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The Rule· of Celibacy Stays VATICAN CITY (NO) - eerdIotaIis Caelibatus (the, Celrn- discipline of an unmarried bacy of the Priest), was made hood in the Western Church Pope Cites PO!!)e Paul VI has issued 11 EmphaSizes June 23 but it waS dated and carefully reviews the argtA- lllew ertcyclical reaffirmhlg' , i,lIne 24, the feast of st 'John mEmts from theology and the the C h u r e h's traditional the Baptist and the name day Bible supporting celibacy, teaching, on the need for priesUy of PoPe Paul. The encyclical" key paragraph of the Pope'lJ Example 'Seminarian oeidbacy, describing it as, a of approximately 12,000 words, view is stated in paragraph U, "heavy and sweet burden" and clearly restates the Latin-rite which declares: M "a total gift" of the priest to insistence on priestly celibacy, "In any case, the Church Of Christ Screening God and His Church. The encyclical examines and. the West cannot weakelll hel!' 'll'he document, entitled 8a- rejects modern' objections to the Turn to Page Ten 1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHU8811U1I1iIll«lCICIIOOICOIIIIUIII!1I1111111111U11I111I1I1IIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIICC. The ANCHOR ...: ..... .; .------------------- .. 111111! •• --- .. $4.00 par If ..... Vol. 11, No. 26,J 0 ll'hca Anchor '; 1Gl:' . .: New Mass 'Ri'tes In Simplification Stressed· Did you feel yOui' plriest(s) fumbled a bit'during )lass this morning? Understandable. It _was this morning' that the newest direCtives on the Mass rites went into' Mfect. Habi,t is a forceful teacher and priests may occasion- fumble for some time The directives effective concern most espe- the priest himself as 1Jle ritually offers the Mass, They' ttave done away with many . 'CilO\onies Which gathered more and more meaning' as time went' CN4 but which are now Iiore-' ehumbs in the simplification of vites as willed by Vatican XlL Multiplication of good things does not always make those gOOd Cbings more me.aningful or 'fruit- ful. So, the prIest now geneflects l\ess frequently but at· times when his reverential gesture teaches something clearly., You will also notice that many ." the blessings have been drop- As a matter of fact not one been dropped. It is only tbe Supreme Pontiff Marks Fouith' VA'l'ICAN CITY '!lomorrow" June 30, ""liill llIark the folirth anniversall'y' .. the crowning of Giovallllni .ontini aB Pope Paul VI. ThougIP. was elected on June 21 and \11'00 pope at that very instant, ftIIle al\niversary is traditionally eommemorated on 'the date eX JAis cOl·onation. The Holy Father has stated flaat there will be no specw eell."emonies to mark the event _cept a solemn Mass at St. lPaul-Outside-the-Walls. T ill. <illy will find him busily (lJ\t -.ork at his desk and 'in sche<il- lWIed audiences. ' Tum to Page '!'eft Summer Mas$<es Page 4 expression of the blessings, that has changed. ' ,; \ In the beginning, when an ob- Creation of ,New Cardinals Shows. Church Universality VATICAN CITY'(NC)-Twenty':four of the new princes of the Church received! official notification of their eledion to' the' college of cardinals in Rome in a ceremonY' that lacked the splendor and privacy of old. Instead of. gathering in the private roomfll of national colleges and residences in Rom e as in the pas-to the new cardinals shared a large stage in Pope Pius XU auditorium near St.' Peter's' ,Archbishop Antonio Ribe'd, nun-· ··which have' flared ,up in Viei- . basilica to ,hear of their or-' , cio ,to' ,SpaiIi'; ·M:axiinilien de .fieial· elevation from the lips Furstenberg, ,nuncio to Portugal, . of,: 'Cardinal and Carlo Grano, to Italy, - Papal ot'State. The; Warm the ,:inet'while Pope Paul was 'hoid- of 1il e .. th t . t 'tL. Sacred College, PatrIck Car- mg. e secre conSIS ory WI.. d' al O',Q 1 . f W h' 't '35 'of the Cardinals. ,. ' Cardio:a{ of ject was blessed, there was not' ,they received ftom necessariily the accompanying' the heads ,of the various states Sign of the Cross only a' to which they ,were 'papal diplo.:."' r urn to Page ,matic Tl1ey were ,. nam and the Holy Land, . 'Speaking· in the Hall of tbe Consistories ·in the' Vatican, Pope also touched on the Tum to Page Eleven Cardinal Cardinal 'Brennan O'Boyle -. , .f .,:,j ;'" Ca'rdinal ·Cardinall' " 'Krol ,Cod,. Three other' cardinals who had been chosen at the sarrie time were absent from the day's cereillonies ;because by tradition, phia, John Cardinal Cody of" Chicllg'o and- Francis'Cardinal Brennan; dean i of the Roman Rota, both when they entered'- the auditorium and when latel!' they were· presented with their biglietto of nomination (ticket .. or document) Pope Paul VI, at the secret consistory, in which he officially created new cardinals, .. "the flames of fratrici<;lal war" Pontiff Revives, Diaconate F,or Married, Single ,Men VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI, has publishe:dl regula,tiomi· ,which will guide the ree'stablishment of the perm,anent diaconate with celibate and married dea- cons, implementing the 'will of the Second Vatican Council. , '" ,'The regulations are COl1\- in, a motu 'proprio, a. CCD KEEPS IJ(ER YOUNG: Mrs. Mary McCormick of Our Lady' of the Cape parish, Brewster, probably ,qualifies as oldest COD teacher in Fall River Diocese. 'At 82 'ld te 'h' F' t Co ' H '" ,' , , :J t Uu ac lUg, IrS, rnmulUcants. ere she IS ,w1th thiS year s crop. Octogenarian Keeps' in ; TOUCJI with Tots Th"'ough r;hristian Doctrine Classes They can her ,Mrs. Mac and al'e attached to her as to their. own grandmothers. For document drawn up on the personal authol'ity of the Pope, entitled Sacrum DiaconatUQ Ordinem and issued June 27. The document makes it clear from the outset that the reestablish- ment of the permanent dia- conate in the Western Church depends on the decision of the, competent national or territoriall. conference of bishops, along .. with'the .cOllsent of the Pope. Permanent deacons have long , been traditional in the Eastern ,Chur.ches., , The r.egulations, which consist of an introduction and 36 num- bered' paragraphs, restore 'fullness a major sacred ordel!' of the Church that has for cen- " ttllries only ,a pre;equi1ite " . ordlllatlon to WIth the new regulations It' be- 'comes possible for' men' to be ordained deacons without be- ing required to continue on t@ priestly ordination. ," ," The order of· deacon for sem- inarians who intend to continue on to the priesthood is not af- "fected by the new regulations' because they only apply to the restored permanent diaconate. three years Mary McCormick has been teaching Brewster children the love Jesus has' . As envisioned by the f th d h tions this restored permanent of- or em an ow to return it. Recently less\>ns of her current crop of second gradelt"S' ifice will permit deacons' to of- culminated with their First Holy Communion. Though she has never been blessed with children of her own, the widow of' Radford J. Mc- was called catechism then. But Who made the world?' and the Cormick has been close to, today's Christian Doctrine meth- od is very much advanced, she reply bY' rote was "God madIe the world', Now we go further young ones all her'life. She feels. earlier, telling them God is religious classes in her ''Then it was a matter of mem- everywhere and not to forget nati'lre Brookline rns a girl It orizing questions and answers. Turn to Page Silf ficiate at 'many various religio\Alj functions, including marriages, Turn to Page Ten Movae Ratings Page 16

06.29.67

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)lass this morning? Understandable. It _was this morning' that the newest direCtives on the Mass rites went into' the C h u r e h's traditional the Baptist and the name day Bible supporting celibacy, A· VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI, has publishe:dl regula,tiomi· ,which will guide the ree'stablishment of the perm,anent diaconate with ~th celibate and married dea­ cons, implementing the 'will of the Second Vatican Council. rnmulUcants. ere she IS ,w1th thiS year s crop. 'Brennan O'Boyle ' ,

Citation preview

Page 1: 06.29.67

The Rule· of Celibacy Stays VATICAN CITY (NO) ­ eerdIotaIis Caelibatus (the, Celrn­ discipline of an unmarried pries~­

bacy of the Priest), was made hood in the Western ChurchPope Cites PO!!)e Paul VI has issued 11 EmphaSizes~ublic June 23 but it waS dated and carefully reviews the argtA­lllew ertcyclical reaffirmhlg' , i,lIne 24, the feast of st 'John mEmts from theology and the the C h u r e h's traditional the Baptist and the name day Bible supporting celibacy, A· teaching, on the need for priesUy of PoPe Paul. The encyclical" key paragraph of the Pope'lJExample 'Seminarianoeidbacy, describing it as, a of approximately 12,000 words, view is stated in paragraph U, "heavy and sweet burden" and clearly restates the Latin-rite which declares: M "a total gift" of the priest to insistence on priestly celibacy, "In any case, the Church 0«Of Christ ScreeningGod and His Church. The encyclical examines and. the West cannot weakelll hel!'

'll'he document, entitled 8a- rejects modern' objections to the Turn to Page Ten

IRlillflttllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliOO~C61~CC~8CCIiCCGll814llflIllt81H,"IHIIIIIIIIII1III11It1I1I1I11I1Ullm88CCIIII8H1I11I18CUllIlIUIlIUUUIIIIIIHHHlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllmmU1I11UGU8I811811IlIUIIHt1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHU8811U1I1iIll«lCICIIOOICOIIIIUIII!1I1111111111U11I111I1I1IIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIICC.

The ANCHOR

...: ..... .;

.-------------------..111111!••---..

$4.00 par If.....Vol. 11, No. 26,J 0 ]~M7 ll'hca Anchor '; 'P~'CIE 1Gl:'. .:

New Mass 'Ri'tes In 'Efifec~; Simplification Stressed·

Did you feel yOui' plriest(s) fumbled a bit'during )lass this morning? Understandable. It _was this morning' that the newest direCtives on the Mass rites went into' Mfect. Habi,t is a forceful teacher and priests may occasion­~Iy fumble for some time ~t. The directives effective ~ay concern most espe­~ally the priest himself as 1Jle ritually offers the Mass, They' ttave done away with many ~r- .

'CilO\onies Which gathered moreand more meaning' as time went' CN4 but which are now Iiore-' ehumbs in the simplification of vites as willed by Vatican XlL

Multiplication of good things does not always make those gOOd Cbings more me.aningful or 'fruit ­ful. So, the prIest now geneflects l\ess frequently but at· times when his reverential gesture teaches something clearly.,

You will also notice that many ." the blessings have been drop­~, As a matter of fact not one ~ been dropped. It is only tbe

Supreme Pontiff Marks Fouith' AnniY~r$a,ry

VA'l'ICAN CITY (N\J~ '!lomorrow" June 30, ""liill llIark the folirth anniversall'y' .. the crowning of Giovallllni .ontini aB Pope Paul VI. ThougIP. ~ was elected on June 21 and \11'00 pope at that very instant, ftIIle al\niversary is traditionally eommemorated on 'the date eX JAis cOl·onation.

The Holy Father has stated flaat there will be no specw eell."emonies to mark the event _cept a solemn Mass at St. lPaul-Outside-the-Walls. T ill. ~

<illy will find him busily (lJ\t -.ork at his desk and 'in sche<il­lWIed audiences. '

Tum to Page '!'eft

~llltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll:mmll;((C:::CJ

Summer Mas$<es Page 4

expression of the blessings, that has changed. ' ,; \

In the beginning, when an ob-

Creation of ,New Cardinals Shows. Church Universality

VATICAN CITY'(NC)-Twenty':four of the new princes of the Church received! official notification of their eledion to' the' college of cardinals in Rome in a ceremonY' that lacked the splendor and privacy of old. Instead of. gathering in the private roomfll of national colleges and residences in Rom e as in the pas-to the new cardinals shared a large stage in Pope Pius XU auditorium near St.' Peter's' ,Archbishop Antonio Ribe'd, nun-· ··which have' flared ,up in Viei­

. basilica to ,hear of their or-' , cio ,to' ,SpaiIi'; ·M:axiinilien de .fieial· elevation from the lips Furstenberg, ,nuncio to Portugal,

. of,: .Mril~'tO 'Cardinal Cicogn~ni and Carlo Grano, nun~io to Italy, -Papal Secr~hi~y ot'State. The; Warm ~pplauBe greete~ the

,:inet'while Pope Paul was 'hoid- ·~eW' ,Amer~c,a,J,l me~be~s of 1ile .. th t . t 'tL. Sacred College, PatrIck Car­mg. e secre conSIS ory WI.. d' al O',Q 1 . f W h' 't

'35 'of the old~r Cardinals. ,. ' 'J:~1l. Cardio:a{ K~ol ofa~hIi~:d:f~

ject was blessed, there was not' ,they received notif~cation ftom necessariily the accompanying' the heads ,of the various states Sign of the Cross bu~ only a' to which they ,were 'papal diplo.:."'

rurn to Page Eigh~ejll. ,matic n~presentatives'.Tl1ey were

,.

nam and the Holy Land, . 'Speaking· in the Hall of tbe Consistories ·in the' Vatican, t~ Pope also touched on the pro~

Tum to Page Eleven

Cardinal Cardinal 'Brennan O'Boyle

,~._~ -.-~'

, .f

.,:,j

;'"

Ca'rdinal ·Cardinall' " 'Krol ,Cod,.

Three other' cardinals who had been chosen at the sarrie time were absent from the day's cereillonies ;because by tradition,

phia, John Cardinal Cody of" Chicllg'o and- Francis'Cardinal Brennan; dean i of the Roman Rota, both when they entered' ­the auditorium and when latel!' they were· presented with their biglietto of nomination

(ticket ..

or document)

Pope Paul VI, at the secret consistory, in which he officially created new cardinals, .. deplore~ "the flames of fratrici<;lal war"

Pontiff Revives, Diaconate F,or Married, Single ,Men

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope Paul VI, has publishe:dl regula,tiomi· ,which will guide the ree'stablishment of the perm,anent diaconate with ~th celibate and married dea­cons, implementing the 'will of the Second Vatican Council.

, '" ,'The regulations are COl1\­,~ined in, a motu 'proprio, a.

CCD KEEPS IJ(ER YOUNG: Mrs. Mary McCormick of Our Lady' of the Cape parish, Brewster, probably ,qualifies as oldest COD teacher in Fall River Diocese. 'At 82 8~'8

'ld te 'h' F' t Co ' H '" , ' , ,:Jt Uu ac lUg, IrS, rnmulUcants. ere she IS ,w1th thiS year s crop.

Octogenarian Keeps' in ;TOUCJI with Tots

Th"'ough r;hristian Doctrine Classes They can her ,Mrs. Mac and al'e attached to her as to their. own grandmothers. For

document drawn up on the personal authol'ity of the Pope, entitled Sacrum DiaconatUQ Ordinem and issued June 27. The document makes it clear from the outset that the reestablish­ment of the permanent dia­conate in the Western Church depends on the decision of the, competent national or territoriall. conference of bishops, along

.. with'the .cOllsent of the Pope. Permanent deacons have long

, been traditional in the Eastern ,Chur.ches., ,

The r.egulations, which consist of an introduction and 36 num­bered' paragraphs, restore t~i~

'fullness a major sacred ordel!' of the Church that has for cen­

" ttllries ~ee~ only ,a pre;equi1ite " . fo~ ordlllatlon to ~he ~rIes~hood. WIth the new regulations It' be­

'comes possible for' men' to be ordained deacons without be­ing required to continue on t@

priestly ordination. ," ,"The order of· deacon for sem­

inarians who intend to continue on to the priesthood is not af­

"fected by the new regulations' because they only apply to the restored permanent diaconate.

three years Mary McCormick has been teaching Brewster children the love Jesus has' . As envisioned by the regula~ f th d h tions this restored permanent of­or em an ow to return it. Recently less\>ns of her current crop of second gradelt"S' ifice will permit deacons' to of­

culminated with their First Holy Communion. Though she has never been blessed with children of her own, the widow of' Radford J. Mc­ was called catechism then. But Who made the world?' and the

Cormick has been close to, today's Christian Doctrine meth­od is very much advanced, she

reply bY' rote was "God madIe the world', Now we go further

young ones all her'life. She feels. earlier, telling them God is ~ught religious classes in her ''Then it was a matter of mem­ everywhere and not to forget nati'lre Brookline rns a girl It orizing questions and answers. Turn to Page Silf

ficiate at 'many various religio\Alj functions, including marriages,

Turn to Page Ten

1~I!lIIl1ll11ltlllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllrJ

Movae Ratings Page 16

Page 2: 06.29.67

• •

.1

I!-tEA'NCHbR'~pioceseofF~I.1 Riv·etf-'Jhu.~~).une29., J967 .,2,··:, , . ~ I' • ,'! II I ,~ (' A .... '.. :.. .' • ), J' ."

. . -. • ~. ." . ., t·· .~ •

Bishop ,.Perry, ·F~'els· C.hurc'h: . Is Failing to Re,a'~h Negro:

PEORIA (NC)-"The Church .is not getting through to the Negro:' For this reason, said Auxiliary ~ishop

Harold R. Perry, S.V.D., of New Orleans, the Church can­not stand on official statements alone. The Negro Bishop said the Church, in the eyes '

mission collection" replaced the. of the Negro, is too much "collection for Indian and Negro limited to' such oareful pro- missions," a name that offended nouncements as those issued the dignity of the Negro. by a minister, rabbi, or the "It seemed rather odd to make Bishop of a diocese. . an appeal for the Negro mis­

. Cites Disagreement sions," he opined, "when one­"Of course, this thing is be- third of the parishioners are'

Negro."'fond reproach, but, the Negro Asked about riots in- urban feels the official pronouncements

, ore. lacking in effectiveness, are centers, ·the Bishop suggested .o.ot being backed up. ,.; that there is a message here "we

do not seem to be getting. ,'TheFor this, reason, the Louisiana' rioters are trying to say. some­

· "Auxiliary took .issue, ,with those thing. These acts of vandalism who view. Project Equality 'as economic blackmail. are trying. to point to' some

He rejected the charge of Ave neglect on our part." Maria, Catholic weekly maga­zine, that Project Equality is an attempt to accomplish through "-....------""'---'--.....L.1..........L..........J j force of money what churches FRIDAY-Commemoration of St. '

· have. failed to do by preaching Paul, Apostles. III Class. Red. ,BLESSING OF .FLEET AT l?ROViNCETo.~N: Principals at the, annual ceremony ., ,and teaching the Gospel. ,Mass Proper; Glory; 2nd Pr?y-, conducted at the Cape-tip town, were: ,Rev. ~ohn F.-Sullivan, 8S;OO.,' ad'ministratoIi'

Concerns BishoPs er St. Peter? Apostle (Un(ler of Our Lady of Lourdes Parish, Wellfleet; Mo~t 'ltev. James J. Gerrard; V.G., AuxiliaryRather than unsavory coer­ one· conclusIon), 3rd Pr~:rer , Bishop of the Diocese who blessed the boats' Rev. Leo J. Duart pastor of St. Peter'reI

,eion,Bishop Perry said" "it is II (under separate conclUSIOn) . . ' '.'. democratic program in·. a very for ~e Pope; no Creed,; Pre- ~arJsh; Prov~ncetown, sponsor of the annual ble~smg. ':,'. ' practical way, ,a practice thor­ face o~ Apostles.,Amiiversary oughly accepted in a .pluralistic of thl;! 'Coronation of POPe' society." Paul VI.' Jesuit ~rges "H,in' ,P;oliey in VietnamIn fact, he found little differ­ SATURDAy - Most Precious ence between such practices and Blood of Our Lord Jesus the policy of the federal govern­ Christ. I· Class. 'Red. Mass Questions IJBridge of Friendshiptl With Reds:

,

ment in refusing financial aid to ,Proper; Glory; Creed; Pre­segregated institutions and com- face of the Holy Cross.·Today WATERBURY (NC)-Present ~uspices 01. the 'Greater Water- of stalemate," Father Lyons sattJ,

· munities. ' ·is the first Saturday of, the attempts .to build . "so-called-· bury Chapter of Young Ameri- "anti shift the' baWeground tid! "The nation, too, has a collec- month. bridges of friendship between eans for Freedom. He has visited eemmunist-inspired wars from

·tive guilt for fostering segrega­ SUNDAY - VII Sunday after the United States and the Soviet' Vietnam six times in the last- tree world territory to commo­tion for decades. This is part of Pentcost., II Class. Green. Mass Union" are helping to prolong the several years and is co-outher 01- mist territory. the redemptive work it is obliged Proper; Glory; 2nd Prayer war in Vietnam, a Jesuit priest the book, "Vietnam Crisis." "We have to make communillQ to do," said the Bishop. '. Visitation of the Blessed Vir- said bere. "We have to change our Jl&llcy aggression risky for the aggres-

He stressed that in his travels gin Mary; Creed; Preface of IIOr, we have to take every po&­·about the country he has stayed . Trinity. . Father Daniel Lyons, S..J., H . I Ch lllible step, not only to resist com­in 20 Bishops' houses and found MONDAY-St. Irenaeus, Bishop president of the Free Pacific· Osplta aracfe. munist aggression, but to spreoo in them' men deeply concerned and Martyr.. III Class. Red. Association, told a large aooi- C . F ·1· freedom'wherever we can. If tbe al>out the racial issue. Mass Proper; (Mass as on June ence that while the United ommunlty ael Ity free world does not get a hegem­

..... C.onversions Increase 28 in,Missal) Glory; no. Cr~d; StateS has "enormously strength- CINCINNATI (NC) - The· ony over mainland- China SOOJ'..l,I

'. ,,~ishop Perry feels the Catholic Common Preface. enedits Position in Asia by de- "community fac'lity" character we can be sure that.. the Soviet ",.Church's interest.in the;Negro if! TUESDAY-Mass of Previous fending South Vietnam against of the planned new Providence Union will." , '" "Bot, one of proselytizing but' :of ." SUTic;lay.: 'IV 'Class.'': Green. Clommunist aggre~ion, "unfor-:, ,l;I~sPital,. in ,su.q\lrlt!m Mo~nt ."'Our system is. SO superior ill

a concern· for justice:. Over 'and .... Ma'ss ' Proper;'" No Glory nor tunately we. hlWe .not yet adop~, Ai~)was ,~<Jerlip.~cl-J~y- t~e m- .' 1heirs that we are bOUnd to willl above this, the Church is a 'mis­ Creel:l; . Common Preface,','·: a policy of.. wipning becausea ,we ,,~~~on.of th~ lo~.qusmess- :~.w~ a~esuf:ficlell~~\ detel' ­'sion Church with a message. ·But, WEDNESDAY..- St~· AnthoD)t ,;lr~ .0:V~rly I,:on~~rnel,i . l:>out. "men .~mongl~ .. n tnnstees... . mined," Father L;ybris declared. justice should be the No. 1 con- . ·Mary, Zaccaria; Confessor.·:IiI bUlI.dmg these, bpdges to th~.. "The'hospital'wSS"plallned'ud,;,

· eern, with freedom left to 'the" ' .. Class. ,White,. Mass ,PrOper; SeVIets "thro,\lg~ "trade,. eu}ture. ':'will, be staffed"'by,"the FI:an-.'·. ,-.-"'!"'!'----------->lindividual to join the Church of· '" Glor.y.;·, no·; Creed; Con1tnon \ and .other me!l~s.. ". '." eiscaii Sisters of·,the Poor .whe.

· ,},lis, choice."" . . : . ,Preface, ,', Father Lyons.spokeundelltiJe" '.Iso·'bought the"site·,·Oh ~hich. '.. 'Despite the current 'drop' in ··THURSDAY-Mass of previous ,,'\ . i 'it'win be built,".'·, "': eonversions, Bishop Perry smiled Sunday.. Iv. Class. Green. Mass, IIl..I T· I ." . ... and. said: . Proper; ,No Glory nor ~reeq; ·I....ew" It es. The S~rs,po~eyer,are

"The rate of conversions .Commo~ Preface, Votive Mass MADISON' (Ne) - Newly i&- deeding the property.~ Hamil­among Negroes is five times that in ·honor of Jesus Christ.' the. stalled 'Bishop Cletus F. O'Don- .ton County for eotiStruction of II before the. (ecumenical) eoun­ Eternal High Priest, permitted. nell has inaugurated the title of eommunity bosPitai. The county eil." 'J.'omorrow is the first Friqay pastor emeritus in the 'MadisoJl will be responsible for $8.3 mi!I;­

He agreed there is still need of.·the Monih. diocese for priests who retired lion of.the more than $'12 millhm · to change some mannerisms. so Because of age or infirmity afieI' eost 8f building the hOspital un­that there is a clear respect for P'oulists to Direct serving in .pastorates. The -Wi8- der terms of a bond' iSsue ap­minorities: -. . oonsin prelate also directed that proved by voters some 18 monthll

~Neglect Brings Riot, Newman Center in keeping with Vatican Couneil ago. The SisterS 'must' provide ................Irs Decree 'on the'Ministry aDd tile balance 01. the funds.· Inl,1~s ?wn ~rchdiocese ~~ New . 'BERKELEY (NC) _ Three

. Lif~' of' Priests, a6Sistant pastoi'll' .... ' Orleans, he saId, the term home,... Paulis~ Will, man recently ded­will have the title 01 associateicated Newman Center here in pastors. . .

Ca~ornia in: an effort ~to buildReti're'ment at 75'··:­1!Iit!t ~e $t,udentS a ~y'nainic cen­

NEWARK (NC)-The Newark· ter for though+:arid devel~·Archdiocesan Senate of Priests ment," according to the new .. has recommended volun~ry re­ head, Father Joseph P. Fly~n,

" ti,rement for priests at 65' and C.S.P.,.: . '_. ' .. :. , ." ;mandiltory retirement at 75J

.~.#~;;~#,••" •••••#.,.~~

· FORTY HOURS DEVOTION

July 2-51. Joan of Are, Or­leans. '

Our Lady of the Assump­tion, Osterville.

July 9-8t. . Hyacinth, New Bedford.

St. Mary, South Dart­mouth.

St. Elizabeth, Fall River..­

111£ ARCllOI lleClclnd Class '>ostage Palll at Fall Rl.r, . JULY 1_ 672~3381

.s~. Publishea every Thursday· at 410­.Jtlllhlano I\venue. Fall Rive, Mass.. 02722 Rev. Pie Marie BeraJ1d, O.P.,· W.ilfred: C. James Lby' tile r:afbotk Press 0 the Diocese offaH 1938, Dominican Priory, J!aBRI~r" SUllscrlptl. price ... _n. ~1lIl ,o..iscCJJ '. Sullivan. ),;.f4,GO IMl'JIII'. . " , Biver. ", . ", '.' .

Father Flynn, who has ~ named' pastor of Holy gpirit par-' ish and religious superior of t8e Pau'ists coor(linating the parish' and Newman Hall: will be joipee. by Fathers James F. COnway, C.S.P., and'Richard J. Callanan C.s.P., this Summer. '

., Necrology JULY 7

:Rev. : James E., Lynch, .1985, •D. D. SuUivan·&soDs First Pastor, St. Joan of An; ·FUNERAL. HOMEO,rleans:

JULY I 4869 LOCUST STREET _R~v. Edward J. Murphy, 188'1,

Pastor, St., Mary, Fall River.' FAll RI~ER, MASS.

O~RC;:URKE Funeral Home

.571 Sec~nd Street fall .lRiyer, Meiss. '

. 67.9..6072 MICHAEL J. McMAHON·

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3 leligious Heads Favor Liaison With Bishops :. WINOOSKI PARK (NC)­:A proposal for the "immed­tate establishment" of a ~eaningful liaison'" be­Ioween the heads of religious communities of men and the U.S. Bishops has been adopted unani­mously at the 10th annual Con­ference of Major Superiors of Men here in Vermont.

':!'he action was taken at the IBUggestion of Father James M. Darby, S.M., of Dayton, confer­QDee president. It followed the presentation of the Paulist Fath­ers' case in their dispute with Bishop Thomas K. Gorman of Dallas-Fort Worth. Father John ... Fitzgerald, C.S.P., superior general, outlined the Paulists' IIIde of the dispute.

Father Fitzgerald interrupted Ids participation in the general tbapter meeting of the Paullsts fbl New York at the suggestion of chapter delegates to present lIItbe facts as we know them" be­lore all the major religious supe­nors in the ~untry.

Cites Contract The dispute revolves around

the Paulists' expulsion from St. Paul the Apostle parish in Rich­llI'dson, Texas. Bishop Gorman bas stated that the reason he asked the Paullsts to leave the parish was because their services were no longer needed as New- . liDan Club chaplains in the dio­oos~. They are to be ~eplaced by l!Uocesan priests in local parishes..

H'Owev<er, Father Fitzgerald !I!lid in a prepared statement:

"The prime aim of the Paulist hthers, as contracted, was to the good and welfare of the parish­ioners of the new parish at Rich­ardson. Nowhere in the contract was it stated that the Paulist I'athers community was accept­ing the parish contingent upon JJewman work or any other ·sin­..-Jar works.-

Ch .·st·a ....... ~. .r. I, ns. .~eeU

More Than" Un' .·t·y.···.:· . CHICAGO (HC)' -A growing

. eonviction that the search, for' ehristian unity must· be closely Rlated to other more far-reach-.· iDg ·dialogues marked·the inaug-. 111'81 meeting here of the North American Academy of Ecumen­fIRs.

Delegates 110 the meeting ex­plained that their. primary goal, tile union of Christiafi communi­ties, becomes less and less mean­iIlgful as it Js isolated from dia­"gues between Christians and kws, believers and non-bellev­.-s and the world.

Counteracting this tendency to tIolationism will be one of the .;oals of the academy..

More than 140 delegates to the lIleeting gathered at Chicago The:" .ogical Seminary to plot toe

DiGNITARIES ·AT iWEl)DING: Among those at .So. Dartmouth wedding of Miss Frances Gamble Aldrich of New York and So. Dartmouth ,and Jose Miguel Garrigues­Walker, son of the Spanish ambassador to the Vatican, were, left to right, Rev. Arthur G. Considine, pastor of St. Mary's Church where the wedding took place; Ambassador Garrigues Diaz-Canabate, groom's father; Bishop Connolly; New York Governor Nelson Aldrich Rockerfeller; and the Very Rev. Reginald N. Barrette, diocesan chancellor.

Dawn of New Era in· Liturgical Music Congregation .App~auds 'Mass for ,Joy'

'SEATTLE (NC) - The spon­ . Vatican II;. the same four hymns every Sun­

eourse of the group. As a resUlt .. folk and pop tune elements. per cent of., tho!1C responding to lielf their discussi.on, the academy . PelO9,uin, fiom Providence, poll said they would favor estab:'plans to give concrete expression ll. I., );»ersonally conducted the lishment of the permanent dia­tit the belief that the, Christian Ui-piece brasS and percussion en­

,conate in the Atlanta archdio­Cheology of today and tomorrow semble and the 275-voice ehoir cese. ..-.st be 11 collaborative en- andcorigregation.

_avor. The Georgia, Bulletin, arch­In its' new constitution it de- ll"r:MlticaJ Help diocesan newspaper, polled some'

.eribes itself as a "SOciety of The solemn pontifical.. Mass, 300 subscribers on the question

.ose who, in their teaching ooncelebrated by Archbishop of restoring the diaconate - a and/or research, are engaged in. Thomas A. Connolly of Seattle sl,lbject that has' been under dis-' .tudies related to the unity of and five priests of the newly ap­ cussion since Vatican Council II. the Christian Church; and the pointed Commission on Sacred Of 65 persons responding to the' ~alogue between Christians and Music, was the climax of a three­ question, ."Would you like to see _er communities of faith." day Church music. workshop the permanent diaconate intro­

Mirroring this concern, newly jointly sponsored by the Arch.;, 'duced in, the archdiocese of l\t­elected academy president Fr. diocesan Music Commission and lanta," 45 said yes, 17 said no, .alter Burghardt, S.J.; of Wood- Seattle University's Fine Arts .and 3 said "maybe." stock College in Maryland, ·told Department. . .The. questionnai,re had ex­J1eporters that modern Christians Designed to give practical help' 'plained that a deacon-married must learn from other Christian 110 pastors and Church musicians, or ~rill1a.rded. - would baptize, eonfesil)ns because "we are' con- ' the workshop provided an up-to­ preach, distribute' Holy Com­Yinced that God speaks to and date approach to liturgy, choral munion and possibly anoint the ID. that other Christian confes-teChniques and repertoire, in line 'sick, ;He, wou1d .nothear con­IiurL.. wiUl' .the nlcommepdeUeW· Qf fessiu ,.,. ~ YaM. '

Ilaneous applause which rever- Singers irdhe workshop repre­sented evel'y parish of the Seattleberated through St. James Cath­

drai may have marked the dawn archdiocese, which Includes' the 01. a new era in liturgical music. western half of Washington state. Th~.Sunday 5:30 P.M,,·Mass at . Other'. particip1,lnts came from

'st. James usually draws a con­ . Idaho, '.. Montana, .Oregon , and gregation of people in a ,hurry to California. get away, but no member of the 'Old JEars" congregation departed even after In a homily at Mass, Father the recessional following the Andrew Squier of the Commis­presentation of composer C. sion on Sacred Music said thatAlexander Peloquin's "Mass for implementation of Vatican II'1l ~.!' decrees on .liturgical music re­

Instead, they stayed for the quires "adaptation and flexibil ­premiere performance of Pelo­ ity." ' quin's new sacred choral work, "We must allow for a healthy"Love Is Everlasting," based on and intelligent experimentation,"the Book of Daniel. he said.· "We must not become

Tambourines, six timpani, structured . ~or allow ourselves ceteste, triangle and brass helped to get, p~in~ed it:J,to a. corner by convey' the contemporary at ­mosphere of the work' whic!l Georgia Catholiesobtains its structure' 'from two tradlitional sources - the hymn fav.or D.iac:onateand the psalm-while combining

'ATLAN:rA.. (NC) - Some tIS

, day, else.w.e're little better off than we w,ere. before.· .

"We must·not be afraid of the . contemporary simply because it is the: contemporary," he stated.

, "We must not be afraid of- a new sound' by a knowledgeable com­poser. It might at first seem to

-lliS dissonant because it is new, but in the history of music the. dissonance of yesterday has al ­'lll'ays become the consonance of today.

"The trouble frequently is not with a new sound; the trouble hi

_ ANCHOR-Thurs., June 29, 1967

Stresses Use Of Publ3C~ty

TORONTO (NC)-Greater use of promotion and publicity tech­niques could attract larger audi­ences to religious radio and tele­vision programs, Charles Reilly, executive director of the Na­tional Catholic Office for Radio and Televison, told the National Conference of Christian Broad­casters.

Reilly noted that "the drum beats loud and long" for com­mercial presentations, but that in religious programming "our efforts seem to cease with the actual production of the broad­cast."

"I suspect," he continued, "that this is because the words 'pro­motion' and 'press agentry' have a somewhat unsavory connota­tion in the context of religious programming; but the larger reason, perhaps, is an over­whelming lack of knowledge and interest. in this phase of broad­cast operation."

Reilly said that many religious programs are being produced! which are above the general level in terms of creative imagi­nation and involvement in vital community interests but they are not adequately promoted. "Not to attempt to achieve a wider audience for what we do well is a kind of negligence we can ill afford," he added.

Set Operatm<OllIl F~IR.E

In New HQlmlP$Irn~lJ'ce MANCHESTER (NC)-Bishop

Ernest J. Primeau of Manchester has launched a diocesan program called 'Operation FIRE,' which combines the Year of Faith pro­claimed by Pope Paul VI for the universal Church and prepara­tion for the second synod of the Manchester diocese.

The program will continue for a full year starting June 29, 1967, the same as the Year of Faith. It derives its name from the 'aim-"Faith Intensified by Re­newal and Education."

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Page 4: 06.29.67

4 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs. June 29, 1967 Open ,.and Honest S<t:h®dlUl~efor SUJJmm~[J' ~®@~@D1l

MATYAPO.lSETTASSONlEt ST. ANTHON,YST. BlERN AR[)'E:

Masses: Sunday-8:00, 9:00, 10:30 AM. Masses: Sunday-6:00. 7:00, 8:00. 9:00. 10:00, l1~O, First Fridays-Evening Mass 5:30 P.M. "- AM. ancj.5:00 P,M.

Confessi,ons before every Mass Daily-7:30 A,M. Confessions: Saturday 4:00'-5:00 and 7:00-8:00 ·P.M.ST. VRNClENT'S lIJ[OME }<'irst Friday Masses: 7:00 and 9:00 AM.

Masses: Sunday-6:45 AM. IR01.TTE 6Daily-7:00 AM.

DAMlIEN COUNCIL, K OF C 1lJ1\1L1L BREWSTER Masses: 'Sunday-9:30 and 10:30 A,M.

OUR LADY OF THE CAPE NANTUCKETM.asses: Sunday-7:30, 8:30. 9:30, 10:30, IJ:30 A.M.,

OUR LADY OF THE nSLlEand 5:00 P.M, .Masses: Sunday-7:00. 8:00. 9:00•. 10:00, 11:00, A.M.Daily-8:00 AM.

5:00 P.M.Confessions: Sat. 4-5 and 7-8 P.M. Daily-7:00. 8:00 A~M.

fAST BREWSTER Confessions: 3:00-5:00 and 7:'00-'9:~ P.M., IMMACULATE CONCEPTION . SIASCONSET, MASS.

, I Masses: SUilday-7:00. 8:00,9:00; 10:00, 11:00 AM. COMMUNITY CIIAPEL . Confessions: 7-8 P.M. on Saturday ~s: 'Sunday~8:15 AM., .

BUZZARDS BAY . OAK BLUFFS ST. MAaGARET'~ _ ., SACRED HEART

Masses: SUl1day~:30, '8:00; 9:00, 10:00, 11:00,. ~ Masses: Sunday-6:30, -8:00, "9:15, }():30 A.M. , 12 ·noon and 7:30 P.:M. Daily-7:00 AM.

Daily-7:00 A.M. . CoDfessi(}l1s: Saturday 10:00 A.M. .aRd 4lOO-5:oo Oonfessi(}l1s: Saturday 4:oo-~:30 P.M. and-7:OO-8:3G and 7:00-8:00 P.M. . ·P.M. Devot~ns: Benediction-Sunday .at 7:30 P.M.

ONSET EDGARTOWN ST. MARY-STAR OF THE SEA ST. ELIZABETH

. Masses: Sunday-7:30, 8:30. 9:30. 10:30. 11:30 Masses::"Sunday-6:45, 9:00 and 10:30 A.M. Confessions: Saturday 4:00-5:30 P.M. and 7:00-8:30 Confessions:· Saturday 4:00-5:00 and 7:00..:8:00 P.M.

P.M. ORLEANSCENTERVILLE ST. JOAN, OF ARC CHURCH

OUR LADY on; VICTORY Sommer Masses at Orleans Theater - Route 61\Masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:15, 9:30, 10:45, 12:00 noon - Masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11 :00 A.M. , - Daily-7:00 AM. . 'Daily-7:30 A.M.'Confessions: Saturday 4:00-5:30 and 7:30-8:30 PM; Confessions: 4:00-5:00 and 7:30-8:00 P.M. Satur­

,W'EST' BARNSTABLE ' days at St. Jo:n of Arc Church OUR LADY OF HOPE NORTH EASTHAM

Masses:' Sunday-9:30, 10:30 CHURCH OF THE VISITATION CENTRAL VILLAGE ,.Masses:, SUI;lday-7:30, 8:30, 9:30, 10:30, 11:30 A.M.

ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST OSTERVILLEMasses: Sunday-7:30, 8:30, 9:30, 10:30 A.M. • OUR LADY OF THE ASSUMPTIONDail)'-li:OO A.M. _

··Masses: -Sunday-7:()0, 8:00,9:00, l():oo, 11:00 A.M.Confessions: Saturday 4:30-5:00 and 7:30-8:00 P.M. 5T .•GHN TilE B:APTIST HALL and 5:00 P.M.

flaily-7:00: 8:00 A.M.Masses: Sunday-9:00, 10:00, 11:00 A.M. COnfess~ns: Saturday 4:00-5:30.and,7:30-8:30 PJIB:.

CHATHAM HOLY ~EDEEMER SANTUIT

. ST. JUDE'S CHAPEL<IIIasses: Sunday-6:30, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00,

Masses: Sunday-8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11100 A ..M.12:00 A.M. COflfessi()J1s: Saturday 7:30-8:15 P,M.Daily -7:3C A.M.

Confessions: Saturday 4:00-5:00 an.d7:30-9:oo P.M., . POPPONESSET COMMUNITY' CENTERSOUTH CHATr1AM

OPIl I,ADY OF GIt.'\.CE Masses: Sunday-6:45, 7:30, 8:30, 9:30; 10:30,c. , 11:30 A.M..Masses: Sunday-7:30. 8:30,9:30. 10:30, 11:30 A.M•....

Cfmfessions: Saturday 4:00-5:00 and'7:30-9:00 P.M. COnfess'iohs: 'Saturday 4:00-5:00 P.M.

PROVINCETOWNEAST FALMOUTH ST. PETER THE APOSTLE ST. ANTHONY Masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00

Masses: Sunday-7:00. 8:00. 9:00, 10:00, 11:00, A.M., 8:00 P.M. 12 noon. 5:011 P.lI;{l. Daily-7:00 AM.

Daily 7:00. 8:00 A.M. Confessions Evcl'y Saturday:4-5~d 7-S·P.M. Devetiolls:.-c Novena to St. Anthony-Tuesday 'at . . SANDWICH-----€ORPUS ..CHRIST.J-CHUIRCH , , 7:00 P.M., (~!~glish) .

Masses:Sunday-7:00, 9:00, 11:00, 12:00 A.M. , -Daily-7:30 A.M,· First Friday Mass-'-7:30-A.M.EAST FREETOWN

Ceilf1lSSions: Saturday 4:00-5:00 and 7:30-'8:30 P.M. -... VATHEDRAIL":C.o\MP First Friday' Confession on 'J;hursday 7:30­

OlJR LADl:' (;1' TilE ASSUMPTiON CHAPEL 8:30 P.M. Masses: Sunday-7:30, 9:00, 10:00 A.M.

Dmly-7:30 A.M. SAGAMORE. Confessions: Before every Mass ST. TIIERESA'SCHURCVlI Devotions: Benediction-Sunday 5:00 P.M. Masses: Sunflay-6:30, 8'30 9·:ro.· 10:30, 11:30

A.M. Also Masses at 9:30, 10:30,_ FALMOUTH 11:30 in Lower Hall of Church. ST. PATRICK ~nfessfons: ~aturday 4:(111-5:00 a!.d 7:30-8:30 P.M.

Masses: Sunday-7:00. 8:00. 9:00, 10:00. 11:00, First Friday. Mass-7:30 A.M. Confession on 12 nocn and 5:30 P.M. . Thursday 7:30-8:30 P.M. .

Daily: 7:00 A.M. POCASSETConfessions: Saturday 4:00-5:30 and 7:.30-9:00 P.M. ST. JOHN'S CHURCHDevotions: Miraculous Medal Novena-Monday Masses:· Sunday-7:00, 8:30, 9:30, 10:30, 11:30 A.M.

at 7:30 P.M. Daily 7:30 A.M. Confession:;: :::.aturday 4:(10-5:00 and 7:30-8:30 P.M.

FALMOUTH HEIGHTS Fil'St Friday-Mass at 7:30 A.M. 81 THOMAS -CHAPEL Confession for First Friday.on Thursday­

Masses: Sunday-6:15, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 A.M. 7:30-8:30 P.M. Confessions: Saturday 4:00-5:30 and 7:30-9:00 P.M. SOUTH DARTMOUTH

HYANNIS ST: MARY ST FRAN(~IS XA"'ER Masses: Sunday-7:00. 8:00. 9:00, 10:00, 11:00, 12\

Masses: Sunday- 6:00 7:00 8:00.9:00, 10:00, 11:00, noon. 7 :30 P.M. . 12:00 A.M. and 5:30 P.M. Daily-7:00-A.M.

Daily-7:00and8:00 AM. 8:00 A.M. Saturday ONLY Confessions: Saturday 4:00-5:30 <lnC! 7:30-9:00 P.M. CA>nfessions: Saturday 4:00-.'i:00·and 7:00..:8:30 P.M.

Da.y Bcfore Holyday-Sarne as Saturday SOUTH YARMOUTH First Friday--7:00, 8:00 A.M. :,lnd 5:30 P.M..

ST. PIUS TENTHHolyday-7:oo, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00; 12:10 noon and Masses: Sunday-7:00 8:00. 9:00, l():15, 11 :30 A.M.5:30, 7:30 P.M.

MELODY T,ENT Night Mass [or July .and August' '7:30 P.M.Masses Sunday-9:15, 10:15, 11:15 A.M.

Bally-7:00 A.M. _ YARMOU,THPORT Conf~ssions: Satm'days and Eves of First Fridays

_ .."' (' n.F.fj JlfF. "-itT .- 4:00-5:30 and 7:30-8:30 P:M. alIasses: SUlloay-8:uu, 9:uU A.M. Tllrn to Page Five

"

~@W(!! ~g$h(!)!p> ODKeefe.. Di$~Q1l$$®~ El!:Mmenism Wetfh Me!J'fhJ~<dID$t .C@nfe[j'®lJ'il~® t1)®~e®l\iltes.

DAVENPORT (NC)-The divi­ than "the kind of unity the world sions of Christianity "are a kind would have." of scandal, a stumbling block to "Protestants have a feilowship the unity of all men," Bis}H?p in belief and love," he said, "'a Gerald F. O'Keefe of Davenport community which strengtheJW has told delegates to the N-orth love. This is perhaps, something Iowa Methodist Conference. we lack."

Bishop O'Keefe, the first Cath­ The "long and difficult" joUl' ­olic Bishop to address the Meth­ ney to unity must include dia­odist group, acknowledged that logue, appreciation of eadi the Catholic· Church is a church's tradition and a study of "JohnnY'-corne-lately" to el~u­ the Scriptures, Bishop O'Keefe menism while' Protestants· "have ·stressed. been working and praying for it . "Unless we are complete17 longer." open and honest with each other,

Bishop O'Keefe told the $GO we can accomplish nothing."

lay f;lnd ministerial-delegates that first Meeting' ' • the first step tow.ard Christian .

unity- is discovering what the .' ..PROVIDENCE (NC~ ,-"The church is. He' explain~d that the.newly formed senate .. of 'pr.iestIJ Catholic emphasis -on the .church of the Providence diocese held iU as .a "social body .and visible . first meeting here with electiGa structure" may place too much of. oHicers and the elIeeuUve importance ~n structure rather committee.', .

CAUGHT IN·...A. .CRIS~S

/

THE HJH,Y F~!HU'S MISSION' AID V(!'q=!H~ DRIENTAL CNURe..

ANI Dear Friend: OPEN

LETTER A true emerg!!ncy has arisen. We need $250,000 TO at once because our norma I budget is vanishing

EVERY whHe demands for food, clothing and mectk:lne READER in -our ~rea, of responsibility are skyrocketina ...

the face ~f· the Arab·lsraeli situation.

Ci)1IeI' 4)fle mUllon refugees In the Near East ... QaYSht-IA that ...'s awful crisis.

Hatfof.them-·.,e chfldren. others are allins, .... t1erflOttrished·aclUlts. Some are lepers, some deaf mutes, ,seme bAnd.

They are innooeRt victims. They bear no arlll8. Hlmgry, ill fed and clothed, miserably sheltered at llest in the .past. they are now passive,' ... ~ pawns in a frightening tug of war.· - :­

V-ou know the work of the Catholic Near Eaft Welfar.e Association and its Pontifical MissIOn for Palestine, Nonnally. through your help, we

'-. give basic sustenance to Near East refusees ..

~~ess~m:s~u~~4:W-6:oo~nd7:30:-~8~~~0~P~M~.~~~_~_~~~~.~~~~:.;t~~~f~a~q~u~a~~r~~iaim~i"~~~n~d~o~I~~r~S~8~Y~~~~.;~;~~ . Is' Idl '-"'~~'~" '-' • 'f.hfS yea.r's budget· )ap y.veftt.....'QSWT.....'8I8' stoc1ts ~f food;'clothlng' and medlcine-arl'4leHlIllltuHid..· - ­demy. e)lhaustee.

T.omeet tllis crisis situation, we ImmedJetely Reed an additional $250,000 at least for present effIer~ies. Ws call upon you-urgently-to provide a truly generous share, so we can IJahten the burden of. these, the least of Christ's' br-eth­ren, in the~~cIarkest hour. Please respond ,III once. May God bless you. .

We ask your. prayers for peace and the end of suffering. We ask It In God's name.

D~votedly in Christ, Monsign'l" Nolan

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I

Page 5: 06.29.67

5 Rabbis' Criticism of Church 'Blackmail Pure and Simplt"

By Msgr. George G. Higgins (Director, Social Actiol1l Dept., NCWC)

Two ",ery prominent American Rabbis-Balfour Brick­!mer of New York City, who serves ag Director of the Commission on Interfaith Activities of American Refonn·· ed Judaism, and Arthur Hert,zberg of New Jersey, who <l!lOntributes a regular column ~ the National Catholic Be­]tml"ter on current trends of thought in the Jewish com­munity - have severely casti ­gated the Catholic Church in the Untted States tol"its failure to lJl)eak out more 'rigorously 0 n behalf of Israel during her re­cent war with the United Arab Republic and .tiler· Arab na­tions in the tur­iMllent Middle East. In their widely publi ­eilled criticism of the Church, both Rabbi Brickner and Rabbi Hertzberg seemed-to me, at least-to be arguing from the premise that the Israel-Arab. war was 1Il religious, not to say • "holy" war, and that conse­quently the American Catholic "establishment" (Le., the Amer­!ean hierarchy) was under some oort of moral obligation to sup­Jl)Ort the Israelis without any reservation and to do so not m.erely as individual American citizens, but collectively and of­ficially in the name of Catho­licism and on behalf of the entire Catholic community in the U.S.

The JIierarchy's failure to do _, they imply, is prima facie e¥idence that the Church in tile U.S. is, ~t best, a fair-weather friend Gf Judaism and, in spite .t certain appearances to the eontrary since the end of Vati ­ean If, Ras only been givmg lip service to the cause of Catho­lic-Jewish understanding in mat­tlern of common interest and ClOncern in the field of religien and civic action.

Reluctantly-but Frankly Rabbi Brickner is a personal

friend of mine. I have known bim socially and professionally iOr many years, and I hold him in high esteem as a dedicated religious leader and a very ef­fective champion of'social JUS-­lice. And while I have never had the pleasure of meeting Rabbi Hertzberg, I feel that ][ l)[now him very well from his writings, and I hold him ·in equally high esteem.

Reluctantly, however, and with II heavy heart, I am compelletll ~ say-as frankly and as point­ooly as I know how-that, in my judgment, their "what-have­you-done-for-us-Iately?" criti ­eism of the Catholic Church' illl ~e U,S., whether they realize it 01' not, is a form of ecumenical 01' inter-religious blackmail.

What Rabbi Brickner and lRabbi Hertzberg are saying, in effect, is that if the Catholic <Church in the U.S. wants to enter into a meaningful dialogue with the American Jewish com­munity on religious matters, i~

llIIluSt first of all present itll uedentials in the form, of a nnational statement by the hier­orchy in an all-out support of c:hle Brickner-Hertzberg tllesis WlIllt Israel's tragic war against flllle Arabs was a religious, not b ~ 0 "holy" war.

Agree fum .&Illvmnnro

o c~her words, whlll~ ~<Cll7 ~ saying to the American mishops runs somethinG nn~

C1lo: You are not oW' mends-­Dtd we, I:lS American Jews, eall1l­ent enter into a. genuine dia­1l:geue with you An the ca~ 4lt'!

inter-religious understanding­unless you agree, in advance, to support "our "side in the Is­raeli-Arab conflict and also agree to do so on our terms and without any ifs, ands, or buts.

Let me repeat for the record -point-edly and very empha­tically, but with all due respect fOi" the obvious sincerity of Rabbi Brickner and Rabbi Hertz­berg-that I regard this as a foml. of blackmail pure and simple.

On Gr<HIJodtl 01 .Justice

Lest there be any questioa about m,. (liwn credentials' OIl PLANNING FOR ECUMENICAL CONFERENCE:this matter, let me hasten to add Rt. Rev'. Henri A. Hamel, seated, "f St. Jean Baptistethat I was solidly pro-Israel ill the recent war, and Said' so Parish, Fall River, confers with Rev. Edward Oliveira, Our loud and cleall' at two public Lad,y Oti. Lourdes, Taunoon;'Sr. St. Louis, S·.S.J., Sisters of meetings during the early days St. Joseph Provincial House, Fall River; Sr. Mary Albertus, of the war. , R.S.M., Mt. St. Mary's, Fall River; Rev. Albert F. Shovelton,

][ did not, however, regard St. Mary's Home, Ney Bedford concerning the New England it as a religious, much less a

Ecumenical Conference scheduled for July."holy" war, and would have felt no obligation to take the side of ISI'ael on "religious" gr~nds if I had not been per­ Ecumenical Conference suaded, on the grounds of jus­tice and intemational law, that Diocesan Representatives To Participateher cause was basically right.

~111 Discussions on Witnessing Christ][( Rabbi Brickner and Rabbi Hel'tzberg think that the war Six delegates from the Fan was a religious or "holy" war River Diocese will attend the:md ii they think that Israel , New England Ecumenical Studyis a religion and not a secular Conference scheduled for Julystate, tltey are l)erfectly fr-ee to 3-7 at Geneva Point Camp, Lake say so. Winnipesaukee, N.H.

OR the other hand, they have The theme of the' Conference,.absolutely no right to expect -rhe Witness to Christ ill our all of their Catholic feliow­ Community". win be discussed citizens-or, for that matter, an by more than 250 delegates from of. their Jewish fellow-citizens all the Archdioceses and Dioceses -to agree with them. of New England, together with

They know, of course, much representativeB <Jf the Councils beUer tbaa I do that many of Churches, National Council American Jews do not agree with of Churches, State Councils, the

Tunm to Page Six Evangelistic: Association, ail well

as Orthodox Churches and the Armenian Apostolic Church.

Topics to be discussed win . include Baptism, the Eucharist,

and· Witness and the People of God.

Also partici1()ating will be Dr. Cynthia Wedel of the National Council of Churches, Rev. Geor­ges Florovsky, professor of pa­tristic theology at the Holy Cross Theological Seminary and fel­

-low in religion at Princeton, and Rev. Godfrey Diekmann, editor of Worship magazine.

Schedule for Summer Season Continued from Page FoUli'

BASS RIVER OUIlt LADY OF THE mGBWAY

Masses: Sunday-7:30, 8:30, 9:30,10:30, 11::'10 A.M. Conlfessi(m!!,;,_Silturdays and Eves of lFill"8t Irridla1lD

'"1::Jlj:'::8 :30 P oM.

VINlEYARD HAYEN ST. AUGUSTlNB

Masses: Sunday~6:30, 8:00, 9:15, llO:30 A.M. Daily-7::i0 A.M.

Confessions: Saturday 9:30-10:30 A.M. and 4:30­5:30 P.M. and 7:30-8:30 P.M.

][)evotions: Sunday Evening Rosary and Bened!o­tion at 7:00 P.M.

CHILMARK ST. AUGUSTINE'S MlSSIilllN

Masses: Sunday-7:00 P.M. ConfessiOOl3: Before Mass at G:SO P.M..

WAREHAM ST. PATRICK

Masses: SUlIllday- 7:00, 8:00, 9:06, llO:@O. llt:@lJl" 12:00 noon and '8:30 J!".M.

DaiUy-7:00 A.M. Confessions: Saturday 4:00-5:00 and '1:00-3:00 P.oo. ][)eVOtioM: Monday evenings 11 Maaa for hao::>

and ServicemeJil l1t 1:00 P.Illl

WIEST WAREHAM. S'F.ANTHONY

Maslrefr. Sunday- 8:30, 9:30, ll$:£@ A.No Confessions: Before MaSSeD

IMA~n«2l11<!J S'll'. ntlI'll'&

Masses: Stmday-8:00,' 9:30. llO:OO A.R>lL. P.M.

!Confessions: Before MasseOl

'WlElLI!.lFlI.~[w <!IJ1IJJ:l 11.&lD>11' «J)JF W1IJmlD>~

. M~: ~W1day-7:00, 8:00, 1':00, llO:ijij, 1211.:@{) A.M. lllIasse.o.lm. ChUl"C1l! JEltillll rj 9:00, 10:00, ll1I.:Q:1) A..llir.

~--3:6tl A.M. and First Friday ~

cl 8:Gt1 A.l;)l, 5:~ lP.ll I ~eBIliOlIW: SCiltW'day ~;30-5~ ~ ~;.;ro-B~ lP'..m?

TRURO SACRED HEART

Masses: Sunday-8:00, 10:00 A,M. Daily-8:oo A.M.

Confessions: Saturday evening 7:30-8:80 P.M.

NORTH TRURO OUR LADY OF PERPETUAL HELP

Masses: Sunday-7:30, 8:30,9:30,10:30,11:30 A.a Daily-8:00 A.M.

Confessions: Saturday evening 7:30-8:30 P.M.

WEST HARWICH HOLY TRINrfY

M~ Sunday-7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00, 12:00 noon and 5:00 P.M.

Daily-9:00 A.M. eollllfessions: Saturday: 4:00-5:30, 7:30-9:00 PM.

DENNISPORJ UPPER COUNTY ROAD

OUR LADY OF THIE ANNUNCIATION Masses: Sunday~:30, 7:30, 8:45,10:00, 11:15 A.M.,

1:00 P.M. Daily-8:oo A.M.

~fessions: Saturday 4:00-5:30 and 7:30-9:00 P.M.

WESTPORT ST. GEORGE

Maasea: Sunday-7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00 A.M. Jl)aily--6:30 and 7:00 A.M.

~essions: Saturday 3:30 and 7;~O P.M.

WOODS HOILlE S'll'. JOSlEll"1l!

Masses: Sunday-7:00, 8:15, 9:00, 11:00 A.M. Daily-7:00 A.M.

©omessions: Satu~day 4:00-5:00 and 7:30-8:30 P.l\I1.

1NJ©~'ii'I}jJ IFAILAAOlU1J'1XI (MegcmseW) lIR1ffiII.&C01IJl1&'ll'lE ([)«J)NCOlEll"'ll'l!I(])N

DlllllWea: .SWlday-7:00, 8:00, '9:00, 10:CO, 11:00, :1.2 noon

~esslonD: Saturdays 4:00-5:(10 and 7:30-8:30 P.M.

Ej)aw<oollollw: Benediction Sunday evening lilt 7:3@ l?JYL

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., June 29, 1967

Plan to Continue Work of Church In Hong Kong HONG KONG (NC)-Hoog

Kong's Catholic Religious superiors assured Arch­bishop Joseph Caprio, apos­tolic inter-nuncio to China, that they will do their utmost to con­tinue the work of the Church in this British crown colony despite the problems created by the vio­lence and tension here the past few months.

The communist-inspired riets of a few weeks ago and current government counteraction tc leftist agitation have disrupted the normal activities of the colony.

Archbishop Caprio flew here from Taiwan to meet with the 14 men and 17 women Religious superiors in this colony and to review their work and exchangt' views.

Inerease Activities

At the conclusion of the 001\­

ference Archbishop Caprio said that "the trusting confidence of all present in your ability to carry on your religious, equca­tional and welfare work in Honf! Kong impresses me deeply and adds enormous vitality to your endevaors."

"I am deeply grateful," he said, "that all present feel that the Catholic Church, in the light of present circumstance~ and diffi ­culties, should not curb but in­stead actually step up its activi­ties in the apostolic and social fields."

The 31 Religious had had mis­sions in China under the CQffi ­

munists. One Chinese priest said. "I have been liberated thret' times, so I'll try for a fourth time."

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Page 6: 06.29.67

THE ANCHOR"':"-Oiocese of Fall River-Thurs. June 29, 1967

LastAt Well, ·at last it has come. At long last.

And the waiting has' been sOmething of a strain on Ifllose who took the Pope at his word and decided to let him restudy the whole matter of priestly celibacy and, guided by the Holy Spirit, make a statement on. it. This he has done in an encyclical reaffirming the traditional pl'ace of celibacy in .the lives of priests of the Western rites.

The patience of many people has been tried by the· veritable mountain of articles and books written in the last couple of years on celibacy. Some articles were seriou~ proposals that this maMer, like every other matter of dis,. eipline, should be restudied. All well and good. ' .

. But long' suffering has indeed been tried· by other articles thatajred the subject-some the juvenile u1Jterings of priests with personal problems projecting. their diffi ­eulties uPon everyone else of .the brothers in.the priesthood; Ilome the second thoughts 'of men looking to .human answers for questions' spiritual .and supernatural in' s~ope; ..other8 the probings .of' those' -to whom the priest,he~etof~re .~ man of mystery, had suddenly become : grist for .their.: amateur psychoanalyzing. and dissecting;' others: t~e.foolis~ '. mouthings of those whose thesis is that any·uninarried male' ever twenty-one is eith~r .a freak. or unnatural.·

Some articl~s on the 8~bjeet did the church a great Ilervice, showing celibacy; not as a negative' thing. but' as

.the free and willing ·acceptance of mature ~en so that they. d God' 1 ta t t of

JY}ight better serve God an s peop e, a cons. n ac. faithfulness and. dedIcation. But all too many of the' articleS . were merely expressions.ofPersonal pique or, sadly, personal· tragedy and failure. All 000 many of the articles put the whole matter on a na£ural and human level.when it can

. . tall.'i only make comp1ete s~n8e oil a superna ur e~e.,·

Pope Paul has .placedceHb~y in' its ~iihtfu~ place in' the life of the priest'a~~ iti the life of. the· Church. It is

Guillotine Cape Cod CeD' Continued h'om Page One

bim." She went on to point out tJiaIIJ

in teaching the "Our Fatber;1!l 'Jesus called on God as FathEl!! of all of us, not merely His owL She reminds ber pupils to bQ mindful of this paternal re}a;.

-tionship each has with the AI]!,., mighty.

There is much talk and str~ on changes these days, but ME&, Mac emphasized that the ne1l7: ways merely mean more com:. plete preparation of children iii

. an earlier age. Religion has not been her 0DI5:

contact with the young. Botti she and her late husband were physical education teachers, ana when they came to Brewster ~

years ago taught many a· gene»-> taion of Summer people ~

to swim. :P hot 0 gap h 8 and poeJDfJ

attest the affectionalte bonds re:. suiting from a happy' teachblill life.

. Mary McCormJCklivesiD • rambling old CaPe Cod bo_

. oil picturesque· TUbman. RoOd.. . Its orchards and barns enclOSed

.

Says Rabbis' .Critici'sm' Blackmail Continued from Page Five with Rabbi Brickner and Rabbi .

them in this regard-but that. Hertzberg too pointedly and too· is another. matter. . . brusquely and/or that r do not 'Hierarchy's' Competence understand the depth of Jewish

One final point. Rabbi Brick-. feeling with regard to the State ner and Rabbi Hertzberg would of Israel. . ". appear to have a' distorted and I must reSPectfully disagree on grossly' exaggerated notion of . both counts. I think I can llID­the competence and power of the derstand' why Rabbi' Brickner Ameiicanhierarchy ili'the field and Rabbi Hertzberg-and tIM!. of' public policy, . whether do-. majority. of their co-religionists . mestic or international.' around the' world-are so deeply

The' Bishops' acting' as" a' col- . committed" to ·the cause Of' •. an act of love of God aJ.ld lov.e of people,. love "drawn from· 1eCtivebody; ~an provide"a' cer- rae!.. · . . . the purest'.'sourc~, practice4 in the imitation' of, God.and min measure of, nioral' guid~u'lce I sincerely honorthein'{6r 1lhiIl

by' a neat white' picket fenee. Here she is surrounded by &bit models, waterfowl carved by he busband, and his marine· paint­ings. The floors are .' covered with rugs she braided or booked.

'IShe still leads quite an en'"

getic life, takes care .of _ house, is preparing fo~ fr~en. who will be guests in comi!'J! weeks, and can be seen rakhij the 'wide meadow around htS ·home.

Just· one thing she' gave .. recently and that is driving .. car. "At 82,' your 'reactions are no longer as qUick as they ouiJl¥l 10,~ on a ~ghway.'~ ,

.Devotion to Mary, Christ, and no'less'th~n aily other genuine' love; is·demaJid-:-Od·such·.matters,"but·they e~commitment and woUld·expect:'· Frl ci . dei"hbo diiWi . d' 'al" .. ' '-, . " ' ......, ... Dot·force the conscience oftheu· them to expect Die·to·join with·, .• er.t s an .."n, ~,. rs, .... mg an re . . . .. . .... . '.. .her to church. Over her bet) .. • . : people, and, if they .were io ~.

. . . 110 do so, would be widely repu­. diated.

B,usineS8 Leader.' ." . 'My "own" guess"jil," by" the •

way, that the majority' of 'Ainer-' It is remarkable and good that thirty-six AmerieankagCatholics were substantially

business ']eaders-of all religious faiths-:-have left for" ~ro-Israel i~ the r~centwar. It .. '"On' IS also my ImpreSSIOn, .bowever,

Vatican City to discuss wi~h Pope Paul :his encyclical .that they did notl'egard it as the Development of Peoples." . a religious or a "l1oly" war and·

. . would have bitterly resented any The encyclical called for international programs to attempt on the' part of the

eombat the "scandal of glaring inequalities" between rich American hierarchy to represent and poor countries. it. as such in their name.

There is an old saying, often Apparently these business leaders have taken .the. quoted by Jewish leaders at

Pope's words seriously and wish to ask him how they can initiate practical steps toward the goals he outlined. And

they are men whose personal prestige and. business influ­ence can make 'an impact 'upon the entire world.

The Pope's words have done with them wha.t his words should do in all hearts-waken people to their personal responsibility for the welfare of the \;yhole human race and their ability, within their own sphere, to do some­thing about it. Under God, all men are one. In GQd, each' must do what is in his power to bring brother closer to brother and ail closer to their rightful dignity as GOO's children and all closer to God.

@rhe ANCHOR OFFICRAL NEWSPAPER OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

Published weekly by The Catholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River 410 Highland Avenue

Fall River, Mass. 02722 675-7151

PUBLISHER Most Rev. James L Connolly, D.O., PhD.

.GENERAL MANAGER' ASST. GENERAL' MANAGER It. Rev. 'Doniel .F. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. J~hn P. Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR . '", . ;- '. , ., ~ ... . - "; ".

inter-religious' gatherings, that wherever you have two Jews, you have three opinions, espe­cially on matters. Of . public policy. .. ,

Ditto for Catholics--except, as .

I'have' already indicated, in the case of the recent war in the Middle East. On this matter, I repeat, it is my impression thatAmerican Catholics were pro­Israel-but on their own terms.

Strangeny !Inconsistent What more do Rabbi Brickner

and Rabbi Hertzberg really·want? Do they want the American Bishops to compel all American Cath'olics to be pro-Israel on somebody else's terms, or'worse than that, do they want the Bish­ops to pretend that they can sP,eak authoritatively for the en­tire Catholic community on this and related' issues in. the field of foreign affairs? 'If this is what they are real-·

ly' asking for, they are being strangely inconsistent, for, un­less I am badly mistaken, they would be a'mong the first to ob­ject if any individual Jewish agency or combination of Jewish agencies were to pretend to be able to speak officially and au'" thoritatively for the entire Jew-'

" ~sh community on any matter of public policy-including, I ,would ··bope, the'Israel-~ra~ war.

Support IIsraeI

them 10 supportmg Israel's right h" . . '.' t· ~ 0 T.~ to·· t ·th tIt b' d' angs a pIC ure ur..,..."Y/VoLeXlS , ~l.. o~ . e or .m . ran«:c, . of' 'Per etual Help'; "Slie biiI as a free and mdependent JDa- . P ., . _-..&

0':

• ••0, has bung. .over my .bed ev~ . tlon. .. ,., ,.....". ..succored me .many atHne ... ­

.00tSpoken ':Ro~~ ,

. plaCe i have lived since.' I ... On the other hand;. r do not·.mariied.': .' ,:".

think that they bave any right to expect me or anybody 'else to make a religion out of 18­rael or ·to canonize ·i1s leaders or its past and present polic.i~. This I simply will not 00 ­period.

I say this very bluntly, not to· disrupt, but hopefully .to ad­vance th~ cause of Cathollc-Jew­ish r~latlons. In other words, 1­am firmly. persuaded that re-'. ~pectful, but outspoke~, honesty 15 by far the best pollcy in the field· of inter-religious affairs.

.Moreover, I' have reason to think that RabbI' Brl·ckner ~~d

~u. Rabbi Hertzberg agree with me in this regard, for God knows they themselves have been just about as outspokenly frank as they could possibly be in their. /!'l0rmal Sch~ol of..Gymnastiescriticism of the Catholic Church m Boston. HIS sacnflce was :roe­for its alleged failure to do and :war~ed, fo~ upon graduation she to say the right thing with re- ~as Im~~dlatelY offered a teach­gard to the Israel-Arab war. . mg posltlon at the school.

.Plan New Funeral RO E °

Ite xperlment PATERSON (NC)-The Pat­

erson diocese is one of the few Sees in this country selected to experiment with the new funeral -rite. Word of the selection came to Bishop Lawrence B. Casey of Paterson in a letter from Arcb­bishop John F. Dearden of De­troit, president of the Natioilal Conference 0:1' Catholic Bishops.

The new rite is designed to emphasize the theme of hope and' joy in Christian ,death. It per­mits a broader choice of psalJrnS arid Bible readings; proves

ebanges in ~s during praY4~. .'. _ :It· inay appear: to· some that· . in funer&.. homes, in church Qoo.

CbmnastlCl Career.''" ,

At her last birthday, fIie ·friend who usually drives bel' to Mass was detained unex~ edly.

To her great surprise a neigh­bor called just then and offered a ride. "Our Lady of Perpetual Help knew how much itnieauli

. to me to attend Mass on thai particular day and once mOlle bad come to my aid."

'. . .. . DIVlne Providence has shel~

ed her through her long life.. When she graduated from higli sch,OO~! :Win~ing the h~adma&-ters pnze 10 gy.mnastlCS, bes'f th t ld t ld b a er was 0 I wou e 8IIl

investment to send her to the

.Later she operated the Broo. line M u n i c i pal GymnasiUDi where age ranges from seven to 70 came to exercise. The gyIIl\ burned' down a few years ap" but is now being rebuilt,

Summers she taught at HaP­vard University summer schooJ. the only one in the country oe­fering physical education at thafl time.

Dancing and apparatus WeAl her fields of instruction. She was, to marry a swimming

_coach. They moved to New York where slie taught gymnastics .. New York University on Wasil.­ington Square.

Does she still swim and dance$'. Oh yes, she still goes to Robin

Neck Beach on Cape Cod Baw IIii .,'Brewster where she taugh. • many youngsters to swim.

..Dancing?.' "Well, once.... HU9h. J... Golden ;... " "": , I have· stated .... wsagreemeDt, at ......i... ,.. ··'·while at a cbW'ch event...·.·

Page 7: 06.29.67

THE ANCHOR-Catholic Schoolfl Vincentians in' Attleboro, Brownsville, 7,Thurs., June 29, 1967

To'" Seek Fundi loIn, to Organize Twinning Program Board fUes SuitFro'm,' Business Yet another link has been forged between the Diocese of Fall River and Browns-KANSAS CITY (NC) ville, Texas with the inception of a "twinning program" between members of the So- Ag(Qiolrn~t ~~§ l~w

Bishop Charles H. Helmsing eiety of St. Vincent de P.aul in both localities. Since the appointment of Fall River's TEANECK (NC)-By the slim­lJf K'ansas City - St. Joseph former Chancellor, Bishop Humberto S. Medeiros, as Ordinary of Brownsville, much mest of mar~ins, the Teaneck

board of education voted to ini­bas approved formation of a interest has developed here tiate a law suit to upset schoolfunds already accumulated forllay committee to organize an an- in his two ye8lr old see. Many bus legislation signed into law nthe purpose. Some $1100 haveD.ual school fund-raising drive organi~ations have sent fi­ month ago by New Jersey Gov.already been sent.mnong area businesses. nancial aid to the. area, and Richard J. Hughes.

Additionally, members willBusinessmen will be asked to last month it was announced' The board voted for the actionwrite to Brownsville Vincentiansl':1elp pay costs in diocesan paro- that Rev. Joseph P. Delaney, as­5 to 4. Pressing for the moveon spch topics as works of par­<mial elementary and secondary sistant superintendent of Fall was Mrs. Dorothy Pollack.ish conferences, social servicesachools. River Diocesan schools, would ele(:ted to the board in Febru­utilized, and reports of confer­The bishop's approval was an- work in Brownsville for five ary.ences, councilS' 'and special"

Catholic school board by Msgr. ' its '!lchool system.. l DOu~ced· at a meeting of the yeats, aiding in development of.

works. The Teaneck, board .intro~ucedl

. Michael F. McAuliffe, superin- The Vincentian twinning pro­ ,the resolution without prior no-WThry' Tllnfis' ll"ll'ojeee ' tice and did' 'not provid,e 'for aCendent,of C;ltholic schools. , iecfhas been organized by Rev.

Why are the 'Attleboro Vin- hearing, even 'thou'gh the' board ., ' , ''Il'he idea of. the committee· had (Ed¥itbnd L. Dickinson, chaplain 'centians committing themselves. had been one of th~ plost vocal .. ,'been under· .consideration by the ·,;:oif..::, th~ . Attleboro . Particular

board for about a month. Board to this patricular 'project? Fathet' ' ,supporters' for' pl.lbl'ic hearings . :' Co~ci.l of the Society, and now I'ickinsort gives the -artswer: . 'when the bus ''le'gisiation wa~•. ,p;!,ell\~l'lrs .Ju~Ian Knop~e, Msg.r. , assistant at St. Mathieu's Church,

THERE IS· POVERTY :and 'We., before the State Senate: .. ~~rt,n ,ff.QeIlC~l and John M~rtl- f WID:River. . must contirwe .to. fe~d the h~n- , : Mrs. Pollack. 'sald' no' advanoo

.• : i. p.~,~. ~w~f~; .l:l:pppmted t~ s~1,l4y. the ;':Father Dickinson' explains that feaSibility of estabhshlng the.' for' "some time the Attleboro gry and clothe the naked. announcement was made because

THERE IS :M:ISERYand we it would bring out "the peopleoom~!ttee. . . cou~cii had· consi!iered twinning must give inspirilitidn 'a'nd hope: with an axe to grind." DuringIt ·was a~so in line With, a rec-. with a needy council in Latin

ommendatIOn made to the Cath- :. An).ercia, with aid consisting 9f THERE IS HEAVENLY RE- her election campaign, she had Qlic sc~ool board by. John J . .' spiritual and' financial assistance WARD and we' must 'strive to ' argued for open lines of con\mu­Mc~on?ugh, state c.halrman of . as ,well as an interchange of obtain· it· for· others and fOr nication between' the· board of

, I Cit~zen,s" ~of Edu~ati.onal ~r:e- , frt'Emdly information. There were Qurselve!\.. '.' ..,' ,,' ,.. ,educatiol). and ,the ~ublic. , " ,"" d~m, " ~n, . ~rganIzation . which .,no ava\lable councils in Latin lFA'Jl'HIER DICKllNSON THERE : J~:, ,~'f.RJ!;D . AND, I Both ·the. president and, vioo , ",~~<1~.~a,x IUd. to parochll~l. and! !.America;: however, and when , , SELFISHNESS and we must re": president of the board of educa­

.' ,Qrp,af!?"educ;ltlOn. .. ':Bishop Med~iros was appointed ing him to organize the society . place this I :\~I'ith I l<!>Ve. 'and inter- . tion voted' against the 'resolution ,'''' . : '. ,Save In Taxes .,. ",00 the. Br,ownsville Diocese with 'in,every parish, 0St,. ... \: ,.; .:' ~'"'' ·.to test the.law's constitutionality. ".. "The' American business com':'" itsll~Fge :Mexican,.America? P?p.,. '. Father Dickinson and Father WITH GQD.'~ :aEa...J.>:WE ~II,..r. ... The law reql,lir¥s.di;;~r:ipts,:Which

. ti't t ·d·t! 11' has sup-'" ,, ulahonj.,It was felt that twmnmg Junius exchanged letten clari~ SU~C:;:~~p. ,~~d .l~li, :rwinnin~ transport. chi~dre~. :t~, ,~ubllc .. m fit y . ra I ona y . Progra~ ,is indeed a 'v:ery ef- schQols to prOVIde tlie same serv­..d'• • pok-ted' education . and . shows: ' ~ ~o~d be f~aslble' the:e... ' fying, the program and the Attle­

• I· ,.. ti f' tl ~... ,., ",Socnety OrgaDllzed .boro :coundl"began sending con- fecUve' way' oi'''!lchitlVlng. this' , ice to children attending private everY In.!hca on 0 wan n~ Permission for the pro]'ect was tn·butio.. ns to Brownsville' .from- success. ,.': ".' .. 1'-. , . ,schools. p,reviously," such stu­.: "'\1' rnd ... McDonough ad'Vised.... : ~ , re, . '. . ,obtained. .from the Vincentian "Let us neve:!" for.get,"adds,' qents could only.. be. ~cc9mmo­tile bljaFd. . C '1 G I' p' d . f' t ste in' " ouncl·. enera III ans an " . .' II F~th~r Dicki.nsqn,,; ~~tha~ we are, ,dated ,alo,ng .ex!sti~, ,public ..K~~p~e sa~d the I~ P,,, "Eather Dickinson wrote to Bish- Il '~W1m' 3'_' IInteniIloft ~ members of a very. simple ChJ;is- school routes.

.:' . ()~~a'l.uZI,hg th,e fund-ralsl~g ~om,:,.;; op,JlI1edeiros explaining the. plan 1J..1l%I)f \fiiillil' II ~IJ IbII Uan ' org~mi'zaHori" dedicatE!<! to ..... -I, I,:,

nuttee 'Was to secure BIShoJ,), '"and: program. His Excellency ,@rt... "'o,f:·'Church the ~ulfillment ot the, elementary Sd,o~tmlr~lL~rn ·IU,o·.nOIl'S~elmsin'?'s ~ermission. ''T.he next replied that he would be happy duty of every Christian ~ see ... trn"1I"' IIll !Jteps Will mvolve workmg· out: to "receive this. mark of. inter­ MQN1'J.l.E:AL, (NC) - A good Christ in all' our 'fellow illiman J 0/1,' ~.lL '.'" " a method to s:t up a commltte.e, est," and added that he had jusfl Catholl'c must be concerned WI'th" . eSlUh mlD)r<tllr~an.beings and to help' him in help:"and .the workl?g out of certam". appointed Rev. Bernard C. Juni­ man,' wit~ hi.s problem!\,.anxi- ing them to ·the .best of our. HAVERF,ORD,(NC)_JUt an. I;troblems, .for mstance, whetht:r. . us.' O.M.I. as Diocesan spiritual etif,l!i a~~ .bereav~Illents, Mi~czys-. ,.!ndiyid.ual, and cqllectiye ability... nual $1,009 s<;hol.~~ship· fQt: ,grad­the campaign will exten~ to : cnirector. of"the Vincentians, ask-' .law cle .:aabi~!t.t, ,!iu~~secret~ry of solely because he has' told us uate study toward a master's de-Kansas City, Kan., archdIocese, _. the, Va.tica,n's World Covncil Oil! to do oo-an.d he is God." • gree in library.'·sHence· a\\i~rded be stated. Laity',.t91d.. il JP,.ee.ting at the Uni- by the Catholic Library Associa-

He said business firms contrib; .. '~Ur~ge~ fr.CIlnciscans versity of Montreal. tion wiU be named for the late u:ting to the drive would' save A..4.Jl TOO .He addres~.ed delegates to the Davelnport Finances Father Andrew'I;., Bouwhuis, S.J'.0

, ' 'iilrg'e' amounts in taxeS'compared lIY\\Ouerl1llZe r.alnlng·, ':''i 00 the"c6ht"of sending parochial .CHATEAUdUA¥(NC)-Fran-, ·:::~~l~~~q~;~~~i~~,~~c:~:~,1~~d;.. Stu4y.... f~~.. ,.~ri~~ts .' B:~:~~t d~~~ ~:l~~~: ~~t~~

flChool pupils to public schoe.ls if··· ei'scan . educators frOm' North wee1,(;,lQllg crPllVention. ".' '. DAVENPORT, (NC) - Bishop had ~en .lit~r.a.r:iaQ .at. Canisill3 oome ,. Catholic schools wel'i!'.' :America were .urged .here. in ,H~ Siiid· that.,all.laymen, are .Ge~ald 'F:'O'Ke~fe 'of D~venport. '. College, B!-1ffal~, ,for. 20 years; furced to close. I , QUebec '~ updat'e theIr academic ~1l~,.t9 a~.in~iYidua,l apQstolicf . has anhoUriced l iirtplementatioD was president of the CathoUc

'.,' "" , ': progtam' to conform to modem .' v~atio~, no matter what their of a policy designed to encouD'- Libary Association irorit '1943 to missi9ll with·. respect to: the age priests to continue profes- 1945, a membeJ;' of its, .executive ......:HoIY· Father A.d'y;~iSS·'...:~~:- ~th annual FraJiciscan Cb,urcb .PI' .tlJ,e nature of ..their sional 'cliucati6ri: ' board ~- ." ,

. . 10 years and receivedJ.'ln

Computer Experts" Educational. Confere?ce meeting. oontrilwtion. ~'Laymen are not a In a, 'letter'. to ,an diocesan ; a citation from 'the' associatioll , '. .' . here exammed toPICS such as people..~part.but an integral part priests, the Iowa Bishop said in 1958 for "distiTQruished and

VATICAN. CITY (~<?)-Po~' 'reotgainzation of the- philosophy of the Church," he'said. parishes and institutes have been unselfish leadership in Catholic ,Pa.ul VI rec~lved,partICipants 1il' and theology' programs; develop­ Ii, the isocial milieu, the role authorized to. pay 'costs, up to $100 letter.s in librarianship." ~e Int:rnatlonal Co.nference on·' 'merit of the person in semi­ 'of all Catholics, is to· exercise annually! for, institutes, study M~~aqlzedInformati?n, ~torage, "oailes,' moral theology in the "fraternal charity" in helping weeks and'conventiQns attended

.)let~l~yal.and Dissemmatlo~, or- light of the Second Vatican others ,and sharing with them the by priestS.'" . gamzed by the International Council and Scripture in a total burdens of life. In general, de Bishop O'Keefe also stipulated lTederatiop for Informa.tion Proc- progra~. Habicht said "those who lack the that time spent ~t· such profes­0Ssing and the International Fed-· . means to lead a truly human sional meetings should not be m'ation of Documentation. Some 70 deleg~tes from Spt life should be sought out and counted as part of a priest's va­

Among those at the audience U. S7 two Can~dIan and ~hree cared. for by. a truly Christian cation time. were professors from·the United MeXican FranCIscan prOVInces charity." . States, the Soviet Union and we~ told- by, Father Colman llIungary M,a)chrzak, 01' .M., of St. Fran­

. '. Ci!l College, Burlington, Vt., that Seek Opinions . The Pope ~~d: .seminarians should be exposea . eoyQl,lr a~tI~Ities ~mploy the , to the, many contemporary phil ­ PHILADELPHIA (NC) - The

. most. sophisticated mstruments Osophical movements. He also new archdiocesan Council of yet inyented by man but yoUl"' sJiid th,at the "future priest must Priests will solicit suggestions final results wi~ .d~pe?d upon .undep;tand and appreciate what MONTHLY CHURCHfor iinp~vingpastoral work

. ~e ~f1:Ith of t~e mItlal mforma- others in our pluralistic society from all, the ,clergy of the Phila­~onyou furnish to your, com- Blre thinking, saying and doing. delphia a.rchdiocese, announced BUDGET ENVELOPES

>I> •J)utel"S Co '. the chairman, Msgr. Frederick J.". ... b ti I ' 'f.hat means, m turn, that·he must Hence you ?'U... e re eso understand himself and his en­ Stevenson., here. A special com­ PRDNTIED AND MAILED

and sc.rupulous. In the search f011' vironment profoundly." mittee will receive the recom­true mformatIon so that the mendations, but priests can also Writs or I?lhone 672-1322 fruits of your labon and the BP­ make suggestions to their coun­

234 S~oll'l~ Street - Fall River , ~tions of your machines mat ~nsltdhde to Hear cil representative at any time, llPe useful, profitable and advan­ Msgr. Stevenson said. flageous to mankind." [liSS(LIJgt~ of Survey

5 500/' II' SYSTfMAm • '10 year .SAVINGS

96 mouUlCr dC90slb requlrell

1I fNVESTMEU5 000/ • '10 year SAVrNU

lro !fa" (l~I;:e \'or II'lthllTllWll:l

4.50% V:V ~~=

Bass River Sav;n!j's Bank

IIaIJ'lIle lay ¥ail W0 lPillly 1T1he Postage

• SO!,ml W"RMOUVIli • HYANNIS

• 'lrARPof!lU1r9 SHOPPING PLAZa

• iJlEL'«~8S I?9RT • OSTERVIW

NEW YORK (NC)-Results 01Il a survey on. attitudes ot' young

Trinity Grant people toward religious careers, WASHINGTON (NC)-Trinlty a dialogue between Protestant

eoUege here has received Ii deaconesses and Catholic Sisters, $24,000 institutional assistance lind a discussion of the inner city grant from the U. S. Office of will be among the topics cov­Education, Sister Margaret ClaY""1, ered at, the 17th annual Institute cion, college president, an- on, Religious and Sacerdotal Vo­D.ounced: The grant is for support "cations at Fordham University, ,iJf the prospective teacher fel;'; "'July 5 and 6. l.qwship 'program in American·" . Father George 'Malone,... S.J., 'b'lsto~y. Under this plan, studenta, .. professor. of oriental theology at ~.prepar;in!: for teaching iD fn.:,,,. ~ '~~n)CXm .CeQ.ter .at ~ord­I1er city .schoo~ on the ilecol,\d- ham, will discuss~el~giou.s yoca-, ., .tevAr~ ... ... ". ".11' tiooa amolll: Eastern ·CIfristiana. .

.BLUE RIBBON LAUNDRY

~73 CIENTRAL AVE.

,.:99.2-;6216

"" ;NEW·...&iEDF.ORD j .',

~lflllllllllllfllllHlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllfllllllllllllllllllllllimlllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllll1I11111111111lf'§

§ h's A. Hit §

! live Chicken ) II 89c lb. i §=_== ~Caslh .and, Cqrry Only) i=

· I a'c·'Le"an's·§ M ~ = " , =: § UNION WHARF, FAIRHAVEN Tel. 997.935. §= . . ". . . = !imtIlIllIIH!IIII11I11t1I1fUIIIIIHIlIIIIIIIIIHllllllllflllllllfllllutIlIUUWlmltl!llililllllllllllllllllllll!lIlllllllIllIlIllE

Page 8: 06.29.67

8

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,THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs. June 29,1967

Herre Are Practical Rec~pe's f'orr Neighbor-Aiding -Foods

By Mary Tinley Daly Examplee of the "good neighbor policy" practiced,

eponianeously and sans fanfare when our daughter Mary and her three-day-old baby returned from the hospital, mentioned in this column recently, have aroused interest .. readers, with requests for "'more specifics." Says one leader: "You recall that you always used to 'send still an­ether richly iced sticky cake.' il'hat was my idea, too, of send­log something Ion w hen a Deighbor was in II bin d. Then I was in a bind, 1I0t with a new baby (I'm long past that stage) but with a hus­band' who re­quired my ,con-Iltant attention lilfter a heart' attack. Well, did we ever get 'sticky cakes'.' and by the half-dozen!

"Oh, I appreciated the well ­wishes behind those cakes, but honestly, Mrs., Daly, we just couldn't use them. Too rich .for my husband, and I was in DO

eake-eating mood." From another reader:. "You

dismissed in one brief para,.. graph what actually these youn'g

'good neighbors sent 'in to tide your daughter over while she was regaining her strength, the dinners 'not too spicy for a nurs­ing mother, not too rich or exotic for children.' Also, you men­tioned that that there was little in the way of dishes or pans to be returned, HOW, for inst.ance, do you bring in Italian spaghetti without bringing it in a pan, or an 'all-encompassing casserole' without the casserole?"

Double IDinners Others asked about "d~uble

dinner" recipes, food suitable for lunch left-overs 'the next day, other "good neighbor" examples in the food line.

Guess I was vague, a fault the Head of the House has noted often, and I didn't mean' there were no pans, no casseroles to return, lljmply the returnables were not. fancy, easily break­abies.

As for the double dinners: . make the Italian spaghetti' in

t;luantity enough for your own family plus the amount needed for your neighbor. Take the'

·terial. . : .' k~p baby. warm and dry evengive-way portion to your neigh- . you can substitute ~una or chick­bor's kitchen, put it in one of her pans for reheating. Send, or preferably take. the prep~red' easse.role, heat 10 your nelgh­bor's oven and send one of your ehildren to pick up the empty Casserole later.

Or, make two meat loves with brown roasted potatoes, one for your family, one for theirs. Wrap theirs in aluminum foil, ready for re-hel}ting in their own'oven.

Salads? It's' almost as easy to fix a double portion of lettuce, tomatoes, cucumber, shredded' earrots, celery for two families as it is for' one. Put the gift salad in a plastic bag, dressing in II

Dioces,an Nun~ Prepare !For Soc.al Apostolote

.ATLANTIC CITY '(NC)--The muns, of the Camden diocese win attend an' orientation program, here Saturd~y to prepare for their work in the Summeroocial apostolate.

The riuns plan !l, coordinated effort in the sl)cial work fieid. I

They will work .with anti-pov­ Catholic Women. She is a former erty groups on such' projects as president f1f three ': Catholic ',ing the lovely new designs in, 'tragic fate ,of, the Jews, Tu;owicz'

,pre-school education, remedial ~omen's organizations and spear..-towels, ,decided that they were said., ,The ·book claims' that in work with deprived children and headed a town-wide clean liter-' : much too lo:vely for jU'st'dry-h'1g i942-43 , alone· ,20,000 Jews, were " child-care ~,vices. ature camp p

'- on~ off and they, incorporated· hidden by Poles ill Warsaw.

small throw-away jar and trot the. whole business 10 your

ne1t~~~ season f1f the year, chicken salad ean no longer be considered the solace of "one who 'knows not what else to order"; it's a honey, welcome anywhere. Recipe: steam chick~n, any amount of chicken, with sliced onions. When cool, cut meat in cubes, sprinkle with lemon juice or white vinegar (keeps meat firm and delicious), add an equal amount or less of diced celery. Mix with mayon­naise diluted with a bit of vine­gar or lemon juice. Season, toss and you have chicken salad worthy of anyone.

Served on. a bed of lettuce with tomato slices and hard cooked eggs; with potato chips, it's 'a dinner, a luncheon,or,what­ever, one that is both no~rishing and, eclat. Whatever's left over, .if any, can be spread' between two slices of bread, toasted or untoasted, for luncheon or a bed­time snack.

'Salmon Q~ickie' As to casseroles, anyone who

has ever worn an apron knows that they spring from the imagi­nation, emerge from whatever is' available in refrigerator or pan­try and are almost universally acceptable.

For a basic, we go back to our favorite cookbook, "A Little Bit of Butter," that small but sophis­ticated tome and its "Salmon Quickie" submitted by Lynn Bureau Morrison:

1 large cream of celery ooup* C mayonnaise ¥.i C milk ¥.i C Parmesan cheese I"large can salmon 1 box frozen green beans I 4-ounce pack noodles 'I T.bs, onion,

Combine the soup, mayonnaise, milk and shredded cheese. Stir in the salmon, beans and noodles (both of which have been . colors and vivid , nursery set-especialiy the ptop- . cooked) and onion. ·Toss well. p~in~. .If you erty of absorbency. Many of'the Pour into a' 1* quart casserole are a. home .tiny. jump suits that have become

'. sewer, most pattern eompanies a favorite of mothers are madeand bake for 25 minutes at ,325 are 'carr)ling a wid~ vari~ty of 'of .thisniaterial and bathing suitSdegrees.

·Summer patterns us10g thIS ma-. and terry hooded beach: jacketSFlavor blend Of this is great;

en for the salmon; add buttered One 'company ~as desJ~s for, ..w,hjle . he's ,'enjoying Summer beach cover-ups 10 terry 10 longbreadcrumbs for fancy topping. or short lengths. Many of these

Let imagination and friendli ­ ·designs have an oriental influ­ness come to your aid and your ence possibly because, this type:neighbor's! • , of cloth lends itself to draping and large' loose sleeves. Obi sashes complete this particularVeterans Name design line of patterns 'and they appear as if, they would be theWoman of Year perfect thing to use over a chilly"

NORTH ARLINGTON (NC)- wet bathing suit, while at the , same tl'me the total effect ap-'Mrs. Claire Flaherty of Queen

of Peace parish in this New Jersey community .has been named "Woman of the Year."

Mrs. Flaherty, 71, is awidow. The mother of three children;

Mrs. Flaherty still is active in Church and civic work, despite her age. She is responsible for establishment of this state's first dental clinic for children here during· the depression era. ,,'

Mrs~ ,Flaherty does voluqteer work with blind people for the MouiIt' Carmel Guild and is a member 'of the executive' board of the Essex~Newark -District of the Archdiocesan Council' Of

.peals to the eye.

This revolution in the towel~ng . industry has entereq the fashions for the bath field; and' now as never before your towel ward­robe can be colorful and smart­ly designed. The Spanish influ­ence in home furnishings has in.:. spired the l,inen designers to carry this over onto their 'draw'; ing boards and the result. has

-been compeiition among the toweling ,companies to' see who could create a line of the most

'elegant and beautiful towels. Ba.th ,SaJl'ongs '

. As the old saying gOes, ~one"

.'thing leads to- another," so the' designers,of patterns, upon'view-

Spend Vocations' Aiding Church , NEWARK (He) - ThiJ1eer;( families from North Jersey wiD sPend their two-week Summer vacations, doing volunteer work: in parishes in the South under sponsorship of the CbristiOO Family Mission Vacations JliUI"" gram.

The volunteers will leave d~

ing July and AuguS,t and serve in Paintsville and Corbin, ~

. ~orton, Ya.; Frenc:h Settleme",-La.; and BUford, S.C. ­

'!'hefr work' will involve home ~sits, eatechetical programs, ~ camps and manual labor. At Bu.­ford they will do Cana Confer­e,?ce work for personnel of tbe Parris Island Marine Corps Re­cruit Training Depot.

"An volunteers will be accoJDoo »anied by their children, wiUl

ON JAPANESE RAD][O: Momoko Kochi, 'a top tele-: vision' and radio star in' Japan, is narri;ltor for the Good Shepherd Movement's "Light of the Heart" and "Smile of the Sun" radio programs. Produced by Father Jan-ies··

i F.Hyatt," M.M., right, the' daily, fjve-minute shows are­broadcast for a 'record total of 1,545 minutes each week over the Japanese n~tworks. NC Photo.

JWORLD OF FASBIaN ~~ By MARlILYN RODERICK~

TERRY CLOTH FASHIONS Terry cloth has emerged from ·them into patterns for after-bath

,the linen department and en- - sarongs, ~o and fro beach cover­tered the clothing department. ups and even smartly chic host­Especially in the field of sports- 'ess gowns. In these patterns, two wear, the shopper will find a or more towels of the same de­large selection of garments made sign are cut and stitched accord­of .this absorb- ing- to instructions and 10 and ent textured behold the beauty that once material, and graced a towel rack now graces no longer does you. Only on you it looks bet­

· it exist only in ter. the " p r i s tin e This marvelous terry cloth is white that we not limited in its use to· only are so used to, the' female adults of the liouse­but. it can be hOld. Its ·valuable properties of obtained in a warmth,'wa'shability and absorb­variety .of lush ency make it a favorite of the

surf and fun. .,

New Book Describes , ,

Polish: Aid to Jews , BERLIN (NC)-A new book

describing the aid many' Polish people gave to Jews during. the Second World War has been' issued by a Cracow Catholicbl' . h '.pu ,lshmg ouse, Znak.

The principal aim of the book, 'according to Jerzy Turowiez, editor-in-chief of the Cracow Catholic weekly, Tygodnik,Pow­szechny, is to dispel the idea in many, publications of the ~West that the nazis could not have ' carried out their 'extermina,tion of the Jews in 'Poland without active help 'from the Poles. ,

In a front-page. article in the' Catholic'" .weekly, Turowicz .

'claims ,that the book gives an: almost complete picture' of, the:

' aid arid assistance given to Jews 'by .individual Poles: It' eUec­tlvely qu1sh'es attempts to: make: Poles.:, co·responsible for ,the,

the families ranging in size from two to six children. They will also be accompanied by teeD­agers who have volunteered tQ

baby-sit.

, "lC~URCH FUNDS· TRUSTS iPlE~SIONS •ORGANIZAVIIlBNS

l

': CORPORATE· PERSONAL SAVINGS .:.

As of January 1st.

NEW, HIGH. RATE

Per Yearr

on , INVESTMENT

SAVINGS (ERTIF~CA ns

• $1000 Multiples, held for 'Six Months or Longer"

• Dividends paid twice yearly, • No Notice Required -for

Withdrawal • 'Dividends not subject te' . Mass:"income Tax' '

REGULAR SAVINGS

':Now Earn

Per Veair

You may save any amount. any time when' you have Cl

Regular Savings Acc,ount. Old­Fashioned Pass Book fle~ibi!ity.

SAVE BY MAIL Weprov,ide Postage-Paid envel­opes .for convenience. Specity, type of account.

, Ioitb Main Street" " , 148B.A.fl. .....-....,." """;!-'-~ .. ..

Ii•••••••••••••

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Page 9: 06.29.67

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Now's' Time. for GardE~ner To Move Spr;ng Bulbs

, ,. By JosellBllt aQd Mall'nllyn Roderick From time to time it maY' happen that you find your

i3pl'ing bulbs dwindling in performance and feel that they Mould be moved or replenished. Tulips and daffodils be­gin to dwindle after several yeaK"S in the same place and lIOOletimes benefit from b0­mg moved.. I move tulips berry bushes show promise of after three of four yeaR'S in an abundant crop. AU seems I!)roer to make room for il right with the world, at least

the worlc' of good eating.Dew supply of bulbs. This b a Rhubarb is one of the most [jOOd. time for moving bulbs. versatile of the spring plants,

lIf y<\u, know where your bulbs 'delicious when teamed with are and· if their foliage hllO·· 'raisins or strawberries in a pie I:ipened sufficently so that llt, fsl· but equally good 'when all you !ready to be removed, it hi a 'do to it is stew it. One of our oimple matter to dig them up. favorite ways of cooking the ten­They will remain relatively dor- der pink stalks of this plant is rnant until next Spring, so mov- by baking it in the form of Q

rng them will have no effect on pudding. All one needs to do to tfueir perionnance.· The pro- turn out an aromatic dessert 02dure for caring and storing.iD this way is to layer one inch fAlimple and is as follows: pieces of rhubarb, sugar, and

After digging the bulbs oot 02 bread crumbs (generously dotted the ground, give them a good with butter) in a buttered bak­hosing to remove loose soil. Thitl dish, place it in a 375· oven foil' will also hopefully remove any- 40 minutes, pass the whipped grubs or insects clinging to them. 'cream and wait for the compli­Then set them out in the SWlI. ments. ~r two or three days to dry. Raspberries are another bless­

][f you are very efficient, you lng of the garden, but very few might label them according to of them' manage to find their ~lor or if you are intending ~ way into: the house. ChildreIm !Jet out a mixed planting, ~ust and berry bushes seem to have lhy them out in flats as you 11 magnetic attraction for on~ wash them. When the bulbs are another and during the berC1' thoroughly dry they should be season small heads can just be IIPrinkled with a fungicide and glimpsed between the canes and. lin insecticide In preparation for before the berries have a chance IItorage. Check over the indi- to announce their arrival in the Yidual bulbs for insect damage- garden,' small hands haw .. rot before storing and the job ~lanned: their departure. lis completed. This year I would like to be 11

In OnloD Sacks '"mean mother" long enough 1n Jr usually store my bulbs ftl woo a' couple of small baskets

~ion sacks, which I hang from into the kitchen and into a berC1' the rafters in the cellar, and X pie. The very first pie I ever have never bad 11 problem with attempted after I was married drying; but you may find it m«ma was a raspberry cream and both eonvenient to pack bulbs in iIoe and I thought it fit for the lllamp excelsior or sand. Person- gods. llUy, I think the less watel'-1he,. I'm sorry to say that over the are subjected to the better be- years I have misplaced the ..use of the danger of fungM recipe and I have yet to find .feetion. one as good as that very first

Tbe bulbs may be planted 10 one. Of course it may have been the Fall just as tulips are usually the fun of making a pie for a new planted. I don't bother to sepa- husband may have made this IIOte the bulbUs, the small bulba recipe seem better than it actu­.hich grow at the base of the aily was; I'll just have to keep lat"ge central bulb, but these looking until I come across it May be planted individually and again' and this time I can judge will eventually produce large its worth with a more jaundiced. Iulip bulbs; The flowers which Gye. . ~ult from these transplants are Whatever the fruit may be that !lever equal in size to the originall you favor, the season when ilt blooms butJf planted in out ~ can be ,picked fresh or bought .e way places they are charm- iresh is the time to enjoy it an log and worth saving. you can. Frozen and canned

In the Kitehen varieties. m,ay ~ell have to serve The feeling of well being per- during wintry months, but theJ'

liIleates the kitchen at this time ~ will never replace the thrilil of ~3r. As the garden harvest be- eating your first strawberC7 m. lfi,ns, the larder seems to over- ,.June or your first raspberry ']a flow. In my refrigerator at this .July. IIlOment there reposes a full bas- This is truly 1m old-fashioned! lEet of the largest plumpest shortcake recipe and one I keep .rawberries imaginable, jl:lSt coming back to J1lCI) matt~~r how :waiting to be crushed with sugar many othe~ I try. _d wedded with cake and cream lID order to become the tastiest IiTRAWBERRY SHOR~A.Jl(lI

IIbortcake possible. ! cups flour ' Along with the berries, m,. ~ cup sugar "

.-oler contains a large water­ 4 teaspooN! ba'kmg powdel!'-.e!on llnd a smaller but equally ~ teaspoon salt tasty honeydew. The rhubarb ~ % teaspoon'nubnegll&ill sending forth its red lh cup butter *eaked' shoots and the ra~ 1 egg,well beaten

1f.l cup milk BenediCtine Sisters 1) Sift together the ftOlJllI',

sugar, baking powder, salt andAdopt New Habit nutmeg.

J:i:LIZABETH (NC)-The Ben­ 2) Cut in the butter, using 11

~ietine Sisters of Elizabeth have pastry blender, until it is illl very ltIdopted a new simplified habit. small particles.

According to Mother Cornelilll, 3) Add, the beaten egg and t!i).S.B., the use. of the habit !s milk and· stir just until blended. ~tional and it is being worn 4) Turn batter into a well ­~perimentallyfor the first yell!!' buttered· pie plate or iron skillet l§;y the New ;Jersey nuns. (if you have one) and bake in Q •

The new habit is easieli' 00 450° oven for 15 mintes. lIlUlintain and eliminates ple~ta Ii) Split the shortcake as soon iIIDd flowing sleeves. A turban as removed from the oven and .bich sits back off the forehead butter each layer. Place togethei!' Itas been substituted for the old with strawberriell crushed witlhi.

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., June 29, 1967

Nun to Direct Child Centers

MIAMI (NC)-A nun who Yasi year was the center of a contro­versy for wearing her religious habit while employed, by the federal government has been ap­pointed to organize and direct new Child Opportunity Centers in Dade County.

Sister Marie Infanta Gonzales, an Oblate Sister of' Providence't1

1of Baltimore, became the first member of a religious commu­nity to se~ve as director of a fed­eral anti-poverty project"' In Florida. tn June, '1966, she be­came head of the Culmer Day Care Center, operated' in' the heart of this city's Negro district

I by the :E;coriomic Opporiunity Program, Inc. (EOPI).

Later that month, members of

I the Dade County' anti-poverty board and the Florida Chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union charged that public funds were being used to "propagate m religious faith." But m court suit threatened by ACLU never ma­terialized.

The Office of Economic Op­.,----J portunity in Washington, where Sister Marie Infanta organized

Sons of the Sacred Heart of Jesus (Verona Fathers) dis­ and directed a Head Start schooJl in 1965, ruled last September thattributes Holy Communion, because there are not enough the nun could continue to weai."priests to serve the many Catholics ~n the diocese of her religious hablt.

Bujumbura, Burundi, Africa NC Photo. Now the local EOPI office here has' announced that Sistei'" Marie Infanta has been assigned 16 plan and direct two new pre­Asks Best Teachers school child care centers in Na­ranja and Homestead, about lIO

Prelate Says Most Personable E~ective miles south of here.

In Religious ~nstrudion Classes Confirmation Numbers MILWAUKEE (NC)-A priest His message. Suprise Czech Reds

mvolved in youth work sug- Moreover, he is not afraid of VIENNA (NC) - Communistgested here that' school princi- the questions and uncertainties authorities in Czechoslovaki11pals reserve their most person- his students express, Msgr. Si­ have been amazed by the greatable teachers for religion teach- gur said. Nor is he ll'fraid to ex­ numbers of young people whoing. Pi'ess his own uncertainties. have taken advantage of a recent

The reason for this, said Msgi'. As a community, classmates in relaxation by the governmentAlexander O. Sigur, is that the religion open up to one another pennitting Confirmation cere­person of the educator inspires and search, with a "let's go to­ monies. faith in the young. gether" technique, the priest News coming out of Czecho­

"We communicate by signs, stated. slovakia reports that childretl symbols, selves," Msgr. Sigur , Msgr. Sigur said religion is a and young people by the thou­stated. "Youtbknows this: 'What "dirty word" to the "betrayed s~nds have presented themseivel you are shouts so loudly that many" who criticize high school for Confirmation depite the su&­I cannot hear what you are religion courses for their repeti ­ tained efforts at atheistic instrue­teaching or preaching.' Man iii tion, "particularly rote, without tion in the schools and youth man's only way to God." redeeming insight or relevance," organizations.

Msgr. Sigur told a study con-' and 'for conveying the notion of It has also been learned thi:ti ference of Catholic secondary religion as rigor rather than the seminary at Nitra has been school administrators at Mar..; of 'Christianity as' a liberating given permission to accept new queUe University here that he and .loving 'experience. candidates for the priesthood. spoke from 15 years' experience "iJ:igh' school religi()fi needs Forty .candidates, including some as director of the Newman cen:" aggiomamentofor the- yoUng of older age, have applied for' ter at the University of South- who need their Christ incarnate entrance to the seminary but western Louisiana. The admin- where they are-not :In books, only three have been permit~

istrators came from 35 states buildings or in bigness," Msgr. to enter. and the District of Columbia. Sigur said. "If He Is a person,

He said that a good religiQUS then they can love Him who educator is one who is under- is love." DEBROSS OILstanding, patient, inquiring, ••••••••••••u ••••,personally involved, evangeli ­ • B co. cally simple, and who vibrates with enthusiasm for Christ and :GRACIA BROS.~ Heating OilsI r Cross Diocesan Lines : Excavating r and Burners 1l'G Give Sacraments I !

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@y;)s of the province of New Or­ I •leans, which besides Louisiana • WYman 2-4862 II also includes parts of Arkansas, ~ ~ ,Alabama and Mississippi, have given pennission for priests of the New Orleans archdiocese to preach and administer the sac­rament of Penance in their dio­lOOses.

Archbishop Philip M.' Hannan oi New Orleans has gra'nted a similar privHege" within the boundaries of his see to diocesan. and Religious 'priests from other MANuFACTURERSdioceses in the' province.

Included in the- province of NATIONAL BANK,New Orleans are the ,dioceses of' ,of BRISTOL COUNTYBaton Rouge, La.; Lafayette, La.; Alexandria, La.; Little Rock, THE ~REA'S MO$'II' ACCOMMODATING BANK Ark.; Natchez~Jackson, Miss.; and Mobile-Birmingham; Ala.. ATTLEBORO IFALLS

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992-5534

Page 10: 06.29.67

THE ANCH9R- AnllmmversaryThurs., June 29, 1967 Continued from Page One.

)peace, both for the world ~~d lIor {be Church, will contir:lue

" I '. to ,be a major concern of theContinued from Page One '

Pope. His .ellsential r6Ie;! as afu~erals and burial~, as, ~~il as

reiigious leader has brought h~IJIlto, distribute Communion and to' intervene countless times mbx:ing ',~ ViaticUlll to.t4e, sick..,:-­ - beseeching for and' proposinCread the Scriptures, P.I:-e~~:' -: sist in ,the 'administratiOn~1-:" parish an'd w'ork with the lay 1 apasj;olate,

In general, most 'of these func,.. tions ,are to be carried out when a fully ordained priest is not available and it is presumed

" that deacons will be 'first' \1tj­'Jized .in missionary :,cti.Ubti:ies such as' Africa or in" COUll' ­

, deserately sh'ort ot priests, ::SUc.~ , as those of Latin Amenca. ,

Msgr, Mario Pio Gasprid," an 'official of the Vatican Secretariat of State, who assisted 'in 'the drafting of the regulations, told a press conference in Rome 'that it would be wrong to think of

MISSIONS CARPENTER: John Wirth, 25-year-old carpenter and former U. S. the-restoration of the permanent Navy petty officer of Belleville, N,J., receives godspeed from his archbishop as he diaconate o~ly in terms of an attempt ·to compensate for a j,s about to leave as a lay volunteer .worker in· New Guinea. With him are, left to right, shortage of priests. Father George Mader," director, Newark Liaison Placement Office for Volunteer Law Per-

Instead, he said that is should sonnel; Archbishop Thomas A. Boland of Newark; anI:] BishopJ9hn J. Cohill, S.V,D.; re­be - remembered that' "without ,cently consecrated by Arch~ishop Boland f or th~ diocese of Goroka, New Guinea. the I permanent diaconate the. ,

Church is expressed in its Encycl='co'l R' f L -' ~ fieL . 'T dete"not I hierarchial fullness" because"" , • eo i'l rms ~e~ 8~acy ra I It)~ this order and office,.;\Verc es-:" ' , , ' '

",!l~nt\al parts of,t,he,.Chu,rc~,.from Pope Details Po.sitive Valu'e tOPlI'iesthood "tionsbave pressed for the imple­~,its earliest tim~~., .:'"",.', ,: . "

, :,,;, . Although. the order, of deacon Continued froin Page One has continued to' be .. conferred faithful observance of her own

" ,t1Jroughout the centuries" even tradition (priestly celibacy). ".to the present, the' office"of dea- And it is unthinkable that for, , .eon gradually declined' 'J'ntH it ,centuries she' has followed a ""became in effect'. the"n'ext to path, which, instead of ~avt;lring "'last'step to ordination as 'a 'priest. the, spi-ritual richness of indi­

.However, it· has carried in. the. vidual souls· and of, the people Western Church the obligation'of . of God" has in some ,way com­eelibacy. . ' , . promised it, or that she .has

, 'with' arbitrary juridical 'pre-In this regard the new regu­

,']ations make separate provisions :lIor unmarried and mar'ried men, ,Unmarritid men may be ordained ""'rmanent deacons at the age ofJtI~ 25 or older, depending on cir ­

, eumstal'lces, but cannot be mar­ried aft rod" t' 'Th" '. g,',' , erma Hm,., e, re u­

, '" lations also proyide that this age, . "J)'ml't may be ral"se'd b'y" ','a" "d'eC'I'"

Ilion of the appropriate episcopal" ."." ·ro!l,fe'rence.· '

, ' " Married men may be. or,d':;Iinecf'

',' deacons at, the ,age, .0,f ,',<t5 .or' y

older, However, "they cannot be'

scriptioris stifled' the free. ex-, pansion of the most profound re-.alities "of nature arid of grace,"

On .the .practical level the en­cyclical. insists on the careful' ..

selection and' the development

of maturity of candidates f()r thepriesthood, as well' as the need,' , . for di,scipHne. and also an 3ware­ness' of conscious choi'ce, It also

,calls fOJ: periods of'expedme'nta­ti. l'b b f 't be .

on . m, ce,l acy e ore J -. c,omes something·stable and· def­, 't· 'th th 'th' dInl Ive ,WI ' e '.prles 06, . , ~'Once· a moral; certainty .. has

,admitted if, there i~' not, ,\>~fore,: been' obtained, 'that the, maturity,. ,:" hand not only the consent"of the', of a .. ,candidate, : is.sufficiently, .... , wife but also (proof).'9f her" guarallteed, he, .will. , be,. in a,

sacraments, the institution whi~h must study the true roots of the problem," .

The encyclical next considers the charge that celibacy does violence,to nature,

"After what science has now ascertained it is not just to' continue ,repeating that celi ­

. bacy I'S' agal'llst n'ature because J't runs cOllnter to lawful physical, psychological and affective needs' or t'o clal'm ·that a' completely matUl:e human personality de­m'allds' fulf'I'llm'ent of these I)ee<]s * '* *' The sexual instinct is' not

' all that he (man) lia,s, Man is also and preeml'nen' tly (a be'l'ng of) understanding, choice,~ree:'

dom, and, thanks to these pow­ers he is and must remain su­' perior to the rest of creation;'they g'ive him mastery o.ver his

'physical, psychological, and af.,'{ective appetites,"

The second part of the en­cyClical' deals specifically with the' seminary trainIng and {or­

"mentationoftheVaticanCouncml 'inerits 'supporting "th~'. aril'lHmt, "'in' every. sector. sacred and providential present At the Elnd of the fourth yeu, law of priestly, celibacy." Msgr., ,Pqpe...Paul .s~ll has m,an~, ou~ Garofalo noted that ,the Pope", standmg prOJects whIch' have cites the Bible 107 times in the " be~'l- awaited for a long time: course of the encyclical. '" th,e promised stat~ments on the

In the second section of the' problems o~ family plan~ing first, part, the encyclical ex­amines the historical aspect of celibacy, While noting that ceJi­

.bacy is not required for priestst b d" . d' f th0, e 'or ame or e Eastern

. rites,' the Pope al,so paused 10 express "our esteem and our respect for all the clergy of the Eastern' Churches," However; he also noted that the Eastern' Fa­th,,ers of the Church ha,'e e'spe-",

. clally recommended'. celibacy' d th t l'b ' .'an ' a ce I acy IS g'lven a

" special recognition in the Eastern ., hChurc , such as 'the fact that· o,nly celib.acy. priests can be1 t d

e ec e bishops and that· 01'­dained priests cannot marry' after'

' d" t' or Ula IOn., ',' "':'

'The encyclical also' takes into account that Popes have allowed' ,

IChri~tian updghtnes:;' ~nQ' ,th~t, po!!itio~ to ,take, on' 'b'i'mself" the~ation of future J.>riests,It be~in 'special cases the ordination' ~ere is. pres~'nt 'in 'H,er 'riatuJ;a!., heavy and sweet burden or' 9a-, gills t!y noting that tlie' 'Second: I>f '1<m"ert ministers of'" other'·

:: .... ,qualities ~hich'would, j)·ht"be. ~11 .~ ~erdotal. ~h~stity.' as ,8 total 'gift Vatican Council h'iis 'already.. ,comITI\jnions, However, in" a very impedimen~ nor unworthy .~.; of himself to ''ttu; Lord' and i4i laid down guidelines for' the 're- ' strongpar-agraph ,folloWiI}'g' these

. ~e ministry of her husband,':' .' . His C$uI:ch" 'the",P~pe declares, : formation of' semiria'ry training exceptions,. the Pope,' states: . The new regulations ~rovide '.: .j'1;t~ts",WaY?, ~~,e. '~n~ycii~al :. ilird' tliafinstructionsare 'already , "A]~, ,this, however, does not

for a three-year course 'of studies' says, the,: obligatiop ~f c~!i~acy- being' drawn up to carry out signify a rel~xation of ,the- ex,.. before' permanent deacons can whic~ .. tl1.~ .. Sh.~r,cJ:1., ,::e,q,~r.~s o~: 'tllese'ideas,. " '. 'isting law .. and must not"' be in-, l>e' ordained' to give them 'sul1i- :th!>se,.. tl.l.k~Il,g. H.oly 9!,d~!s,':'be7,' ',' Ho",ever, the encyclical .notes " ~erp~'~ted ,as a, prelu<le' ~its 'cient religious and intellectual comes"~i c!1fidi,dat.e'.~, o",~ a,e-' that the call to th'e vocation of abohtion,'T-here are better t,hings

;" preparation 'for their flin"ction': If, ceI;lte«J .l>er~()r.ll,l~bli~atio~. \Jf,I::- the p~ie~thoodmustbe nurtured' to, do' b'esides prorlloting, this '.heY are' not 'members of, Re~,. ~er ~~~~n~l.u,e.n~~_.. !»f, di~iil,~ :, ~r::rthi~ ~h~s.e'wh9:~ave,gb',en~.' hyp~th~Si~, ·Which,. tea,r~ do~n, iigious ol'ders they ,must be at' ,,~,'ac~:,.~!Jd. ~ith, 1,ull' h!f}ection pers~nal response, ':At the sam~.. that vlg~r .and love }J} whICh 1a~?ed U!. .,3"rsp~ci.fic dio.ce/;e.,,~. 'aI1~ libet!~::'. ", ,':' .. ",.:,';'. ,.. time .thebiolo-gica.l~hd·psycho7.. c~1iba~y finds s.ec.urity'alld' hap­'-, .. ~, :'::"":; .:, . ,Replymg ~ the 'argument, logical state'Of candidates should: plfiess ~nd' whlCh obsclll'es the

.: :,:Per~anent d~!lc,ons ,are to be'" that celibacy' lmdanger's'·the faHh','\}e carCiUlly take'n irtq a~count" tr~.e· d.qc~ri,ne, tha.t .·'justi:fie~ 'it,s' ,.:' ,under the .a.uU:\ority of the ,~ishop' ',in·.;\he areaS" ;where ;'th~te' are to be' S).1l'e 'th.a,t Jhey:~~~ receive., e"ls.tence,andexalt~its :splef!d~r. '

, 2~dthe'. p~iest inwho.se ie'r~" pries'C"shortil'ges; the elicY'clical' "the gift of chastity.'~ , . It VJould.bemuch ,bet~er to pr~-', : I ":" '~ltOl:y they ',~ork., ~Ilq J1lust be.. points" out' ,that Chiiist' 'started .~ Msgr',' Salvatore qarof.rlo, .a mot"e, serIOus studH~s Ifi' defense , 'pro.vide~ .with .a. spiritual life':w'itti bhiY'theA.'posnes;'''a'hand-,bibli~al,'pt?fe!ls?r" at . Rome's ,l)f the. spifi~~a.l ri!ea,ni,ng :and,

Whl~h .should,,' 1fic.I!-1de : ifl,~eriO!". Il'II ot'men to; al1' 'apl)ea'Fan(:'es ,La{eran Ulllverslty and one of mor~l vallJes of vlrgllllty .and ~edltahol~, d?lly Mass when pos- lackin'g'in number. and' qu'aHty," 'the specialists who helped pre- ,c,elii?acy,", '

. lllble, reCitatIOn of p,art of, the and-appeals loall to '"trust 'the "'pa,l:e the, text of the .encY.clica.I,. "". ~he,,'encyclical ,recommends ,,]Divine' Office; spiritual retreatS providehce' of God, ·Then 'the said" that the' ,matenal for It· medltahon, prayer, the Mass.and 'at least 'once every two~.ears Pope adds';' . was di'awil from studies of thl'ee devotion, to Our Lady w belp,

and ·Bible reading. "It -is: simply not possible ..to ., seIJarate commissions composed' 'safeguard celibacJ'. ' believe' that the abolition of of experts from various parts

: plans' for the .ceasing of con:­':flicts, which have divided' men and' mations in bitter combaw.,

Not conte~t with general ~ peals for peace-especially iI:l Southeast Asia-the Pope hlllll written directly to leaders OD both IIides and has receiveell .em~isaries from the' U,S,S'.& 'iu~d'()ther leading nations of,·the

world, Relief of the refugees 'and the deprived has also been a fatherly concern in all "wars".

Within the Church, the Pope"D 'activity has been especially: striking in the fields of ecumen­ism, liturgical reforms, lay aPOB­tolate, international justice anell peace, restoration of the dia­conate, renewal of religious ' life. reform of pentiential discipline. priestly life and ministry, the role of bishops in their dioceses

.and in the central government oil the Church and in missionary

activity'Num~rous apostolic constit1lll­

'tions, motu proprio and instrue­

a~dPOPulatlOn, the r~orgamza-tlOn of the Roman Cuna, D' th fifth th . urmg e year, eft

looms the' September meeting . of the synod of Bishops, a new

. t .. "'-­expenmen sprJngmg from, ..-Vatican Council which will, seek

I .to express col egtality in a moJre concrete fashion than before. In October, representatives cd th ld' l't' .e"wors al y WIlt gather ~ Rome for the Third World Con­

' gress of the Lay Apostolate U> 'map the future of the work ....., ....the Jaity in carrying out its If4)­

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laud' Tablet Editor On Anniversary.

NEW YORK (NC) -,- Patrick F, Scanlan, managing editor 'of ,the Brooklyn Tablet, was, hon-' ored at a dinner here celebratin'g ,his !>Oth::-nniversary on the di­,eees~n 'newspaper with " .Arcp­. 'bishop, Bl'ian J. 'McEntegart ~f

Bi'ooklyn and Auxiliilr,y .Bish­. op John' J, Boardman, were the . main speakers.. .

Pope Pius' XII named him a ]{J~ight ofSt,GregoJ',)' in i944~

ecclesiastieal celibacy would con­siderably increase' the n'umber of pl:iestly vocations; churches and 'ecclesfal,communities which allow' .their ministers to marry seem' to prove the coiltrary.~·'

. 'The'" reason for the drop' in the ~uinber. of 'vocations, the encyclical continues; is to "be founa:: -,'elseWhere; ."EspeCially, for example, in: the fact' that individu'als imd families have lost their s~nse of' God and all'

;:that )s., holy; their' esteem' for the'9hurch as,the· institution of soilvaiioJi ,th'rough faith' a~d' the

of the world and representing all , viewpoints on the subject. Bish­

'rips wel'e also consulted and· UYou Can' Whip Oan Cream, but drafters of the documents also' had athand numerous individual You Can't Beat Our Milk '!" casesfl'om which to draw ideas. Nevertheless" the Pope followed the entil'e prOcess of the doc­ Yf;)~I' Gull' Hill Route'Man ;s .ument and frequently added' Always ot:Vou, Sel'vice this, own· touches, . Msgr, Garo~

. falo saic:i, so that the docume'nt FOR HOME DELIVERY CALL 998-569'1 'is tni~y his. . The CULF H" AI RYfirst ,section, of. the' first m

. p~rt of. the' encyclical, is' a .de.., , ," .:' '~ '.:I·lL:, D'· . hiiled,'doctrinal examiilation 'of" . ' .' ,.. , ' the ,biblical and thep~o~i~aJ;u;gu-··J, .,_'.... S_O_......_D_A_R..r_M__O...Ul_ T_.~_.,_~_A_S..S_. ..11

Page 11: 06.29.67

Serra President Asks Updating) ~n Programs·',

TORONTO (NC) - Wh~e 60me Serra clubl3 are exCeI~ lent, others are "pl~ding along doing exactly the same work for vocations as they did ]4) years 3tIO," the president m ~rra Intern'ational said here.'

-rhese are the mime clubB: which continue to conduct es­fillY contests without ever having any dialogue or debate wit~

,1hese youngsters, without ever tlharing with the'm their k'nowl­edge and deep, esteem, ,o~"the priesthood," stated Jan, I~. 3. Berbers of Montevideo, Ur'u/tltay.

Berbers addressed· mOl'e 'than 2,500 Catholic laymen from' 20 nations at the 25th annual con- • vention of Serra International,' n group which fosters vocations to the priesthood. Dut'ing the past year, as head of the 12,000­member organization, Berbers visited 279 Serra Clubs in some 32 countries throughout the world. He spoke on "The State of Serra."

"Soine Serrans are up-to-date Catholic laymen co co "'sensitive io fact that society is changiI1g,'"

,Berbers declared. "They" par­ticipate in well conceiv~~ anel!

, conducted formation pr,ograms , , on the Church and iUi doc't~ine

and thus keep'in step wlui::the jpOSt-conciliar Church.

,. ' Errors' , . ,He took :note of "two 'major ,.errors" in thc Sena' opei'ation:' "We are not updating our' ac-, , tivities sufficiently; 'we' arc' not

"using our manpower, efficient-, ly.n

He said it was "unbeliev'eable'" that in the United States, where Serrans who are businessmen bave the benefit of the newest machines and computers, "these Ilame businessmen fail to use these modern tools and ap­proaches in their quest for vo­cations.

"It is required that we pro­duce new films, modern sound, and color films, which present the relevance of the work priests and Religious are doing all around the world.

"It is important that we uti ­)i~e other audio-visual media such as radio tapes, television

,video tapes, and recordings to communicate to the world our

'. great concel'll anq esteem for th~ , "priesthood," Berbers declared. ", ,\ Effective Program

He said that each Serra club, should abandon all "non,..es­

'. rential activities" and organize an effecti ve program toget.her "With their pl"iests, "to study with. ihemtheir role in :the Church of today. >l> >l>, and to Iiive theril- .l)

,!!elves completely w pa~toral -, ference of C~tbolic. Bish!>ps. 'Work and to help define the. Ancient Roots Christian role' of. layman and 'vice President, Hubel't 'Hum­in'iests.;' ' '. phr~y, who was' ur1tlble to, attend,

, T'4) accomplish its goals, Bel'.,. , 'sent a telegram of congnltula.:. . ' bel'S recommended that' the, Ser. tioris, saying ".a'il fa'iths' have

ra International Foundat.ion pro.. ' been enhanced by, Fa~/:Ier Cron;,;' , ", eure a' capillil fund, within the in over'two de'cades as assistant'

next two years, of one million director of, the, Soci~l ,,Action :' ,'.dollars,He s~id. tbe capital fund" Department.': .. . .

would be ,maintained by the'," ,Bishop Wr;ght. said. "it ,'is' . ' foundation, with only the interest fashionable to speak of. ,men

paid out each, year for· ','new lfke Father 'Joh'r, Cronin !IS work­. and exciting projects." ing in the s~,rit, of Pope John

,XXIII, and i ,would be, the last'; to say a word, wQich, would di­Vocations Shortage minish appreci<ltion of Pope John.Studied in Texas

"However, the saintly PopeHOUSTON (NC) - A special would be the first to point out

progl'am to seek. solutions to, that his own' essential witness,what was called a "glaring short­ as that of Father John Cronin, age of vocations to the priesthood has roots much more ancient among Mexican-,Amedcan Cath­ than his pontificate.olics in Texas" has been under­

Learn "'rom "'ailur~taken by the ,;ocat.ion directors in all Texas dioceses. ' "It 'has roots in the Hebrew

As ;l result of this l;epoli, the prophets, in the Christian Gos­pel." ' Texas vocations directors voted

1«1 undertake a special pl'ogram In his addrbs at thc dinner,

Department of, the U.S. Catho­lic Conference for 21 years, was honored at a testimonial dinner here as he prepared to return to teaching. The Sulpici;:ln So­ciety has assigned him to St. Mary's Seminary in Baltimore.

Tributes were paid to Fat.her ,Cronin by Msgr:-George G. Hig,.. gins, director Of the So<;ial Ac­tion Department, who served as' t.oastmastel'; by Rabbi, Hichard' Hirsch of the Union of American

,Hebrew ,Congregations; Clarence, Mitchell, Washington director of the National Associatiort for the Advancement of, Colored People; James, Hamilton, Wash~ irigton dire,c,t.or' of the. Nalional Council' 'of. 'Churches; Bishop John J; Wright ,()f ,Pittsburgh, episcopai chairman, Of the' So­cial Action' ,Department; and Bishop Paul f. Tanner" gereral secretary, of tge,:National, Con~

lHE ANCHOR­ 11J Ih~ll's., June 29, '967

Vell"mofDtf' !L~ymen

Il)mscuss C~uncil WINOOSKI (NC)':"-Fifty-three

laymen, representing some 30 _.parishes 'tbroughout Vermont, . gBthe:red at St. Mi<;hael's College­het~ t~discuss menns of bringing

- the results· of the Second Vatican Council into their communities.

The immediate objective of the Conference 011 Laymen was to loring together representative laymen to advise the Burlington djocesan council's educatiOllld .'commission on the best way to

-_. ~.dUi:aJe the laity in the spirit . .ana happenings 'of the council.

Bishop Robert F. Joyce of(

Burlington gave a brief talk a% the conference, offering his en­couragement and guidance rOlf

lay p8rticipation in the life of the Church.

"I am most impressed by the zeal of the laity," the bishop said!. "In the past we have lacked con­fidence in you," he added, but said that all must now "motivate ourselves to understand tho

AT TES'll'IMON]"AlL: Honoring Father John 1[. Cronin, 8.8., second from left, at a· testimoni'al dinner in Washington, D.C., as he prepared to resume teaching after 21 years as assistant direetor of the Social Action de partment, U.S.C.C., were, left, Bishop John J. Wright of Pittsburgh, episcopal chairman of the social action department; Bishop Paul F. Tanner, general secretary of the Na tionql Conference of Catholic Bishops (seat-.. 00) and Msgr. GeOrge G. Higgins, director of the social action department (standing).

Interfaith Testimonial·' for Sulpician, F~ther' Cronmn,S.S. Returns to Semina ry

WASHINGTON (NC)-Father John F. Cronin,· 8.S., assistant director of the Social Action

social action becom'e as profes­sional as Catholic activities illl education and social work.

"Most of dedicated workers in the fields of race relations and' poverty," he said, "have ac­quired their skills by learning on the job. So far there has been little' intercommunication between specialists who do this 'Work in different dioceses," and asked there be opportunities "to learn from the failures and suc­cesses of others" doing similar work~

Asks Coo)leration His second suggestion was

that "var"ious agencies of the Church cooperate in a nation­wide study of the' 'implications ,of the decided shift of Catholics' into the 'rriiddle' class."

He, pointed' out that Catholics "al'c moving to· the suburbs and building 'new . chUrches and schools;" . 'leaving behind inner­city churches !I,nd schools largely unattended' l:iy those who move . .. ..'"

, ,order.io' 0klahoma's Negro par-, ' Appoi~ts' '0 1 Alessj~~' ishes;" .

" ' Bishop:' Francis C. ~elJe,.,;~To .Education' Post turned Negro' 'pari~hes' over w'

WA$HJNGTON (NC)- Ed- ,'the :,ord¢.r ~n. 1925, In.,H~66, the ward, R, p:Ale'ss)o, assistalit dean ,provincial' of,Vi,e 'otd~r's wCl;ltern of the,,:schoo( of .education at, pr~viil(:e, ,ask:eq 'the "diocese ~ Se~on ltall University, South cOl)sider', "Closing ,N:egrpparishes. Orarige, N. J.; has been named bo~h to fa~ilit.a~e in,tegrati,on and to the newly crented' position of to. allow th~,Roly ;GhostFllthers coordinator of' ,govetnmental ' 'to filla riec;lq for pdellts in Latin' prograrn.." for the department' of' A.merjca~ -'" .,

-Il I ,

FAIR'HAVEN ',l·UM·BER

, 'COMPANY

Complete line Buiilding Mah!riaJs,

5IffllNG ST;, FAIRHAVIN

993-26'1'1

education, Uliit~d' States Cath· olic Conferenc~. The appoint­ment is effective July 1.

D'Alessio, ;l5, has been at RESIDENtiAL Seton Hall for the past nine • SCHOOLS. CHURCHESyeal's,

, \ In announcing the appoint­ DNDUSTRIAL • BUNKER ment, Msgr. James, C. Donohue, director' of the department of D ADSON 'OIL BURNERSeducatiori, 'noted that "the ever­

Complete Heating Installationsincrcasirig volume of fcderally suppol'ted educational programs ·~4 Hour ·Oil Burner Service emphasizes the need to have someone in the mltional office who will' devote his fuJI atten­ GLEN COAL &OIL CO., Inc.tion to gat.hering and disseminat­

in, creating "serious financial and personnel problems Ifor the diocese concerned." ?

Yet, he said, "in most cases the Church is the only powerful agency that can cross political boundaries and unite the city and suburbs in a community of service and concern."

Perhaps, he said, "the Church, in, the United States needs to develop a collective conscious­

, ness that it is largely irrelevant in the lives of 30 01' 40 miJJion poor Americans' >l> * * * If we c,an develop a determination to be totally at the service of those

,in most need, we' can develop the necessary- programs' and techinques."

Holy Gho$t Fathers To Leave 'Oklahoma

'OKLAHOMA· CITY (NC) ':""" Six: . Holy Ghost ,Fathers are leaving Oklahoma and eonclud-' ing' 42 yearsofservic~ by the

Church."

New Cardinals Continued from Page One

')em of renewal in the posf,..conciliar Church and the op­

pression of the Church behjil~

the Iron' Curtain;

Pope Paul said he had 'foUl? reasons for creating the 'new cardinals, which raise the 'mem­

,bership of the college of ~1I'­dinals to a record 118. The firm of these, he said, was to pay public tribute to persons 'Woo have faithfully served the Church both in the Roman Curi~

the Church's central administra­tive offices, in the various ,arch­dioceses, and in the diplomatie corps of the Holy See.

Secondly, he said, he was fol­lowing the example of Pope Pi\\B!l XII and wanted to expand con­stantly the representativen~ of the college.

Thirdly, be said, he wantec\l to bring closer to the central! government of the Church WOll'­

thy and talented persons whf> have had a variety of experi­ence.

Lastly, Pope Paul saId, bJrJ cboice of new ,cardinals W3II:l'

dete.rmined by his desil:e ttl ,make the unity ,and catholicity ,of the Church' shine' ever"'mop ~fore the whole world.'

in cooperation with Mexican­Amel"icnn 'Inymcn· 'to" study the

Father Cronin' 'discussed the fu­ture of CathoTii: social action in

ing inforrnation both ~rom the governri1ent and the variow '640 Pleas~nt Street New Bedf~

JlKoblcm and find somes~ the United SiatE~s, and ,ur~ed that dioceses.' :. i:," •

Page 12: 06.29.67

12 .THE ANCHOR-Diocese of lFan·River-Thurs. June 29, 1967

-Ideon@~y ~f Christa~~ H@!?e Is N,~®ded ~n ;lati~\ l@Oids

.. IEdited by· .Jollm g. Considine, MoM.

From "Social I1tevollotnon iiD th~ Ne~. Latin America"

Granti~g all difficuUies, ~rites Bishop Mark C. McGrath, C.S.C., we nonetheless· realize that the kind of social change we must hope for in Latin America will not merely happen. We must deliberately wor.!c for it. This 1!'equires, as we have pojn~. ~ard goals of progress within' <i)ut, a far more explICIt liberty, the task of helping the ideology of Christian hope passive masses to become respon­

,for man on earth, in con- si~le indiv.idual citiz~~s. We face

t · 'th and tending to thls task In the relIgiOUS order, nec lOn WI h' C th l' 'commit-h' t 1 reward and not fun- w erem our a 0 ICS -

IS e ernla " ment will be less. and less thedamenta ly op- . h .

d t 't N result of structures whlc mam-Plose 0 ~. 0 taiD. the faith, and more and onger can we It f al"'h ' t' more . the . resu 0 person

"" rlS lans thap

- chdic~'-' We' face the same task in pehar . as 1 suf°se the temporal' order. The two or­w 0 slmp y - , ' ' .. . t rt . df h' t d ders are closely In e wme . e~ .~s 0J7 an Thus' it is. that the intense de­

leh.lI ap~ents' sire for personal respo.nsibility 'IW 1 e marXIS d . t 'd' t t t

'pretend to un- an· 10 erme Ia e. ~ ruc .u;es 4i t d'ts flows from the Chnstlan ViSIone r, s adnb ~ts of man. Thus it is that the Catti­laws an ell' h Id f· ' 1 al fmakers. Neither 0 IC S ~u avor .ev~~ oc'" e ­

• s t fort WhICh draws IndIVIduals mtoth X 1e mar , 1 t' f . thwho pretends that history pro- ~mmun~. ,ac IOn) ormmg. :m ceeeds accordingly to determined In a conSCI()~~SS of the dIgnIty and inexorable laws, nor the aId an~ respon~IbI~~ of each, ThlJ!l style economic liberal, wha pre- !t JS that we mSIst tha~ refarm rends ,to canonize selfishness by pra.~ams, whether national. ar aaying that each should work for Alli~"ce fo~ })rogress" 'sho~d himself and history would!. take aVOid the pItfall. of promotmg <care of itself: neither of these' eve,r, m~re,o~mpotent .states. takes a responsible view of his- which may'arnve at the Imme­wry-within which we progress di~te care of material needs. but according to the measure of aur wlll never f?rm ~h.e responSible, aincere and responsible effort for free and acti~e CItizens that de-III better world and according to macracy reqUIres. our measure of man. Church's __ ltesponsibiBitlr

No point is dearer to Ca~holie But how much is the Church OOciaf teaching than the insist- supposed to promote in the social ence on the human person, as the ar temporal order? Obviously, ~ter and reason for the prog- we must distinguish. Christi~n ress of things and of society. No Catholics make up the bulk af amount of economic planning the population. of Latin America; from above can achieve the de- and consequently bear the'maja£' velopment of the whole man nar responsibility for its' social de­of the truly ~uman society. velopment. The· Church, as an Father Vekemans has stressed institution, asmagisterium, or to the fact that the masses of our speak simply; the' hierarchy af people are now atomized, sepa- the Church; has the basic re-ratE'<l, r-,."~rless, subicct to the sponsibility of preaching the ootian af the state, which tends ward' of God, not only in its to act mOl'C and more for them individual but also in its social

, and directly upon them, beca~ dimension. This we have already they are not formed for actiml stressed. Should the Church as and lack the intermediate ar- an 'institution also directly pro­ganizations of family, commu- mote' programs of econamic and nity and specialized endeavor social ~tterment'!

which should channel their aWll We often say that this should free and dynamic work for a bet- be dOi)e whenever other private oor existence. We must grasp the and public forces are lacking for fact that our masses were for the .task. This is a· common situ­centuries tied into, a static aris- ation· in' ,Latin America. Givell tocratic structure, which held 'the lack 'of intermediate struc­them in place while it required tures' lnour midst, in many areas little of them. It'gave them a the .~~JY· pther force at work; kind of security, particularly on apart .from the· Church, iii the the hacienda-type 'rural pattern, governinEfnt" 'often· too. distant, but r~9uired. of them little re- too'bU!~1!uc~atic:01' too steepecI ill t:Ponsd>le action. politic;ll complications. Often,'

Forming Millions too, tl~e ,yery ,programs ,of ,the: As this old structure disap- government fail 'because of the .

pears the innumerable millions suspiciOIi:' or.· passivity ,of·' the' find themselves isolated on the people.. In 'many,)nany ~nstances

land, or in the city slums or in uni~: hl~ :l:1,ishop. or the parislll the precarious existence of the priest or: local" Catholic groups, proletariat. Europe, also, grew give moral sUPP9" to a. program ' 3Ut of feudal structures inta de- it wiii not be done; often, toe, mocracy. This process took cen- if they do not directly pramote turies and is not yet complete. In it, it wHl not be done. Latin America we are trying to When the Church, as an insti­cio it in one generation. Democ- tution, fills in for, the lack af racy, if it is to be government intermediate structures, it retires not only for the people but also from the area when these struc­G)f and by them, requires respon- tures have been created. This is sible citizens. We do not create the ideal; and there are many democracy by merely giving the exampl'es where this has already right to vote to all citizens. Our been done. great passive masses, never used But besides filling in for otheDl to thinking or acting far them- the Church must· fill ,out to their selves, will often either sell their full human and spiritual dimen­vote to the rich Cir cast it wah sion so many efforts in the socio­the demagogue. Our great pas- economic sphere~ The insistence sive masses will \ too typically on the formation of the persians expect everything;to be done for involved for their social· respon­them, either by the State or by sibility is a case in point. There the popular leade~ or by tlfIe are 'many" othe~A merely tech­Church. We have before us a nical approach to the problem tremendous task not merely of" of'development, lacking 'in' 'the education' but ef formation, not idealogy, of human values, is a merely in scliools but In learning - dangerous, thing, convertible, to ,. work together conSciouslY' to:: .'.. 'aiij-~totalitatian purpose.

" '

CURJ!:UCULM WO:!ROCSlHfOP: Seeking a unified curriculum for Catholic religious education programs throughout the U.S. Army are, left to right: John Shultz, direc.tor of Religious -~ducation, Fort Meade, Md.; Chaplain (Col.) Raymond Gough of Carhs!e Barracks, Pa., Msgr. Russell Neighbor, associate director, National Center, Confratern­ity of Christian Doctrine, and Sister Mary Judith of the Mission Helpers of the SaCJred

. ,Heart, Baltimore NC· Photo.

.PrQPose Unified Religious Curriculum Involves Education Programs ~t Army Posts

FORT MEADE (NC) - The Confraternity of Christian DoC­ find the' Catholic religious 00.­adoption of a 'unified curriculum 'trine. cation program a continuatiOll. for 'Catholic religtous education of what' it had been a.t the lastThe conference also recom­programs throughout the U. S. post.

mended the establishment at ..Army will be recommended to single source- of supply for texts Also considered at the work­the Army's Chief of, Cha~lains and audio-visual materials. Cath­ shop as a means of dealing witllin a comprehensive report pre- olic chaplains at post level have constant personnel turnover wupared by a conference, of mili­ previously had to order these the possibility of initiating a sys­tary 'and civilian religious edu­ directly, from· the publishers. tem of referring servicemen WMcators' at the U. S. Army ,Chap­ Recommended is a central supply are also experienced catechistlllain Board here. service to serve as a liaison with to chaplains at their new post.

In votes taken on the majar the publishers and the Depart­ ,whenever they aretra!"sferred.issues discussed at the four-day mElfit of Defense..

'workshop the educators over­ , The conference also recorD­Upon the approval of the Chiefwhelmingly supported the con­ mended short, intensive trainincof Chaplains, Father (Col.) :Jo­cept of a central curriculum pre­ for catechists so that teachel'llseph T. Kasel, deputy of thescribing ·subject matter to be would not be lost because atU. S. Army. Chaplain Board, willtaught simultaneously in all af change of station while beinCsupervise the actual compilatioitthe Army's Catholic reIigiaus ed­ trained.and writing of the proposed standard curriculum. '

ucatian programs. The curriculum would leave

the selection of catechetical texta Servicemen Cateehlsts Priests' Senatefrom an approved list to the in­stallation chaplain. ­ According w Father Kasel the VANCOUVER (NC)--Theflne

Ute unified curriculum would l,U'­ meeting of the Vancouver an:b­Central' Supply Service low a child to go with his parents diocesan priests" senate was •

The conference participantll from, M.lC . post ... another 8Dli tended b,- ArchbishopMartia selected texts to be included im M. :Johnson, Bishop':J. F. Carne7' the curriculum on II grade-by-­ and the 11 priest-senators. The. 'Elects Officers"grade, basis from among the ma­ group elected' officers for two­terials of 19 pU.blishers. , GRE~T 'FALLS (NC)-~ year terms, 'and' were advised.

Each '. text~was discussed indi­ GreatFallEi diocesan senate of bf' tile archbishop to study suciIl vidually to determine whether priests haa elected ita first liIet questions as the 'best use of del'­it met the needs of modern post­ of officers. Twelve priests were ical manpower and collegiate ap­Vatican Council II catechetics, ali chosen . to represent diocesaa proaches 10 division of work; outlined by· the· worli:shap parti­ clergy,: religious communities guidelines on' the best age for cipants by Msgr. Russell J. Neigh- and teaching priests ill the ... priests' retirement; and erectio. bor associate 'director of the· cooilcil"" Montana.; fill new parishes.

'

Holsum Bread Is tbatgood!

Page 13: 06.29.67

THE ANCHOR-Diocese ott fan River-Thurs. June 29, 'WWScores Physicians" Change 13'

Syrian Bnshops Take .Up Catholic ProblemsOf Abortion Policy Stand .....KOTTAYAM (MC) -A com- "some local problems which are stance of Ecumenism." The Diittee of bishops bas been in disagreement with the attitude ticle contained quotes from tilWASHING1'ON (NC) - The direetoo' m the Fmnily named by the Syrian Orthodox of unity and statements of the letter to Bishop AthanasioS com­

Life Bureau of the United States Catbolie Oon:ference has ,Church of India to take up "some Catholic Church since the Vati­ plaining that Orthodox Ch~

charged thwt the American :Medieall Assooiation'l/l policy local problems" with the coun- can Council." tians in South Kanara (Mysoftl try's Catholic Bishops' Confer- The announcement did, not state) are being "lured" to jom ence. specify the problems, but ob- the Catholic Malanltara rite witll

change on abortion urepreseDte a clepreci~ Gf the value of human life." According to

eli JeSponsIbiDty fM the gOOd af A synod 'announcement said servers called a recent arlicle in offers of money, jobs, and scholJ,..Father James T. McHugh, llOciety is decidedly laek.iJJig I/Iil the committee will contact the the Orthodox Church's official 8I'ships.the &tatement eondoning :re­ the ,pan cd: IDe AMA.rtJ Catholic Bishops" Conference O!il organ \Older the title "An :In­Jl.axed abortion 1a w 8 a l!I adopted by the association" J!)olicy-making House o.f Dele­gates "presages a decided- change in the philosophy cxf medicine and II whole new era in .Amelio- ­.ican medical practice."

"By providing for liberatiza­tion when there is documented! medical evidence that the infant may be born with incapacitating physical deformity or mental de­ficiency," Father McHugh stated, "the A.M.A. places the decision­making power on life and death in the hands of doctor and pa­tient without any safeguard m the right of the unborn child."

HUDman lLfili'ill Wmnnne

He also noted thlllt "one of the many reasons for the change in policy is to help provide greatei' legal safeguards to doctors who wish to perform therapeutie abortions, even though in the words of the statement, 'there ifl no consensus among physiciaJlfl on the medical indications for therapeutic abortion.'''

"We are aware," Father Me­Hugh said,' "of the human prob­lems'that give rise to a consider­ation of abottion. We are also aware of the concern of physi­cians who find themselves threatened by the present laws. Unfortunately, the AMA shows itself willing to increase the reasons for granting abortion without any assurance that thiD will decrease the overall inci­dence of abortion. Such a policy change represents a depreciatiolll\ of the value of human life.

One Wmy WDew

:'In opting for liberalization. no specifi<! provisions were sug­gested," he continued, "to insunl D continual analysis and evalua­tion of the incidence of abortion. and the reasons-medical, social and psychological - f'ur which abortions are performed. NCl> great concern was shown for safeguards to assure that the sanctity and dignity of human life is not further denigrated m our society.

"The lack of objectivity m. thinking, and the ambivalence toward the value of human life are awesome indications of the emerging decadence that threat';' ens our society. Despite the lack. of consensus over the medical! and psychiatric indiction for therapeutic abortions, the AMA has manifested these attitudes in its new policy stand. To this de­gree, the freedom of the physi­cian may ~e assured, but- a sense

Brrink Heads Prrciect htl Michigan Diocese

LANSING (NC)-Anthony Jr. Brink, 47, professor of speech; debate and drama at St. Paull Seminary. Saginaw, for the last five years, takes over July 1, a:l

the first full-time program direc­tor for the Renewal Througb Vatican II Project in the Lan­sing Diocese.

Brink will supervise proposed apostolic formation centers iD the diocese; plan and organize apostolic institutes for the laity; supervise preparatio,n and distri­bution of program materials ,and serve as liaison with parbill chairmen so diocesan prograJDll will more efJ:ectively ~ael:l tIiIl JNIrish level.

He will work with Father Wil­liam J. Ra()emacher, who served! as full-time director of the PI'P' eram jor the last year. '

HUNGER•••

"

Try liVing om one 3 ounce bowl of rice a dayo , sometimes every other day.

Two hundred million people in India dol Throw your weight around a little,

by making a gift to the starving of the world. <>

~=="~~=-""!1lame: ~_ _=_·

address:__-===..-=;==~ --==,

THE- MISSIONS NEEI;) YOUR ,HELP IN'THE SUMMER TOO!

lHE RIGHT'REVEREND EDWARD,T. O',MEARA, NATIOI'lAL DIA£crOR,­

,THE SOCIETY FOR'THE PRO'PAGATBONIOF IIiE FAITH, 3~ FIFTH AVE., N.'Y.;N.Y. 1~01

Il!llI FA.... IIIVER youa DIREctOR III aT. liiW......'iIllOHD cONe lOINI', 36e 1\1. MAIN ItT.'

Page 14: 06.29.67

"'f'".' '!'

Movel Covers·:'C·ruciaIY.ears·' In ··Laf~ of' S~0 .Augustine

JBy Rt. Rev. Msgll."• .1fOllallll S. Kennedy Rex Warner is a writer -whose novels, although ne.'VeF'

enjoying exceptional sales, .have 'won' high praise from discriminating' readers and..rev~ewers, Speci~esteem is, accorded his historical novels, laid in Greece or Rome. His

· l~tes~, The Converts (Atlan- some years, and they have a son, · bc-LIttle; Brown. $5.95; 8.. Adeodatus, a bright and amiable Arlington St. Boston, Mass. . youngster. 02116), deals with some cru- •.' AI;lgustine's' mother, ~onica ~al years in the life of St.' Au-. (which name Mr. Warner, for

'gUstine. The narrator is Alypius,;.:B~rp-~ reason spells with.tw~ ~'s) s friend of Au- '.: ~. 41stressed both by ~his Halson

. ~; :gUl"tine's and a ..' :.~A.iigustine's a~d.bY h.is ref~sal '. fellow African. ;,.~'l!ecome.aChrIstian; A.~gustme,

'''''''A!ypius is 2l~.·~pius,.ai1dtheir·fri~nds are'and settled . in ·;,;.tIt:o·re, amulied-t!i;m impressed by . the late fourth>~bii~~ity.'They, 1ind.i~ te?ets ..

". '~entury .as· his <~~.~~d'~d f~I.~~Q!contradictIons <" account begins.'..~~.~~~?OSSI~ilitles.Mor~ov~r, "" He. is complet_,,;Shrl.stlC~ns.seem sc~rcely ~~mlr-

. 'lng law studies "ableto:the~... '.' ' . and means soon .' ~:~~: .' , Christians' JI1'liults . ~ go into prac- '. ,.•... .A.I¥Pitts, in. R0.r:ne,,:'~bServes

.' tice. Since child- '.' th~ -the' pope IS, rIch, . and that · bood he has .' ;··€,ltristi~ns are qUit~ as '~Jn~i~ious ·known' Augustine, and his ad...,~:Qt!'ers, extr~mely eO!llent~ous,

,., 'wration for this older 'friend":,..· aji!hin.tolerant'l>f. views differing ro CANADA: Archi>ishop . ,; 'Is 'unbounded:' , )';':~iit' ttieir ovVn.> . . .'" Emmanuele ", Clarizio .h a 8 .... ,'.. Along w~th t' another. friendr":L~~Jl,ey'are vin~~«~ve:·to·peo~le

been' named Apostolic:D.ele~. ,. ~ebri<;lius"f\ugustine and AJ~;J~~lf':sty~~her.etu:~; DUX religIOn y • ,.ius .decided some years' ~arlieti;),i~~."polibcs, and .applaud per- gate in Canada, succeeQing

"".(W devote themselves deliberately:,<.:!~erS on the' stage or in the to the post .left. vacant by. the .~~." to, th~ pursuit of wisdom...Thei-'·'I~#anotfor.t?eits.t~ill,but be­ transfer of Archbishop .Ser­l. , .Jl!~ve kept at. this ta~k, b~t ~~ve.;j~·. of th~~r' bE;~~g fellow giov Pignedoli to the Roman ., Ili\Qt yet reac.hed theIr oPJechve.,.y ~nl,>ti~ns. ..:~,':',

Curia. NC Photo.;, Rome, Alypius finds, is chang-:,,::.~,:}~tJ.rPIUS<;an~a8,lIY see th~f~rce !Jlng rapidly, The empire is in; ~ SO!,~e contentIOn.that ChrIShans

". decline. Chrlsitianitr is no,longer.1·i.a~·t~nemies o~.the· old Roman persecuted; indeed, it is th~ stat~·t-~;;~l~ty. . : .. '. ,. .

;3;'tteligion. But there are divisions '-;J\.:.H,e is oveI1oyed';to learn that. $cDn@oD Balarae~ ... ', mnong ChI'lstians. Arians" . and.:·; ':A~tine, alr~a~y ~ 'cel~~rated

';. '.' IDbnatists, :for example, reject teacher of. rhetOrIC, IS commg to ILmw $et" Aside ··'-'oome p'art of traditional doctrine.. ~ome. In .the Eternal City, Au­

. " ~. . Psychologiesl Touches'. : '." gustine' quickly makles his mark, BIl1tU3mnoi~,':< The ·old Roman r~ligioil,:'t~at .·.,the~·mov~s on to.~lan '(where 'SPRINGFIELD (Nt> • J

..... <If'the pagan gods, IS guttenng·.!..thetImpenalcourt.lI,l:now estab- " ., .'.". '. . lMlt. Still devoted to it is ·~.:ma~" ~~~~, to ;take up ~.. official :'.IJ.t,~~W~.Oll~, Suprem.e ~ourt

.. ,. "who is a kind of patron to Alyp- . p(Wtion, . ', . pas decl~red unconstItutIonal· ,.. "·-.jUs, 'and a person of· iritegrity/" ... 'lIIllftuence 01 Ambrose a state law directing school e' .. Prate'xtatus, who achie~es: the";' .- Aljpius joina 'him there,' and 'districts·to· periodically redraw

<mlinence of the Praetorian 'pre- botla observes and shareS the atteIid'ance boundaries· to facili ­" .. :Ilectship.. He together !f!th hia steps which finally bring Augus- tate integration. . .:.:.-·...'~ife, Paulin~, are of nob~~,<;llar- tine into' the Christian Churcli. The decision was handed down .,,,,,. ~,ter, representative o~. :the.,be~t One 01. the~ is the infAllence of just. ·t~· days' after a federal'.<, In.pagan Roman virtue. ~uqhelr Ambrose, the remarkable bishop judge in, Washington declared . ,.: .,llteliefs are ill).possible for Alypius. of Milan, whose-preaching, with ~e fac~ school segregation un",: .'. ' An alternative is philosophy. itll e10seIT knit argume~tation, constitutional. ,.' ~e has looked widely and r~ther its eminen.t reasonableness, and 'N' i 'hbo hodS h Is

deeply into, this, but it cannot its explication of the Scriptures,' e I: roc 00

, ~ffer the ultima'te wisdom, and it... il1u~nes many q~~stioDil and, The I,llinois 'decision voided a aupplies nothing to love and to"·solveS. 'many difficulties. state law-called the Armstrong

.. worshJp. Because of a horrible' ," Augustine becomes convinced A~'Which directs local school early experience, Alypius is dis- . 'oftbe 'trUth of Christianity. Lu:'" boards to redraw school atte~d-·

.;gusted by sex, but he takes plea-' 'cilla .is sent away, ~te~a strug-, ance ·boundar~es to pre~en.t de. '!Jure in the blood sports of the gle which almost prostrates Au- facto segregatIon and ehmmate 'arena. Here.. as elsewhere, Mr.·.gustine. separation 'of students of' differ-Warner introduces modempsy- ·The well-known episode in 'ent color, race.and natiomility. <thological touches. '.which Augustine hears a child'i. In his, majority opinion, Jus-

Mother Distressed voice saying again and again, tice Byron .0. House said "while Augustine's search as Alypius . "Take and read" and thereupon the act does not use the terms

reports it, has, in general, had· looks at a vers~ from the Epistle 'racial imbalance" or de facto· similar stages: He is now a dev- ·to the Romans that breaks upon' segregation' we feel that the pur­otee of Manichaeism, the doc- him like a revelation, is featured' po~ o~ the act is to eliminate trine that whateve'r is good (in-, in the last page of the novel. It raCIal. Imb.~lance. . including man's soul) ·is created concludes with -both Augustine "ThIS raises a questIon of when by God, and whatever is evil (in- 'and Aly-pius preparing' for bap-' a school is ~aciallY imbalanced."

, . <eluding man's body) is created tism. .The, qu~stIon :was not answered ::. by Satan. But the teachings of lFoBiows 'Confessions' In the act, he said, and it leaves

the Manichees is beginning 10', ·.. ··A cOmparison of Mr. Warner'1I in 'doubt ,.the fate of the neigh­llose its grip' on Augustine. ... novel with'The Confessions of 81: borh~ school concept - one

Not so, however, Augustine's '.' 'Augustine showsthlllt he has' ~hi~h..,.Judge ~ouse, like many passion for his mistress, Lucilla~" . 'drawn heavily on thelatier, and JU~~es before hIm, has been un­Be has now lived with her for·."'·has·not, as far 'as I can judge, WI1li~g .~scrap.

• . ' ,. departed radically from it. " lIlIil:h Court .Test . BUSiness LeClJders .. It·is 'true that the Confessiona House's" opinion reversed a

V· ··t' p' pO' suggest a developing attraction lower court ruling which orderedTo .ISI ope aUB to Christ which Mr. Warner d0e5· the Waukegan Board of Educa­I

NEW YORK (NC)-Thirty-six not stress, but the novelist haa tion to 'redraw attendance lines American business' leaders' left' not done violence to Augustine'~ for Whittier elementary school, ~ennedy Internationat'-Airport· story as he himself record'ed it. .which is 85 per cent Negro, and here for an interfaith visit to the· I!e_~anages to, Work. tn much four all-white schools in the Vatican :where they wm discuss background material about the city. ­witli :pope Paul VI his encyclical.. times,' the politics,. the society, Judge HQuse said any law

. on t~e plight of poor countries. the thought, the. varieties of reli- . which ~qntaihs a racial classifi ­~The encyclical, issued March gion. against which Augustine's cation ~is arbitrary and unrea­28, was entitled "Populorum seareD. for ultimate reality woo S9nable and violates the equal ' fr0gress,io" - The Deve\opment carried on: . , ,protection Clause' of the 14th

.;: Gil. Peoples.· It called for: ifi(e·r~. '.' Tilere' is som¢ rePetition in Amen~men~t ' lilati·onal.programs to combat the ..; Alypius'·. descriptiOn.. of these.. While other courts-until the

~: "'scand.al' of glaring inequaiitieS" elements and S9me tedium in the.. recent W~shingt;on decision-had .... ~tween: rich and poor natiOOsi' pacing "Of the booK, which is ' retu8ed to'deciare de facto segfe­~:: Each member o.f th~ deJ$.g~ti.~; ...~~lP.lt~ reproduce (and giner':- ::ga..~~91( ~qC9\1stjtl,ltional,the 1&:-. .', .. ~i~l,g\ve.l.l~li views. on t~e :~li,~v~': . ·.a~ly.suc·ceed,s) th~ style of ·w.rit-., .• su.e Jll~S, ~~yer Peen decided be­

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Page 15: 06.29.67

Thurs., June 29, 1967 15THE ANCHOR-Bishop Mede,iros Launches Brownsville Catholic Paper Bisho~ Medeiros

BROWNSVILLE (NC)-The Vaney Catholic Witness, Pa~1i;1))[?@~ Urgesnewspaper of the two-yea:r-old Brownsville diocese, made

its debut Sunday in most amusual fashion-is was publish­ Ye(Qw @{F ~C!la\?iied as a supplement and ci:rculated with the Brownsville Her a I d, local newspapell'. BROWNSVILLE (NC) =>

own purpose and .follow our pol­Bishop Humberto MedeirosBrownsville's Bishop Hum­ icy and are happy to acknowl­

berto S. Medeiros in launch­ edge that the Brownsvilll~ Her­ of Brownsville has issued a ing the paper said: "For the ald. enjoys the same right to pastoral letter urging Cath~ present, due to our meager re­ pursue freely its aims and pol­ olics in his diocese'to respond to

icy as a newspaper. The Valley Pope Paul VI's' request for 11 Catholic Witness and the Free­

sources,. The Valley Catholic Year of Faith.

dom Newspapers have no inten­Witness will be published only twice a month and In English The year, beginning today, il!Ition of directing or endorsing theonly. We hope that your enthu­ an observance of the 19th cen­policy and views of each other."siastic response will make llt tenary of the martyrdom of thethe bishop said.possible for us to publish it once Apostles Peter and Paul. Bishop a week, with a section in Span­ Medeiros recommended "prayer­ish, in all the Valley news­ ful study and meditation of the papers." Relief lAid Goes truths of our holy Faith," as one

The bishop expressed his grat­ way of observing the anniver~To .Middle East sary. of the Freedom Newspaper, for NEW YORK (NC)-The head itude to E. Robert Segal, editOr,

The Texas See Shepherdeontracting to print the Catho- Of the HolY,See's Falestine reliei warned that "some among us lie paper for six months as an' agency has left, here for. the seem intent on destroyinginsert to the Brownsville Herald. Middle East to take command of through the evils of confusion"

Segal also agreed to supply .. ' Cathol~c field operation~ to aid' the truths of the Catholic faith.,sufficient number of copies to refugees of the Arab-Israeli war. He said there are many in the be distributed at the doorS ~. ,Msgr. J:ohn G. Nol;m, president· Church today "who may be and all Catholic church'es in the di- of the Pontifical Mission for sometimes are men of great and ocese without extra east, the Palestine, left for Rome and Bei­ recognized intellectual abilitybishop stated. rut. He said he was ~ncoU:raged and scholarship, but who seem tel

by reports that both Arab and have lost the divine gift of faith."Presents Truth Israeli governments are coming

Bishop Medeiros, who was"It shall be our policy not to grips with the 19-year-old chancellor of the Fall Riverto engage in fruitless polemiCs refugee problem. . (Mass.) Diocese until he W88and debates," the bishop wrote.' "These huge concentriltions of elevated to the episcopacy, cited"We shall endeavor to -present poverty on both sides of the new Pope Paul VI's remarks atthe truth as revealed by God ' military lines are now imposing Fatima when the Pontiff warnedand explained by the teaching critical economic stresses'. that against those who would replaceoffice of the Church, under, the cannot be ignored," Msgr. Nolan the sound doctrine of the pastguidance of the Holy Spirit. We said. with new and "peculiar ideolo­believe that the truth when He said he hoped to be 're­ gies."

simply and sincerely told h8s ceived by Pope Paul 'VI, whO has its own power to win the min~~ dispatched emergency funds and Bishop Medeiros urged CatIF and hearts of men. 'relief supplies to the Ixmtifical , oHcs in the Brownsville Diocese

"We shall report .accurately' mission.· He said Americans'tOo to listen to the "living voice of and objectively the work Of are responding to the emergency the teaching office of the magis­God's people in the world, in the, appeal for relief ,funds. made . terium (teaching authority). of nation, and especially in our di"7 .' ,through· the Caiholic·:NearEast Paul VI dispatched ,l\'isgr. Joh~ G. Nolan of .Catholic Near the Chul'ch," and not to the "al­ocese; these works are t9 ~ ,Welfare Association. . East Welfare AssocialtiOn, New York,. with funds and iuring but confusing voices'· of

th~se who set themselves up .,our witness ~ Christ andwil~ Msgr. Nolan 'said he' hopes to plane-loads of relief supplies to aid displaced victims of serve to inspire all of· us ~ .. :re-open suppiy lines broken by 'M~sters in Israel' with only their build up the IGngdom of Go<i," the fighting. . the' Middle East war.' TJ:te ,Albany, N.Y., priest said the scholarship, real or presumed. Bishop Medeiros continued. The pontifical DiissioJl,' he said, ,rontiff was deeply moved by many gifts from ADieric~s. .to back. the 'peculiar ideologies'

"We are free to earry out our ,. has ,emphasized· self-help' re- • Anting to aid refugees. NC Photo. ~ey preach." training as a lasting s.~lution of The Bishop' suggested ~ the refugee problem, "but right Catholics study the ConstiutiODllSee to Observe · now, it's an urgent 'mailer 'of

· bread, . blankets, medical help on the church and on Divine Revelation proclaimed by' the

Papal ,Ai'd Arrives and, perhaps, the encouragingYear of Faith Second Vatican Council. He' alsOword thCllt somebody still cares." Holy FatheR' Sends Food, ClothingLOS ANGELES (NC) - Tb~. asked families to recite the

1.5 million Catholics of the Los Apostles Creed or the NiceneTo MiddUe East War Victims Angeles archdiocese will begin <::atholic Relief Unit Creed together daily during the> the 'Year of Faith requested ~ BEIRUT (NC) - Two ship­ them. We are here at the request Year of Faith.

, ,"" ' . M;ID~LE EASt R.~tI,EF: To the Holy L;and, P()pe

by man through tqe centuries." 850 refugee families. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO~i:X'X)o()ooIOO~ The cardinal asked all to Supplies to be shipped from At the airport, where he was

.;,~~,~r-;-.-~~ ­pledge themselves to a g~eater Great Lakes ports soon include met by the Apos.tolic Nuncio to '. :'" FREE AOMISSIONknowledge and practice of the 1 000 tons of dried beans valued Lebanon, Archblshop Gaetano

faith. at $160000' 50 tons of ~lothing . Alibrandi, and members of the valued ~t $i42,500; $20,000 worth) Pontifical Mission fi.eld team

Clerg'y COmmlt.55.·0n of medit;ines and eating and . who ope~ate out of Be~rut: M~gr. cooking utensils for 7100 fam- Nolan sald that the dlstnbutIon

SPRINGFIELD (NC)-Bishop' ilies. ' ''will be on the basis of need-Christopher J. Weldon of Spring- - Meanwhile, the first of several not creed." field has appointed 10 priests to ship.ments of emergency supplies 'Sympathy, Sorrow' serve on the Bishop's ·Cominis- for Syrian victims of the Middle Thanking civil, military and alon for the Clergy. All will serve East war has been turned over to religious authorities for their OPENthree-year terms on the' advisorY .Syrian government' officials· by' assistance, he said: "We are here body, the first ·such :group' in' repr.esentatives of a" special as priests to express to the ,vic­

Pope Paul VI with a solemn pro­ Helps ·War Voctmms. ftlents of medicines, food, cloth- of Qur Holy Father, Pope Paul fession of faith. NEW YORK (NC)-A spokes- ing and bedding arrived here VI, to convey to them the pro­

In a letter announcing prep­ man for Catholic Relief Services aboard an Alitalia Caravelle, found sympathy and love he has arations for the Year of Faith, has Sl;lid the overseas aid agency gifts of Pope Paul VI to the for them. James Francis Cardinal McIntyre of U. S. Catholics is sending victims of the Middle East War. ''This shipment comes fromasked the profession be made on · more than $665,000 worth of food Planned as a pilot project to the Holy Father. A second willthe year's opening day today, by, and other supplies to victims of be followed by several more arrive tomorrow. morning. Sev­recitation of the Apostles Creed the Middle East conflict. emergency planeloads, they eral more will follow once wein unison in all churches. Donations which have already were to be trucked to Damascus, have assessed the exact needsIn his letter announcing prep­ arrived include over 3,675 tons Syria, and Amman, Jordan, for and assured ourselves that thearations, the cardinal commented of food and clothing, $25,000 immediate assistance to refu­ aid will actually reach those who on the domination of contem­ worth of medicine and eating gees. need it most immediately. Much porary culture by a humanism and cooking utensils for 8,350 Aboard the. first plane' was of the future aid will come fromthat ignores God and attributes families. Msgr. John G. Nolan', president persons and agencies all oVer theall goodness and progress to ,The spokesman said that a of the Pontifical Mission for world who share the suffering ofman's self-sufficiency. shipment of 2,625 tons of food- Palestine, who in a private audi­ those in pain."There is an absence of aware­ stuffs, valued at $334,600' now on ence two days before had been ness of supernatural origin or the high seas lani! originalJ.r des- assigned by the Pope to assess "The Holy Father has urgeddestiny," the cardinal wrote. tined for several Mediterranean the immediate needs of refugees me to convey to the victims of "However, these elements must countries served by CRS, has and report back to him for fur­ the war his overwhelming sym­be preserved or we perish. We been diverted and will be sent to . ther supplies. pathy and sorrow. He is askinghave come into being through the all men of good will to help himJordan. Msgr. Nolan planned to or­creation of God. Our human na­ Remaining supplies scheduled ganize committees in both Da­ in this special project which he ture is subservient to divine in- to be flown to' Jordan in the near is beginning in the Arab coun­

. spiration and grace. It is only future include antibiotics and mascus and Amman to expedite tries with this shipment."distribution and to assure that itthrough this divine quality that vitamins valued at $5,300 and reaGhes the most needy imme- . we can define the progress made eating and cooking utensils for diately. -

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Page 16: 06.29.67

, ' '

16 THE ANCHO~-Diocese of Fail River-Thurs. June 29, 1967

WHEN IN DOUBTCLIP AND SAVE

CONSULT L"STFOR GUIDANCE

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!= Africa-Texas Style Double Man, The Frankenstein Conquers tile Reluctant Astronaut, The They Came From Beyont?

A Man For All Seasons Double Trouble World Return of the Gunfighter Space = CLASS A. Arizona ,Bushwacker Endless Summer, The Frontier Hellcat Russian Adventure Thoroughly Modern Millia E -Bible, The Fanta'stic Voyage Gentle Giant, The Russians Are Coming, The Thunderbirds Are Go

Brighty of the Grand Canyoa Fastest Guitar Alive Goal! Russians Are Coming, The Tiko and the SharkSECTION ~

Bullwhip Griffin Finder's Keepers I Deal in Danger Sound of Music, The ATime for BUrRing Cat, The _ Follow'Me, Boys Is Paris Burning? . Sullivan's Empire

:AORALLY UNOBJECTIONAtJU.lE IFO~ . Christmas That Almost Further Perils of laurel ", Jack Frost (Rus.l Tammy and the Millionaire Wasn't, The Hardy, The Monkeys Go Home , Tarzan and the Valley of Gold

GENERAL PATRONAGlE Cool Ones, The The Gnome-Mobile Namu" The Killer Whale Terrornauts, The '~ Countdown 40 Guns to Apache Pass Plainsman, The ' That TeMessee Beat

:C:' ~I1HtIIlIllHII"IHIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIII"IIIII11"HlllllIIOOIllliIIl!Cllmllllll_

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I' CLASS il Brides of Fu MaacIl8, • Faflrenheit 451 La Y"U! de Chale.. (frJ Poppy Is Also II Rower, 1M '" ftle Oewn Staircase Brown Eye-Evil Eye First to Fight Man Who Finally Died, .. Projected Man, The War Wagon, Tile ' Chubasco The Flim-FliIIII ,M3II' ~ Mummy's Shroud led Tomahawk Warning Shot Come Spy With Me Fort Ut2h Naked Among the Wolves Shadow of Evil Way West, Tile Deadly Bees, Tile Gunfight in Abilene (Ger.! Shameless Old lady, The IFrJ The Wild, Wild PlanetI MORALLY U::::NABlO ...- ' TheDefector, The IGrJ In like Flint O.S,S. 117, Mission for • Texican, Yo-Yo Ifr.) Doctor Zhivago Hostile Guns Killer IFr.l . iobruk§ ,ADULTS AND ADO&.IESamS Eight 0t1 The l.aII ' Jokers, Tete lOrJ Perils of Pauliue ... Sir, Wi"' Love

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Accident 18rJ Diwrce American S'iyb lIIawall Rot Wi"' My Wife Tou Do., Shoot Loud, Louder • • • CLASS A. Barefoot if! the PIn Eldorado Haney Pot, The Pawnbroker, The Don't Understand l1tiJIJ

Busy Body, The lEt Greco Hotel Penelope Spy With a Cold Nose The Caper of ttle QoIdeiI For 1I Few Dollars More Hot lad to lfell Professionals, \T-he Study in Terror, AlBrJ

Bulls Fortune Cookie, The Hunt, The lSp~ Ouiller Memorandunl, .... Sweet LO'te, Bitter , Caprice F~ankenstein Created WOIMIl Island of Terrer Rage Taming of the Shrew

MORALLY UNOBJECTIONAlII1.IE IFOIt Casino Royale FIIflfIY Tiling Happe ned OIl ... King of Hearts Return of the Se¥llll Triple Cross Chuka Way to the Forllla, A Made ill Ital, Riot on Sunset Strip TfUnk to Cairo

ADULTSE ACountess Frem. _ .... ,Funeral jQ 8erlitl A Man anll A-Womaa .. Rough Night in .!erie. Two For The Road= Cmy Quilt, 1M GraiMl Prill McGUire, Go Home Sand Pebbles, The Venetian Affair, The Deadly Affair, "'" tiail! Mafia Tile Naked Runner Sandra (ltal.) TIle War Game Devit's Owu, 1M tt8jlpeRiag, h ' li&lIt of tile Generlk s,irit Is Williltl. 1M WlIefe The Bullets Fir lIfJi

§.MIII4IItIIIIIIIHH"lIIllltIIlIICIII"II"ItItIH"IIIIItIMIR««~v '

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Alfie I8rJ Girl with Gre" Eyes," Red 0eseIt Young lIlId' tile Willing, ....r-·''''':::'":'"- .,..Darling , Knack, The (~r J Servant, The Y"let. IBrJ IBrJ Easy Life, The IltaU lord lO1fe a Duct Strangers ill t8Ie City Visit, The ZOfbI, 'Ale Greet= SECTION 4 The Family Way 18rJ MaratlSade Taboos of ttle Wcirld Ill. Who's Afratd of ¥lrginla '

§ MORALLY U1NOBJECTIONAImll.IE IFOR Fliime and the Fiq Moment of Tru' • This Sporting life' (lId Woolf? ' § ADULTS, WITH RESERVAlI'OOm Georgy Girl lBrJ PersoOll (SwedJ 100 'Ioulli W L1Ml "'Jle 1 Bi& &or Now

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I Africa Addio ntatj Covenallt llrifli De8tlla, I SIeepfng Car IRunhf, 1IIe Way • • • Way Out! American Dream, AI Oe~lier Thil The Male ~ Flight !C lBrJ Welcome to Hard Times Arrivederci, Bally! Devifs Angels Swinger, 'Rae What A Way to GoaASS B (formerly You Just •• IIklctcr, You've Got b ~ 'UIlis Property is Conde/lUll!lill What Did YOIl 00 ill the _ Banning otiddillg aae of Indiffereaee 0taU Daddy? Beautiful Swindles, .. iNel M. Di&lt~ lonl CataiIII Whafs New Pussycat

======' MORALLY OBJECTIO,INIAW' ''Dilree Bites u4 the ~ , Who Killed Teddy 8earTBiggest Bundle of 11IIe!I .. . IFistful ef DoIlm IN fART IFOIi AU The Guoo .. "eking QueGllI Who's Been Sleeping lit ..

Blue Max, The Guide FO( Tile M&frie@ ~ lied '

D' 'fiR Maria

Corrupt Ones," r:&ed !Wier, ~ • Vis4:ouIIt .... An&els, ThI

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Affair of the SVthl, tJj Hurry Sundomi ~~ 0 fli9Gw Q"d ~~,~~ ~ '~ Paris (Fd Bambole Utal.) I love, You lOI1e ~ Loves c1 11 BIOItlta l~ ~ (lbsessicm UQJ iemptatioll lFr.-ltalJ Bell'Antonio IltaU Image of love Lovi;lg Couples ~ (1!3 ~llI'd I.AAAl ~ 110:30 P.M. Summer Blow-Up IBrJ La Fuga OtalJ Magddeoo (Ge;rJ ' ~~ I)fJW:r Dvtl ~ l.rew~, The (Span.) Circle of love La Guerre Est Finie ~ Maid bl Pam ~ ~~~~ 1b Love lSwedJ ' Contempt IFrJ La Mandragola UtaM Marrf3d WllIIW, Th<l ~ /t1mc3 ~ m Young, Too Immoral Cul-De-Sac Law, The IFrJ PJlasciDIille-Femialiuta {!Xl:i? I:::3:1~~~'~ Oasted Lives Mtt llb ~

€flJ -Dear John (SwedJ le Bonheur lFd Miller's BelllJtire! t:rGt:3 ~ c1 Vut::3COli\'llO>lEMNlElO> Doll, The (SwedJ lefs Tallt About Women ~ l'!lolesters, lIz2 ' Oee~ lDd Empty Canvas love and Marriage ~ LlIlomtll Pam ~ 1kJ~~QD 1:'Q!:111 t,~ 'UigcJ ~ Eric Soya's 17 lOa.m8 love Game lFrJ IYJy IS b LWa (fd) ~dk:T~ r~ t'llices (ltdJ

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Game is, Over (FrJ love Goddesses, 1b \ljy Sister, l'.'Jy LCl'Vll ~ I:~ at tile Wort'] ~ High Infidelitll ~ Love In 4 Dimensi~ ~ L\ji&!:H~~~ ~' , ~ ~~1ibG3J

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Page 17: 06.29.67

The PaJfi§h PaJrad~

8T. JOHN TlIlIE llUUPTllS'll', CENTRAIL VIIn..n.AGlE

The Ladies Guild has on­nounced its annual chicken bar­becue for Saturday lavening, July 8.

Serving will be from 5:30 to "I. Mrs. Alfred Azevedo is chairman and Mrs. Clarence Kirby is ticket chairman. Tickets may be ob-. tained by calling Mrs. Kirby, Mrs. Azevedo or any guild mem­ber.

The menu will include a half chicken, potato salad, cole slaw. cranberry sauce, mixed pickles, rolls, coffee and watermelQft.

ST. MARGARET-MARY GUILD, BUZZARDS BAY AND ONSET.

The' annual Penny Sale spon­sored by the Guild lIor the bene­fit of youth activities in St. Mar­garet's, Bu:uards Bay .and St. Mary's, Onset will be held on Thursday evening, July 6 at St. Margaret's Church, Main St., Bu:uards Bay.

The committee has annonuced that gifts suitable for all age groups will be ayailable.

ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST, CENTRAL VILLAGE.

Rev. John F. Hogan, adminis­trator, installed the following officers for the Ladies Guild for the year 1967-68: Mrs. Antone' De Costa, president; Mrs. Alfred Azavedo, vice-president; Mrs. Thomas Morarty, secretary; Mrs. John Murley, treasurer.

Directors appointed for the coming year are: Mrs. Clarence Kirby, Mrs. Alston Cotter and Mrs. Tobias Fleming.

Seeks Involvement DENVER' (NC) -Archbishop

James V. Casey has called on all priests in the Denver archdiocese to submit the names of 15 priests or laymen to sel've on three new archdiocesan commissions. Five priests or laymen will be named to serve on each of the new ad­visory building, ecumenical and liturgical commissions.

COADJUTOR: Auxiliary Biilhop David F. Cunning­ham of Syracllile has been named by Pope Paul 'VI to be Coadjutor with right of sllccession to Bishop Walter A. Foery of Syracuse. NC PhOLO.

CHICAGO AUXILIARY BISHOPS: Named to 00 auxiliary bishops to His Eminence John Cardinal Cody of Chicago are, left to right, Msgr. Thomas J. Grady, director of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, Washington, D.C.; Msgr. William E. Mc­Manus, superintendent of schools of the archdiocese of Chicago; and Msgr. JQhn L May, general secretary of the Catholic Chu r~h Extension Society. NC Photo.

iHE ANCHOR- 17 Thurs., June 29, 1967

B8~[}u@[,Q) C@O'$on

WovGu ~©r@]OD1leJI~ ROME (NQ) - MethodisU

Bishop Fred Pierce Corson tOO'! Philadelphia was part of the official "fam'ily" which accom­panied John Cardinal Krol ~

Philadelphia to Rome for hiD elevation by Pope Paul VI W the College of Cardinals.

At a press conference with the new Cardinal, the Protestana :Bishop referred to the newly elevated U. S. prelate as "oW' cardinal."

"I mean· it spiritually," he ex­plained. "We have a rapport to­gether. I never feel any differ­ent in his presence than I do

, "wiUt my colleagues in the JI.'Ieth­, tldist Church. He and I like eacl:l . ether, and that's not always true ef people you work with, eVeIl among churchmen."

"The late Pope John," Bish6)l) Corson continued, "said thaft brotherhood must precede doe­.trine, and Cardinal Krol and Jl Rever do anything that woulcll embarrass one another in ecu­menical work."Cardina~ Vagnozzi Praises America

In answer, the Philadelphia

Apostolic Delegate Regrets leaving Friends Cardinal stated, "From our first contact we had a charitable un­

WASHINGTON (NC) -Arch­ ways tried to carry out my work in Rome I will look forward to derstanding. We always finfll

bishop Egidio Vagnozzi said here with an abiding concern for the seeing the friends who will come o!-1rselves taking pretty nearly that he received word of his ele­ Church in the United States, in to the Eternal City. the same viewpoint on civic anell vation to the sacred college of accord with the mind of the "I do not know yet just what community affairs. And we don'a cardinals "with mixed emotions." Church and the dictates of my my duties will be in Rome, but I give the ecumenical movement ~

The Apostolic Delegate said he conscience." . can assure the American people wan smile and pretend there 2R

is "profoundly grateful to the Archbishop Vagnozzi has served that they will have no more loyal no' differences. We know there Holy Father for his kindness and two tours of duty in the Apos­ friend there than my humble are differences, but we know

person. that we are instruments in theconsideration in elevating me" tolic Delegation here. He came to the sac·red college, and that his here in 1932 on his first foreign "May God bless America and .hands of God and we approacb

these differences with honest;r"gratification is deep in being assignment for the Holy See and alwaYll keep her as tht~ bastion of and sincerity."called to serve the Church in served until 1942, when, at the liberty, justice and progress in

some higher capacity." age of 36, he was the youngest a world of diversity striving Praises Pope But, at the same time, he diplomat in the service of the teward unity; a world of conflict Speaking with Philadelphmadded, "I sincerely regret leaving Holy See to hold the yank of yearning for tranquility, a world seminarians at the North Amer­this country and the many _ counselor. He returned here in of technological power that must ican College, Bishop Cors4>R dE­friends I have here. 1959 as Apostolic Delegate. uphold the true values of the scribed Pope Paul VI as "one elf

Thanks All human person."Rewarding YeaFS the greatest strategists in any"After 18 year I have really field in the world today.""I have spent 18 busy and re­come to consider the United

warding years in the United See Names Laymon "Many times he appears to beStates as my own eountry and States," the cardinal-elect £on­ "8leW," Bishop Corson explainoo;am saddened at the thought 6f Business Manag·e·II';'tinued, ·"a!1d I have learned to "He's not slow; he's wise. II:!leaving it permanently," the love, respect and appreciate the MARQUETTE (NC) - Bishop ecumenical work, be thankfullcardinal-designate stated. American peopl~; I will keep Thomas L. Noa of Marquette has Y,ou will have a ministry in II"There is so much to remem­ them fondly in my heart for the named John F. LaHaie, a Michi­ part of the world receptive tvber and to say. I want to thank rest of my life. I know, too, that gan insurance agent, restauran­ this idea."the cardinals, archbishops and teur and former State Deputy

bishops, the clergy and the laity Smiling, the Protestant prelateof the Knights of Columbus, asfor'the cooperation which they said, "You better pay attentiolllStudy Joint Chapem the dioceses's first lay businesshave given me during the past $e me. -l might be your nenmanager. " . ,eight years in my w{)rk'as Apos­ In New, Mexico bishop. But 1 don't think the

LaHaie is al110 former chair­tolic Delegate. "ope would let me be a Catholif:WHITE ROCK (NC)-C3tho­ 'man of the Michigan Catholic"I am sorry if in the discharge bishop. He might think I'.lies and Episcopalians here have eenference Lay OrganizatiOl'l De­of my duties I might have disap­ doill£ more good where I am."formed·a joint lay committee te partment.pointed anyone; however, I. al ­ study the possibility of the two His apPointment, said Bishopfaiths building a joint chapel Noa, will help free priests forfor the tiny population of White Offering YouSchedule Religious mor~ ?astoral work.Rock. Classes Outdooll's . The town, which numbers 3 Savings Plans

NEW YORK (NC)-Catechet­ about 200 people, is part of the Home Financing..Montie 'Plumbing &ics" will be taken outdoors in a federally-owned Los Alamos new Summer religious education, County development and cur­ WARI=HAM1:ently has no church facilities Heating Co."lnt~program, "Challenge," to be· con­ducted by the New York archdi­ at all. Catholics and Episcopali ­ Reg. Master Plumber 2930 CO-()P~RATIVEocesan Confraternity of Christian ans attend church services at GEORGE M. MONnEPinon School.Doctrine. Over 35 Years BANKForty-three nuns fl'om 25 dif­ • The project is being cOl,lsider­ of Satisfied Service 261 Main St.. Wareham, Mass.ferent religious communities will ed by Trinity on the Hill Epis­

806 NO. MAIN STREET Telephone 295-2400 FaRi River 675-74W

be involved in the program in copal church and Immaculate Ilanll-fly·Mall ServIce AftllUle.

from .July 10 to Aug. 25 in both located in nearby Los Ala­catechetical work which will run Heart of Mary Catholic church, --------------,Lower Manhattan and East mos. Immaculate Heart bought Harlem. a site here last July, the first

"The Sisters will not use sale of church property in White rlllll;II;I"';"';;;F~"·;~;;;~;:·oomlclassrooms," reported Father Rock.. William Tobin, assistant CCD director, who will head the pl'O­gram. "Rather they will teach Pride Blossoms outdoors, in the projects, in the MONROE (NC) - When the playgl'Ounds through activities local newspaper in Monroe­that involve the l:hildren in a Michigan commlinity of 23,000 ! . IFRIGIDAIREmeaningful experiences. More dubbed the "Flol'al City" for its can be accomplished .in a dynam­ extensive nUJ;series-heard the ic, informal manner." , names of the four new American == ,tEFRIGERATION ==

In additiop to teaching chil ­ cardinals, its front page blos-· dren, he explained, the nuns will somed with a display. of pride work with adults in the area "on in one of its readers. Said the a more 'intel'-personal, pre­ headline: "AI Krol's Brother I AIR A~~~I~~~~ING I catechetical basis several eve­ Named Cardinal." Al Krol's ninp." r1uring the week and on brothel' :~ ,John Cardinal Krol 1'163 SE("~ND ST. FALL RIVER, MASS. I wt:t:l,t::uds... Qf Philaue!Vilia. iJIIJIIlllllilllllllllllli II 11I1111I11I1111111111I1III1II11II1I1I1I1I!1II11::;;iil/lIl1l1l1l11l1l1l111I1111111111I11I111111111111I11111111I5

Page 18: 06.29.67

THE ANCHOR-:Oioces~,~.Faf4. River....,.Thur.s•. J.~ne 29, 1967,18·

-New Riti'es, Stress '-Simplification Continued from Page One silence, hymn to the Blessed

,rayer, expressing thapks or.a Sacrament,. or recitation ~f. a ~oking upwards as to heaven, psalm. It IS to be a defmlte ~ an outstretched hand. action and not something done

Gradually; so as to show this while ~he' priest is cleaning and more emphatically, the priest arrangmg the Mass, vessels. would point to the objects being ,Vestments . blessed-especially during the No longer will the priest wear Mass. The late Middle Ages the now useless maniple - a 'Would press for an added teach- strip of cloth on his left arm, a Jlng-a signing with the Sign of . re~inder of the, handkerchief the Cross three times (the Trin- WhICh a leader would use to !ty) or,twice (natures of Christ). signal th~ congre?ation.

Now with better understand- The pnest also IS able to wear ing by all present and increased the chasuble (oute~ Mass v~st­participation, the blessing of the men~) for ceremomes that Im­objects ~ clearly seen by all- medIately. prec~de o~ !~ll()w the may return to its original simple Ma~~. ThIS. w111 ~hmma:e the prayer of thanksgivin·g. wrotmg penod durmg WhICh the , Communion Rite priest would, change vestments.

. ". The chasuble may be worn for ,There was ~ls~ a sII?phflcabon the Asperges, the reception of a ~ the Commumon RIte. Instead body during a funeral the con­et two rites-the priest's and cluding absolution a'nd other Ole ,people's, each with its hi.- ceremonies throughout the year. tt-oduction-there is now only lEnd of Mass

. ene. The con.gregation is cal~ed ',The Mass will be ended by the to the altar rIg~t after the thIrd priest's dismissal vvhich '\(ViII be "'Lamb o~ God.. preceded by and not followed by

The pnest, after hIS short per~ the blessing. The .priest's bless­oonal prayers, shows th~ conse- ing will be given at all Masses <erated Host to all and wIth them (Requiem also) that are not fol­ll'eCites the immediate prepara- lowed, . by the absolution' or a tory prayers-"Lord, I am not procession. ~orthy." . ..' Greater use is also permitted . Af:er hl~se~ recelvH~g Co~~ of the use of varied scripture IlImmon, the ,ppest go~s ,lInmedl- readings (weekday readil}gs that atelY,to the people to give them follow through with the' Sun­the 'Body of Christ. For 'this,' it day's selections), use of prayer~ would be better to follOW the for special intentions and a long-encouraged coi1sec'ratioq!,f more varied use of th'e'Prayer ihe people's hosts at the Mass for 0If the Faithful. filat people. It would then elim- All are now permitted to r~­mate the interruption .during ceive Holy Communion twice in which the priest would have to the same day on Holy Thursday leave the altar to get the Blessed (Mass of Chrism and Evening Sacrament from an adjacent tab- Mass of the Lord's Supper), as ernacle. is already permitted for Christ-Th~ whole rite is then: c~o,,:n- mas (Midnight and morning

tad WIth a moment of meditabve Mass) and Easter (Vigil and Easter Mass). '

500 Attlbore Oblate Vernacular Use All the rites of Holy Orders

To Resume. Studies may now be, prayed fu the ver-Father Leo Gravel, OMI, 01'- nacular and all the reading of

dained last December in Lowell, the Divine Office:-made short­IIlas been assigned to do graduate er' for the greater feasts' on lrOl'k in sociology at Boston Col~ which, clerics areexj>ected, to lege. Father Gravel will,begiiJ,' have more work 'to do. "

,The, entire Canon' 'in 'the ver­working for' a' Master~s 'DegreeiiextSepteinber; ..,' nacular is now perJnitted,. How­... Father' Gravel is, the sori of' ever; there is no' officililly ap­_r:' and' Mrs. Raymond Gravel proved text yet, available. It is

'iii 41 Wesbninster Avenue, "So: expec~e4 that in·th~, U.S., tpe 'Attleboro: His 'early education', Can~n shall be recit~ ,in En­

was iri Our Lady of Consolation glish, beginning w~th', the, First EIemen'tary School"Pawtucket. /' ~unday ~f Advent m ,N:o'('ember, Be attended high school at st. 1967. " ' , ", , ,

. .JGseph's Prep S~mina.ry, in, , ' ' Buckf.'port, Maine; and' junior H~igs"Orga,n izafion eollege at St. John the Evangel­ist College and Seminary in Bar of' Priests' Senate, Harbor, Maine. Both institutions ' are conducted by the Oblate NEW YORK (NC) - Francis rathel'S and Brothers.. Cardinal Spellman hailed' the

He received the -Bachelor of organization of' a Priests' Sen­Arts Degree from the Oblate" ate for the, archdiocese of New College and Seminary of Natick, York at a Mass op~ning the first ud recently completed his theo- '~~y't~ng of the. newly, elected logical studies there.

Cardinal Spellman told the priestS that' he was" "thankful" that Vatican, Council II recom­mended the establishment oi such senates'., ' ' : , , "Our,time," he said, "is one of great turbulence, bot!) within' the €hurch, and outside it, 'and while, -a bishop always needed the advice. and prudent judgment of his priests, he needs it riow ' more urgently. The senate, is' a ' providential instrument to make their counsel available in solving

, the many problems' which con­front him-and I rejoice that we now nave one in the archdio­cese."- . ; .....

Minis Leave Parosh', DULUTH "(NC)-The Sisters

of the' Holy Names of Jesus and Mary will leave Duluth in July,'

, after'soine 47 years of service in. St. Jean's 'pads'it here. The nu~s originally came to Minnesota in . i920-from Montreal to preserv:e, the French language',in ,tb~ ..

,., rATHER GRAVEJI., o.kL pariBh. •

,Rabbi, Criticizes Church Silence On Mid-East

LOS ANGELES (oNC)-A Jewish leader in interfaith activity has criticized what he called the failure of the "organized Christian church" ~

speak out on behalf of Israel dwr­ing the Middle East conflict. , Rabbi Balfour Brickner, direc­tor of the Commission on Inter­faith Activities of American Re­formed Judaism, said that the "Christian I establishment" was silent "on' the suppOrt for the' integrity of the state of Israel."

Catholic Support Rabbi Brickner also took sharp

issue with a survey by the Amer­ican Jewish Committee which concluded that "widespreaci Christian support for Israel's position is a reflection of the growth of Jewish-Christian un­derstanding."

The survey noted support for Israel expressed in statements by Richard Cardinal Cushing of

. Boston, ,Archbishop Paul Halli ­nan of Atlanta, Lawrence Cardi­nal Shehan' of Baltimore, the Catholic Association for Inter­national Peace and the general board of the National Council of

GliRLS· CYO, CHAMPS:, Donna Mello, right, CYO Churches. Girls' League, director, presents th~ winner's. trophy to . Rabbi Brickner noted that Sr. Timothy Michael, S.N..J.M., left, coach of .the victorious large donations had ~rt made

by non-Jews to the Israel Emer­Immaculate Conception team, New Bedford, in the.presence gency Fund. ,One' came ·fromof co-captains Janic~ Martins and Donna Menezes;' at the' Father Leo McLaughl,.in, S.J.,

amiual banquet held Sunday night at KennedY Center. president of Fordham Uniyersity.• • I :

Ex'pand CommunilcatftolllS But, "he said, "they ' were ex­for' 'Miss:ions',' .:.' ceptions and not the rule. The

organized church seemed unable fCMI1" lBcsltcln PrieSitl's Among GII'~UP Ready to take a strong stand on what

it considered to be a politicalTo lFbe~alJ1l latin American Paroilll Work ~ue.

, "The survival of the JewishBOSTON (NC)-Richard 'Car­ will spend four months studying people," the Rabbi added, "is not

dinal Cushing officiated at de­ at the society's language and cul­ a political issue." parture 'ceremonies for 18 priests· tural center in Peru before leav­ The American Jewish Commit­of .the Missionary Society of St. ing for assign'ments in the Latin 'tee, he' said,' is not entitled toJames the Apostle who will serve American countries, mostly in draw the kind of optimistic con­in poor parishes in Latin Amer­ .impoverished areas. Each will clusions it did.ica.-:.:.the largest group to leave,· serve for five, years. , Rabbi Brickner' added,' how­for duty, in, that are!!' since he eYer, that despite "these failures founded the society ;t;lin~ yean. ':' OIl ' behalf Of the Christian ago. ' Vrges Church BClck. cburch" there must' be "con­, The organization now, nUm­ tinued' and expanded communi­Progre~sive Forces'bers '100 ,priests from all ,parts of eations between these faiths.... the ,world. They, staff about 30' , MUNICH (NC) - The €hurch .parishes in Bolivia, Peru mad,' in Latin America must'support' 'Sc'h 'dO, I D"'do " 0

Ecuador. progressive forces there that. e u e e I.catlon The latest in~lu~es.four pries1s strive towar~ soci~l reforms 'and "Of Shrine Chapels

from Boston" SIX n~bves of Ire- 'must sever'tles With reactionai'y' ', ... " '.', land and eight from seven other and conservative circles, Julius' ,WASHINGTON (NC) - Twe Sees .in the United' States. They_ Cardinal Doepfner' of .Munich' Claretian chapels in honor of

, , sai~ here. " . th.e Imma~,~l1ate ~eart of. ~ary

' 0 'oIL'... B kl ' The German' cardinal gave a 'Will. be dedIcated In the NatiOnalDIstroWlllBtle 00 ' et press conference on his return Shn~e of the Immaculate Con-On ,Sex IEducation fro~n a visit to Latin America eepbon here. Sunday, July 16.

where he attended th' t' '1' Completed in 1966, the chapels,TRENTON (NC)-A' 50-page . ..'. ' e na IOna have been donated to the Na­

booklet on sex education is being Eucharlsbc Congress of EcuadOr ti 'I Sh·· . 'b US be . as pap'al legat Hi' ·t'ed' . ona rme y, .. mem rs distributed to public school edu- '. . ,e: ~ a so VISI, . of the Claretian congregation, cators by the New Jersey depart- Colombia and, MeXICO. which includes priests and broth­ment of· education as a guide in ' ' The cardinal said there is no ers.The Claretians were former­

'implementing an earlier recom- ,i~m,edia~e, communist danger in' ·ly known as the Sons of the 1m­mendation that such'instruction Latin America, but added that maculate Heart of Mary. be offered, in the state's public co~tinued a"oidance of such, a' , Bishop Joseph M. Querexeta, schools. ' danger depends largely upon the ," C.M.F.,' bishop of the titular 'See . A" curriCulum., guide contained a~ility of Latin Ameri~an coun- .. , ,of ~resso!l~di>r;elate ~f IS8bela, iIi the booklet is partially the ,trIes to establish s~ble BOci~~: Ph~lippines, will preside at the work of 'Father Thorn.as Dentici," !:ln~, polit~<;al condltiops. '. ,dedication'~'~ereqloni~. pastor of St. Bartholomew's

~ .. Catholic Church,. East Bruns-'

'

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Page 19: 06.29.67

.. THE ANCHOR­ 19··For.mer Boxing Champion, Movie Thurs., June 29. 1967

,·Actress. at· ·Son's First Mass LOS ANGELES (NC)-There'5 scarred Mushy Callahan and the'

I'

• I

\

Back Pay 'Raise , ,• lot mote than sNdy, determi­ former silent screen star proudly ~tion ond that right frame of watching their son offer his first Fo~ PO§Bceemnenmind ealled n vocation which Solemn Mass in Christ the King gceB into the making of Il priest ehurch. MILWAUKEE (NC)-A grou~ -a whale of Q lot more. The ex-fighter and the ex­ 6f Milwaukee archdiocesaiil

Take, for !Instance, newly or­ actress saw to it that their son priests is supporting a' move dained Father Michael Anthony went to Blessed Sacrament grade which would make this city'sCallahan, S.J. School, Loyola' High and Gon­ ]pOlicemen among the highest

When he offered his first Sol­ zaga University Jin %>okane, paid in the country. emn Mass of thanksgiving in Wash. They encouraged him The group, the Council of Christ the King church here, the when he spoke of studying for Urban Life, headed by Father pew of honor was occupied by l!l the priesthood, and went off to John F. Rasmann, was formed man whose face looks as if it had Alma College in Los Gatos for a year ago to work on inner citybeen massaged by a steamroller, his studies. problems, but now has expandedmld '8 woman endowed with the Mushy Callahan and his for­ into wider problems of metro­baauty of a faded movie star. mer actress wife must have done politan life.

After a look at the man with something right-,-because there The council is circulating peti ­~e flattened nose, scarred fa~ is a lot more than study, deter­ tions backing a recommendationand gnarled bands, oldtime fight mination and that right frame of made by Raymond C.' Seitz, for­fl.ans would swear he was Mushy mind called a vocation which mer dean of Marquette Univer­Callahan, onetime junior welter- goes into the making of a priest sity law school, urging salary in­

.' weight champ of the world. And -a whale of a lot more. creases for the policemen. Thethey'd be' tight! petitions will go to. Jpmes J.

Mortier, city labor n~go~L~tor.!il~~ g~ndce o~~:i~ew~~rebe:~~ U[}u@QD;§@D'i)(clJ~ [}=[]@[{i)@[? i, t The priests' council' com­would swear she was Leonore 0 0 .

mended the work of MilwaukeeHill, star of the silent .screen. lli5o;§[}u@[9) ~@[]'[Ji]1)@[jl')if policemen in handling interra, ­And they'd be right, too! DALLAS (NC.)-Bishop 'FUI-!' "\';' cial problems, especially a dis­

Father Michael AnthoJ;ly Cal- S· f h N Y turbance which occurred a feW' lahan, who was ordained June called the triple Jubilee celebra- ;: weeks ago between groups <a:2 7 by Auxiliary Bishop Timothy tion of Bishop Thomas K. G<>r- il Negro and white youths. . Manni,ng .of Los Angeles, is their man of Dallas-Fort Worth a great llon. Ii's not quite clear how tribute to a good man.

ton J. heen. 0 ~oc. ester, . .,

Father Callahan became Father . Asserts Rural Life . Callahan .. instead of" Father '~W~,a k~~1! ,of reward, on e~rth ,

that ,the. Lord gives a good man," NEW BEDFORD : Members of the H-oly .Family Families Ignored,Sc~eer, b~t after all, what's in 11 Bishop" I Sheen said. "What CYO basketball team, New Bedford, Francis Contior; Tim.. SIOUX FALLS (NC) -Thtlp~e. , greater' tribute could we give' &l

.Borrowed NBDIe man? He, ,has been with Christ.... othy Donahu~ and ,William SieY~~8 admire their'Champion­ executive committee of the Na­tional Catholic Rural Life Con­Back in the Roaring '20s, whelli. The pishop w~ paraphrasing the ship trop)ly being presented. by '.,Ad~lard Bastarache, left, ference complains that the fam­prize fighters were plentiful, . words ¢. 'I- maid servant to S~. CYO Boys' ~gue director, following the banquet, held 'at ily on the land and their pro~g60d and tough, a youngster Peter, "Thou hast been with the Kennedy' Center' on Saturday. lems are largely ignored ~fought his way up from Los An.. Galilean." other sectors of society.geles streets to the nation's top Bishop Sheen, a liormer class- • ' .

"We view with deep. solicD­boxing' arenas. His Dame was mate of Bishop Gorman, spoke iTer·.S·.S In Hope' tude," the group said, "the grow­ing, tendency of other segmenw

:Morris (Moishky) Scheer, SOI!l at the jubilee. Bishop Gorman of 11 produce merchant. The was ~lebrating his 75th birth­

ef society - educational, reli ­Moishky became Mushy and he day, 50 years as a priest and 15 Pittsburgh Bishop John Wright Cites Church'. borrowed the Callahan from 1Il years in the diocese of Dallas- W gious, industrial, pQlitical and

leeal boxing promoter. Fort Worth. Concern at Catholic University orkshop governmental-to ignor~, almosfl totally, the role, the status antll

:Mushy Callahan fought the Family, friends, priests and the WASHINGTON (NC) - "The He suggested that ChristilUUl now even the plight of the map!best in his class-Ace Hudkins, people of his diocese, Catholic erisis in our culture and, in DO turn to the liturgy for help ill and the family engaged in agd­Jackie Fields, Pinkey Mitchell, and non-Catholic, turned out by small degree; the crisis in the making Hvivid, real and alive, cultural production."Jackie Kid Berg. Those were the the thousands to honor the' Church, is not so much a crisis in ,. the .lessons of the Sacred Scrip­days when mobsters muscled in. bishop. Others came from Cali- faith as it is a crisis' in hope," ture concerning tile 'nature and . d on the· fight game and :a,t times fomia "and Canada, from New says Bishop' J~hn.J. 'Yright of.the c~ntral.ity ()f hop'c," " Msgro Newman Hea Sl dictated "tank,' jobs" ,for their England' and 'Puerto Rico. More Pittsburgh.'. ",,,,'. 'B ItO' S h "11i.• d

., oWn)imlncial ~n.efi~Qut none than 8,000 were present for 'the' "The vi'rtue'Of hope, therefore, -"",.A.nothel'w~rkshop. speaker, a Im~)fe c 9,.~ ,~uld.. ,forc~ Mushy, Ca~ljhan ~ ,celebration I Off ,the jlJbilee Ma'sS:" To' c mes' that 'virtue "wIiich most Father, Augustm, Leon'8~d, O.P.., BALTIMORE (NC) . .,...,: MSgJ?

..... tte h ....~. ,~ .. J • e 0 I. ,l;llso, touched onl·the'! Virtue, ,of, ' ._~~~e.i!l,,4Jve, no ,rna, J;. w at ' Prelates jOming in the observ- demands the al:tention: m the' . . . '. William C. Newmanl 'Pf"mClp"",NR:

, .~re~t. " ,. ' ',,' ~tnC~ incl.u.d~d. '!\rcl1bishop Robu,l preacher of the word, Of God wlW,,: hope.which htoepsl.aci~ ~s' ,~n'under- of St. Paul's .Latin High.-Schooll,~J:' ~~ lo~t llis .title.i,n Lon- ert ·E. Lucey of: 'San 'Antonio,' ll""ho-pes"to make"'his"contribution ", Qcyeloped m·· '~Catho)ie ,will become archdioces'an' super­

don in 1930 to Jackie Kid B~rg, , former classmate of' Bishop GOr--' , to a -revivah:if joy'il'l.· the(People; ,~~o1(>gy. ." "',' ... , intendent .of education I-.at the Callahan became a technical ,ad- ,man;,longtill1e' friend of James .' of God," ,:htiemphasized;. .. IFatller" I.~nard "declarecll end of this .month. visor for ,,';Warner Broth~~ Francill" Cardi8alMcI~tyre of Urgent Itbpo~ , ..; .' J>~eacht;rs should n?vet ~ake the Lawrence Cardinal Sh'ehan a»­movi~. He supervi~ filf~t, ,Los Angeles,· and CardlDal-des- B' hop' W'right' addressing Ii virtue @f hope' a~p'car to be '1M) announced that Brother An-IleeDes and his most recent work , ignate:J~hn·Ji'. Cody of Cbicago~ ;. wor~shoP" till: 'p;eacIliiig, spon:";" merely;\ prop f.or thEi .~atus que ' thony Jpsaro, present 'sUperh"" Js embodied in the present hit, . . , , . '.' sored by the: Catl10lic Uruversity -thereby ~rni~ h~~ almost . tendent, 'will return to the Cath­"'SaJld Pebbles." Notre.....).ame Sta'rts, ef America,' .descrlberlhope _ , into an illUSion. ChrIStian hope '0& University of Am'cricD te

Proud Parents· Education Course "neglected except in times Gf" ~ust ..integrate h~expe~ eomplete work on his d6ctorate In 1933 Mushy Callahan and ,.' ," . , great ,crisis and when despair tiOJlll, he sta,tedo iii education.

ibe beauteous Miss Leonore Hill, NQ':fRE DAME (NC) - The seems all but imminent"-as the II Catholic, were married. The Un'v.ersity. of Notre Dame has . "visceral" virtue. Bolllywood wise guys winked- Btaf1e4 a course in the Dynamics "Whenever the personalities of were 'willing to bet it 'woudn't oj' Contemporary Education the Old or New Testament speak .....A', 'U", C T I 0 last.- . ai~ed at bringing its graduate of hope, they do sO in' terms ~ .~

But there they were, battle- students into.,contact with eu't- the living flE!sh," the Bishop ,. ST. JO.A....... OF ARC P~RISH rent problems in education. noted. ''Thus Job, .bewildered ,in " ,.~

,Diocesan Teachers' The courSe~ 'taken by all ean- faith but strong in hope, .us JULY 11 1ft61 ' didates'f~~ amaster's ,or doctor'i!!' Peter on the firSt Pentecost, eaB- "', '7 '

Get Salary Boost d~wre,~,)~ a ,joint effort of ~,'. ingon thQse',w:~o ~ardhim ~,'.: "AUCTIONEER:'.·Dick Bourne , ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NC) .dep'aJ;1m~nt ..C?f: education, mem- believe, but 'to feel in their get'Y . REFRE.SH,.,M"..E,NTS.'.' $E,R.VEOALL,' DAY.. ::-.<,:

hers ,of .()ther academic depart- flesh the faith of which ho~.'i:l '. _ . -~ new' salary' scale has ~

~~~t~;"'.1\~~outside experts·· hi> ·the very fO\indation~AT CHURCH ()F THE VISITATON GROU~DSadopted by the Rockville Centre' di~se'bere'OIl Long Island. education, " Huma'n..·E~~~4t.ODS "··N' N 'TH EASTHAM . ,

Topics 'for the six unit-weeks . I. .. OR .: .,,'The action, taken by the new will include "Catholics and Pu~ "In im existentialist culture, .n. ,10 A.M.ta 3 P.M. ..' ., toH loute 6-Massasoit;- Rd.)

diocesan Board of Catholic Edu­ lie Schools," "Church and SUite: 'II world 'frequently' 1emptoo' .. cation and approved by Bishop in An1e~can Education," "Edu- Believe in itS power, and the._Walter P. Kellenberg, raises the cation Today in the Inner City," fore to develop IH:ohfidence en­IJtarting salary to $6,000, with a and "Dimensions and Strategies' . tirely in itseU,.the virtue of hopemaximum' of $13,000 reached in in Teaching Religion." has acquired 'a relevance, ­20 steps. The former starting urgent importance, such as it had". Mlary for secondary teachers in the days when St. John wrote was $4,800. Segregated Churches . the great book of.the A~

The scale, which will go into lypse," Bishop Wright stated. . . effect this September, will m­ Cause Race Rioting -.olve nearly 100 teachers in the CINCINNATI (NC) - Segre­four DeW diocesan high schools gated churches contribute to the Urge Legalization .mt three parish high schools. raee rioting in Negro areas TORONTO (NC)-The Angli ­Fathe~ J)avid G. Farley, diocesan throughout the nation according can Church Women have askeCl .uperiritendent of schools, said to the head ot1 the United Church the Canadian government t.l le­tile scale" approximates public of Christ.' galize "properly controlled" .... ' IMp IId1ool. salaries ia Nassau 'Speaking at the opening of the pensing of birth control infOnDa-' . .w Suffolk Counties. He indl­ denomination's general ~od, tion and devices. A resolutiGll ea~ tbe board will consider a Rev. Dr. Bell 140hr Herbster of asking a change in tbe law 'Wall"

. _1D~ increase for diocesan ele­ New York called 'on the churches adopted unanimouslyb)" the _' mentary school teachen ill tbe to "search theill consciences" __ ~elegates. attending the ~. -ear jutW'eo prdJng racial lIelations. afmual meeting here.

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Page 20: 06.29.67

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. June 29, 1967

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