign affairs, O'Brien said it

'''Foreigh affnirs is too impor- is necessary that criticism of the .. " tant to be left to the experts," government's foreign policy be

, ,O'Brien said after receivirig an based on real knowledge of to­honoral'y dcgl'ee from Al'chbish:" day's ,wol'ld. ep Thomas A. 'Boland of Newark. '( C' tu'

. , 'Danger 0 ' on sion

"The :greatest, and potentiallyFordham Donates most dangero~s, fallacy ,of all in , $5,000 to UJA Fund dealing with foreign nations:" he

said, "i's to confuse what Should ,NEW' YORK (NC) -Father be with what is."

Leo L. McLaughlin, S ..J., pr~si-

dent of FOrdham University 'Good intentions are simpiy not herc, has bontributed $5,000 to' e'nough, he declared. Discussing the Israel Emel'genc)' Fund of the problem of peace' iii 'south­the United Jewish Appeal of east Asia as an example, he said: Greater. Ncw York. '''It's easy to be a peace~lover,

but it takes cOllsidlmlble thought,'Father McLaughliri; in a tele­W 'll' R ald h ,energy, imagination,diplomacy,gram t 0 I wm ,osew ,on- ° dOh' h

orary chairman of the UJA of' ~nd In the, worl m w IC we G t N y'k 'd h h d live, sometImes, force to be a rea er ew 01, sal e a ak " ' been alerted to "the acute situa- ,peacem, er. 1Iion in" the St~te 'of 1'si'ael,",' and Graduates, he said, imist un­"as pt'esident of Fordham Uni';'" derstand "that' 'willillgness to' versity, where students are ac- compromise' differences" has to eepted reg'al'diess of race,color be matched "by vigilance in or creed, I am happy to contrib- safeguarding our essential free­ute ,$5,000 to this worthy cause." doms."

AMONG GRADUATES: Gradua.ting 'seniors at St. Anthony High, New Bedford, include, from left, Christine Laol'ode, Paul E. Boudreau, LucilleP,elletiei, Gerald Nolin.

BUCKHEAD (NC) ...:... Two John McDonough of Holy Spirit Georgia congregations-an Epis­ parish and the Episcopalian min­ New P',ovincialcopalian and a Roman Catho'lic­ ister. Parishioners of Holy Spirit WASHINGTON (NC)-Fatherwill soon, occupy one church had, just completed their new Francis Trotter, c.S.sp., haSbuilding here. church building and wel'e very been named head of the Holy

St. Dunstan's Episcopal con-: willing to have the Episcopalian . Ghost F~thers' eastern pmvineegloegation is moving into the group share their facilities. of the United States by Fnthell'newly finished building of Holy Father McDonough is optimis­ Marcel Lefebre, C.S.sp., superiOll'Spirit Catholic church. Coopera­ tic about the arrangement. He general, of the order.tively, the two congregations said he has hopes for a jointwill share the church, building community ministry as well as

~D ••••••••••••••~and facilities, while carrying on a combined ,program for the separate services and programs.. teenagers of both churches. He

."I hope something more will : J,B ;hopes that a better undet'stand':'

come out of this temporary, ar­ ing of each other will result. • IIIrangement than just a rent, situ-' • ' III"I look at it as a practice inaUon," the Rev. Donald Harrison, 5LUMBER CO. icharity and a means of bringing,rector of St. Dunstan's, com-'~' us 'closer together," he added.mented, ,

Archbishop Paul J.' Hallinan • So.' Dartmouth IIIJoint Ministry of Atlanta and Bishop RandolphRev. Mr. Harrison said he has' d H . IiJClaibonie of the Episcopal •• an yannls III

in mind a joint ministry to the C;hurch in Georgia both;endorsedcomniunity - the joint caopera": ' · ..~he idea. They agreed the ,plan • So. Dartmouth 997·9384 .. tion of Catholics and Episcopa­ , was a practical and workable one.. • Hyannis 2921 Ilians in working with 'progl'ams for solving the space problemfor teenagers, a guidance, and for the Episcopal group. ·•~~.n ••••••••••••••­counseling service and other programs designed to help the community, , Check, 'These' Banking Ser.vices

Practical Plan ,St. Dunstan's, a relatively new

congregaUon formed Jwo, years • Savings Bank Life Insurance ,ago by six families,. today has • ',Real Estate loans grown to about 60 ,families, or, 250 members. The small congre­ • Christmas and Vacation Clubs gation faced the same problem faced by many other churches­ • Savings Accounts the pwblem of money to build • 5 Convenient locationstheir own church. ,

IDuring a recent panel discus­ NEW BEDFORDsion, Rev. Mr. Hanison" com­

mented that it would be interest­ INSTITUTION for SAVINGSing to see how an arrangement of two denominatiolis sharing the same building would work out. :!JIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII111I11I 11I111I II III II 11I11I11I III 11I11I 111I1111I11I 11I1 1111I 11I11I 11I11 11I11 I11I11 II 1111I 11I11I II 11I11 III III 1II1111~

An interested layman initiated conversations between Father I D& DSALE~N~ND SERVICE, I

:: FRIGIDAIREMONTHLY CHURCH

tIE

8UDGET ENVElOPES i R~:~~~:~~~~N iPRINTED AND MAILED

Write or Phone 672-1322 I AIR CONDITIONING ! 234 Second Street - Fall River ~ 363 SEC~ND ST. FALL RIVER, MASS. ~

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SILVER JUBILEE: Rev. Jcseph A. Martineau of St. .J,oseph's Church, New Bedford, obServes twenty-five years in the priesthood. Left to 'right, Father Martineau, his'

'sister Sister Gonsalve, a.p., Rt. Rev. Louis E.Prevost;' pastor of St. Joseph's, and Father's brother Dr. Fra:ncis

- J ... Martineau.,,..

CathoHc, Episcopal Congregations . . - ~..

Share Same Church Building

Schedules Ninth Porochute Jump

AMARILLO (NC) - FatheE' (Lt.) David E. Greka, chaplaiIlii assigned to the Green Berets, ree­seI've special forces unit, m scheduled to make his ninth pap=> achute jump.

Father Greka, assistant St. J()co seph's parish here in Texas, saleli no matter how many jumps :ll paratrooper makes, there's al ­ways an intense feeling before each one. It' not exactly fear, but a feeling of anticipation, "like the emotional buildup you have before a big football or basket,.. ball game," he said.

About two years ago, a pat'ish­ioner of St.' Joseph's who wns ~

member ,of the' reserve specian forces asked Father Greka if he would be interested in becoming a chaplain with the'organiz,\tion. One of two chaplain spots was open, and Father Greka accepted.

"I was pleased to be asked," he said.

After being assigned to Oak Park, HI., command headquarters for all reserve special forces. westl; of the Mississippi, Father G I'ek:n began his trainirigat the Army Chaplain School, Fort Hamilto~ Brooklyn, N.:Y. He was commis­sioned a first lieutenant in the 12th Special Forces Group (Ailf­borne), 1st Special Forces.

He took, a three-week course in p~rachute jumps at thc Air­borne School, Fort Benniilg, Ga, '.fhis . ilicluded, 'in additioil tel classmom work, a week of jump­ing from to,wers, t\nd fil~all3f. "jump week':-when each mila

, makes live parachute' jumps.

Cle'rico'f Celibacy Upheldl in ,pon Of Pr~e$ts'

NEW YORK (NO) Priests in 10 dioceses in Connecticut, New Jersey and New York gave a slight margin of support to the current laws of clel'ical celibacy in a poll conducted by the Metropol­itan Committee of the National Association for Pastoral Renewal.

Opposing changes in the law were 1,413 or 50 per cent of the 2,905 participants, while support­ing a change to optional celibacy were 1,331 or 47.1 .p~r cent., ":ighty priests express,ed no ,opin­ion.

Despite the overall oPPQsition to change, however, 50 Pcl' cent of the respondents favored "re­admission to the active ministry of those married pl:iests,. who wish to return to priestly work." Some 44 per cent were in oppo­sition.

The 2905 survey replies were in response to the mailing of a questionnaire to 7,950 priests, l"Oughly 97 per cent of those in the tri-state area which included the archdiocese of New York and the dioceses of Brooklyn: and Rockville Centre, L. I~,' and all dioceses in New Jersey and Con- , necticut. ' ,

. Pa.'ltors Opp~se""

More than a qual:ter' of the priests in, all dioceses. except NOI'wich returned questionnaires. In the archdiocese of: ~:w york 44.6 pel: cent of the pne~ts re­

" . sponded 'to, j'eprese'1t, nearl~, half of the total sUI·vey. ' ,

Breakdown of the survey re­suIts showed that a change to optional celibacy was strongly favored by assistant pasto\'s, pre­sumed to be younger pl'iests, and opposed by pastors, A ,similar diffel'ence was seen between priests outside and inside New YOI·k. •

Pastors were opposed to change in ~lll dioceses by an av",: erage margin of thl'ee to one, In Brooklyn and Rockvile Centre, pastors voted against change by a margin of nine to one. Assist ­ants in every diocese favored change but. the pel'centage in' favor was only 50.1 in New York while it was 62.7 outside.

Ask Re-examination Of Tax Status

NEW YORK (NC)-A panel of ' Episcopalian lawyel's and cler­gymen has issued a report em­phasizing the "practical and moral obligation" of chul'ches ~o

re-examine their tax-exempt status.

The repol·t, issued by the Guild of St. rves in New York,' urged that taxes be imposed on real estate and other commercial in­terests owned by chlll'ches but used fOI' non-I'eligious purposes. Many members of the 19-man group also U1'ged thnt church' profits from stocks and savings accounts also be taxed,

The panel urged that churches, like other tax-expmpt institu­tions, be I'equired to file finan­cial statements.

"With growing tax burdens producing increasing discomfort and discontent, it is not surpris­ing that the hlx sheltel's accorded organized religion (among oth­ers) by existing tax laws have alrcady come under el'iticism," the report pointed out. .

E~ect Nun SACRAMENTO (NC) - The

Sacramento chapter of the Na­tional Association of Social Workers has elected a nun as pJ'esident of the group. She is Sister Lucina Barks,' a child welfare worker for the Catholic Welfare Bureau of the Sacra­ment.o diocese.

nOCTOR VOLUNTEERS: James Francis Cardinal McIntyre, a~hbishop of Los An~

geles bids godspeed to Dr. Loo Brown and his wife Isabel, a registe,red nUrHe, after enrol­ling them in the Los Angeles Mission Doctors' .Association. Their children, Joel and Becky, will accompany them. NC Photo

Doctor Enlists for Miss'ion Service Recently Returned from:Vietnam

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The doctor hardly had time to change uniforms. ,"

Lt. Comdr. Leo Brown came home from 11 months service as a Navy doctor in Vietnam-then enroJIed as a mission doctor .1.0 serve in Africa.

Dr. Brown's wife, Isabel, Ii registered nUl'se, ;llso enlisted in the mission cause. They, and 20 other lay men and women who enlisted as' Lay Mission Helpel's, wel'e enrolled in 8' ceremony conducted . by James Francis Cardinal Mcintyre of Los' An­geles in St. Paul's church.

. The doctor exchanged the 'gold stripes of a naval officer for the mission' doctoi"s ring, which bears' a cross, the medica'r cadu- . ceus with the legend "We Are God's Helpers-Heal the Sick."

The Helpers will serve in Afri ­ca, Latin Amel:ica and New Guinea. They will join apprl;)xi-

Greater Risk WASHiNGTON (NC)..:....A gov­

el'l1ment sponsored 'study has re- ' vealed that the risk,of a coronal'y

mately ,100 Helpers already serv­ing at mission posts.

, In Navy 11 Years The Helpers enrolled by the

cardinal include three pilots, an, electrical engineer, a senior me­chanical design engineer, three teachers, four registered nurses, a draftsman, 'a secretary," two medical technicians, a bank offi ­cial and, a former Marine master

. sergeant who is an experienced bookkeeper, warehouse manager and pilot. He will use all three skills in New Guinea. , Dr. Brown and his wife are also pilots. They will be sent to Driefontein, Rhodesia, to work at the Catholic general h<>spitaI. Accompanying them will be their, two children, Joel and Becky.

The Bro:wns plan to pick up a Cessna plane in Johannesburg and use it to cover clinics situ­ated in a wide area about Drie­fontein.

Dr. Brown has been in the

Seattle Uni versity and Portland UJiiversity. She earned her nur­sing degree at San Diego State.

The Browns first learned of the Mission Doetors of Los An­geles about six years ago from a naval chaplain in Oakland and have been considering volunteer­ing ever since.

"I want to get to heaven," Dr. Brown answered when asked

. why he enlisted.

"In my field I've spent a num­ber of years in residence as an assistant to good surgeons learn- . ing to be one," he said. "Now I intend to spend a nu.mber of years with some good Christians so I ca.n learn to be one too."

DONAT BOISVERt INSURAN(.:E AGENCY, INC.

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THE ANCHOR-Thurs., June 15, 1967

PgttS~M[f@[}u ~~@rJ1l$

$yn@d] DO'il TI CWiJ to PITTSBURGH (NC)- A "tali''''

get date" of 1970 has been set foll' a Pittsburgh diocesan synod, Bishop John J. Wright has an­nounced.

One of the results he hopes t6l see, the bishop said, is establish­ment of a presbyterium - the body of the diocesan clergy for­mally united with the bishop. .

The synod itself will be a con­vocation of the clergy, Religiou~

and laity of the diocese with con­sultative status. It Can be con­vened only by the Ordinary oR the diocese, and it deals with matters I'elating to the welfare of the Church.

Bishop Wright announced the synod at a clergy conference, 0

meeting of all priests of the diocese.

Explaining why the synod wiDll not be held until 1970, BishoJll' Wright said:

"It will take two full years even to raise all the questions" on which the bishop wants ad­vice. "By 1970 the Pittsburgh Pilstoral Council, whic;:h willl meet June 17 for the first time, wiJI have completed its fir~

three-year, experimental phase. "By 1970 we will have the ild­

vantage of knowing which direc­t.ion the current revision of canon Jaw is taking." (A post-conciliar commission to revise canon law is now ilt work in Rome. Its tash is to implement the brOad out­lines for J'evision approved loy Vatican Council II.) The Amer­ican hierarchy will have arrivetll at a consensus on certain m21­ierll.

Bill Defeated HARTFORD (NC) - A bj~

which would have relaxed Con­necticut's laws on abortion hall been defeated in the state House of Repl'esentatives, 73-59..

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.. SOUTII VARMOUTH • HYANNIS

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Dame

Good Christian priest than a Brother. -The re­ The Browns are from Seattle. port was bnsed on a study of He attended University of Wash­Benedictine and Trappist monks. ington and his wife studied at .

heart attack is~'far greater for a"

~--------------- --~------------------------

We Join in A

Salute to lOad

OUll !Father's Day

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Reg. Master Plumber 2930 GEORGE M. MONTLE

Over 35 Years of 'Satisfied Service

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12;, THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall·River-Thurs. June '1'5, :1967' ,

~@~~@®@ @~ ©@[(<clJO[fi)@~S'5 [L@S'5@S'5 ,

lj\~@ ~~~(lD~fr[[O@(lD~ AA®rnru[1®[[~ ,

Continued from Page 'One world, 'He and Archbishop p'aul J. Hallinan' of Atlanta became the two American members of the post-:-conciliar liturgical corn­mission.

In September, 1965, before the close' of Vatican II, Caniinal Ritter launched Operation Re­newal, 'a program designed to

, bring the meaning of the council te all persons in the archdiocese and to be"a vehicle fot' sugges-'

',,; " " ,,: "i 'Pastoral CouncRll

This.' year, he again imple-­inentEid council documents by establishing an Archdiocesan p'astoral council of priests, Re,li­gious and iaity and an Archdioc­esan Council of Priests. ' "In recent months, seeking to expand bishop-priest' communi~ cations, the cardinal set aside each Friday to have lunch and meet with priests of the archdio­cese. The'groups were small 'and

tions :6h"implementation of co\m..l 'the dirdinal continued' the prac­cil decrees. ' , ,. "tice uhtil 'a week before' his"

The' 'cardinal 'aimounced th:at ':', death. The last meeting was held Q syno'd'and 'archdiocese widfe'as-' 'June '2: "', ' sembIY"w'ould 'climax the re~' newal program.

PIr'D®$fl"~""il'@..~e Continued from Page One

Rev. Mr. Edward E., Correia, ,98 Lexington Avenue, Dart,:" .mouth, studying at ,st. John's Seminary, Brighton, to ,St., Vin,­cent de Paul'Camp, Adamsville,

, "

IEarlier he had written al1'as":"~ 'si'stant pastors in t!le,archdioces'e, asking them to tell him if they would like to serve in the 'inner city and other poor parishes.

Cardinal Ruffini Born Jan. 18, 1888 in the vil ­

lage of San Benedetto Po near Mantua, Cardinal Ruffini studied in Mantua and Mi,lan, Following his ordination in 1910, he went

and weekends at St. Jean-B~p-' to Rome to study at the Pontifi ­tiste Church, ',Fall River. cal Biblical Institute.

Rev, Mr. Ed,ward J. Fitzgeralod, After service as a Scripturef127 Broadway, Taunton, also ,professor and secretary of, the

St. John's Seminary, to Cathedral: Congregation of Seminaries and" '" Camp, East Ft;eetown, and week -' UnivE!rsities; he was named Arch':",."' ends at Our,! Lady of, Fatim~,bishop,of Palermo in, December' New Bedford: ,.. ' 1945. Two months later.he, was

A~~HBISHOP DlEAitD~N

Pre~@~e Spe@~err

C@fi'h@g'BC Pff~~@t~ S~jf$' '1E~~~C~I?~d

~OS'5[}u@[9)~~ CID[(@~@S'5@~, ~@(lD[[@®®@'~@ SAN FRANCISCO (NC) -

Archbishop Joseph T. McGucken>" of San'Frimcisco'called the pr~ posal of an Episcopal bishop that all Christians recognize the pope as head of the universal Church "very courageous'1 and "noble."

, . '. The archbIshop s81d that he

,r~ad the news of the sermon given. at Grace. Cathedral here by BlS.h0P C. ~llmer Mye~s of t~e E~lsc~pal dlOc.ese.of ~;llfor-Illa WIth mtense mterest.

In the sermon, Bishop Myers said that the pope is the "chief pastor" 6f men" and the "chief'" spokesman' fOr the Christian:

and the solution of the problems, t

bf poverty and of racial justice. "'" " .' '. ",','Perhaps the road to umty Wl~

be made more .~m?oth by t.his type of cooperation m the fulfill ­ment of human needs: ~everthe-less, on the top level It IS neces­sary that the theological discus­sions that are now being organ­ized and being conducted will continue because there can never be real unity unless there is unity' of mind and of heart, unity of faith.

'" ',"But, we are glad to see that' I,,:

there 'is'a development along the

olicleader, tbat the Holy Father Myers' 'talk' which he said wasA'li' ~@[f\)'\7®rmft'o@[f\) be recognized as exercising this prompted by the need for Chris­

tian unity in view of the crisis inp'astorship for all of Christen­the Middle East has been varied.CHICAGO (NC)~Archbishop dom.

John F. Dearden of Detroit, pres-, .' 'The ideas that BIShop Myers Episcopal Bishop Richard Em­ident of the National Confer~nce ' has suggested are the kind that rich of Michigan said that Bishopof Catholic Bishops, will be the '11 t k t d 1 f th ht' WI a e a grea ea 0 oug Myers' words will do no goodprincipal speaker at the closing d d·t t· h'd t kan me 1 a IOn; suc 1 eas a e and will not further unity at all. session of the Aug. 17-2Q conven- time to sink in. I think all of us desire unity.tion qf the National Catbolic

"I",doubt· l'f' all Chrl'stl"ansl, es- But one of the gteat facts of theConference for Interracial Jus­

tice, in Kansas City, Mo. pecially non-Catholics, will find world: "is not that you desire . ,them l'mmedl'ately, accept,'able, unity; :''bitt that there are real,The convention's theme, "The

'.but I do be'll'e've that what he has differences in belief."Church and the U,rban' Racial •• 1 ;

" C" , said 'is a ,very gr,eat, strid¢ in Bishop Edward R. Wells of theeXisis," will ex~lorethe, hurcb s , '

' commuriity in the world;" . ,,'lines of unity of love, as we work Notini that ,Catholics haVe al:';' ·"together, fo~ t?,e benefit of'the

"ways'believed this, Arc~bishop' human family." McGucken said that "it is very' :", Vraieti' ReactioD gratifying to us to hear the sug­gestion coming from a non-Cath- Protestant reaction to Bishop

"

\ "

Rev, Mr. George:t. Harrison" raised to the College"bf Cardi- .role as a force for social:chlmge ~the, ~cu~eni9a~ move~ent. ;And West Misouri Episcopal diocese, . ,- " ' in' cities. . I ,can't,help but hope that it will said he did not "see anything

1837 Robeson',Str.eet, Fall Ri\;'~r, nals. ", '," "..' ,,' "De frtiitf41. ,,' ,r-' ., , controversial" in Bishop Myers'of St, Mary's S¢ptitiary, ,Ba.lti,,': ,Asttong anti-commllni~t;Cllr.. " ,', I~, wIll be, co-host~d'by Rock-, " . ' talk. " , ' more, to Our Lady of the 'A~~ ,~d~n~J<Ru~fini :tirtdercut,coiriiIlu:.,:~urs\C?ll~r' .cong~ct,e:1i~~the ~"", ":,, TowarcJ,:Peace

Bumption Church, Ostervi,lle.:<:'~",nist ·appea.I, in Sicily: lw a vigor- ";,:" esu~. s, m , "ansas, 1 y, ~ al:l",: ,:", ' , , : The" immediate' past president ,I

Rev. Mr. William J.,~jir1~Y;' i}us,piogramof sbciili act~on that sas C~ty-St. Josep~, Mo., dlOce~e" ,'''A~''far, as I can see' the :first of tne NationaI Council of 43D Maple Gardens,,'F~U,Ri'V~f(,'>~rici'1idea,"~he establishmE!nt~of·,~pd.:~he Cath;ohc,' !nterracp~.l effottSto be made Reuben H. also of St. Mary'~'.Seminary, J~', ' lo~-rent apartments, public, CouncIl. of Kansas CIty.. , . , St. StanislausCh1,1rcb, Fall Riv,er.~s~hools a'rid homes for the aged.

Rev. ~r. Co.rnelius F. Kiley;'2~," ~l1e Cardinal st~onglY,opposed , West Bntanma Street, Taunton, thE! ,recommendatIOn, eventually also of St. ~ary's Seminary, to, ,!:ldpP,ted Dy' the Vatican Council, Holy Name Church, Fall River·. that elderly' bishops resign.

Rev. Mr. RObert A. McGowan': Wheri,PopePaul VI implementedaf 54 Pleasant Street, North' At,;,' this ',recoinmendation and "ear-': tleboro, of the Theologieal Col-: 'nestly'" requested bishops to re- ' lege, Catholic University, to St,' sign'by the age of 75 at least, Joseph Church, Fall River. . Cardinal Ruffini went to see' the

Rev, Mr. Donald Messier, 575 Pope' lind the chancery office of ' Benefit Street, Pawtucket, of Palermo later announced -that Our Lady of the Angels Sem- 'the'Pope had "expressed a strong inary, Albany, to Sacred Heart Church, Fall River.

Rev, Mr. Kevin F. Tripp, ~16

Cottage Street, New Bedford, of St. John's Seminary, to a Sum­mer seminar' at Notre' Dame' University.

,desire" that the Cardinal'remain in his See.

T]le Sicilian Cardinal died· suddenly from, a heart, attack, .

,Sunday, June 11, just two hours, aftlilr, voting in Sicily's regio'nal ' eleCtions,He was 79.

Ar~~~shrih~:ardent wg~ chs­~u~~ 'U ~ C~ en~e" 0" ange mer an urc.

~C rh C.Al&a""'h=~I&c!!' ~ U wlill\;i""" 1I~\1...

: Continued ,from Page ,One " .. ,

~Msgr. Clarke said there is a move toward development' of an adult education program. He indicated it was coming because of current' inisinformation in secular news media. He coun­selled his listeners to obtain their ' theology "not: from the secular daily papers, but from the' suc­cessors of St. Peter.'"

,Bishop WaJ;'d referred to ex­perimental theories in education which seem to ignore "that there

, is su~h a thing as original sin"';;" '. WhIch is being downgradedriow

along these Churi!b'es, "Bishop 'lines should be cooperation, not Mueller of the Evangelical only between all Christians but United Brethren, said he did not ~etw:e~I1C?hJ:istians, ,non-Chris- think Christians are "ready for t1ans, allmembers of God's fam- such a drastic change at this ily' foward' peace 'fn' tlie world time."" ,r"--~-------------------------d

Shew Him How Much You love Him

By Ren.uembe';ng Hum, on His D~.,

June J8

.qkl~ERCHANTS (/Ya1imuie BANK

WITH SIX CONVENIENTLY LOCATED BANKS

ON N~w BEDFORD SOUTH BANK-Cove St. 'at Rodney ,French Boulevard WEST BANK-Kemptori Street at Mill Street LUND'S CORNER SANK-Acushnet Ave., near Lund's Corner DARTMOUTH BANK-Dartmouth Street ,near Rockdale Ave. 1NI0R1H BANK-Acushnet Ave. at Coffin Ave. CENTER BANK-Purchase and William Sts.

DRIVE-INSER\lICE AT' All BANKSSERRA OFFICElRS:, At the installation of new officers

for the New Bedford Serra Club the Most Rever,end Bishop congratulates, left, Vice President Dr. Robert W. Small, and right, President Richard C. Fontaine.

in some places-that darkens the intellect and weakens the will."

He asked that there be "a re­turn to common sense" and that it be recognized that children need urging and 'prodding ,and forming.

Bishop Ward emphasized that education and devotion must rest on dogma, not on private revela­tion. , "No one is permitted to have a

do:-it-yourself ,liturgy," he said. Stephen Riordan, president of

the archdiocesan CCD executive bOilrd, said "current projections indicate that between one-half and three-quarter million per­sons will be under CCD instruc­tion within the next five years."

If the CCD is' to be respon-' sible for instructing this num­ber, more manpower will be re­quired, Riordan said.

f{lll!fMl@l!9$ ~'11'

QUALITY m!l1d SERVKE~

./ I

mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. June 15, T961 13Jesuit Scholastic Is Volunteer

WHIETHER A WEEKEND OR SEVERAL WEEKS AT THE BEACH, THE MOUNTAINS OR ABROAD, WILL YOU CONSIDER GOING SOMEWHERE ILSE, TOO,

BY'GIVING" GIFT TO THE MISSIONS?

Physician in Vietnam IProgram WOODSTOCK (>NC)-A Jesuit

scholastic who is also an obste­trician-gynecologist will practice medicine in Vietnamese pro-vin­eial hospitals this Summer.

Dr. Louis Padovano, S.J., 36, departs June 16 from San Fran­cisco for Saigon, via Hong Kong, in the Volunteer Physicians for Vietnam program of the Ameri­ean Medical Association. AMA sponsors the program to help offset the shortage of native doc­tors in Vietnam.

The Jesuit scholastic has ob­tained a papal indult from, the Sacred Congregation for' Reli ­gious, which was necessary be­cause canon law ordinarily pro- . hibits a priest or Religious from practicing medicine. Fat her Pedro Arrupe, S.J., Father Gen­eral of the Society o!. Jesus, gave him permission to make the jour­ney.

Georgetown Graduate Dr. Padovano said he does not

know how many American doc­t,ors will accompany him on the trip to Vietnam, nor precisely where he will be assigned on arrival. He knows only that he will be part of a team of doctors practicing general medicine and surgery somewhere in the south of the war-torn land.

"It comes down to the fact that the world is in rough shape and the people need help," Dr. Pado­vano replied when asked why he wants to go to Vietnam. "Mod­ern technology will not be good for man unless it is put at the disposal of those who need it most, by those who know, how to love."

Dr. Padovano is a graduate of Georgetown University and the university's School of Medicine. He did his internship at St. Michael's Hospital, Newark, N. J., from 1956 to 1957. From 1957 to 1960 he was a resident physician in obstetrics and gynecology at Georgetown Hospital.

Progress With Jesuits He was a captain in the United

States Army from 1960 to 1962. Upon discharge he set up a pri ­vate practice in Newark, his

Commattee to Stwcr:f]y Miss~on of Laity

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Department of Lay Organiza­tions, U. S. Catholic Conference, will launch a study of the mis­sion of the laity in the Church in the United States.

"The specific aim of the study is to review the present national plan for'the coordination and de­velopment of lay apostolate structures in this country and to make recommendations for any changes that may be required as a result of the Vatican council, or new situations in the Church and world," Archbishop Joseph T. McGucken of San Francisco, chairman of the conference's lay organizations department, said.

The study will be carried out by a joint committee of the Na­tional Councils of Catholic Men, Women and Youth, under the auspices of the Department of Lay Organizations. The joint committee is known as the Joint Councils Executive Board and is made up of the executive com­mittees of the three major lay councils.

Blue Army WILLISTON (NC)-'-A westem

eonference of the Blue Army ~

Our Lady of Fatima has been scheduled here in North Dakota from Sept. 1 to 3. There also will be a pilgrimage to the National! Shrine of Our Lady of the Prai­ries, Powel'll Lake, N. D., on Sept.3.The events are being held under the patronage of Bishop 1iilary B. Hacker of Bismark.

home town. His medic'aY work came to a temporary end on Aug. 14, 1964, when he joined the Society of Jesus.

Dr. Padovano's progress with the Jesuits is sO,mething of a story in itself. Most Jesuitschol­astics spend 12 or 13 years in preparation for the priesthood, but Dr. Padovano's ordination will come in 1969, after only five )'eras of study.

He said currently he has his hands full preparing for final examinations in the first year of theology, which he is now eompleting at Woodstock, Jesuit seminary here. After ordination, he plans to begin a residence in psychiatr;)Co

YOU CAN GET AWAY FROM IT All,

but two-thirds of this world CAN NOli By sharing some part o·f YOlllr summertime' allowcllnce-scme part of th~

$30 bitli@n Americans wm spencll @n v@cClItiorrlls this year -Cli mJDssDoUllary can help some of the 11 million lepers without medical care, the 2 bollion hungry ..

MISSIONS NEED YOUR HELP IN THE 'SUMMER TOO!

RT. REV. EeWARD T. O·MEARA. NATIONAL DIRECTOR

~HE SOCIETY FbR THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH. 366 5TH AVE.. N. V .. N. V. 10001

&PAM. eWIilI\\ 1lQUR DIRIlCTOR De RT. RIlV. !!AYMOND CONllIDINIl. 86B N. MAire .....

Priest Scores Master Plan for Colleges HARRISBURG (N C ) ­

Father Joseph A. Flaherty, O.S.A., president, of Villa­nova University, said here Uiat most of Pennsylvania's pri ­vate colleges and universities cannot meet the goals set by the .state's proposed Master Plan for Higher Education.

, 'rhe pian was' originated by the state board of education and submitted recently to Gov. Ray­mond P. Shafer. The plan makes suggestions which would pre­sumably improve the state's

_ higher educational facilities over the next decade.

In a statement before the

Dear Monsignor, Inclosed Is a share of my vCllcatlon I

$ I to feecll lome of the l million children now starving. $ 10 to chaBilge the course of a leper's life woth sulphone. $ 25 to buy bandages and medicine for a mobile clinic in

latin Amerfica' which treats 20,000 people a year. $100 to heUp a crowded Asian orphanage buy new beds. 1$25@ to tllf¢ilDI11I a young mClln for the proesthood.

Name _

AdJdress _

House Committee on Higher Education 'Father Flaherty criti ­cized the plan's recommendation that private schools expand their facilities by 40 per cent in the next 10 years. He said the pro­posal was made "without of­fering any basic suggestions as to how to accomplish such ex-, pansion."

The priest noted that private colleges and universities' do not have the same easy access to state funds and other means of support as do secular institu­tions.

He also urged that the master plan's recommendation of a par­tial state subsidy for d.octoral

programs be broadened 'to in-> elude master's and other uni-> versity operated programs.

Father Flaherty asked for creo ation of a "statutory higher ed­ucational authority to ,operate for the benefit of all institutions. whether state controlled, state aided, or private." He said the institutions could jointly meet tile cost of operating the autho.... ity.

Father Flaherty spoke en be­half of Villanova University and a number of other private col­leges in southeastern Pennsyl­vania. There are some 20 Cath­olic and 30 non-Catholic private eolleges in the state.

I' ,

.-1

~ .:,:(()liserva'rtt::::~:~ra·.elet;·~Wri·te'$' '. t ,~ ~ '. • • :'... -~ • •

'!r~:' Jmj'pre~si~'ri'~: >·:of Austral.ia By Rt. Rev. Msgr. 'John S. Kenn~dly'

Australia is about· as big in territory· ·.as the United : States minus Alui'lka. But its Population iSl;lome ten and a

half million as against more -than 190 million for the United States. Unlike the United States, but'very much like South America, Australia is settled' churches and bridges. These men, mostly along the 12,000 miles of coast. Yet vast ch;:.mges are taking place, and the

" future may see the whole co~ti-.' . nent developed and populated.if In this.' devel­.:.... opment,.a good

·i: deal of the cap­; . ital is coming · from A~erica. , . But Australia is

I.;': ,very' close to .". 'Asia:' His a · "c:iow~-linednest

under the eaves ~f Asia" in the' words'of Elspeth Huxley, in- her

. new book Their Shining Eldorado: A Journey

·.Throu·gh Australia, with photo­. graphs and maps (Morrow.·$6.95; 425 Park Ave., S., New York,

,.: :DI. Y. '10016). . Australia, theref<lre, is likely to figure more and more in our future. Most of us know hardly

"!-" anything about it. An excellent introduction is provided by: Mrs. Huxley,' who has traversed thousands of miles oj[ the country

\ " and visited every part of it. .oj. ItS History

There are many impo'rtant as­/ pects of Australian life which , ." M.rs: Huxley does not touch i,·. upon. The politics of the com­

monwealth are barely mentiol}ed. ;,:;: There is little or nothing about, their effortS to acquire a' piece of 1945.!\ the eCol).omy in general,· a~l,it, property lmd a 0 house of their I' '., education, or about religion. Tlie own. . ~;'~', book is not exhaustive, nor 40es . Origlnai Inhabitants. laity Outnumber i;;': :C::~~~n~ ~~ :~s~~;:::~:a~e:~ . As inhabitants from afar have. C!~rgyon "Board :;<'., , 'who succeeds in giving· one "ttte..increased,. the 'aborigines have LAFAYETTE (NC) --" Laity

feel o~ the country. , '. ..; " . , ,all but.. dlsap~ared~ Commonlr :now' outnumber' cl~rgy ~n ·the Aus'tralia has no mourita~ns of .·cal~ed bl~cks, th?y have been Lafayette diocesan school boa:rd,

.' ., : any great height, but is marked' entJrel~ WIped out 10 some areas. it.is disclosed by new appoint-' by vast desert areas. ·It ..is.·the driest of the world's continents. The reason is its antiquity. For millennia it has had its surface ground down by erosion. It is a land of fierce sun, mighty winds, spectacular storms. It is' also fab­ulously rich in mineral resources, some of which are just now be­

", ing discovered and e~plo'ited. il Its history is relatively brief:"

'Captain Cook's discoveries were' made in the eighteenth centurY,' and for a considerable time thereafter the newly found con-Unent was a dumping ground for convicts from Great Britain.

'Riffraff and Craftsmen The crimes ot'. those trans­

:, p~rt.!l~ were.<i~",tpanr. cases ~, i:·~!-,I.Vlaltbat .petP~trators o~ the

LOS .ANGELES (NC)-Fathe.... ;; Joseph Franc'is, S.V.D., will be­

come head of the western prov-. ince of the Divine Word Mission­aries here. He is the third Negro priest to be assigned to' such it: position..

Father "John Bowman, S.V.D.; 11 Negro priest, now heads the order's southern province. He was preceded by Auxiliary: Bishop Harold Perry, S.V.D., of New Orlean's, who held the post prior to being made a bishop.­

and more besides, survived hor­ribly brutal treatment and the rigors of the climate to get a ne~

nation started.. Others came of their own freE:!

choice, For decades 'the migrants . were predominantly from "the British Isles. But, although a million British. have sett.led in

.. Australia' since World 'War II;' Greeks, Italians, Yugoslavs, and MSGR~ JOHN IF. DIENlElIIlYl other Europeans have swarmed in. There is a policy of keeping • C@rMlITf\)@!nl@]@nU'Asiatics out. In the last 20 years only 2,000 have been admitted Continued from Page One as permanent residents. completed overseas tours in Eu­

Cooperative Spirill rope, Japan and Bermuda. Prior Mrs. Huxley 'was impressed to his assignment to the Chaplain

, by the coo'perative spirit to be School, he served in the Person­found in Australia. As men battle nel Division of the Office of the

. the elements and .the terrain and Chief of Air Force Chaplains:.seek, in mining; in sheep-raising, . The Air Force Chaplain School

. in cattle cnuntry, in new indus­ is established to orientate cler-.tries, to make a living and rise gymen of all denominations en­in the world, they work not only tering the chaplaincy.from civil ­together, but in a real sense, for ian life to their future work ia one another. and with the Air F()rce and its

Voluntary work, in the com';' people. mon interest, is expected of Lt. Col. Denehy, native of Fall everyone. Great things have River,. was educated at Coylebeen accomplished by coopera- High School, Taunton, Holytive endeavor, and it has become cross .College, Worcester and almost a kind of religious belief. the Sulpician Seminary, Wash- .

Intere!:!tingly, the country has ington. . the largest percentage of home­ The son of Mrs. Elizabeth A. owners of any in the world. Denehy, he entered the Air Force l'Ifewcomers live frugally, save in 1950 after serving in parishestheir money, and are' assisted in since his ordination on Sept. 22,

·1~~;· . l'l

39~

L8

Whole

HAMS Shaak. 47C' Portioa .

..8

La 19c

Week-End Meat Specials I

ciYiciiis 'Cut-Up

FULLY COOKED

1 1f2 to 3 LB Average AII·chickens are gov't inspected ..• but not all are U.S.DA Grade A. At FINAST aU our chickens are U.S.D.A Grade A.

F.ace Portion LB 5'7c Cenler Slices LB 99c.

Produce: SpecialS! IFLORIDA V ALENeIA ..... Loaded with Jti~'

ORANGES ." 5 B~G

T\~. ~.~b~~lOntoday..T!i~r~.~~, f~,.;. )VIrs. Hl,lxley began her JO\1mey".,: ¥sg,r,~ou~on saH~, "It..~ecr~rnes., .j,' ':I!>EVILEDHAM . ",;:. . ." I'

I. .... ~~~.m.. t'~.,,~~~ ~~~~'ofa:~..<.•.7;re~r-old. at Sydney a.nd procee.ded.sout~, ,.It.I.~g~lr...,.d...E;:.si.rai?l: to l1ave.g~?ter'T., 'U'" d"'" ,.'.'., ,"':.JI '" "i \ .. :~'.tI:· .. , $1-00fl:.·.~~r,~1·.4~ug~~~r.~Q~ a.t:eh,.tEjd nav~l, }r<?!p ~lJ.e ~tate. of New, Soutb;.,·.lfl.r:r~w\ese~tatIOn on the,.dIoc­ n erWOOU .. ~ ~ : " 'r;Ii :",.,~g,lcer, .who icwas.~ t~ansport~.. -yva1es, ~o VIctoqa, d9~n t9.Tas.;. esan sc~ool board. In ~~tne,we.,!.. ,-I.' ' .. ':' '. .. ..,. . . . . . .

" ~...·~~t;.liie.f{)r .h~~,n~.:·~}orro~e? :~.· ...nia~ia, :w~st ~South. A,'!~tralia, pla,ll to have th~ lay !Uembers,., "'. 'Regular:'$1.98"Value' '"'''' .' '. "1 :",:1 '"'''''' ,: ',. ,." ,

!l ~;:~:;t?t~t~~·~~~;0~~~0~~f;:;·;'.;:;:C~~:~:~~'s~;:t·t~1~~e~~~~~;; :i~~f~~:~!bY. our·catholi~ ..SCh~~.,.: .,GillelfeST/dNU:.$$.StE~,:,.·.,:g,r"'9:9-'c

!i ,£>.ir~e:>!~?Ul~·riO( eye!}'.~;,p~t O~,·.:·:.·:· :'. WJ:iat'LieS .Ahead;':: ::':',);h,~r:~: .'~aI-ish s~h(>O~ ,~ards,\",

. ProtectIve measu~s ca?1e ~ather m~ntsannounced here in Loulili­late, but ~ wardshIp pob<:y ~ now ana. in operatIOn,.and under It, ~n the Msgr. Richard Mouton, dioe­western l?o~lOn of the contlOent, esan school superintendent, said a slight rJs~ In th~ e~tremely low the expanded membership of 'the numbers IS begInnIng to take board provides for lay represen-, place. . tation from 10 of the civil par­

The re~son .for. t~e decl~ne of, ishes (counties) of the Lafayette the ~rigmal InhabItants. 18 t~e diocese where Catholic schools

. dr~tic change wrought In t~e~r.: are located. The diocese includes, ~abltat. They w~re very prIml- .13 civil parishes of' southwest tive p~ople.who sImp~y wandered Louisiana,'. though there are about. gettIng a liVIng off the Catholic. schools in only 10 of land, Its flora and fauna. . them.' BU~ t~e land has ·been altered Bishop Maurice Schexnayder of

as mllhons of. acres hav~ been . Lafayette approved the expand­put· to use for the grazm.g. of ed membership which totals. sheep, for example. The' hvmg . seven laymen and six clergymen. th~t was theirs .for the taking is Several laymen represent more .

.. no longer aval~able, ,and the~ ,!~q,an,.one pariSh.' .,' .: have been st~adl1y reduced. .. "W'th the adyent of. 10c~l:."

":riffpl~f\ : 9th.~~s.".;,·)yere skllle~ .er~ Ter.ntory, m~o th~ l:>,arren· '''We'look forward to workiI.l.l;L F '. ce~afts~en, who have le~t ,ll)-emo.~·.. ,cen~er at Alice Springs! nort~~, ~. closely as possible with. the

ll'lals 111 the form of haO(~s0Jt:l~ ...east.to .Queenslfind".:;;outh .agaIn. newly' expanded board," the su-Dr...R/,:~Il''''' fo1'll'IT~"""'1l. H" "",,,,,,.Jl'$ along the Gr~at Barrier Ree~. perintendent continued... "~e 1i"J ~ "" II "... ..,1iI. ""\I.Ill&lJ She apologIzes for not havmg" hope the new· membership WIll

.' W ..,&,el!'·'••' D'll";"M·S··.... ';;''''''.' <lone mOJ:e, Quot .she. cer~ainly did· e?able the Cat~olic p~ople~f.the ... ..,U"" "0 I!J vv •• "".... enough to gather a WIde range .. dIOcese to VOIce' theIr opinIOns

of clear impressions· which she sets down in sharp, swift prose, spoiled here and there by 'typo­gl,"aphical errors. '

Australia has done its part in.' each of the great wars to save Europe, and now looks to Amer­'ica for assistance against absorp­

. tion by Asia. It is an outpost of the West, flourishing with a swiftly rising prosperity which depends in increasing measure on trade with the East. What lies ahead fol' it?,

and preferences in the important' matter of the education of their children."

·1F@G'[M«!If!'B@Ifil.·P·r@gD'~1fll'il PONCE· (NC)-Some 90 Re­

ligious and lay missioners from the United States will prepare' for work in Latin America by

.participating in an apostolic' for­mation program 'beginning' Aug. 22 at the Catholic University qf Puerto Rico here.

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PRO PARVULI AWARDS IN SO. AT'JI'LEBORO: Rev. Roger Gagne, assistant at St. Theresa's Parish, So. Attleboro, pins the cub scout award on William Cauley of parish's Cub Scout Pack lifo. 24. Others present are, rear, Robert Unangst, club master, and Willi:am Niquette, class instructor;

Serrans to Me·et In Toronto 'l'ORONTO (NC) - "CON voe COM '67-Concern for Vocations Communication" will be the theme of the 25th annual con­vention of Serra International here June 25-28.

More than 2,500 Catholic lay­men from 20 nations, represent­

. mg' 325 Serra Clubs of the world, are expected to attend the convention sessions for an analysis of the newest 'deas on priestly vocation. The wives 'and ehildren of some members win also '( attend. Several :hundred priests, Serra Club chapl,ains, and 35 bishops are expecteq to par­ticipate.

The three Serra Clubs of To­Rnto, Ont., 'plus the three other mubs of the Province of Ontario aft hosts.

The organization, founded 33 )'ears ago in Seattle, ~kes m Dame from Father Junipero $erra, a Franciscan missioner· 'Who established a string of mis­sions on the west coast of Amer­iea during the 18th century.

"riest Chosen GALVESTON (NC)-The ad­

Jninlstrator of St. Mary's cathe­dral here will become the first Roman Catholic priest to serve as president of the Galveston Ministerial Association. Father .ll>seph H. Crosthwait was named to replace Capt. Lloyd George of the Salvation Army in a special ~ecuUv.e sessioK1lo

UIIARUIGI "!tlIfIlCI-.c au••_~_. ...utle ~-~ ~

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forefront, Kenneth Mattau, William Farrell, and John Savoie; standing: Michael Fricot, Joseph Green, Timothy Foley, David 'Roach, William. Niquette, Jr., Richard Bradshaw, Robert Unangst, Jr., and Gerard Fricot

Meatballs, Spaghetti Go to Vietnam Nun, Pupils

WATERVLIET (NC) - The pupils. of Mount Carmel school here wanted to find some tangi­ble way to let American service­men'in Vietnam know that they are behind them all the way.

They began an unusual project ~sending homemade meatballs and spaghetti - all cooked by Sister Mary Virginia, their teacher-to soldiers in Vietnam. , The children also send cookies baked by. the girls, chewing gum and candy. Many have adopted a serviceman with whom they correspond.

Operatiori Meatballs and· Spa- " ghetti began when a few' service­men whb correspOnded with Sis­ter Virginia mentioned that they longed 'for such a meal, but that

Promotes p',ogram Of Work-Training

NEWARK (NC) - The Mount Carmel Guild, social welfare agency of the Newark archdio­cese, is recruiting 100 youngsters for participation in an anti ­poverty work-training program.

Young people between 16 and 21 will be accepted for Youth Chance, which will train them in certain manual skills and in work with the handicapped.

They will spend a maximum of 32 hours a week in work and learning programs, being paid $1.25 an hour.

Answer Servicemen's Request it was impossible to find that kind of food where they were stationed.

Sister Virginia wrote to Presi­dent Lyndon B. Johnson to ask

Prelate Addresses ·Lutheran Synod

SAN JUAN (NC)-A eall to ecumenism was delivered to the· Ilixth annual convention here

·of. the Caribbean Synod of the Lutheran Church in America by Archbishop Luis Aponte of San juan~ . . , .

Archbishop Aponte asked the Lutherans' to join' him "'in the desire tpat '?ie .might, as soon 88 possible, begin a real ecu­

·menical movement here on the island,whereby we might gen­uinely manifest to one another the'love that Christ showed all men when he prayed 'that they may all be one,''' .

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how she could a.rrange to send such items to Vietnam. He re­

o ferred her to the Navy Depart­ment, which sent her instructions on transporting the food.

Charles F. Baird, Assistant Secretary of the Navy, wrote Sister Virginia a letter, express­ing appreciation for her efforts in behalf of President Johnson. He said, "The value of such kindness Is inestimable and I know -when your packages arrive

,they are the cause for a very special occasion."

Sister Virginia and the chil ­dren will' continue to write and send pack~ges for the duration of the war. They pray for a ces- ' sation of. hostilities' daily arid look forward to the time when' "their" .servicemen pay their promised visits to Mount Carmel school.

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ENGLEWOOD (NC) - Eablil Arthur Hertzberg of Temple Emanu-el here in New, Jersey has recorded a spiritual talk for Catholic nuns to be distributed by the Conference - A -lVIonth Club. Father Ronald Gray, 0. Carm., club director said the rab­bi's talk is entitled "God Made You."

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-=-i 6 :"tl-tE ANCHOR~DioceseofFoll River-Thurs.-June lS; :1967

CINCINNATI (NC) - The etttholic Church opposes direct abortion "not simply as some­thing contrary to Cl:iurch disci­]!)line," but as "something against the universal moral l!1w," Arch­bishop Karl J. Alter of Cincin­nati declared.

"In speaking out against cur­rent attempts to liberalize aOOr­Cion in the U. S." the archbishop said, "Church leaders have no thought of imposing a Church hw on American citizens. They

stand forth as the defenders of the basic rights of that most helpless minority-the unborn:'

, ' "This is not to say," he contin,­ued, "that those who are proriiot­ing less rigid abortion laws are monsters with no concern for human rights. They absolve themselves from the role of op­pressors with the contention that the fetus is not a human organ­

.ism and therefore has no rights. "In their eyes, the direct ter­

-mination of pregnancy is not

only' not immoral; it is even equally unconvincing about the virtuous when certain therapeu­tic or socio-economic reasons recommend it.

"Their case rests on the prop- . osition that science has not yet shown that the fetus is a human person,

"This is a perilous basis for a movement concerned with an issue so vital to society. For if science has said nothing convinc­ing about the presence of human life in the womb, it has been

contradictory proposition, that human life is not present there.

"The advocates of abortion must grant that there is at least equal doubt on both sides. This leaves them with the consider­ation that they are encouraging the killing of what might very well be a human being. Since they would act in doubt, they would at least risk violating the most basic of human rights-the right to life."

"It is reasonable," suggestecll Archbishop Alter, "to ask them to resolve their doubt before proceeding further. And it should be resolved not by law but by further study. This should be an exhaustive exploration, by the most competent and respon­sible scholars, of every aspect of this complex issue.

"Common prudence suggests such a study. Our common re­gard for the dignity of human life demands it."

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Assumption to Have Ecumenica' Institute of Religious Studies

WORCESTER (NC)-An ecu­menical ins tit ute of reli ­gious studies for Protestant and Catholic laymen and clergy will be established at Assumption college here next February.

Offering degrees or certificates in religious education under a Protestant and Catholic faculty, the institute is being developed at the request of Bishop Bernard J. Flanagan of Worcester and the Greater Worcester Area Council of Churches.

Father Ernest L. Fortin, A.A. vice-president of the Assump­tionist Fathers' college, made the announcement at the closing meeting of the 168th state con­ference of the United Church of Christ held at the college.

The institute plans to start its classes with the semester next year. Although Assumption is a college for men, institute classes will- be co-educational.

Father Fortin said the plan­ning included consultations with deans of four Protestant and Catholic theological schools in the Boston area.

The principal objectives of the program, he said, will be to: (1) discuss the most important recent developments in Biblical theo­

logical and pastoral studies, and (2) study the intellectual, scien­tific, cultural and sociaR aspects of the modern world as they af­fect or relate to the understand­ing and presentation of the Christian message.

Student J!>otentiall He said the program will seek

a closer integration of theology with new developments in reli ­gious sociology, comparative re­ligion and the psychological dis­ciplines.

Father Fortin said the master's degree program will be open to both qualified laymen and clergy.. Others, he said, who do not have the qunlification for the master's degree program, may "audit" the course without credit and earn education certi ­ficates.

He said a survey showed the student potential for the institute in the Worcester County area alone includes 2,700 Catholic and 3,800 Protestant lay teachers; about 500 Religious and diocesan priests and Brothers; :-125 Prot­estant clergymen and 1,176 Cath­olic Sisters of various communi­ties involved in teaching Con­fraternity of Christian Doctrine and parochial schools.

The .Parish Parade SS. MARGARET-MARlY GUll.D,ST. JOSEPH, BUZZARDS BAY, ONSETFALL RIVER

Mrs. Frank Bowen, presidentCharter night for Boy Scouts of the Guild, announced thatand Cubs will be held Sunday Miss Kathleen Rhea, Buzzardsnight, June 18. Junior choristers Bay High School graduate, andwill fete Mrs. Eugenie Archam­Miss Judith Facchetti, Warehambault, organist, with a program High graduate, have been award­Sunday afternoon. ed scholarships for thei r efficien­

The parish picnic is slated for cy in CCD classes during theirSunday, June 25 at St. Vincent school years.de Paul Camp, NOl·th Westport. Elected to serve as officers for

A physical fitness program the coming year are: Miss Ur­will take place in the schoolyard sula Wing, president; Mrs. Hay­at 1 this afternoon with Marine den Coggeshall, vice-president; Sgt. Richard Wallace heading the Mrs. Arthur Wills, recording sec­staff of judges. retary; Mrs. John McManus,

treasurer. ST. PATRICK, The directors named for 1967­SOMERSET 68 are Mrs. Annie Eldridge, Mrs.

Victor Cordeiro, chaiI'man of John Gray and Mrs. Frank the annual parish lawn party, to Bowen. be held this year from Thursday, Mrs. William Brady, chairman June 22 through Sunday, June of ways and means, has an­25, announces his aides as in­ nounced that the formative cluding Frederick Forest, co­ stages of the planning for annual chairman; Sylvester Medeiros, Penny Sale, scheduled for Thurs­treasurer; Albert Medeiros, tick­ day, July 6 at St. Margaret's et chariman; Stuart Mattos, in Church Hall, Main Sil'eet, Buz­charge of electrical work; Den­ zards Bay, have been completed. nis Pereira, heading construc­ HOLY NAME, tion; Thomas Reis Jr., publicity. FALL RIVER Carlton Boardman is in charge Miss Ade Bethune, liturgical of the American food booth; and artist, will announce and discuss Mrs. Emilia Cabral will direct results of a study of the church the Portuguese food booth: En­ and sanctuary at a parish council tcrtninmcnt will be offered meeting at 7:30 tonight. All pa­nightly on a "giant stage." rishioners are invited. to attend.

.>i­.

_____ N I L.

FAIRHAVEN ACADEMY: This international group graduated Sunday from Sacred Hearts Academy in Fair­haven. Left to right, Barbara Alfonse of U.S.; Elza Vas­concelos of St. Michael, Azores; and Clara Chow-Kai of p,anymy

FROM PREVOST: Top ranked graduates at Prevost High, Fall River, are, from left, Gabriel Andrade, Paul Dextraze, Robert Lambalot, Edmond Tremblay.

Rte$ent Re~iSJ;ous Partic~pQltion mn H@U$6ng D<emonstrctioll1S

LOUISVILLE (NC)-A survey taken by the Louisville archdioc­esan newspaper, thE' Record, in­dicates that many people here believe priests and Sisters should not participate in "open housing" demonstrations and that such demonstrations do more harm than good.

Several hundred persons re­sponded to the survey on the morality of "open housing," long a heated and controversial issue here. .

Asked if "open housing" is a moral question, 60 per cent said no, while 36 per cent answered yes.

As for demonstrations, 73 per cent replied that they are doing more harm than good and are unnecessary.

Many emphatic and emotional negative responses, the news­paper said, were given to the question: Should priests and Sis­ters have been active in these demonstrations? Respondents backed up their replies with the following reasons:

Priests and Sisters who are neither taxpayers nor property owners have no right to be in­volved.

If they want to help, they should stay in church and pray. Priests should preach about it, and teachers should teach about it, but leave demonstrations to lay people.

It is undignified and causes people to lose their respect for

~@01filO[{i)@[)'V fr@ A©J01filOli'

1R?®~O@E@l1!J§ W@01fil@UI1 COVINGTON (NC) - S1. Jo­

seph Seminary here in Louisiana will admit as students members of women's religious communi­ties and add Sisters to its faculty next Fall.

It will also pI:Qvide college training in a 4-4-4 seminary pro­gram in the New Orleans arch­diocese. For 7.5 years, the Bene­dictine Fathers of St. Joseph's Abbey have conducted the sem­inary only as a center for high school and junior college educa­tion.

As in the past, St. Joseph's will accept seminarians from other dioceses.

Religious. It is not a moral question, and

Religious have no business in politics.

Religious should not be asso­ciated with "proverl and well ­known communists."

The Record said it did not mean to suggest that the majority vote makes an opinion either right or wrong.

THE ANCHOR- 17 Thurs., June 15, 1967

RabbB ~~wocates

Uml ~fi'®@ [f [J'@U1t PHILADELPHIA (NC) - If.

Jewish rabbi advocated a 'unite(]J front of all religious against the contradictions of the 20th cen­tury in the commencement ad­dress to the 498 graduates of St. Joseph's College here.

Rabbi Marc H. Tanenbaum, di­rector of the interreligious af­fairs department of the American Jewish Committee, received aJlll honorary doctorate of religious education from the college in recognition of his work in the field of Catholic-Jewish rela­tions.

The Jewish leader said: "The scientific revolution, which can" for the first time in recorded his­tory, banish poverty from the earth, also has produced a Pan­dora's Box of apocalyptic terror that gives man the potential te 'overkill' himself at least 125 times."

Rabbi Tanenbaum also citecll the observation by Bishop Fultolll J. Sheen of Rochester, N. Y., that! Americans today "live in a sump­tuous palace lost in the midst of{ a vast slum."

Teenage~$ to HeI, Conshu(!;(!' Ch~U'ch

LOS ANGELES (NC) - As soon as Summer vacation begins, Father Henry Vetter C.P., willi lead a small band of teenage boys down into the Valley of the Holy Trinity, five hours' drive south of Mexicali, Mexican bOF­dertown, to help new colonists there build their first church.

The colonists are very poor, IDut are settling in an area where wells are producing water anCl bringing life to the desert.

The Passionist missioner sta­tioned at Mater Dolorosa R~treat House here, said the boys wouhll work with men experienced ill Building with adobe.

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, TH!: ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. June 15, 1967 1'8

M@wemru®rmt (Q)[f.~@rro,~&@d

By Msgr. George G. Higgins ' (Director, Social Action Dept., NCWC)

The Wall Street Journal reports that labor leaders are /worried about the "generational gap" between themselves and their ,rank-and-file members. According to the Journal, they are jolted to discover that their younger members '"don't remember the Depres­sion or the days when unions' weren't around." In trying to explain this "generational gap," ,many commentato~ ar~ taking the' easy way 'out by blaming it all GIl the labor movement's top leadership, :Which is said to be getting soft, ideologically as well as physi-­eally, and to have given up

\~ the fight. This, it seems to me, .is a gl'OSS exag.,. geration. On the

, other hand, there is a danger that the labor movement, as it· grows In numbers and in economic and political influence, mayuncon­sciously tend to lose sight of the fact that ;<, basic reason for ex-" istencc,is "to protect the rights,

, and ac7--- ce the welfare of the individual worker. ' '

This is another way of saying Chat if the rank-and-file have an obligation to the labor move.,. ment, by the same token the, labor movement and its elected and appointed representatives have an obligation to the rank­and-file.

The labor .movement belongs to them, not ·to a handful of top , ~fficials. ,

DediC>l\ted Men , '1 am not suggesting that labor leaders as a group are 'out of touch with their rank-and:"file' men-';~rs, or that they aresel.,. fishly using the power and pres:" tige,o£. their office for t!le'ir own material advantage. or that they' are getting soft. . Some .are, but the majority are'

~ot. TJ1~ majority, in ,my opinion, are dedIcated men who deserve well of American society, to ~hose security and welfare they are making such an' important contribution.

The problem is, more subtle and more complicated than that of ordinary human selfishness or greed or lack of vision on the part of a handful of unfaithful

, labor leaders. 1 am referring to the danger

that big unions"':-simply because t:i!, they are big, and even when

their leaders are honest and un­selfish men of vision-may un­consciously lose sight of the im,.., portance of the individual :worker.

- Describes Laborell' Who is this individual worker,

this member of the rank-and-' file? Here is the way he is de­scribed in a recent 'survey of a number of local unions:

"The rank-and file union mem­ber, goes through life at a' humble level, s~eking in his, own way

, the livelihood, the security, the necessities, and smail comforts that our civilization makes pos­sible.

'''He is caught up, as all of us are, in the mass society ,!hat technology has fashioned. Usual­ly he lives in an urban commu­nity near the job that is his eco­nomic base, in a small town or metropolitan center created by forces beyond 'his ,control.

"A tess-advantaged member of the community, he, has had limited education and enjoys lit ­tle prestige; he' has a relatively lIIDall income and seldom gets to ewn property more substantial than' his modest' home or car· ~ never makes a speech or, ge~

\1:0'

his name in the paper; he rarely makes important decisions, ex­cept in his own little world.

Base of Society 'He becomes an unslFflled, semi­

skilled, or, if he is fortunate, a skilled worker, gets' a 'Job and holds,on to it, joins a union, and evef\tually dies as anonymously as he has lived * * * Yet this, rank-and-file worker, anony~ mous and unimportant though, he may seem, is at the base of American society and unless one knows what he is like one can not fully understand the society:"

This is the man, the average man, the so-called rank-and-file worker, whom the labor move­ment was established to, serve and to represent. '

One of Labor's principal func­tions is to create' conditions of employment which will make it possible for him, to take pride and to find satisfactio~' in Ihis job, and to look upon it as some­thing more than a means of earn­ing a livelihood for himself and his family. '

Speaking of the importance and the dignity of the individual worker, may 1 hurriedly insert a rather controversial, footnote ' on the subject of the union shop and the related subject of right.,. to-work legislation.

There is no question in my mind that the pros-the argu­m:ents in favor of the union shop -far outweigh the cons or the arguments against it. It is only fair to note,. however, that there' are some fairly persuasive rea­sons why the labor movement ought to reexamine the que'stion of the union shop penodicaiiy.

One of these reasons, is the possibility that in some cases the' ' union shop; in addition to mak­ing things a little too easy for a minority of dishonest or undem­ocratic labor leaders, may il1sq have the result, over the' long haul, of weakening rather than strengthening the labor move­ment. '" , " '

Spirit of Apathy To use the pOPul~r slang ex~

pression of the day, they couldn't care less about who runs the union or how he runs it, so long as he continues to get them prO­gressively better and better wages and working conditions.

There are undoubtedly a num­ber of complicated causes for this spirit of apathy and - indif­ference on the part of so many union members, but to some ex­tent at least it may be due to the fact that a good number of workers' in recent years: have joined unions verY reluctantly, not out of a sense of conviction and for reasons of social j,ustice, but simply because they had to join under the terms of union shop provisions.

Spirit of Sacrifice This is not an argument, in

favor of right-to-work legislation -but it is something for the labor movement to think :about.

Surely this much is true, that, while it, is important for the labor movement to organize the unorganized, it is equally impor­tant and equally necessary' for the labor movement to look for new ways of "unionizing", the organized - of transmitting ,to those who already, belong to un-, ions some understanding of what trade unionism is all about'i'md of instilling in, them the idealism ' and spirit of sacriiice to ,'WhiCJl the labor movement, owes ita very 'existence.

DOMINICAN ACADEMY: Highest honors at Domin­ican Academy, Fall River, went to, seated from left, are Therese Chouinard .and Denise Turcotte. Standing, from ~eft,',

" F' 1 ' . . 8lr~ V IVIan 10 a, semor homeroom presIdent; Diane Ratte,

'school president; Beverly Stinton, senior homeroom presi­dent. '

~

Prelate Stresses T5M@ foEl' Le~sure

GRAND RAPIDS (NC) , - A bishop urged a group of college students here to "find time nn your life for a little leisure­even a little nonsense - whIch makeS for sanity, survival, and yes, salvation."

Bishop John J. Wright of Pins... burgh, speaking at the 25th 8n­nual commencement of Aquinas College where he received all

honorary degree, deplored what he called the grimness which marks the chase for material success among many educated person-a race which qualifies many of them for, an award as "most likely to kill themselves before 40." ,

The bishop said on too many college camplises' there is I1lO

room for "sheer amusement." He said students 'should pick out a "few clowns" for friends, as wen as those whose constant intensity about tasks leaves no room for a little humor.

He said he wished some people would seek a little of God's Plll­tience with weak human nature, instead of arrogating to them­selves a superabundance of Godl'G righteous wrath' about evil ial the world.

Bishop Allen J. Babcock cd! Gr~nd Rapids presided and pre­sented the degrees. Sister Jane Marie Murray of the MarywoodDominican Sisters, author of

. books and religious iI:lstructiOlll, and a, pioneer in the liturgical movement, also was awarded an lwnorar¥ degree.

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THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. June 15, 1967Moulded Belfer Cotholics" 19 Students and Athletes

Prelate Asks Knights of CG)~~mbusRetiring Coyle High Head To Lead L~tu~gica~ Relrn®wal

KOKOMO (NC) - Some 500 Knights that the Vatican Counci1Leaves Great Track ~ark delegates at Indiana's 66th annu- was concerned with "tooling up By PETER BARTEK al state Knights of Columbus for the futurc--"so that Catholics

convention here were challenged may be as "capable in presentingNorton High Coach to be a "vanguard" in the pro- the Word of God tomorrow as In the main lobby of Msgr. Coyle High School in gram of liturgical renewal 'by' Thomas Aquinas was centuries

their state chaplain, Bishop Paul ago."Taunton, any visitor will see a glass showcase full of F. Leibold of Evansville. He said that the demands 01trophies, medals, ribbons, and other awards symbolic of Bishop Raymond J. Gallagher today's youth are not a "threat

the accomplishments of Warrior trackmen. This, in it ­ of Lafayette also charged the to our control," but an insistence self, is not amazing except Knights to "meet the challenge that we "put our mOney where when one considers that 10 surprises. The '59 edition of the of youth" and "keep faith with 'our mouth is."

Warrior track team won both them by reason of the m;l.gnifi-' Youth he said asks "that weyears ago the first dioce8'an the dual meet and County meet cence of your own service to should face the' difficulties ofschool did not participate in trophies in the Bristol County G~ and to .the" communities in today and apply the cont~nt of

the sport. The growth and suc­ League, and wound up the sea- whIch you live. our beliefs to the solution of cess of the Coyle track program son with an impressive 12-2 re- Bisho~ Leibold spoke at the' these difficulties. They are ask­ean be attrib­ ord. Coyle had emerged as a SPEAKER: Paul H. La- conventIon Mass .at St. Joan of lng us to make our faith practi ­uted to the dili ­ track power. Montagne, a member of Ar~ chur,ch ;md BIShop GaJlagher, cablc--to make it work asa re gent efforts of Higher Class Bracket Notre Dame Parish, Fall debvered the main address at ality of life."Brother Thomas

Brother Thomas continued at River, and a member of the the convention banquet the sameGallagher, C.S.C., th Board of the Catholl'c Order evening.' Twin Promotions'principal of the e helm for the next two seasons, 'Bond or Charit~

Holy Cross until 1961, when he was appoint- of For.esters will speak on FT· 1Il\. ed principal of the Herring City " In calling for the Knights to 011' wan IrrlestsBrothers' school. Fraternal Aspects of Fra- h d l·t . alsecondary school. During his spear ea 1 urgIc renewal, WASHINGTON (NC) -: ~Brother Thomas term as head track coach, Broth- ternal Benefit Societies" at Bishop Leibold pointed out that priests who are twin brothers arehas served at er Thomas produced many out- the New England Fraternal Vatican Council II described the ,slated for twin promotions in theCoyle for the

past 14 years. ,standing performers. Among Congress in Webster on :Mass as a "sacrament of love, a near future. , . His first Taun- . Peter those' who performed under the June-17. sign. Of" unity ~n~ a bond of, ,Both are to be elevated t9 the

/. ton assignment Bartek tutelage of Brother Thomas set- chanty, ~ descnptIon that para- , rank of domestic prelate I;>y the was in 1950. He taught Religion ting records in the Bristol llels. the K. of C. principles of". Cl:\urch and to' the ran,k, of for two years, then left for a Co~ty League or placing in the Coyle Prine,ipa I chanty, unity and fraternity. ,colonel by the U. S. Army. , year and returned ip 1953. New England' Catholic Meet Youth's Demands The twins-Fathers Gerard Jo-

Brother will, leave Taunton were Barney O'Hearn, J:ack Phil- Continued from Pagt: Ope The, bishop said that the liturgy:' seph Gefell a,?d Joseph G;erard " I again this year following, his lip, Ed Boyle, Bob Lane, Fred West Haven, Conn. will'be' the fortifies' the ':faithful 'in'" thei-r Gefell-are pnests of the ~!Jch­,, sixth year as principal o~ the and Pete Bartek; Brian McCar- new principal of Mon~ignor capacity to preach ChriSt to out- ester, N. Y., diocese. Both, are , Taunton high school in accord­ thy and John Heneski. Coyle High School, T<!u,nton. siders, 'and thereby revealS the ehaplains in the regular l~nny

ance with ll'egulatipns govet:ning The ground work had been Brother Richard, C.S.C., is - a Church as a sign raised above' aDd both have s~rved with &he principals ,in, Holy ,Cross, ,~n­ ,laid for Coa~hes'Fr~d'Bartek' native of Johnstown;' 'Penna., 'natiol1s. Heurged the Knights to' paratroopers. ,,'I'I

ducted institutions. """, and Bob Lane who took over where he graduated from Johns- make their' convention Mliss a " Modest Beghming from Brother Thomas when he town Catholic High School be- "livin, symbol of all you 'set out,'

moved into the front office. In fore entering the Brothers ot;" tt>' accomplish' as Knighis 'of C()IoWhile a teacher in the Religion 1963 and again in 1964, the War- Holy Cross. He comes to Coyle 'lumbus in Indiana, for your sane-'Department, Brother Thomas in­ riors ran off with both the dual with teaching experience at tification, for country, for theaugurated Coyle's track program and meet trophy' representative Mackin High School, Washing- cause of Christ." ' in 1958. It is difficult not to of 'supremacy in the Bristol' ton, and .Notre Dame High in :Bishop Gall!1gher toid the'smile when he recalls how the Coun,ty loop. West Haven. program commenced and the But, this time the running The parents of Brother KinirYtremendous strides it has made. ,Fails to Pass'Coylemen did not stop with are' being honored at the Voca­Brother remembers vividly county victories. They traveled tional Institute at Fordham' DOVER (NC) - Despite the'when a small group of ,students to Danvers to participate in Class University on July 5, as parentS backing ot Bishop Michael W.aproached him one Spring day' B of the New England Catholic' from wliose family there are five Byle of Wilmington, the influeri ­and asked if he would sponsor championships and won I top or more who have entered the an informal track team. , ' , , honor both years.' It, was ruled ,priesthood' or religious life. '~:~e~~;~;:.~I~~jo~~~ai~d~~~~~. GEO O'HARABrother Thomas reminded the in 1965 that Coyle would no Coyle's new leader has two ware, ,J ,i1 "faix: 'housing ~ilr has '. _• , ' eager and ambitious runners and longer be eligible for Cll,lss B, brothers who are priests, twoJumpers of their reasons for at ­ but if it were to enter the meet, .sisters who are religious sisters',tendance ,at the smalL diocesan it had to compete in Class' A. ',and 'another brother in the'high school., ' ~~:e~7~::~e:; ,~i:.~~ CHEVROLETMore C&mpetitive Now the Brothers of Holy Cross. _"I am here first to strengthen' , _, ,Brother Thomas Gallagher,your faith and help to save your The WaJ:rriors are, definitely ,principal of Coyle for the past six';soul," he emphasized to the small PLUMBING & HEATING. tNC. ' outmanned in the large '.school years, has been assigned to theband of zealots. "And, while we' division but the day is not far Notre Dame International Schooi' .. ," Sales ana servicetend to this always-first-purpose, ' distant when they Will, conquer in Rome, an English speaking .. tor tJomesticthe Holy Cross Brothers devote the likes I))f St. John's Prep of boarding school for boys. The ~ '~ and Industrialtheir lives to the education of : Oil BlJIllCrsDanvers, Boston CQllege, High school was founded shortly afteryouth, hoping to develop their, of Boston, Catholic Memorial of the War on the inspiration of' 995-1631charges into future leaders. I Roxbury, and Xaverian of Bos- Pope Paul VI when he was still 2283 ACUSHNET AVENUE am interested in track if you are ton, perennial Catholic school Cardinal Montini. The Holy NEW BEDFORDinterestet: in your soul and your powerhouses. And, when they do, Father is still' patron of theeducation," he told his young they will annex the Class A school.admirers.

" ,"

, '

Where A GOOD HAME'

Means A

GREAT DEAL

Catholic Championship, adding ................................................Much more than an informal more trophies to the lobby show­

activity became actuality that case. Qualters and Paul Therrien the same year as Brother Thomas Brother Thomas seemingly ~n- Warl'Jors won their fourth Coun­and Joseph Scanlon, lay teacher joys nothing more than to take ty championship in the last 10at the school, organized an offi ­ a few minutes from bis busy years. It is only fitting that thecial team to represent the school. 'schedule to discuss track, :"Track 'club should perform so admir­The neophytes traveled' to New has changed considerably, over ab~ in this its founder's last yeaX'Bedford to take on' powerful the past 10 .years, and~' many at Msgr. Coyle High School. " New Bedford High ,in their times that were gOod .'a decadeinitial engagement. " ago are only mediocre, nOw. If Brother Thomas will be missed

Emerge as Power ,you had II fligh jumper. who by all those who came in con.. , The sight of Coach AI Boucher could clea:.: 5' is'' arid, a shot put- tact with him during his stay at

running his charges' through ,ter who could throw '44', yOU;" Coyle. His diligent efforts and their drill must have put the were in pretty good shape. Today his manly example will long be

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Coyle mentor and his trackmen these are common perform- remembered, by those who were ances." fortunate enough to have been ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••in a state of shock. New Bed­

ford unbeknown to Brother To illustrate, the truth of one of Brother Thomas Galla- Fr Thomas was one of the leading Brother Thomas' statement, the gher's Coylemen. ' eontenders for the state cham­ Warriors now have three shot pionship and when Coach Bou­ putters who are throwing close cher saw the Coyle squad he sug­ to SO'. Sophomore Steve Slavick gested a scrimmage meet with no ,is consistently over the 50 foot score being kept. Coyle readily mark. Bill Holgerson, a consis­agreed. tent six-foot high jumper, had

The meet was run as a prac­ little competition in the Countytice session but the Coyle coaches but had. difficulty placing in, the returned with grandiose ideas of state meet. the school's track future. Hard The Golden Rulework and many hours of prepa­ration paid dividends quickly Track definitely has become for the coaches and their more eompetitive;' Winning dis­proteges. ' , tances, heights and times are im­

Coyle took its bumps in its­ proving, elilch year, Foyle is. also Inaugural season but the 1958 improving. This s'eason under the campaign yielded many pleasant Glirection elf Brother Harold

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Bishop's"~Council'President Urges Prayers for Peace.

WASHINGTON (NC)~'l'he head of the U. S. Oatholic bishops' organization issued a call here to Cath.olics and "all who believe in God to join in a crusade of prayer for peace throughout the, world.» 'l'he statement was issued on behalf of the U. S. bishops. Archbishop John F. Dearden

@f Detroit, president,' Na­tiona) Council of Catholic Bishops, said the bishops had set aside Sunday, June 11, "as a day of prayer in all our churches and shapels." , '

"Let us pray for immediate peace in the Middle East and ask Cod1s guidance upon the ·leaders. of nations, so that they may me­

. mate this dispute quickly and

permanently," the archbis~op said,

The archbisho'p said the .ou't­break of war in the Middle East Us "a tragic event" with con­

"sequences "truly frightening" ....hich could trigger "a wot'1d holocaust."

"In. this hour of crisis, we, the €atholic bishops of the United

Otherwise, for all its marvelous knowledge, humanity. which is· already in the middle of a grave crisis, will perhaps be brought to that mournful hour in which it will experience no peace other than the dreadful peace of death" (The Church in the Ma,dern World, No. 82) •."

Honorable Accord .' '. ".. " .'.. .

In this hour of crisis, we, the Catholic bishops of, the United States, unite with the HolyFather in his fervent hope; that the United 'Nations Organi?:ation will be successful in halting the. conflict.

. , We pray that arins will be laid. down and that an honorable accord will be concluded so that this conflict may be resolved,' not .on the b~ttlefield, but in the forum of the United Nations alld

3tates, unite with the Holy: before ·.the 'International Court Father in his fervent hope that'- . of justice. . , the United Nations Organization will be.successful in halt:ing-the OOilflict," Archbishop Deal'den

sa~he full text of ArchbishopDeardenis statement follows:

Mournful Hour tb k f . thThe ou rea o' war III e

Middle East is a tragic event, ,one fraught .with consequences

that are truly frightening, War in itself is deplorable. but this present conflict carries with it the additional danger that it might spread and indeed result in a world holocaust.

We cannot forget the warning given to mankind by Vatican Council II, less than two years ago: "Enmities and hatred must be put away and firm, honest' agl'Cements concerning world peace reached in the future.

,[Nun Gives Address At Baptist Church

PHILADELPHIA (NC)--Sister Mary Lawrence, a Medical Mis­sionary Sister" delivered the Woman's Day message at Bl'ight: Hope Baptist 'church hel'c Sun­.day.

Bright Hope's pastor, the Rev. Dr. William H. Gray, Jr" said: "The appearance of Sistel' Mary Lawrence at Bright Hope, the first time a nun has spoken at a Negro Protestant church in Philadelphia, represents the new policy set up by the ecumenical

-,Ocouncil for Christian religions to join hands in the Spih·it of Christian u'nity."

Sister Lawrence recei ved a special achievement award from the. Woman's Day Committee, sponsors of. the 57th annual Woman's Day. The theme .of the day was "Out.standing Woman­hood," and· focused on the contl'i ­hution women make to the Qhurch and the community.

CathoHc Colleges Name Cooll'dincitolr

ATCHISON (NC)-A 44-year­old layman has been named "co­ol'dinator for two Catholic col­leges here.

In his new post Evan J. Taylor will seek to promote cooperation between St. Benedict's College, a. men's school conducted by the Benedictine Fathers, and Mount St. Scholastica College, a wom­en's school conducted by the Benedictine Sisters.

The two schools recently re­ceived a $69,150 grant from the U,S, Office of Education intend­ed in part for staffing of a co­ol'dinator'£ ~

,..

. 'We ask our Catholic faithful and all'who believe in God to join in a'crusade of prayer for

peace throughout the wodd. ~et us pray for' immediate. ..

peace in the Middle East and ask' God's' guidance upon the leaders . WASHINGTON (NC} - "The

subJ'ect that will underlie theof nations, so that they may me­diate' this dispute 'quickly and,. history of your generation is the. permanently. .

. SO Per Ce'nt Rai~e

. For Lay Teachers BROOKLYN (NC) Lay

grammar school teachers with a bachelor's degree who entel' the. Brooklyn diocesan school system in September 'will become the first beneficiaries of a new stal't ­ing salary that will incl'ease 40 per cent-from $3,600 to $5,000,

The new scale,' announced by the diocesan schools office here,. features 12 increments to $7,400 per year. Teachers with a mas­ter's. degree will begin at $5,600 and progress to $8;000. .

Teachers 'who have not yet re­ceived their degrees will begin at $4,200 if they have less than' 90 college credits, and $4,560 if they have 90 or more ,college credits. . . .,

SISTERS TOO: Two' Dominicans' of,Presentation are initiated a blockade of an inter­among graduates at ' Mt. St. Mary ,Acade~y,!Fal1;River. nl:itional waterway: the straits of.

Tiran, Israel's .sea lane'to Africa . From left, Sister Ritadu ,Rosaire 'a4d:"Sister Gertrudis and Asia. , .. Maria exchange farewells with Jeanine Santen-e and Jean~ "This blockade may lead to anine B~aud,:,y. _ ". ' , ' . . ,.,.... " " ma'jor conflagration. The'Middle

,. East has been an arena' of tension ' I K' , . due' to the' threat of contil1lJed

. Crisis' of Development'.·s . ey, terrorist attacKs; as well as the ., :' "recent Arab' military mobiliza­Kat';"enba'ch .Tells ,....Gr·aduate's.

crisis of development-of the less, developed nations abroad, and, no less,of the underdeveloped' country that exists within our: own borders," Under Secretary. of State Nicholas B, Katzenbach.:. told Georgetown University graduates here.

Receiving an hoilOrary'docto­rate of laws at the university's 168th commencement, Katzen-. bach addressed some 1,400 grad-. uates on the problems of closing' the gaps between the world's rich' and poor. He' noted - that 20 years earlier, on June 5, 1947, Secretary' of· State George Mar-'

. shall had outlined his plan for' the eco~omic recovery of Europe.

"Our concern today," Kat?:en­bach said, "is not malting it pos-' sible for men to use thefr skills but 'for other men to develop' them;' not ·.restoring societies but' creating them." "

He cited figures to illustrate '

--'e~rdlnal' Cush'ing' Endorses', Plea For Peace

BOSTON (NC) - Richard Cardinal Cushing of Bosto1lil endorsed a statement on the Middle East conflict calling upon the U.S. people and gov­ernment "to support the indepen­dence, integrity and freed~m of IsraeI."

The statement was issued the day before the outbreak of the renewed Arab-Israeli war. Sign­ers represent "a cross section of prominent Christian clergymen and religious editors," according to its initiators. It was sponsored "as a public service by ,Ameri­~ans for Democracy in the Mid­dle East."· ,

The text as' endorSed by the cardinal, s,aid:­

"Pray for the peace of Jeru­salem (Psalm, 122:6). Men- of conscience must not remain si ­lent at this time. The Middle East is on tile britlk of war. President Nasser of Egypt has

the economic gap between the "haves" and "have-nots," both~

'th' th U't db d da r9a ap ,WI. III e n~ e States, al.1dalso noted some sl~ns'

o~ hope 111 the results of foreIgn ­ald.

Every Man Must Try , Paralleling our efforts to sup-' port development abroad, ~at-?:enbach said, is the work being done within the United States, ,"to redeem underdeveloped' America." , ,

He said: "Having now brought rhetoric to rights, we face the still mor-e difficult phase - to bring rights to reality."

All the problems of develop­ment require individual commit-. ment, Katzenbach told the grad- . \lates. He praised young Ameri­cans who are working with 01' ­ganizations such as' the' Peace Corps, VISTA and the Teacher Corps, and cited Mrs. JacqueUne Kennedy's remark about her late husband: "He believed that each man can make a difference and

tion along Israel's borders. ·~t.et us recall that Israel is a

new nation whose people are ,

still recovering from the horror. and decimation' of the' Europeanholocaust.

'Moral Responsibility "President Johnsoo has called

the blockade 'illegal and poten­tially disastrous' to world peace..

"We therefore call on the United States government stead­fastly to honor its commitments to the freedom of international waterways. We call on our fellow Americans of all persuasions and groupings, and on the adminis­tration to support the indepen­dence, integrity, and freedom of Israel. .

"Men of conscience all over the world bear a moral responsi­bility to support Israel's right to passage through the straits of Tiran.,The people of Israel have the right to live and develop' in tranquility and without· fear. The Middle Eas~ requires respite and .. peace.

"As Holy Writ proclaims: 'Seek that every mim must try." . peace and pUI'sue it,''''

\ '

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A VERY HAPPY FATHER6S'DAY:!,