19
It's Rest and' 'RecreatioaTim. !but- They Pursue Quest-ofor Knowledge Religious ill Diocese- Seek to Improve-T,e:aching Expertise lIlY lI'"A'ftI4JM. IhGOWAN It Diocesaa edooators an g-ebti'l1g' NI1' net and l'OOuper- aiioo 'IIbis 'Suminer, it must be on weekends. SparkecI by Rev. Patrick 1. O'Neill, sUperin- tendent of schools, woo's teach- ing courses m adrnintstratlon at Notre Dame ,University, . teach- ers are scattered across the na- tion learning and studying. Probably farthest afield is Slster Mary Adele Thomas, R.S.M., ai. Mt. St. Mary Acad- emy. She's at the University of Lisbon, Portugal, preparing to introduce Portuguese among languages available at the Fall River school. To be at' University of Minnesota in Duluth for a year it; Thomas Delaney of Mt. st. JQseph Schoo.'l, Fall River. His work will be in the field of guidance and counselling. Both Sister Mary Adele and Delaney are l'eCipients of grants under the National Defense Ed- ucation Act and five others from the Diocese are studying under the same atJM)ices. T'hey are Sister Marie Adele, S.U.S.C. of St. James, Taunton, and Sister Jeannette Carron,' C.S.C., St. Anthony,' New Bed- . 6>rd, studying French. at As- sumption College, Worcester; Sister Ma17 George, S.N.J.M., Immaculate Conception, ·New Bedford. enrolled m a Poriu-· gUese . Institute at, eoilege, .NashVAue;Sister The- rese Poirier, C.S.C., St. Anthony High School, New Bedfonll, studying niUsic at \ Rutgers; and Sister Ann Mildred, OJ? of Dominican Academy, Fall River, . working in tllte fields ai. Latin and Asian Studies at Wisconsin State University. Sister Mary, Joel, R.S.M. and Sistei' Mary Davida, R.S;M., . both from Nazareth Hall, Fall River, are attending an on learning disabilities at Bos- ton College under sponsorship of the Commonwealth. ,They are being joined today' by Sister ·Mlll7 Urban, Ja.S.M., Diocesan supervisor, fol!' an ad- ministrators' seminar. ,SiBter Mall7 Georgine, :a.S.M.. ""·1 " :1 THEY'RE GETTING .A ,'HEAD' START' IN FALL RIVER -:-l?ages 10 and H Fall River, Mas.s., Vol. 12, No. 30 Father Szklanny Dies Visiting Poland Word has been received of the death in Poland of Rev. Adalbert Szklanny, assistant at St. Patrick's Church in Fall River for the past six years. Father Szklamny had gone on a visit to his native Iand on June 3rd, and although The . ' CHOR Thursday" July 25, 1968 PRICE 10e @ 1968 The Anchoi $4.00 per Yoar he has not been in especially good heallth in recent yearn his death came as a surprise to parishioners aJIld friends. Rt. Rev. John E. Boyd, pastor of St. Patrick's, said that a cablegram stated that Father Szklanny had been buried in Grodziki-Gome on July 18. Father Szklanny was 'born April 22, 1915, in Poland, the son of the late Jan and Tekla (Kulpa) Szk,lanny. His early ed- ucation was in Poland; and caught up in the tragedy of World War II, he served in the army and finally colJl1lleted his educatiolJ. and was ordained to the priesthood on July 8, 1945 in Beirut, Lebanon. He served as a chaplain in a hospital in Jeru- salem and then ministered· to displaced Polish people in East Africa and England before com- ing to this country and Diocese in 1953. Father served as assist- ant at St. Joseph's Church and S1. Vincent's Home - both in Fall River-and at St. Patrick's Church in Fall River since 1962. He was an accomplished musi- cian with great knowledge of and proficiency at the organ. Turn to Page Twenty also' II supervisor, is a member of a team irivolved hi explaining Dlllew approaches to reading to II teachers' group; while Sister 'Maureen, RS.M., Hall, Fall River, is involved in an in- ner city clinie in NeW-pol't. , other supervisory personnel 'who have attended workshops are Sister . Bertha Belanger, , C.S.C., principal of St. 'Anthony's elementary school, New Bedford, . who was among participants illl a - workshop for principals at Boston University; ,and 'Sister Mary .Mercy, ,RS.M., principal at Feehan High 'School, AttIe';' boro IIlnd Sister Mary Ludivine, R.S.M., assistant principal at Mt. st. Mary Academy, who were ,'math at Bridgewater state Col- the University of New Yorkq involved in a workshop in mod.- lege; Brother Dominic Monfette, Buffalo, designed' to help teaeJrr. ular scheduling at UMass ear],y I\I.C.. Prevost Higb, JrallL Rive!!'. Tum to 'Page Six Asks _Police Support WASHINGTON vig- orous 'plea for more community support of the nation's police- men was made hel'(! by .John W. McDevitt of New Haven, Conn.. Supreme Knight of the 1.2 mil- lion-member Knights of Colum- bus. ' I McDevitt addressed· the cloS- ing banquet of'the' 40th' annual convention of the National Cath- olic Laymen's Retreat Confer- ence here. Some 600 delegates, representing 240 retreat houses in the United State&-at which ,ihis mon<th.., ' Grants: from the Franco- American· .Society, are· enabling Sister' Celine Thiboutot, O.P. and Matthew Dutil, O.P., both of i>Ominican Academy, to attend a' French course at St. Francis College, Biddeford, Me. Sixteen religious and lay peo': pIe are attending Nation{ll Sci- ence Foundation.. institutes in many states: Tbey are Sister Mary ,Catherine, S.U.S.C., Cas- sidy High, School, Taunton, at- ' tending the University of Ve-r- mont at ·Burlington, and study- ing . Also Sister st. George, S.S.3.. st. Joseph Prep, Fall River. math at. Fiske University" .Nash-: ville; Brother Daniel Caron, F.X. Prevost chemistry, at Univer- .: si,ty of New·HlNDpshire; English at - Blackburg, Va. ,Brother David Truchette" ·F.I,C., Prevost, math at Univer- sity of Maine; Miss Judith John- son, Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, chemistry at Winona College, Winona" Minn.; Miss Marjorie Morin, Sacred Hearts., biology at Wells College, Aurora. N. Y.; Sister Mary Claude, RS.M., Feehan, science lilt Fiske; Sister Pafricia Ann, RS.M., Fee- han, science at University of South Dakota. Sister Helen Richard, S.N.D.. Stang High School, North Dart- mouth, math at University CYf Notre Dame; Sister Marie John" S.N.D., Stang, math at Holy Cross, Worcester; Sister M. St. Michael, Stang, computer tech- nology at UMass, Amherst. Brother William Farrell" C.S.C,. Coyle High School, Taunton,'math at Wesleyan Uni- versity; SisterMa'ry Agnes, O.P.. Dominican Academy, physics University of Washington; Seat- tle. ' An unUsual NSF institUote was that participated in by Sistel!' Frances Lynch, R.S.M.' of Fee- han High.'Shewasa'member <Xl , (' a . Problem Solving Institute several million Catholic laymea. worker. He is, not' 11 judge. ,make annual spiritual retreats- "He is not respOn/lible for lllil'" attended the convention. . adequate howiing, lack of jola' 'McDeVitt described city po- opportunties and many of the licemen as the "forgotten men other ills which plague our s0- who bear the brunt of distur- ciety," he added, "but he.has a bancell, and generally are inno-- solemn duty .to ,keep our cities cent victims' cA. senseless vio-· free from disorders, and to make lence." He said they "personally them safe places for one and aD carry little responsibility for the to work, to vialk, to drive and frustrations 'against whieh ,the to enjoy. troublemake!'S seek to rebel. "This is Ii responsibility he ''The job 01. the policeman,· abdicate, either because he continued, "is to uphold law of the intensity of the violence and order. He is' not ,a social and disorder, or because of the rightness of any basic cause which may give rise to· the dis- .' turbance," McDevitt stated. The K; of C. official told the , delegates "the officer of the law . must use every reasonable and legitimate means to restore order' and to disarm and' subdw Turn to Page Four Bishop Still Must Lead PHILADELPHIA (NC) - "The bishop is not at liberty to abdicate his authority and still retain his office," John Cardinal Krol told Philadel- phia's Council of Priests at thefil' meeting last May, according to a council newsletter sent in mid-July to all priests of the archdiocese. "The reality cannot be ir;;)- nored," the cardinal told the elected members of the council" "that at his ordination the priellt promises reverence and obedi- ence to his Ordimry and his successors-not to the cathedra! chapter, the board of consultors, a council of priests, or any other 1'W'!l 'to PaJ:e Fourteen A FRIEND VISITS: Mrs. Joseph P. Kennedy is shown on her visit last Sunday wH)h a delighted camper and with director Rev. Edmond R. Levesque at the Nazareth Day Camp for Exceptional Children run by the in Adamsville. . ..

07.25.68

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tion learning and studying. Probably farthest afield is Slster Mary Adele Thomas, by Sister ·Mlll7 Urban, Ja.S.M., gUese . Institute at, Variderbl~ carry little responsibility for the to work, to vialk, to drive and still retain his office," John ing courses m adrnintstratlon at st. Mary Academy, who were ,'math at Bridgewater state Col­ @ 1968 The Anchoi it; Thomas Delaney of Mt. st. Also Sister st. George, S.S.3.. st. Joseph Prep, Fall River. High School, New Bedfonll, ""·1 $4.00 per Yoar

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Page 1: 07.25.68

It's Rest and' 'RecreatioaTim. !but-

They Pursue Quest-ofor Knowledge Religious ill Diocese- Seek to Improve-T,e:aching Expertise

lIlY lI'"A'ftI4JM. IhGOWAN

It Diocesaa edooators an g-ebti'l1g' NI1' net and l'OOuper­aiioo 'IIbis 'Suminer, it must be on weekends. SparkecI by Rev. Patrick 1. O'Neill, sUperin­tendent of schools, woo's teach­ing courses m adrnintstratlon at Notre Dame ,University, . teach­ers are scattered across the na­tion learning and studying.

Probably farthest afield is Slster Mary Adele Thomas, R.S.M., ai. Mt. St. Mary Acad­emy. She's at the University of Lisbon, Portugal, preparing to introduce Portuguese among languages available at the Fall River school.

To be at' ~he University of Minnesota in Duluth for a year it; Thomas Delaney of Mt. st. JQseph Schoo.'l, Fall River. His work will be in the field of guidance and counselling.

Both Sister Mary Adele and Delaney are l'eCipients of grants under the National Defense Ed­ucation Act and five others from the Diocese are studying under the same atJM)ices.

T'hey are Sister Marie Adele, S.U.S.C. of St. James, Taunton, and Sister Jeannette Carron,' C.S.C., St. Anthony,' New Bed- . 6>rd, studying French. at As­sumption College, Worcester; Sister Ma17 George, S.N.J.M., Immaculate Conception, ·New Bedford. enrolled m a Poriu-·

gUese . Institute at, Variderbl~ eoilege, .NashVAue;Sister The­rese Poirier, C.S.C., St. Anthony High School, New Bedfonll, studying niUsic at \Rutgers; and Sister Ann Mildred, OJ? of Dominican Academy, Fall River, . working in tllte fields ai. Latin and Asian Studies at Wisconsin State University.

Sister Mary, Joel, R.S.M. and

Sistei' Mary Davida, R.S;M., . both from Nazareth Hall, Fall

River, are attending an institu~

on learning disabilities at Bos­ton College under sponsorship of the Commonwealth.

,They are being joined today'by Sister ·Mlll7 Urban, Ja.S.M., Diocesan supervisor, fol!' an ad­ministrators' seminar.

,SiBter Mall7 Georgine, :a.S.M..

""·1 " :1

THEY'RE GETTING .A ,'HEAD' START' IN FALL RIVER -:-l?ages 10 and H

Fall River, Mas.s., Vol. 12, No. 30

Father Szklanny Dies Whil~ Visiting Poland

Word has been received of the death in Poland of Rev. Adalbert Szklanny, assistant at St. Patrick's Church in Fall River for the past six years. Father Szklamny had gone on a visit to his native Iand on June 3rd, and although

The.'

CHOR Thursday" July 25, 1968

PRICE 10e@ 1968 The Anchoi $4.00 per Yoar

he has not been in especially good heallth in recent yearn his death came as a surprise to parishioners aJIld friends. Rt. Rev. John E. Boyd, pastor of St. Patrick's, said that a cablegram stated that Father Szklanny had been buried in Grodziki-Gome on July 18.

Father Szklanny was 'born April 22, 1915, in Poland, the son of the late Jan and Tekla (Kulpa) Szk,lanny. His early ed­ucation was in Poland; and caught up in the tragedy of World War II, he served in the army and finally colJl1lleted his

educatiolJ. and was ordained to the priesthood on July 8, 1945 in Beirut, Lebanon. He served as a chaplain in a hospital in Jeru­salem and then ministered· to displaced Polish people in East Africa and England before com­ing to this country and Diocese in 1953. Father served as assist ­ant at St. Joseph's Church and S1. Vincent's Home - both in Fall River-and at St. Patrick's Church in Fall River since 1962. He was an accomplished musi­cian with great knowledge of and proficiency at the organ.

Turn to Page Twenty

also' II supervisor, is a member of a team irivolved hi explaining

Dlllew approaches to reading to II teachers' group; while Sister

'Maureen, RS.M., ,Na~r~th Hall, Fall River, is involved in an in­ner city clinie in NeW-pol't. ,

other supervisory personnel 'who have attended workshops are Sister . Bertha Belanger,

, C.S.C., principal of St. 'Anthony's

elementary school, New Bedford, . who was among participants illl

a - workshop for principals at Boston University; ,and 'Sister Mary .Mercy, ,RS.M., principal at Feehan High 'School, AttIe';' boro IIlnd Sister Mary Ludivine, R.S.M., assistant principal at Mt. st. Mary Academy, who were ,'math at Bridgewater state Col­ the University of New Yorkq involved in a workshop in mod.­ lege; Brother Dominic Monfette, Buffalo, designed' to help teaeJrr. ular scheduling at UMass ear],y I\I.C.. Prevost Higb, JrallL Rive!!'. Tum to 'Page Six

Asks _Police Support WASHINGTON (NC)~A vig­

orous 'plea for more community support of the nation's police­men was made hel'(! by .John W. McDevitt of New Haven, Conn.. Supreme Knight of the 1.2 mil­lion-member Knights of Colum­bus. ' I McDevitt addressed· the cloS­ing banquet of'the' 40th' annual convention of the National Cath­olic Laymen's Retreat Confer­ence here. Some 600 delegates, representing 240 retreat houses in the United State&-at which

,ihis mon<th.., ' Grants: from the Franco­

American· .Society, are· enabling Sister' Celine Thiboutot, O.P. and Sist~r Matthew Dutil, O.P., both of i>Ominican Academy, to attend a' French course at St. Francis College, Biddeford, Me.

Sixteen religious and lay peo': pIe are attending Nation{ll Sci­ence Foundation.. institutes in

many states: Tbey are Sister Mary ,Catherine, S.U.S.C., Cas­sidy High, School, Taunton, at- ' tending the University of Ve-r­mont at ·Burlington, and study­ing p~ysics.

. Also Sister st. George, S.S.3.. st. Joseph Prep, Fall River.

math at. Fiske University" .Nash-: ville; Brother Daniel Caron, F.X. rC~ Prevost chemistry, at Univer- .: si,ty of New·HlNDpshire; BJ::oth~r

English at Vir~nia P~lytech~it; ­Blackburg, Va.

,Brother David Truchette" ·F.I,C., Prevost, math at Univer­sity of Maine; Miss Judith John­son, Sacred Hearts Academy, Fall River, chemistry at Winona College, Winona" Minn.; Miss Marjorie Morin, Sacred Hearts., biology at Wells College, Aurora. N. Y.; Sister Mary Claude, RS.M., Feehan, science lilt Fiske; Sister Pafricia Ann, RS.M., Fee­han, science at University of South Dakota.

Sister Helen Richard, S.N.D.. Stang High School, North Dart­mouth, math at University CYf Notre Dame; Sister Marie John" S.N.D., Stang, math at Holy Cross, Worcester; Sister M. St. Michael, Stang, computer tech­nology at UMass, Amherst.

Brother William Farrell" C.S.C,. Coyle High School, Taunton,'math at Wesleyan Uni­versity; SisterMa'ry Agnes, O.P.. Dominican Academy, physics a¢ University of Washington; Seat­tle. '

An unUsual NSF institUote was that participated in by Sistel!' Frances Lynch, R.S.M.' of Fee­han High.'Shewasa'member <Xl ,('a .Problem Solving Institute •

several million Catholic laymea. worker. He is, not' 11 judge. ,make annual spiritual retreats­ "He is not respOn/lible for lllil'" attended the convention. . adequate howiing, lack of jola' 'McDeVitt described city po­ opportunties and many of the

licemen as the "forgotten men other ills which plague our s0­who bear the brunt of distur­ ciety," he added, "but he.has a bancell, and generally are inno-­ solemn duty .to ,keep our cities cent victims' cA. senseless vio-· free from disorders, and to make lence." He said they "personally them safe places for one and aD carry little responsibility for the to work, to vialk, to drive and frustrations 'against whieh ,the to enjoy. troublemake!'S seek to rebel. "This is Ii responsibility he

''The job 01. the policeman,· ~nnot· abdicate, either because he continued, "is to uphold law of the intensity of the violence and order. He is' not ,a social and disorder, or because of the

rightness of any basic cause which may give rise to· the dis­

.' turbance," McDevitt stated. The K; of C. official told the ,

delegates "the officer of the law .must use every reasonable and legitimate means to restore order' and to disarm and' subdw

Turn to Page Four

Bishop Still Must Lead

PHILADELPHIA (NC) ­"The bishop is not at liberty to abdicate his authority and still retain his office," John Cardinal Krol told Philadel­phia's Council of Priests at thefil' meeting last May, according to a council newsletter sent in mid-July to all priests of the archdiocese.

"The reality cannot be ir;;)­nored," the cardinal told the 2~ elected members of the council" "that at his ordination the priellt promises reverence and obedi­ence to his Ordimry and his successors-not to the cathedra! chapter, the board of consultors, a council of priests, or any other

1'W'!l 'to PaJ:e Fourteen

A FRIEND VISITS: Mrs. Joseph P. Kennedy is shown on her visit last Sunday wH)h a delighted camper and with director Rev. Edmond R. Levesque at the Nazareth Day Camp for Exceptional Children run by the D~ in Adamsville. .

..

Page 2: 07.25.68

2 THE ANCHOR-Dioc:ese of Fan River,...11turs.~J!JVy,2~i ..1968. • .'. .. ~ .' t. ..~..~. '

.. Brothe;r Favors. M'artini's PI~s .S8)end·Mow· PrOgram'

CINCINNATI (NC)-A Holy Cross-Brother oome out here in favor of two martinis,· "back to back/' plq.s a. Spend now campaign by. the' Ohlfrch·am.d by:universities arid 001­leges in this country. The recommendations .. of. Brot~er

Herman E. ~lli, C.S.C~ ~ .'.:. were aimed at· solVing eUI'G - of all men. ."'Wh~ ;m~ weh

rent critical problems. He .bUil~ monu~!tts~lniit~a.d of dis­d "If do at pensmg 8el'Vlce. be . asked.ti· ·eau- one :,. ~. n. "Why caD. we not remember our

solv.e today s problems, todaY,: purpose, rather than. put· stone :we may not ha~e a to~orrow... . upon stone to perpetuate our

The Brother, mtern,ational diG' ...·existence?"· . . . • .. I'eCtor of th~' .Food ~ese?rch." . To~~i .~t: ... Center for ReligI~us Institutions; . . Looking lilt the size of eridow­8tonehill College, North Easton, ment funds' some ,universities

· ~ass., . tol~ ~ meetin~ .of reli- have accrued, Brother Zaccarelli gIous ~ltutl.ons ~dmimstrators said these institutions amass 2.t :XavIer Umverslty, two ~- their funds as a bedile against the ~ ba~k ~ back, a.re a po~nt ~~umcation~ ~edlwn form­wtitutions a~mlstrators.. . .

He add~ ~,tuHY, stultifymg lItaff meetmgs are roadblocks to progress. . . _

. ~ormal meetings WithOut ngI? structure can be more con­dUClV~ to the m:ve~opment. of effective! ~ro~ve and ongl­nal administration than "all the memos, directives and bureau­eratic meetings devised,·. he

· said. "A single cocktail, for exam­

pie," he continued, "can relu management members .enough to overcome the timidity and fear organizational structure creates in staff echelons.'"

· Reviewing roles .major insti ­tutions play in meeting society's

· moral, physical and health needs, B rot her Zaccarelli charged some' institutional ad­ministrators with suHering from "'an edifice complex."

"They build building af.ter bui.lding," he emphasized, "with no relevancy for what they should be doing. for their con­stituency."

He asked why the bulk of this money cannot. be put into pro­grams for the common welfare

. 'Mass Ordo' FRIDAY-St. Anne, Mother or

Blessed Virgin Mary. II Class. 'White.

SATURDAY - Mass of Blessed Virgin Mary (Vk IV Class. White. Mass Proper; Glory; Preface of -Blessed ·Virgin.

OR St. Pantaleon, Martyr. Red.

SUNDAY-Eighth Sunday after Pentecost. II Class. Green. Mass Proper; Glory; Creed; .Preface of Trinity.

MONDAY-St. Martha, Virgin. III Class. White.

OR SS. Felix, Etc., Martyrs, Red.

TUESDAY-Mass of preceding Sunday. IV Class. Green.

'. .. OR ".' ,. ·SS. Abdon & Sennen, Martyrs.

1'" ',1 . i'. r." .~ ~ ...

". ,.. ,

;<j.; ;.1

problems of tomorrow, instead of spending now to solve'to­day's problems. .

He noted one university pub­licly announced its endowment fund as having exceeded $1 bU­lion presumably to be used for aolving tomorrow's problems. He advocated solving "todeY'8 . Bishop Taylor has been bish­ ed, but one tba1 must counter­problems'today.". op of St<lCkholm since 1962. act any tendecn:, to fell into 8 .

.

Create Christian Formation ·DE~pal,tmen·t

Detroit·· Prep~res for Renewal Pro,grams DETROIT (NC)-In the latest and high schools in the eight­ "Educcltion in our day Ja DC

in a Series of moves designed to county .archdiocese. . . . longer something. that ends with

Archbishop Heider Pessoa CBl­maR oj~ Olinda and RecHe said in an mticle in 'V'ozes, a monthly. publishE!d by the Franciscans here in Br~l. ". .... 0

Archbishop Camara said that if the Church "is in part respOD­

o sible 'for the .()nditions 'of the· continent today~ 'we '!hust ask. ourselVES what we did to p~' vent :th,~ small group of privi.;.. leged... men' frum···maintainil)g their wEialth· and creating,misel7 ·for·the .great masses;" .: ' .'

He said that :Iome 'may -think: that be 'is in too much of II hurty :te' ·throw ,the Church's in­fluence ,and fore e into the strug';' gle . for social :'ustice' in Latin

. America,. but, he .explained,HOST: Bishop John" E. "we 'art: living in a a Latin

Taylor, O.M.!., of Stockholm' America flhat is more· than 300was host to Catholics attend­ years bE!hind the times." mg the general assembly of· The Church .ile said ,cannOt the World Council of hesitate ~ ex~ legi.1imate and

demoem:t.ic ~urefor changeChurches in Uppsala. A na­througbclut the ecntinent, Qtive of East St. Louis, m'., "non-violent pc-essure," he add­

prepare the Detroit arehdiOcese Other divisions include the for implementing impending re- '" Confraternity of Christian Doe.. newal programs, Archbishop John F. Dearden has appointed Msgr. Arthur L. Valade director of a newly created Department of Christian Formation.

The department will encom­pass all archdiocesan educational activitie~juvenile a nd adult, religious and academic.

Msgr. Valade, 39,· had been archdiocesan chancellor.

"There will be other adjust­ments to ·be made later," Arch­bishop Dearden said, "but a suf­ficient base now has been built

.to prepare for' many major pro­grams expected .from the 1968

. Archdiocesan Synod."

Distribute Duties

The synod, reflecting Vatican Council directives and the first general archdiocesan aSsembly to give laymen major roles, have involved hundreds of thousands of Catholics in preparations eX­tending over a year. Its. formal session is expected later this year. ~ .

The Archdiocesan School SyS­tem, division of the new depart­ment, is one of the largest ed­ucationfu enterpriseS, private or public, in Michigan. It Win be headed by Father John.B. Zwers' who, . as superintendent of schools, had· direct concern foll'

Red. Glory; Common Preface. approximately 175,000 students y/EDNESDAY-St. Ignatius of in over 350 Catholk: elementar,y

Loyola, Confessor. m Class.

Urgeo-s·,.(:hurch. i~ Latin America Atone for' Sins of -Omission

PETROLIS (NC)-Tbe Church V3gIle, ineffective negativism. in Latin Amed~ must start We must overcome the supet' ­atoning for its ":lins ofomission," Sti·tion and fatalistic ChristislJlro

trine program, involving almost' 150,000 students attending public

. schools, the two-year old Insti ­tute of Continuing (Adult) Edu-·. cation and the Newman Ape&- . tolate. Msgr.. Valade, who will coordinate archdiocesan rela­tions with Catholic institutions of ·higher learning, will be' in charge of' the archdiocesan edu": cational television network and will oversee various special ed­ucational. projects.

.dlExciting Arelll . "Education quite Obviously Is

.the force of .. the future," Msgr. Valade said. "The signs of the times tell us that and the mes­sage lias been underlined thou­sands of times in thoughtful synod proposals.

N~iCII'OOOgy AUG 5

Rev. Martin J. Fox, 19i'l, Founder, St. Paul, Taunton.

Rev. Thomas A. Kelly, 1934, Pastor, SS. Peter & Paul, Fan River.

AUG. 6 Rev. Joseph P. Lyons, 1961,

.Pas~r, St. Joseph, ..Fall River.

.AUG. fl Rev. '. William Bric~. 1880,

. Founder, St. Joseph, Fali' River.

childhood but instead: is a force that all (If us, formally. or infor­mally can profit from through all of our lives. I look forward with eal~erness in helping to pioneer .In this. exciting area."

Msgr. Valade, as· chancellor. was in charge of the study which produced. the series of changes.: Dr. Arthur Deegan,· management consultant, conducted its. techni­cal aspects, including surveys of the operations of all archdioc­esan dep.artments. .

Designate Directors One I\ecommendation . ill the

decentralization of the 'chancery as a l>reUminary to carrying ou! expected synod projects. Re­sponsibilities for paris.hes bas been assigned tc.> Auxiliary Bishop Thomas J. Gumbleton, as vicar for parishes; responsibili ­ties involving the priests han been givlln to Auxiliary Bishop Walter J. Schoenherr, as dele­gate for clergy and' charities, social service and social actiOill are the responsibility of Father Robert "V. Monticello, as. director of a newly created Department

tty that we tnmsmitted to t'1lMl Latin American people, he said.

"'We have justified Marxism,It he continued, "because we cele­brate Masses for the African slaves in the homes of the wealthy landlords."

. "In our hands," the archbishop said, "teaching was often a di­visive force." He then suggestecl that tIle Church Dow concentrate its efforts on basic education and abandon its iJivolvement in higbo­er education.' . ,

. "Social revolution' iii' Latill . Atheric.a presupposes a social revolution in North' America,III he said, ex.plaining that there is a "problem' of justice in the relations between our twN worlds, the one developed aDd the other underdeveloped."

"Conce~ebrated Mass For Mrs. Burns

Bev. Edward J. Burns, asst. ant at 8t. William's Church _ Fall River, was chief concele­brant yesterday at a Concel&­brated Requiem Mass offered lB st. Thomas lllfure .Church, So... erset, for the repose of the soul of his. mother, Mrs. Edwarcl (:Ann Reilly) Burns, who died after a long illness on ~turd. last. . ,

In addition. to Father. Bu~

Mrs. Bums is surviv.ed ·by twe daughters, MiSs M. .Dolo~ Bums, head of the English ~

partment of B. M. C. Durfee High School in Fall River, and Dr. Ann M. Hoversen, ProfellllCS' of Foreign Languages at tile College of S1: Thomas, Minne­apolis, Minn.. and by several grandchildren and great-grande ehildren.

NCEA Changes New headquarters staff cbanga

have be~n· announced by tbe National Catholic Educational Association, the nation's largest Catholic education orgariizatiOOll. Rev. John F. Meyers is associate secretary for the Department «It School l:juperinten"dents; Retr" Eugene I. Van Antwerp,. 8.S. t. associate secretary for the Sem­inary Department; Sister MiJF­Jam Joseph Farrell, P.B.V.M.• associate secretary for the Ele-­mentary School Department; and Rev.' George MoreaU, o:M.L 111 coordinator of a new program cd consulting services in guid-> aD(:e and counselling.

oI Christian Service. JEFFREY E. SULLIVAN Earlier, in.a move ref1ectin« .Funeral Bome

Vatican 'Council decisions bllt not direc1Jy involving synod ae-' li50 Locust Street tions, Auxiliary Bishop Joseph FaD River, ~

M. Breitenbeck had been giVeB" 672-2391charge .cf activities involviD«

Sisters and Brothers:' His title Rose ·Z. 8alllvala Au delegale. lor ReligiouS. JeffreJ' B. SuUi~

\ '. White. .

'. "OR· The Holy Maccabees, Martyrs..

...

: . Sac~ Heart,. FairhaVen.

Aug. 4:-St.·!I'heresa, SOUth Attleboro.. .... '.

Our Lady '~ .Vietory,Centerville,;" .. ..

O'ROURKE·BRC~KLAWN'THU:!'tSDA~7""" MaSs of preced­ Funeral Home

. pO~ .

..

ing Sunday. IV ClaSs. q~1l. .

FORTY HOURS .DEVOTION;

.July 28-St. GeOrge, West­

.i=UNER~AlHOMI:, INC.' .. 1IIn'Ol ..,-:....~.... 571 Second Street

..... Wma·· .Fall·· River, Mass. '.'.~~W:. ~iREq~ ... 679-6072

...15.. Irvington "Ct.... MICHAEl';' MCMAHoN ., ...Iew ·Bedford '­ .. .. Registered 'Embalmer'). '. 995-5166'-':'

Licensed Fune;:a.l, ~i~ .........---.........' .."'-"-~.-6 .. .,"',.

D.··D.·.S"lliYan&·:so. , .HOME,:~Y~EI.lM : -'I •

, . 469, LOCUST' 5TREE1' ;;~ F~.~·~

..... ".' ~. • M'-4;' ,. "- • , ~ ..... ' ,

, .., ...: ~-338.1 "'~'''' ·WUfreckC.···· 'Jafnes' I."

c. :.DrisColl· '.' Sullivan, Jw. '. .. .

Ii. ,

Pre7CanaConferences... -.. : ..

.Scheduled for. the"Remainder, of this Year .

Page 3: 07.25.68

3 Retrea't Give,s Values' To Total Person .: wA~HINGTON (NC)-The retreat movement brings into the hfe of. the Chu;'-'OH, th~ geneJMl oommu,nity amd per­BOns who profirl; from it certaIn values which aare "d~sper­~ly needed'M; the .moment," Biglhop John, J. Wright of PIttsburgh told a nationwide gaJthering of prornoterl8 of filie retrea>t In{)Vemerrt here.

Bishop Wright, episcopaladvisor to the National Catholic Laymen's Retreat" Comerence delivered the keynote" addre~ Iilit the organization's 40th annual oonvention held at ~e Mayflow­m' hotel here, July 17 to "20.

"Spiritual exercises in the best b'-adition of Oatholic lay 're­iI.lreats," Bishop Wright said "di­creet our attention awa 'f €Iurselves and our P~Xi:;:: ~ncerns, toward God and our ulitimate values. Meditation' the Dturgy as prayed and"perlo' d 'i1lIithin 'a retreat and th 'lrme - ,e 81 ence 02 the authentic retreat housaccomplish' thO e

. IS .necessary re­~USlng of OUI' mmds and hearts

American (prrnest Named -to" Rota

PHILADELPHIA (NC)' - Fr. 'l\homas M. Mundy, 54, 'an au­ebority in canon law and theOl­ogy, _ has been appointed by Pope Paul VI to serve as an auditor (jUdge) on the Sacred Roman Rota, the Church's su­p.reme court in Rome.

The papal appointment was announced here -by John Cardi­mal Krol of Philadelphia.

Father Mundy, a member of file faculty at the archdiocese's major seminary, St. Charles Borromeo in suburban Over­brook, Pa., since 1945 Js the third American to be n'amed to the Church's supreme court.

The other two were Francis Cardinal Brennan, who died la&t

as tio no, things else i~ our eivilization," he asserted.

Climate These three elements, the bish­

op coDtin.ued, ."are not the whole of Chr.istIan hre; like faith, they express their fruits" in worthy works; but they provide the cli ­~a~ ~ssential to spiritu~l !!ur­VI~~!D; a culture preoccupied With: ~ctIon a1?'d r~~ults, -1)ut in­sensItive ~o elt.he~ Ideas, values or ~yn~mlc pr~nclples which it .inst~nctIvely.reJects as abstract."

Bishop Wng~t ,told the NCLRC delegates...the. Ietreat, movement ~ an mdlspensable function m the Church during this era ofreform and renew 1 " 0 f ·t .. a . ne 0 I S

baSIC alms and purposes, he said,is to foster and develop medita­tion-"thinking in the heart."

lElements

The retreat movement "!far from contradicting _the 'action imperat.ives of the mq~ent,­

makes them possible by bringirig to the Christians involved in ,them the - elements of sanity, serenity, balance and spiritual refreshment without which ac­tivists be~ome fanatics, their works become confusion and' their programs, public nui­sances," the bishop declared.

The retreat movement, Bish­op Wright said, avoi.ds the two extremes of "mere intellectual­ity" and "mere sentimentality." It combines wha.t is ~lid in both by bringing together mind and will, thought and feeling; it involves the total person, he added.

See~ State Funds month, and. Fat~er William J. , For Medical SchoolDoheny, C.S.C. Cardinal Bren­nan was named an auditor of MILWAUKEE (NC) - The the Rota in 1940, became dean Wisconsin state Coordinating (chief judge) in 1959 and served Council for Higher Education Wltil 1967 when he was elevated has approved a recommendation tn cardinal. Before going" to that aomajority of board mem­Rome, the cardinal had been a bers of Marquette Medical member of St. Charles Borro­ School be appointed by Wiscon­meo Seminary faculty. sin's governor in exchange for

enough state funds to keep theAt the Overbrook seminary, school from failing.' .Father Munday taught canon The recommendation provideslaw and fundamental theology. that the governor -will appointHe was a member of the Phila­ nine of the 15 melllbers of thedelphia metropolitan tribunal

medical school board. The Mar­from 19~5 to 19067. quette Medical Scho~l had sug­

Earlier this year Pope Paul gested that the governor appointappointed Father Mundy as a five- of the 15 in return for the consultor to the Pontifical Com­ more than $1 million a year the mission on the, Code of Canon school says it needs to stay alive.Law. The medical school's legal ties

T-he Sacred Roman Rota han­ to Marquette 'University 'have d;led ap~eal.s in Church litiga­ already been cut, presumably to tion, pnnClpally in marriage pave the way for state funds to eases. the schooi. This- was done to

avoid a constitutional question of church-state separation, sinceConferences Approve Marquette University is oper­ated by the Society of Jesus.Housing Program The council's action may still

'WASHINGTON (NC)-Senate ?e oppos~ in the 1969 state leg­IMld House conferees have agreed Islature, SInce the action i8 only on a $5.3 billion program design­ a recommendation. Some per­ed to provide new rehabilitated sons have argued that thegov­housing for low--and moderate ,emor should appoint only five -income families. members of the, board and that

allowing him to select the ma­The program represents- a first jority denies. the school thestep toward a 10-year goal of right to exist independently.• million new or rehabilitated

housing units. It was expected to ~vide 1.7 billion housing units - Thanks Pope M'er the next three years. -

VATICAN CITY- (NC) -':"-On Key provJsions include one leavin,g Rome from an official'

.. help nearly 500,000 families visit to Pope Paul VI, Syrian­buy homes and another w pro­ rite Patriarch Antoine" Ignace Yide 700,000 units of rental ~ayek of AntioCh sent the pon- ­bOusing. Under the borne owner­ tiff a telegram of gratitude and'­_ip plan, the federal govem­ tcMJal adhes~on to ,the Gredo" of IDent will pro,:,~de a partial in­ .the People tilf God, pronounced" terest-rate for monthly mortgage . b,. ·the Pope· lilt tnte ..cand Of ,the ptt¥menill bT families. Year of FaiMl. '

CARDINAL VJISlTS-: Oardinar Cushing 'visits Monas­tery of Discalced Carmelite Nuns. South Dartmouth, as pa1'lt of observance of feas.t of' OUT Lady <Yf Mt. Carmel. With preJ.ate is Rev. Emmanuel Sullivan, O.F.M., <Yf the Boston Archdiocese.

0

Priest's'Dream Natmve Nigerian Planning Community

To .Aid Countrym,en MEMPHIS (NC) - Father"

Abrallam Ojefua, 56, left here for his native Nigeira with III dream of founding a new re­religloui; community which will be geared to aid his 50 million countrymen:

A member of the 3-million­member Beni tribe, - Father Ojefua is the scion of a pagan family. He was received into the patholic Church when he was 10. He was ordained to the priesthood in 1945, then sent by his bishop to the National Uni-, versity in Ireland, where he earned a doctorate in sociology.

On his return to the Benin City diocese in Nigeria, he be­came head of the Catholic edu­cational system for the nation.

Father _Ojefua came to this

Pll'opose Censure Of Party leader

LONDON (NC)-A group of Labor party members in the House of Commons, including several Catholics, introduced a motion proposing the censuring of the chairman of the parlia­mentary party for attacking large families.

Douglas Houghton, 69-year­old chairman of the Parliamen­tary Labor party (the gov_ern­ment party), had said at a pub­lie meetin~ earlier that large' families would in the near fu­ture be considered a form of social - delinquency.'! He added that "already large families are a form 0 of social irresponsibil ­ity," when speaking at the open­ing -of a research project spon­sored by a firm which makes most of Britain's contraceptives.""Just as marriage and divorce

is not a purely" personal. and "private matter, just as abortion is' not either, so the procreation of children is not a purely pri ­

country to study the work-and­pray method of the Benedictines and the contemplative method of the Trappists. He said he has a dream of blending the two methods into a new religious community of monks, geared to the temperment a'nd needs of his

" countrymen. While in this country, he stud- "

ied the Benedictine community methods at New Subiaco abbey and seminary, Subiaco, Al'k., and the Trappist methods at Our Lady of Gethsemani abbey, Trappist, Ky.

.Abbot Flavian Burns, O.C.S.O. of the Trappist community, £1­nanced Father' Ojefua's return trip to Nigeria and also has undertaken to raise $5,000 to aid the Nigerian priest in building a library, dining room and chapel.

Father Ojefua's dream is founding a community which will train teachers, catechists, key laymen to aid his people; to found a Catholic radio station which will reach all Nigerians and to blend the best of the two' worlds, contemplation and apostolic action.

., Cold to Plan LONDON (NC)-The Church

Union, spearhead of the strong Anglo-Catholic group in the Church of England, said that their church should not proceed with proposals for union with the Methodists as those propos-_ als now stand.

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., July 25, 1968

Hartford Studies Future Needs

HARTFORD (NC) - T h 0 Hartford archdiocese has launch­ed a study in conjunction with state, municipal and business' agencies to determine the future needs of the Church here.

A commission established by Archbishop Henry J. O'Brien on the "recommendation of the

• archdiocesan, Senate of Priests will work with the state's seven regional planning agencies lo­cated in the archdiocese, and other groups. The commission will make use of the extensive research data on the growth and development of communities in the state already compiled by ,these agencies.

One result of the study, ac­cording to the new Archbish­op's Commission for the Eval­uation of Economic and Demo­graphic GroWth of the Archdio­cese of Hartford, will be the projection of the type of parish or other Church facility that should be established to serve best the needs of the people. It will include "not only the erec­

"tion of new parishes but the re­adjustment of existingpllrishes to new conditions."

The commission said that "the wealth of sophisticated data"

"available from state, municipal and ,business agencies engaged in research into the state's growth can be used "to offer a

,sound basis fQr short term (5-10 years) and long-term (to the year 2,000) projections of futur,. Church needs."

Information Officer NEW' ORLEANS (NC)-Fa­

ther Lanaux J. Rareshide as­sistant chancellor of the 'New Orleans archdiocese, has beelll named public information of­ficer for the archdiocese. He will serve as a liaison between the news media lIJld the arch­diocese in his new post.

ELECTRICAIl. lCol11ltU'lQJdolro

944 County St. New Bedford

_O"'O_D_D_O~C_C

Plan To Build? See Us About

low Cost Financing WAREHAM

SAVINGS BANK Wareham Falmouth ":.Y 5-3800 KI 8-.3000

v'ate matter," he also said. He ­ ,25 yeQrs with .thelnternol Revenue Serviceadded 'that he is certain that by the year 2,000 social and -eco­ 222- Union Sreet, New Bedford 997-2717 nomic pressures'· will have­ (Res.)' 'Tall",ch.. Street,'-Mattapdisett· -758·~2379 d~ven Britain into making-lam­ .:ca.p ;';i~-~~t ~~.~ refo_~) . . ' , .-' . ~ ", .' - .-: ily ',()lanning , a 'major" part ~

lllational-planning.

-QPENI!"G -OF AN OFFICE ROY W. LYNCH,' A.B., M.B.A.

PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT Mall. Cert. No. 2166

TAX CONSULTANT

Page 4: 07.25.68

4

,

THE:ANCH0R-Dioces&ofFall River:,-Th~n•• JuIy25~ V~68~ Exe:euti~e: Director, Urges Nurses~1

Cou~cils. Help Make Better Church A\ • If I R-' j,..""ufi,e·o' n" DENvER (NC)-Mrs:JBhillp:JJ Part of:: ftle difficulty, Mis£Agr.CU ura:· e~v...l. , . <:~!. atems. from :a3lumMcHugh Of Detroit was'elee1ed.', 'Kelly said;

1ll.I' president for atwo-year_ term to ~ the. councIls as OlUJD8Give's, " Hu.n~gry napa 'aMtie:-NatitmiillColincil'o!llCiWll,.. "'w~learrrtogrow up cWccNurses-conventiondiere. as' . . . '

. read f' d' OOUl"agementi. The~NCCN~srt thee.final.session.. , ~. ·Church. n~ us _,- One"of· We- m08tt widesp i cau~o 0 '.~g,. ," . of, tbe... 14th1. biennial convention badly, she, ,stated. And I ~ about tHee prospects :'Of1

develOpinf.'i :natl(~~SC lIS" ,r:ootedi!.Jn,~tli~. voted< 'to., remain', in' existence- to stress' that we, too, ~re IIWC

belief'the,popu1ati9n.JIIlllSt:~na·h,ead:of:.re80u~\ despite' financial difficulties and m~s~:'::il:;..~~~;, Cllu~that,we larly in the ~it~Caral'ea.?f",foodI8~mnles:R:.maY"~:~~e" 'deciin~==:~:, ~rel~c:]:>a:=i~Stit~tional) that full-economlean~'8~l~ '... '-. '.' "liier' . The action was, taken in the €hUrch.and alSo what IS: now oo.velopment::iS'theochle:f'rea-, on1y;,I~I~yy~t,~ou~~erti .... wak~ -A>t a~. banL-bitting_, rep,orJ: our' lopsld.ed_ .st,.retlS on: pe~ ., . . .. h .~~. and~ waten TO' gIvec a, concr.,.ee. ~ ....J. mcation. son; for" falllDg·· but· ra~, 'local, examRle;- we<- ~. t8kel~ a: submitted:i b» Dorothy; Kell:nl san ~ . But-' a're' we not' confr~Bted' typicall five.,.acre< ~Jin'l Jir.- NCCN' executive. directOl't and:: now,with' a: ben·and egg dilem- diiJ:"....Jiipan;, incidentally; sets, a: " editor, ofl. the~ Ca~o1ic ~urse, Pollee: Support;. rna?' Development- may reduce-' legl;ll' :wDit~ of:·'7lAz' !lcres~ 'on' its:. mamwne, •who, ~ccused" 8OJDe' oIJ. . , , . the' risiilg flood farms. HIs ·netincoJDei_ ~t."~ay's;;. the. loCal. councils of.' being. lit... " Continued. from Page, One of' people. But 'Prices.\Wling>tradi.tion,a1:JJlethod~~ tle; mo~. than.d:Oci~! clubsl ~ those who. are. violating tile

. p,opuTa.tion., 8l1d.p.rodUcing~abt)l~tPl5t~:,oI: recpmmend~ s.u..~" councils peace of. our_cities" Unfortuna~ pressure. pre- graini would', be, aoom',:$6'7.1p;·a. ~'~~e,;up.theIrt~inl1dity. Ito ,help ly, though, the cry- of 'police vents:, develop- crop: Wfth new- met~od~ate~. maKe~ better. (,hurch., brutalitY." has' oecome as false ment. How can fertilizer; improved. ~tbis' Th~convenho~0Ji'posed&,su.g- . as the proverbial cry of wolf. this vicious spi- output' carr, increase- to 7.5: tons" gestion for a· raISe olD dues.. Miss "Indeed' brotality must be' rall)eovercome'l Even allowing 'for: higher' costs;, FIRST' VOW&: Brother Kelly reported'. a;. raise, in. dues' discountenanced. and punished,. TIle" Short an- his nenxirome- still rises,to $400., Paul.R. Bourque; O:F.M., S()lIl • in 1966' resU1teo. m.lo~ o~' some he continued, "but our polic&<> swer· is' that' it If' hee carr d.ouble-el"OPi'; it may· of Mr~ nd Mrs' Maurice J 5,000. members the.. first, Year, . men need. the full'support CI!f'. looks as though double~ again.. Thush~be~s:,to'. '.. a :. ", .'

0

and nearly, 1,000 the second y'e~. the' 'Community if' they are to too' world may , follow the pattern,in. Japan .. Bourque, Holy: Name p~sh, Financjal. hardship,. ~e: salli" cope., with. the' rampant lawless,;.. be'OIl the brink' where between .13700: ?Dd ', 19'14, : New'Bedfo:rd;.has taken f1ll"St necessitated~ a cutback. m the, ~ess which' has inundated' tat of' a' new eca- fann output'and--income-,tIipletC V'OWs'ass~Franciscanfi'iari:il Washing1;on. D·;·C. headQ'!1arters': The community must' under­nomic revolution, as remarkable Fannen: JI)&.,m.v~' ceremonies: atr St; Rayhael's staff.: ..' . , stand that violence cannot be illdts,way as thee industrial rev.. · Farmers' facing: Wese' pros.. , '" ~ T:~,C, etJte NJ He Miss Kelly- sa~d the co~cil . curbed. with feather-dusters. olutiori: O:ver the-, last· two d~e-, pects do; in, fact invest. in agri~, ~'OVltilllte,~ay ~' .:. of 'faced three, chOIces' -; b9lding "'Our' law enforcement o:ffi:. ades,· careful' research, earned- cultural'· modernization., In 1965;'. is~ Msigned~ toJSk ,C·ranC1S along.,present lines: with dissolu:,. 'al" h dded" ust take Oil' in" a large'measure by the' India imported _ $80' mipion Assjsi Church, New Yo~k tion an: eventuality; d~ssolution ;:n:'mea:ui:s-.wi,th pe~sons-whc ROclCefeller. Foundation, first in wortttlof'fertilizert,FOl'~'l968;the'. City,,for[the Summer: and m ~ow, or" a.'~_ro~ram of. prom'eS- often turrr,out to· be nothing but Mexico, then in' the· Philippines', figure! is. $315' millions:! The uSe~ Seytember will begin studies 8lve revItalizatwn.:. . irresponsible hoodlums. By and I

and" now, increasingly in the 0£: fertilizer' lias.' increased, 300' :t :M:. 'K College' North In. the approved. rell11taliza.tion I large our. policemen are wen­Indian subcontinent" has begun Per cent in' four year~. In the 81. errIm~ . " '.' d- program;. Miss- Kelly explamed· train~d, considerate, honest and' to,produce and acdimatire new early sixties, Iildiarr farmers i~ , Andover, Mass. H~ IS agra this would milan, the NCCN decent people, trying hard to kinds, of hybrid. grains.. Wheat, stalled about 8,700 tu?ewells a nate· of Silang HIgh School, would' have.O to-, h~ld more .~e-, perform a very difficult task. maize,_ rice-new types. are ap-year, In 1967-68, the fIgure was North Dartmouth. quent board.. meetings; establish "'They need and are entitled,to pearing, in all, these c~tegories. 26,000, Acreage under th:.. new, • national committees: to .evalua~e' the encouragement and CODa They are, more. resistant, stand. seeds has grown from ,notliing to. needs.', and, problems of, CatholIc, d 't t of the commW>­better and. can produce six to 13 million a~res in. two yea~s. TIl'@m§"TJ~Iftl{.(jjJ T~nQ]$ nurses; plan p.r.Jgrams to, meet ~ft;~ h:~~ . . 10 times·the old yields. The result thIS y.ear 15: a 100 mI1- '!2J.,~ them, and', elliarge' the" staff, for. " "

Spiral@fExpansionlionton'grain:harvestcompared- !\R\ct'<'..I.16B-nrrlb-, ~D~[h)@fM\\§ field.visits"and.,~onsultations. thMCDbe:ttshtol~ hlS'd ~udleJ.lC: with 88 million in 1965, the last [J,,011~~u I:i!J Cl"", Crioticizing complacency in e pu C' ou . a":01 Jumpm",

This is the really astonishing year with a good monsoon. MADRID (NC) - Concern . councilS and among' individual' to the rash_ con~uslon that. tb0. breakthrough. At leaSt there is . The story in Pakistan, is. no. ov'er' "deviations" in the train- Miss' • ]7 II rted' arrested person IS always an in;..t ". nurses, ~e y. asse. t 'ctim.the chance of a. sort of quan urn different. BetweE;,m 1963 ,and.. ing. of seminarianS and the con- "Because we,: have been, too no;en VI . .

' jump dahead of'the old rigidities. '1967, fertilizer use. trebled. Smce duct' of.. many priests occupied a tllll1''d to rock "hI' boat too com- Instead. ~f. beIng the undeJib ' . d' t' per capI'ta bewell h . l'b t' placent. with reli'>ious10 _.,knowledge' d'og the. eVIdence; d'd te'"shows- toda....Ih In la, pro uc Ion . the early 1960s;- tu Z ave large part of, the de I era. Ions ",

actually fell between 1900 and risen by 8000 a year. to. 07,000 of. the. Permanent Committee of learned in childl~ood and all too . that h.e IS the' pn~etican I da1947. For the next decade or so, today. Land. under. the'. new~ the Spanish Bi§nops'. Conference willing to sit. and listen to ex- ' for trial;, and ~nvlc on un ex­there 'was a three per cent an- seeds· has. grown .from , nil to. '-~ . , h .rt t' to . d d' t" w .. the law, he saId.

t . .""re. 0 a Ions, e Ica lOn, e-, . . ,nualexpansion of acreage, bu nearly four milli~n acres:·in two: Fernando Gar<;linal QUiroga y have_ failed to' use. aur 'councils . ''To say that a, ~tJzeh has llW ... this no more thim kept pace years. The result'I~ a wheat,har,- "Palacios of' S'antIagode Com~os-,. as vehicles to help' Catholic nght or responSIbIlIty to r y

with' risiilg "Population. Now. vest 33 ,P,er. cent high~ t~an. the . tela, presidt:<!1 at. the, meeting, 'nurses"to matur,~ into Christian .to. ~e, supp0r:t, of, OUT' law lll1en-­there is tHe' chance or doubling last good weather ?eak~ In, 1965,.. which,was.. conducted In secrecy. . professional' women, ,to: make, forcmg agenCIes IS.. to put Die

' ,and trebling the rate of agricul- and. an overall.' ~all?- haI:Nest,~" A', statement released ,bY t~e, our voice heard on the side of s~amp- ~- approval on defiant tural'·growth, ending grain im- percentaboveprevlous,records~ committee-after,themeetmgsald social justice. and charity" disobedience through. th~ me-­Rorts, achieving self-sufficiency, If'such resul~,.can be· a<i~ev-. it: had- "examined with great O?- clearly oppose the dehlftnani~ . dium of silence," M~Devltt, ~ fioodiilgr the industrial market ell. in the Indian subcontment' jectivity the'"abundantly ,avall- zatiQn of persom; in our institu- serted. with farm demand and setting' where nearly half the- ~evel~p... able informatlOnqn the, attitudes tions. or' calling out' for new ap­iiI motion an upward spiral of ing ~eoples,(outSid~Chma~ live ?f cert.ain' sec~ors of t~e Chu.rchproaches to problems whi~h we, general expansion. and If they can be .extended to_ Ir,rSpam,.particularly 10 the field as nurses must have' known

Admittedly, the, "miracle"' other llre~,. ~e' confront, a pe~- o~seminarians' ,training and the existed,"' . seeds need special care. They fectIy realIstIC chance of a'gn- behavior of pnests;o as' well as' lPve their. six to' lo-folc;l return: cultural growth becoming.' what- in'the doctrinal area,"

it.has, been. in. all previous proc.-, "In order-to ,correct deviations esses of modernization-in Brit- and channel many generous ac­~«liy,$') M~~~DSm 11@@~ MUN,ICH (NC}-Julius Car­ain, in America, in Jap,an--a' tivities within: the. norms of The dinal. Doe~ner- .Jf Munich willrF@r ~Ql!nfD~~!J'\1\1e[j'Yr\l'; powerful and decisive. engi,ne of Holy Father," it. added, "there

meet in.' Bogota·, Colombia, Vl7ithg~eral growth. will soon' ~eissued,certain cri-BERLIN (NC) - Marxism in German priests ~who provide pas'­lInvestmeni Neoo~. teria. applicable' to the. wholeits various forms was describetY toral care for GErmans- in- Latin

But~ these- vast: changes~' will' country."·here.as. the. "only' theore.tical and AmeriCa? om AUI~' 16; He· will'not.occur-witbout',large-andISYs-, 'TIle: statement, also disclosedpracticaJJ instrumetlt? ~ay> for' . also attend. t~!'> international

Christiaris. toJfulfill the demands. tematic: investment· in' ttie new" tbattthe~HolYj See; has- app,roved', Eucharistic' Congress' being" held O£. the Second Vatican CounciF technologies;. AlttiougD- fertilize!'? 3.1 new' seminary! curriculum ~t'BogoWAugl 18:.25,; f6r "fraternity\' in, the whole" plants; are- g9ing' up, our- figures, .,drafted1lastIA'P.ril: bY) the.bishops1

. world.'" show what massiVe. amounts:· oV conference and that: the P;e1'JDa..

fertilizer still have to. be. im- Dent committee worked' ~ . ~ til: C:I'T:Y . iGuenter Nenning. o.fj Vienna,. ported, Tubewells: requi~> elec- some- detailed':'. p)ans, fOO" semin-­editol';.im·chief~ of~ the- Austriim: 'IOILER~ REPAIR:'. €O~tric pumps; A lot< of' the, equp- ,a,ryJ' courses;

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j\'R,eriodical;. Neues FO.l'UJllI, ~e- menttfbr generating;stations:-has , StAlURIDG£..ROani:

/ elared in. an, addi'ess: MarxIsm," ASSONET;, Mj\S~. 02702"tc»b~imp6rted. Double"cl'Opping> . Na.ti~Et1ic..g.ue ' ­has become "thoroughly accept-, " TeI,,&44-5556: able'?- to.~ GWrisllims, because its; C0€H-IN" (N€)'-H;igh' MlISSeB'

Teqllires, farm- macliiDel'Y'i MUeD> off this., has to.> be7 iinporled~ TIie­ BOI[ERS' IlETUBED'

philOsophy of atheistie. materi-· iiIr the' modern-'Malayalam, lan­needi iS1 UierefOre-' bolli fOr' lOcal: > TUBES RE:PLACED'alism.is\rapidly dying, .. !fl1ag~ are· toJ be' introduced' hi!­investmentt andj as, usual; . fOr? ~ "24,IjOUIr SERVICE"Keralil· state .in>India; on' Aug; 15~foreign) excilangec to- bring; iJJr flU: IN$URANI:E\ COVERAGEttie?count~s.ihdependence·day'vital imports. ...._--_.........,...-:-....__...,

Mission' or France· Can.we-say; ho:w.mU<lh7Eresi..- and~the'Feast'of-tbe"Assumption.

.e·rsonnel' Change-P.. VATICAN:, C:mY (NC}-POpe

Paul has accepted the resigna­' tion from the- post;'o£Jpreh'1te-of tbe Mission of France, or Pon... tigny; of Archbishop Fran~oi's' Marty of P~is and has named

i,Bishop Henri Gufflet of liimoges' , in his place. . •

The Mission 00' France, now" constituted" as. a· p.l'elature, was 'founded during World War II"to train French priests:- to work'1m. areas., where people no, longer, practiced' Uieii'- religion.

dent- Johnson's· scientific- adVis,. ers~ made'i an· estima,te last yehrl "''' . ~~ FoJ" seeds; .fertilizer,'pesticides,.: Building' COlliltroctorl and.: machinery). they saw the: I need for' some $21 billions be;. ~l Masonrryi ,1 fore 1985~ Since water, .power;: " ';j soil sun:eys,storage, farm to·. j '''II'f'4TO'R \ market roads arid farmers' "cred~ Yc/ ",,' ~ " . '.. 1

it·are:fiilly,as criticill, we ShOUld'.:~I'f;l.-.'E:~U.'._ n"".E,,~,.1Il ,T','~ )prooably.· inorease- the,-'sum; four.. , 1. ' , ~ II'~r fold..-say to $80', to' $90 'biJIions

. or between $6. and. $7 billions, a, I -year' in adOition to present. !D'" :1 '1; JEAN/mE $TREE'lJ' vestment;;. .A!nd' hQW small'2J;; ,:FAiRHAVEN:l m l 4"13121." "burden~' tbisds;..we,·wiU,~amine" I

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Page 5: 07.25.68

- -

r·--······---··-------. THE ANCHOti­1!~9~ldy[l'!{s Archbishop MeEntegart ilturs., July 25, 1968

iieftin"~fi; Msgr0 Mugavero, Sui~ceed$ I WASHINGTON (Ne):-Reti~ oMc University· of America here Endoff~@ ~~~~~~

me.nt for reasons of impaired ·.'and raarhed' his doctOrate in 1061. qealth of Arehbishop Bryan Jr. JE[~ served ~ assistant pastor SisteEl"$O CCUCUS McEntega~ 75, ~ bishop of at. the Basilica of ,the AslfUm,ption

MONTCLAIR (NC) - DeleoBrooklyn has. been a.pproved by and assistant chancellor. of .the gates to the special chapter ofPope Paul VI, who appillinted Ealtimc;u'e archdioeese from 1959 the southern province of .thel.\1sgr. Franci.sJ. Mugavero to to 11951 when he WM -appointE>d Sisters of Charity of St. Eliza­succeed him ~ spiritual head vice officialis. In 1955 he Wa.Il beth hav~ endorsed the Blackof the Brook~yn diocese. appomtedvice chancellor and! Sisters' Caucus to be held in:The Pope also appointed Msgr. officialis, Il::ld 0:on i966 was Pittsburgh Aug. 17-24.F. Joseph Gossman :00 titular numrad to :the ,facunty of ·St.

The caucus, a follow up to thebishop of J!\;gwJ,to tD serve all IVl3ll'Y~S SeminaIy, ..Roland Parl.t, auxiliary bishop to Lawrence in 'Baltimore. ' April Black Clergy Caucus in"

Detroit, will discuss the prob­Cardinal Sheh:am, erehbishop of Baltimore. lems of black identity and the

place of black Sisters in theThe Pope's 3ctiOml were an­ Lisbon ,Gets' Relic Church.

Luigi Raimondi, Apostolic Dele­nounced here by Archbishop

The special chapter here noted.Of· $t0 AIm.thon' the financial needs of the con-' i.LISBON '(NC)~A major relic

gate in the United States. ference and suggested that fi ­

Mugavero, 54, :Is 0 natiw of Bishop-designate Francis John

Gl1 St. Anthony of Padtllll' was Jlancial assistance be forwarded Brooklyn, son of Angelo I1Ild· to Sister Martin de Porres at Rose Pernice Mugavero of a1"OO. of Lisoon' here :&s a gift

presented 00 ·the .cardinal patri ­Mt. Mercy Convent, Pittsburgh.

from: .tL"te shrine honoring the Delegates to the westernBrooklyn. He was educated .at MOSIGNOR GOSSMAN MONSIGNOR MUGAVEROsaint at Padua, It:lly, .to the Lis­ province chapter of the same

Oathedral Preparatory -&:hool bon ·cathedral. community, meeting concur­and Cathedral College in Brook­ ,St:. Anfuony was eorn m. the rently in Passaic, N. J., proposed lyn, -!lnd Immaculate Concep­

St. Ambrose parish school,

Lisoon 'cathedral parish -ond was an experiment with the electionCites Serious Issues tion Seminary, Huntington, N. Y. haptized in the font still used in of superiors in two or three of

'the cathedral. its houses.After ordination to the priest ­ BW3pitisfl' l@gd~1f See~ IICred@o' G$ Block .hood in Brooklyn on May 18, ·Arriving here byanr, the relic Establishment of a provincial 1940 ,Father Mugavero made ad­ was tclcen to St. Anthony's T@ E<&:lllim<eni«:~d· Progress senate is also being dicsussed as

church opposite the cathedral the special chapters ended theirvanced studies in social service which Ui built over·the room in NEW YORK (NC)-"Although the :Holy Spirit," Dr. Stuber said. second week of work. They areat Fordham University and which the saint was born. The I rejoice in the fact that nine Dr. Stuber observed that the due to conclu.de sometime<aarned his master's degree. room is now a chapel beneath theologians of the Roman Cath- chief. emphasiH at Uppsala is around the end of July, butHe served as assistant pastor the sacristy. olic Church have been elected being centered upon the Church their decisions are subj~et toQt St. .Joseph Patron of the Uni­

The following day the relic at Uppsala off'.cial members of in the modern world, an area approval of the superior generaLversal Church and at Nativity of was borne in procession to the. the Commission on Faith and where there is already,' to 0the Blessed Virgin Mary p1\r­cathedral, where it was present­ Order of the World Council of large extent, Protestant, Ortho­ishes, then became executive di­ I}{h~@«ll$ ~o~o [P[)'O@~\J'$ed to Manuel Cardinal Gon­ Churches, since it indicates dox and Roman Catholic agree­rec'tor of Catholic Charities for calves Cerejeira of Lisbon. real ecumencial progress, I be- ment.the Brooklyn diocese, and later ~~MDil'ilD'ilD ~~%)@d@{?D@[ii)

A six-foot-high statue of St. lieve that ::najor interfaith pro- "I came baek from Uppsalasecretary to Archbishop McEn­ SAN ANTONIO (NC)-Fathei'Anthony by the Portuguese gress will not be made dy.ring greatly encouraged, because ittegart for charities. Richard S..Amico of Olean, N.Y..sculptor Leopoldo de Almeida the next decade' in the area of now appears that for the first ­lE:n.llt.nmoi'o Natnv0 in the Buffalo diocese, wiwstands in front of the Portuguese faith and order, but in the time since the Reformation theBishop-designate Francis Jo­ elected president at the Alumnipavilion .... at the San Antonio, _ world-field of life and work." churches are now officially~ph Gossman, 38, is a native of Association of the Americ8LllTex., Hemisfair .and will later The Rev. Dr. Stanley~I. Stu- united in· a program of Chris­Baltimore, the son of Frank M. CoUege at Louvain, Belgium an­be moved to a permanent site in ber, American Baptist ecumen- tian action in the world, whichand Mary Steadman Gossman .of nual convention here...that city. The statue was pre­ ical leader and director .of .As- will have a major influence onBaltimore. After completing el­ . He served as vice presidentsente:l to the city of San Antonio sociation Press, New York City, future social, economic, moral,ementary studies at Shrine of last year and succeeds Auxiliaryby the Portuguese ambassador made this statement on his re-. religious and political trends~he Little Flower parish school, Bishop St~phen A. Leven of Santo the U. S., Dr. Vasco Vieira turn from the fourth assembly in the '70S" Dr. Stuber said.he made his high school and col­ Antonio as presidegt of theGarin. of the World Council oflege studies at St. Charles Col­ 450-member association. Foui'ChurChes at Uppsala, Sweden.lege, Catonsville, Md. other bishops and some 60AMthoE'm~e~S;lentHe completed his studies for I!'l> M 1l'I\ &h~",!J, Dr. Stuber said that the wec.. 1Ill,•• n...I~"'''''&.lo...."", priests from throughout theU'OOIJ"'~u~u tr ... 1lJ .... ~Il YOU Assembly is committed to workthe priesthood at St. Mary's Prayer in Schools country attended the reunion.HO~ F1ll II 811'" d 0 with the Roman CatholicSeminary, Baltimore, and at the h§ rOpe S ~re 0 Church in regard to develop- HARRISBURG (NC) - The Next year's meeting of the

North American College in Alumni Association will be heldATLANTA (NC) - Georgia's ment and other needs of the l?ennsylvanit senate by a unan­Rome, where he was ordained in Buffalo.offi~al Baptist publication h~ ,mcdenl world, but that the imous 49-to...O :vote has approvedto the priesthood on Dec. 17, sharply criticized the Catholic ·June 30 pronouncement of Pope a bill which would authorize a1955. Followi~g ordination, he Church and termed Pope Paul Paul VI ,on The Credo 'of the lI)Criod for silent prayer or med­studied canon law .<.)t the Cath­VI's Credo of the People of God PCQple of God will make it itation to be conducted in the en 'example of lFeligiousbigotry. most difficult for the faith .and state~s public schools.

Urge 'Integration An editorIal in the Christian order section to make much '1'he bill, forwarded 'k» the,Index said: "With ali the tallt of progress, if any, on .the essential House, would allow a teacher "ifOf Social Action ch3Dges In the Catholic· Church, theological issues now dividing .authorize<l1.or directed by .the

,TAIPEI (NC) - The Priests" ~let~G ,keep "the record straight. Protestants and Catholics. board of education to conduct Institute for Social Action in Surface 'Changes .1D£Yhave been "On .t1uch issues as intercom­

. til ,period ,~f brief silent. pr-ayer'"China (PISAC) has called upon ·made, but the .1..'Ore of Catholic .munion, .theone true 'church,

requi~g partidpation of an·the Catholic nuns ·and priests of ·doctrine is as rigid ond bigoted infallibility, indulgences, relics, studen.ts prior to beginn.i.ligofTaiwan to integrate their ~ial as ever." . the nature of·the Christian min­ the .school .<illY.action and thus make it more 'The Credo "Of ~e ·People of istry, the source ,of authority, effective and meaningful. God, proclaimedb,. PQpe Paul ,purgato~, ·.the ,Virgin MaJ;Y, the

The plea came during a work­ (June 80) ,at ·the .e~d C1f thel> .sacramen.ts,·and the position I1Ild shop held by PISAC at Fujen Year .of 'Faith, reasserted the power .of the hierarchy ovei' I

Social Action." .ihosalso been criticized :by some they are at a'll in earnest.. iTaipei's Archbishop Stanis­ Catholic ~ubliC2lti()JlS.ine!uding '~Iy ·EnoourngedD

'·bus Lo Kuang addressed the 'three Dutch Catholic news-' l'.lVlixoo .marn2tge is .related ~ning session by s~y&ng: ilp/J!Per8. ..10 these, ,as .is ' birth .control. "Here in TcaiwW), the mission ·of ,From ·my .point ,of wiew 'these

.propagating the faith must .be • ,wueacanbe settled 'only .by

.-prepared with social ac:Uons, QP- :Conver~ions Ar,ouse .'ereative <oompromise, bas~.d

rvortunities must be prepar-ed. Ind,·an 'Of.ll:.·..,..::"Is .,~pon' the ·.teaohingD. of·..tbe New with ,social actions, opportunities If' ...~u ":'Testament.'I (;donot ..look ·fOl"­·must be cr.eated by social '3C- BOMBAY . (MC) -.The ebief ,walld. ' ,to· .<Uniformity ,of .belief IK' Uoo.s;"ernef minister 01. .Mabarashtra practice ·~tthese;llOints, ',but to

Bishop .James CL. W~ ,of ,says ·his government-.is:aware ,of :an·:acceptaDce"of. ~arious·,points­;the Episcopal Church in Taiwan :.lthel~poosely.tizing acti-vities" .af ,1Jf-v.iew ,uni~ .throughand.~

Catholic University, at which 98 'lPrlncj,ple tenets, of .the Chl.lli'ch, "against the position and power :lttended, inclUding 59 priests ,including man,. doctrines ~er .of ·.the laity, are some of the ! I ,JEREMIAH COHOLAN and '27 nuns. 'The theme of the critical uamiJ!atioJl loy contem- serious issues which the .the­workshop was, "Planning for ,po.rar,. theolQgi ims. ·The Credo ologians 'NUl have to face if.', ,PLUMBING &- . HEATING

.:Jaid, ''TIle fact that .50 ,man,. . two C8tbollc~prjests'in,bis.~.

'ROD-Oatholics, including me; .Chief..mblister ,\?.P.·Naik .told lhave been ask~to share in -.this ,the state l~gisl~tDrerthat1lJl,m­.workshop,.·indlcates how 'far (#Ie :dian .priest, ·whom'he identIfied / lliave 'advanced ,in -ecumenicalooly,,·as a ·FatherMirandais ::' .understandi.Qg ,and coope~tioD omwerti.,TI<g '~:'lle} to tChtistian­..-i'~ Christian Caurch~ ,~ty.'. . . .. -..

~o .suell Corr:.Pk:nt,~said. Mr. rN~, <has .been '. reeeiv~ .. about .:Face :Closing Lthe ,other ,mise=onau", •identified

'M;ONTEVIDll;O (NC)-About .a8.E3thei' M~Wevi'flr'QmSf)8lin. .iO(l Catholic schools ·with a·,total I.But, ,<he'8ai~.hill. I,':riministratiolll @i 75,000 .students .1Ilice extinction ,is _'are ,of the ~g~ac­

~ .unless some kind of,:&Umly ~Stlb­ ~vW.es ,ofbQtb •.missionaries. 3idy 1s providec;1, a national .()l' ­ -Mr. Na:lli.said. tbaLthere '!1re ganization of privnteeducaton ,1.,146 ,misli~onaries An:hjs· state, Gaid. .here in U-rvg!U170 "at'! ,of ·wholl!'l .• ar:e~.i'gn~

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Page 6: 07.25.68

6

()

c. THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 25, 1968 More Knowledge S()meth~ng

Continued from Page One ers work with teenagers and fu­, ..' .~

volving sensitivity training and workshop experience with teenS.

.When a Priest ·Leaves Recent announcements by two prominent l Jesuit:', ,. She is spending the remainder

priests that' they have left their positions ~d t~l:!-t pne of the Summer at· Regina Pacll!I has already married a divorced w~man and that the other Center, New Bedford, working

with Rev. Colman Conly, SS.CE::..will marry have caused a great deal of pain and emhar­on a vacation program for dis->mssment all around. A few points .should be kept in mind.. advantaged area children.

The fiI'st is thrut these priests, Hke qther . priests of. · ~ . . .,.

Meanwhile, 12 stay-at-honm the Ohurch in the Western world, knew exactly what they. Sisters _representing four relt=

gious communities are makingwere getting into 'When they asked the priesthood, from history in Fall River. They areo

the Church. They accepted celibacy not as a denial of working in "Summer Opportu-­something good but as an opportunity to, devote them-. nity Centers" under Title it selves 'more completely to all of G(}{l's people and as an grants from the federal gove1'Jloa

ment along with over 100 lay,ascetic ideal quite fitting to one who walks in the person teachers in 10 city pub~of Chris·t and makes available Chris,t's saving POWer' to schools. The project. marks the

. all men. first· time that members of reli ­The next point is that priests' :realize that .they are gious communities have worked

'in Fall River public schools. living a life of sacrifice that can be strengthened and Making a little private historY, supported only by prayer, by holiness of life. Priests know is Sister Joseph Mary, RS.M..

that if they are anchored in goodness of life then they who is in charge of recreation will receive from God the gI'aCe to live the ~ife demanded. at tbe Aldrich School and whc of them and in the way that is 'expected of them by God reports for work attired in a

neat pair of culottes. Sisters ofand by God's people. Mercy are working on exper)..

A third point is that should a priest cOme to the re­ mental versions of their habDJ alization that he can no longer live the priestly life, then . this Summer, and the Fall River he is free, as one ,of the Jesuit fathers did, - to petition religious is "doing her thing" m

· appropriate garb. the Holy See to release him from his priestly duties ~nd

, ,

~E()I$T£RtbANbUtEN$9; 8Yl.AIV . Heading one of the largesliobligations. Concern for God's people and a sense. of in-·

· Summer centers is Sister Katbo ~grity WQuld seem to demand' that this be 'done bef~re' leen Marie Farley, who dur~ he'starts talking marriage:' . , .the . academic year is 'principal

A fourth point is the Catholics do. nOt .believe.in the 'of Mt. St. Mary. Academy.. She'l!l coordinator of Follow. Through" right 'of a person' already v-alidly ~arried to enter iilto Summer Head Start and OE~

another marriage after a divorce. And so the priest who , · Head Start programs at the Li~ atbtempts marriage with a divorcee goes against not. only. · eoln School, and is responsible the discipline of his Church but the truth of the &)spe]s•. · for 125 children. 'the Also coordinators are Sistel'It is not the part of 8Illy person' to· judge another. .James Helena, S.U,S.C., in But, at the same time, in the midst of the anguish brought charge of science prograJDSil upon the Church by. the actions of some of her children, ... 'and Sister St.' Maurice, S.S,J"moo~~lnCj' heading reading programs. Tbe~

proper perspective. One-half of one per cent of the priests it isJhe part Of honesty to place what has happened inits

Rev. John r.. Moore, St. Joseph'", Taunton have headquarters at the FaD River public schools administra­

of this country left their priesthood last year. Not a 18ll'ge B.A, ~.A., M:Ed. tion building. Dumber,. to be ~ure, But it is'a great tribute to all the Others Involved priest~ who are doing their 'work for God and for His A Call to Action Qther Sisters involved in the :People that the leaving of even one·is newsworthy, attracts programs are Sister Mal3: public attention, is. a .sou:ree of upset to people. It means' Guenette, .S.S.J., teaching rea~'

that the priesthood is still highly regarded and it teaehes. FOR THE' NATION'S BlSHOPS ing at the Small School; Siste7 Raeann, RS.M. and Sister Ter­priests everywhere that theirs is a calling that 00m8ll1ds

Is the Church in the. Unit>ed States Si() caught. up in esita, .S.U.S.C., science and artmuch, that must be strengthened by holiness of life, that . at the Carroll School; Sister

.~ own loCal and area problema that it has become im­people call to aceount JD()St strictly, that people look upon Patricia, RS.M. and Siste"possible for the OaJtholic community to form a voice ofin such a solem~ way that any deviation from it and :its \ Pauline, R.S.M. music and read-­national policy? Have we as Catholics been so concern~ ing at the Lincoln School. high ideals is greeted with shock and' surprise ood pain. .with our own emerging prob- . Also, Sister' Mary Lawrence,' lems that we have to some sues such as dbcrimination, civil ·O.S.F., reading at the Connell

lights, civic· d.isobedience, gun School; and Sister Martha Marie, No Election degree really forgotten the control, publie assassination­ S.U.S.C., special education ail world in which the church . to mention only a few-shouldn't the Watson School.

"No one elected me the father. I am the father." must live? the Church,. through the na- Despite .heat and humidit", That is a good line for every father of a family These 'questions are raised tional Council of Bishops, take everyone seems to be enjoying

·to keep in mind. WhHe he must show respect to his wife . only as ~ point of reference and a more forceful and dramatic' the Summer activities, reportD d h' h 'ld -h'l th - t be d tand' ". speculatIon. role in our national life as citi- Sister Mary Urban, who's on

an IS c 1 ren, W 1 e, ere mus un ~rs mg aIJ.l~ng . There are many who feel that zens of this country? duty at the Diocesan School all members of a famIly, the father still has a POSltion the Catholic community has Certainly the writings of Office. given him in the very' nat.ure of things and demandi~g turned its back on the pressing Popes John and Paul indicate Just a reminder from an im­of him a response. issues of American life. That we . the course of action for the pressed layman to all these

... have been so immersed in our Church, Is it not time that we busy educators: the ~Pope did . . The f'ather must be the head of hIS f#lmdy-not the own post-council evolution th~t formed a national policy and say, just last Sunday, thatdictator, but the head. He must always remain the kind the events of our national life put· the thoughts of these men . EVERYONE needs a vacation.and loving husband even when he beComes, a father. He have suffered because the Cath- into .a" concrete national unified Don't forget, now! must project the image of' strength and decision and COU'l"- oli~ cOmmun~ty has no unified policy. Then the totality of

th t h' f th" f h th' polley of actIon. America would 'know that theI age .so a.}s sons rom eI; ma~cy ave, IS.~ a To some degree this is true. Catholic Church as a' national Schedule Rural Life trellIS on whIch they develop m theIr own mascuhruty, Much energy has been expand- unit is interested and actively .. so that his daughters may know what a man is and should ed on iriternal problems. Many ensuring the survival of this de- 'Conference Aug. 9· be for a. greater understanding of their femininity. • .members of the church have be- mocracy. Con:;;idering the cir- ST. CLOUD (NC)-The Nao

. , '. .. come so involved in these pur- cumstance of pr,~sent-day-Amer- tional Catholic Rural· Life Cono The father must be mvolved. WIth hIS famIly. ~he ,suits that they. have become ica, is it not time for the Church 'ference (NCRLC) will hold its

child's earliest ideas on home and family and -God and '. oblivious ttl the!really pressing to cease being j;letty and small- annual convention here in Min­spiritual values must not be :a one-sided legacy .from a needs of man in -the world and minded by· concentrating its "nesota Aug. 9 to 11. The theme mother but must come from both parents. .particularly man in these United efforts on a 'loeal and regional will be "Farms and Towns of

" States. Since many of today's situation instead of' an internal Rural America: The Problems problems involve deep moral is- nature?" , .~ and the Future of Their People."". ". .. " .• .' ­J . . Contribution in Hqu,r;.~~ N:eed N~~8 :X~':~~~e ~ire~~~~':1~~

· tional and effect every phase of ··by· broad and' :national involve- Other speakers include Dr. Er­our'life as citizens of this union. ment. ."..... nest J. Nesiu,;, vice president..of

'. . dJ·...' Th'e' . A. ',' ~.·.C.'.·······~H· .. .... ". . The problems w~ 'face are na- lQcal activitr ..must. be replaced . deliver..... 'the keynote'.,R'·'·.··N· .": ,': .· ... '0·:·· '. address.@ The Church must not-stand' by It·· i" bi . o. West Virginia University,' and . and merely preach what should . .- '! erna ~:pr!l ,,~ms .must not be Dr. Bert Evans of the Univer­

, '. .' 0 •••. \,'''' ". ~ • . ~ dOrienor jusfo"take upa col_·,"'a;ca.u~l7.0.f d~la!v. We must put . sity of Nebraska. (,\~F.lCIAL NEWSPAPER OF THE,DIOCESE'OF, r:Al,L' .R~VER lection to help' the needy. It ~~r o,!? h<l.use m order ~.soon U. S. Secretary of Agriculture 'U.,blished weekly by'The Ca!!,olic. PreSs oft"ti!Di9C~~e of.. ~a. II. River .must also·become active' and in- '. a~ ~P9S~I:I~~ ,~o we. ~,ay . ~x.pand Orville' L.. Freeman .will ,speak

. :. ..10 Highland' Avenue : '.. . . .:;;., volved in.away that <:(prist'can 'ourii e.ne~gl~ :onpursumg. our on "Farms' and' Cities of, Rural . . Fall River, Moss; 027:22. " . 675.:7.151 .'. .'. be seen in the market place; 1\' '..de~Jlr .as,~, pe~Ple of~., Am.erica '-:- the Problems ,and

PUBLISHER •. ' "., '. ' .The found~tion for this active .' . We have the. ipeans to make .Future Of their People." : • '< ' •. '. involvement already has been a .·.tremendous 'contrib'ution.· .. tG Twelve. bishops.. and Priests•

. Most Rev. James L. Connc;.lIy, DJ)., ,PhD.. . constructed. .help this countr;, in its hour of wiil concelebrate the convention ·GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER. The ,history of the Catholic ·need. What.weneed.now is .the· :Mass and the ',homily will be

Rt. Rev. Daniel F. Shar'loo,.M.A.Rev. john P.'Driscoli' Church in Aplerica testifies ttl unifying force .0J eilergetic and given' by Msgr. Daniel Cooper, . MA~AGING. EDITOR . this fact. It is now time to build, selfless dedicati<'n by our Na- Lincoln, Neb. diocesan director

. H~gh J. Golden 'In this foundation. Isolated and ~onal Council of Bishops.,· 8f Rural Life.

Page 7: 07.25.68

7 'ope, President, StressOurrent ',W·orld Crisis .;

WASHINGTON (Ne) Delega.tes to the 4~ annual iWatkmal C!diholie Laymen~B Retreat Conferenee here in the nation's capital have reen aminded by both iI:'ope Paul aad President Johnson of 'llie GUr1'ellt crises !eaeing the nation and the world.

"Title laity should vivify their IBves with charity and e~pre33 it -rui beet l1;heY1:un m their w.o:ri!t3," ~ Holy llffith31' um.>ertecl in Jis mes3Uga which was :read by Pat­rick Cardinal O'Boy:'.e 0:1 WucJ1­mgron.

Re:::lemL't:on of l\:b:1k::361 , "'Let eat;h one remember *hat

00 CUD have an imp~d em all ffi211 and contribute to the nlva­

, tion of ,the whole wo:r:'.d by p~b­lie wor.ship and ;prayer 03 well ,~ by ?e1lUDCe ond ';ioluntar,y nc­ceptam:e of the labors 1md hard­ahips of life. By roch :neans does ±heChristiun grow ~ the ilikeness to the suffering Christ.

"'IIhe tried 1:D.d true instibti.on ,of closed retreats is .;potent ,~1lDS '1;0 enliven men's·Jove of $Qd. and nei,ghbor; the "pr,:l)fer .~ penauce ~eyentuil ,ean ,;;.0­.1Iieed hav?a uni~ e:U1;)Ct, ,iltlld '~elp ~, ithcredemptiQIl, pf ·Pl'll1kind.,

,,"His :Holiness, ifllel'efore ,ef!. ­~..Iroge3 the memben; m ,tl,1e iPanference to,eoptinue w;ith growing enthusiasm and, r:eru. In

, the,::;vise way they ha7e~o3en,"

, ·the Pu.pDl message 3ai1. . , Grateful Nation . President Johnson noted thllt

"'You meet at a 1im~ of grave eb.<L1enge , to ev.m the m98t aacred of our .national traditi~s. But you face that challenge well eqnipped. For you have spent llour :!l'uitful deeades in strength­·ening the .s;piritual and moral fiber of America. You have en­hanced the valtulble service Clehdered by the 'retreat houses .r our Aand with your -..mtiring 'ooIl1Panssion and hard, good

'work. . '''Please aeceptagrate:ful na­

·Cion's thanks, and a President'. profound appreciation:for youit' ~iring~ntributions ~ the ille and, legacy of ·our~ap1e,·

~ President stated.

.Vatican ;Paper Raps Tax :Plan

VATICAN CITY (NC) -'The Italian premier.s.proPi>sal to re­quire the Vatican to.paytaxea .. 'its "divid.end income :was as­·Miled by the Vatican City daily, li'Ossel'VRtore, 88 a~teral" aut in opposition iio~emental'7

~les oI.intemationa1 law." If the program of Premier

"ov-anni Leone wereadoPte4 .,. parliament, 'the VatleaJI would be required 'to pay back laxes amounting ito over $'1 ,mil ­\Iioo'.

}O'Gsservatore 'Romano's state­-.ent indicated that Premier Leone had, not collBu1ted 1be''Vat­,1can on bis proposal. In 'publlsh­4Ing the premier'.s .decision . ­aban::ion !lnagreement with the Vatic!ll1, L'Osservatore RomnRe

._4: "We eanonlynote with won­

.1', without entering into the , merits of 1he questJ.on, that thia . was done unilaterallY,in CO&­

IJicl with rtheelementary prin­ciples af international law:"

i[,lQsservatore Romano' refer­tfed·to an exchange 9f notes be­

., ,Wveen ,the- Vamcanand the Ital ­,... govemment, in 1963. In, the _change" • ~Chllistian,Demoorat­

,Ie, finance minis~r assured the ¥:atiean it would De exempt ~ the 1929conoordat wltIl

,Jta:Q- from. new17 passed Ja., CftlQuiring holden of .securiti~ ... ,~y ~ea _ dividen.da.'

New'Sec"etaryolEcumenical Commission Believes Diocese Ready for Brotherhood . Hmr- ean ale.~"tllaD. make a ,signifeant eootribution lin the field&f ecumenism? "He

can 3tart by 1'ooking a.t everyGlle· wfrth whom llle comes in eontaet as a SlOn of God who • loved byCbrlst-not as a member en ~e group who is being polite to a member of another group." Tn.'is round advice oomes from Richard K. Martin ~f Taunton, a layman and the new secretary of the EellIllilnical Commission of the Diocese of Fall River. He was appointed to the position. upon. 'the resignation 'Of Rev. Ed­ward J. Mitche!1, wao was the iIi.r.81 secretary of the Commis­sion.

:Mr. Mal'ti.n. \vho has been a member of the Conu.-nission since r:.ts inception three ye<:U'll ago, G!:lYIJ he believes that ween i~

ilWme3 00 tt~e 13ub;eet of ecumen­f.sm, l'Drome of mind is ~he most !mJ)ort.ant facior.

Sitting in hi:; law office on'11te Taunton, Green on 0 simmering cumzner l:l'ftemoon, ilie new sec­retary s.poke in moilem tones of :3iB ow.:!. aocomplishments, but with ~re1ltdeptb oi feeling on 1he subjeet of Christian unity.

Ollier Fellow's ReUgion "'We've got to 5!:arl by learning

3bOul 'theotherfellmv'a lI'e1igiOD. ~t il33e must lea:m.about ours" he 3Irld. ~·ve- foWu • tremen­dous amount 0'1 sincerity and good faith among our friends m­other Oh!.11'cl123, but ~ a tre­mendous hI±: cd knowledge about our Jituzgy,our a-ttmini­5trotion."

"Per~ap3 lreeause Pm a lltWy­er, J've fou:r::d o:u Gbristia:n friends very interE".sted in ask­ing me. aboJ}t the. lPhy'si~ set-up of the DiOlleSe .Nlthe:z- than in discussing Ifundwnen'tal theol­ogy," he said. '

T.~e' Taunton. attorney arid his wife, the former Nancy C. Regan. are the parents of three lively , ,

boys, Craig, 10, Neil, 8, ~d. churches and work with them to and ,tep. 1!.'18 of :;lToblems that ·Bruce, 6. T,heir hnme in North advance the ecumenical spirit might escape us 1>therwise," the Dighton .is in St. Joseph's par­ in .1Jhe Diooe3e under the super­ 'new 'secretary said. ish. 1,'hey. also ,have a summer vision of the Bisbop," Mr. Mar­ "What oon laYIDe:l do on the hQme !n Falmouj;~ where Mrs. tin explained. parish le"lel ~ ifoster a spirit of Martin's brother, Rev. .loba J . The co:nm.iBsion has recently Christian uni.~?" :Mr. Martin' Began is assistant at 81. Patrick's. ; sen.t letters to 'all the parish was asked, His answer was quick." !MI'.. Martin is a g;raduate of ,councils of. the Diocese, asking "I would hope that all the tfolks ,~getoWJl University and Bar- them to form ~umenicalcom­ of the Diocese. would do their ~n'l .Law School. Mrs. Martha mittees ()O. a parish level. The utmost to 3bow friendship to• aD. alumna of Regis College. ~en oi these parish com­ people' of all faiths-it being al­

.On April 15 llichard Martin mittees wID be imli'ted to sit in ways underst~ that we keep'was invested as n Kinight of St. '011 the commission Inileting our own theology and liturgy. 1 Gregory at ceremocies 'm .St. whenever :they w~. would hope there would be a lot Mal7's Catherlral in F-all River. . '''We!;l~ that 1heseparlsh of contact," he emphasized.The Knights ofst. Gregory are ,@ouncil oommittee members will Not Tlneological.• pontifioal &1'der oflmlghth<>od ceme to our meetings and.share tfOunded .Q-y Pope Gregory XVI their ~perier:tces in the parish "rve found so .far that dis-'

':in '1331 as .recognitionof I m~r- euss.ions do not get down to· pa­tiiorlouS services. ' pal infallibility or infant baptism.:MistorrTeachers but are ;still on the non-theolo­Taunton Serra Internatronal,Mr. Form Association gical level," he said..

A. oo-founder of the Grea'!er

ia a member "I do feel ,that an this DioceseMutill also of NOTRE DAME (NC)-A na­Msgr. Coyle Council .62, Knights tional History Teachers' Associ­ Catholics want tolmow their of Columbus. fellow: iOhristians in otheration, emphasizing the teaching

:In 1965 hesen"8Q. ,lIS lay chaiTr­ grotl~" he e'>ntinued...«:if ihistory in GeCondaryse'hooll __ 1iJf1lbe CalhOlic Charitiea "People 1:an have differences.has 'been formed :with headquar- ,

Item at tbe"tTniversit)" of NotreA,ppeal Of. the diocese. Glf opinion an any subject--on . The Ecumenical Commission Dame. bllid~poker, ~seban. politics meets (}D.the requE3tof Chair­ Tae group's objectives include and be ~rfectly natural about it. man Msgr. Henri Hamel iD vari ­ encouragement of interest ia But the minute the subject of ous MeltS of the diooese. "Our 'historical .scholarship among religioEl coine.1 up, a tenseness Ja:JC; meeting was h1lld atSt. mstory teaehers, promotion of sets in and it shouldn't. ,..homas' Episoopal Church ia the -impmvement of the teaching "There is 3l) much more to be Taunton at .the invitation .of the of bistoty,and providing a gained by aD of us, by empha­pastor, Rev. T.ho1llll3 Crwn" Mr. forum for interchange of ideu sizing points we have in com­Mar.tin recalled. and techniques. mon, rather than relying on pe­

Main~ 'lIhe first Dtitional meetin,g of lite aloofne.>s as we :!Ilight have , (l)n the oorr..mission are 11. 'the I:leW orgariization is set for done in the past," concluded the '~tsand 6 2Ilymen :&om aU JulT Hand lZ, 1969, with the new lay secretary of the dio­parts Qf -the diocese. Clergymen ,theme: '"Teaching ,1Jf Afro­ cese's pioneer Ee'-.1menical Com­and laymen ofot:!ler faiths sit American Hist&ry." mission. m .on -th~ meetings.

"T!le mob. 1Ihing -:llhe commie­Ilion is irVing to do ill to eon­ EiJjoyDiningtoot .(,)W' ooun:erp3l'ts iD !>the!!'

aN THE

,Acc'epts Resi.gnation JOllY WHALER ., VATICAN CITY (NC)"":';P.op8 - -'-AND­, P.aul' VI' 'has aOOe.pted the reSig­

notion. WI' reasOns' of heil1th' 01. . 'SP~UTER INN ~ . " . ,"Bishop Horac::o' ·.'Gomez Davila

01. ,:t. ..Riojlll; A:rgentma,·";be .'" RESTAURANTS ' ..1alres the 1itularSee cDf,Buspae. , Inllis plane the P()pe.has named ,Always free Parxins'

AUldl.hu;y Bishop Enrique AD­,ge1elll, CllrleW of Cordoba; Ar­ Hew Bedford Hotel &:enWiL

MARTIN "FAl\HLY: Mr. and Mrs. ,Richard K. Martin with. from left, Neil,:8; Bruce, 6; Craig, 10. Martin is newly awmnted ..secretary-of Diocesan, E~umenic;ll Commission.

THE ANCMOI-Thurs., July 25. 1968

Scores Critics OfU.5•. Policy

UPPSALA (NC) - Self-righ. teous and intolerant criticism of the United. States on Vietnam was challenged by a U. S. sena­tor attending the Fourtb Assem­bly of the World Couneil of Churehes (WCe) as (l delegate of the Methodi13t Church.

South Dokota'(l Sen. George MeGovern sai~ thnt he had been "a longtime critic of U. S. rn­volvement in Vietnam," but that nevertheless he has I;~en both­ered during the wec meeting here by the "self-ri~hteolAS and intolerant" criticism which has been voiced in manY' oections and meetinGS of the assembly.

Objecting to 'tee tore 01 3c:ne of the more vloler.t eriticiSI:\S, Sen. McGoverzl 13aicl "!.l::.e tlI.e~e­

gates from no ::lat:QD come to this m:sembly with clean barcb."

"If the U. S. is as bliP..d nnd evil as some imply," be declared, "then surelY we are in need of the assembly's compassion and praYers and not intolerance."

, Th~: senfltoT sai.~~ "The war. dB . '\7ietn~ is goin$: ~ be en~~ not 80 muCh by the conscience of ,the world as by the presstUe of. opinion brought by U. S. l:iti ­zens," he said. "Don't undere5~i­'mate the· intelligence. sensitivity and ~ommon sense' of the Amer­jean' peop,le."

,Lastly, ilie senator said be thought. .many de!egstes to ~he

~embly foiled to give enough attention to improvements in human relations which have al ­ready been achieved. He cited the various int~ational agree­ments reached in the DI.lc1ear weapons .area and said the as­sembly could well "devote itself to "m\>re thanksgiving for pr~~ ressin human rights and hum. relations over :recent years." . '

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Page 8: 07.25.68

,.. THE ANCl-!OR-Diocese of'FalI Rlver-Thurs:, July 25, 1968 " . I Deplores Rocism

.~

\·1in Textbooks ..\

latin Modes LANSING (NC) - Histo1'Jj textbooks used by Michigan public school children are "hi£,., torically inaccurate" and pep.

By Marilyn R04lIell'nclk.

Beautnes petuate racism, a panel of histo­rians concluded in a report pre-­sented to the state Board of ~ ucation.

The charges were contained-it! findings of a Social Studie$ Textbook Committee appointed by State Superintendent of Pq'bo>

clothes has her own special lic Instruction Ire Polley. He dres.sm<!ker and some even have called for a full review of mo~ two. than 600 social studies books and

"I ;have two," Sandy confessed. asked for new criteria to assure "One I use for daytime and cas­ freedom from bias in books uset) ual clothes and the other is in the state. marvelous for evening wear." Michigan €etholic scllooltJ

have already developed a preoaThe girls went on to explain gram to. teach the history ana

that these' dressmakers are both contributions of the Arneric• . reasonable andcrea·tive. An av­ :Negro in all grades of all Catb4l>o> erage daytime dress can be lic schools in the state.made for the nominal, fee of

T,h~ Michigan Catholic SchoOl'anywhere between four and 10 Superintendents' Committee, an­dollars while . even' ,the most nounced .last Spring tha~ Ne~elaborate evening gown imag­ history will be interwoven 1lIliinable wouldn't carry a price .such llubjei;ts as history, litera.. tag any higher than $200 if it ture, arts and sciences in 1M was handmade. Materials there state's 675 Catholic schools. ' are evidently. inexpensive yet ,Polley's committee concena10velY,:with bright and beauti ­

"ra~ed on history books modful floral prints l1;lading the fab­ widely used in social. studies to mc parade. the public schools, and enlisted

Fortunately for 'the girls of six historians recommended be Brazil their skilled needle art ­ their colleagues, The panel ~ ists can transform these lovely lected 12 Of, the most Wid~ fabrics into stunning' designs' " lllsed public school history ~. with . ·nothing more 'than your Perhaps the most serious 'hi;. idea in mind. Patte'rns are used dictment . that' can be' madl1 only' by the novice sewer who . . against the books that were re:.­needs help,' but the professional ", , viewed is that they are histoy),. is a'bIe to whip 'a creation up cally ,inaccurate, tbe' re.POIt with no assistance other than CHARITY IN ACnON: Shortages of. rood ana medi­ ~d. .

r'her own creativity.' This' of «2nes plague the largely U>o'pOpulation (~, Biafra; which· cours.e ,is every woman?s drealll\ has withstood a year-long' aS8Ualt by' Nigeria, seeking to -a chance to dress as an indi­ New Bishop Speaks

break the Bi'ai'Tarevolt.' Here a'German .nursing sisterv,idual and rwt as a folI.>wer. On Catholic Press wmfort6 eo Biafran child.· NC Photo,' . ftafir Styles MIAMI (NC) - The 'forme!'

executive editor of two diocesanSandy, who has large, Snap.. publications, recently appointedping . eyes and' aD' even more Schools; '.. Rolc~ auxiliary bishop of Miami Il8idsparkling mind to match had as here that the job of 1ltJe Catho­her hostess for this week of ad­

Very Pr:acticaB Cathotic Education Sorving Troubled Society lic . press in the post-(lOnciliorventure, Ida Mello 'of Fall. River•. period is to "continue to boUlerWhen I asked the girls how We began talking about Bra­ NCEA Convention Theme . ' .the cOJ:}sciences of people, ale~ .they liked what they had seen. zilY.m women .and their hair­

of North Arne"Hcan women'. dressers. and Sandy assured me WASHINGTON (NC)-"Cath- to 'such ,contemporary' 80ciai ,ing them ~ .the. disorder, ~',. etyle, Regina replied that she that the beautiful women of olic Education: Serving II . problems as p.()verty :racial dis- equity and InJustice all a·round , " ,. them" .felt they dressed very practi ­ South Arnerica are as interested Troubled Society" will be the crimination ·and violence. , . ".:. l' . it· . . . h V ... eally. From what I could gather in keeping up their. appearances theme of the 1969 annual Na­ • .".' n an n ervleW' WIt "" Oll!et, !rom Regina's English, my as their northern neighbors. A. tional Catholic Educationel As- . h A' S' d' . Miami. archdiocesan weekI;'PUbl' rs, ctlon- tu Y where he served as executive edoofriend Ethel's Portuguese and of this ~riting the girls in Bra­ oociation convention to be held my sign language, she meant zil are wearing their bair short in Detroit from: April ., to 10:. Task Force Booki~t ' itor: fro~ 1960 to ~,96~, Bish.o~.,·· ' that they dressed in 8 v conserva­ and curly, or long. and sb'aigbt Some 15,000 Catholic educators '. deSIgnate .John J. FItzpatrick,

" WASHING'rON .(NC) - ,A said;' "Years ago we were Catb- .. ,',tive ·and well-tailored manner; for daytime wear but like and otners 4llA'e expected' to at­bookl~t entitllld "C r ~ s j sin olic . in a rather narrow sen6Cll

What both girls did seem to WOJIlen all over the globe, for, tend. ~e,?ca:' Ho~e Throug~ Ac- and reported Catholic news toevening theirhair-dD becomesenjoy immensely was a shopping' Headquarters for both the tion, ,~resentlllg ~n outline for Catholic people. I think that nowmore exotic and elaborate.trip they took to' some of our· eonvention .and its accompany­ .orgaruzmg an action-s~udY task the Catholic press is repol'lting

local stores. Regina had pur­ Sandy said that although' she ' ing ex,posi tion will be CohO Hall fo~ce, h~s been pu.bllshed by on many things that are of in­goes to the hairdresser everychased some lovely wool and as m Detroit. Some 750 ex-hibits FrIe~ds~IP .Press, ~ew .York terest to Catholics and no&­Friday she comes 100me andshe spoke of what she wanted featuring products and services publishmg fim., and IS avallable Catholics alikecombs her ooiffure out to herto transform this into, we re­own for educators will be part of the through the publication Office, "The Catholi~ press" hliking.turned to the subject of their exposition. United States Catholic Confer- tinued "has the task ~ h:l::;favorite seamstresses. Paris influences the m~e-up

ence. '. people to form their conscienceFrom what both Regina and of the Brazilian female and if The NCEA is the nation"sold­ The foreword, SIgned by Areh- and thl's I'S an aw Sandra (Sandy) told us,we the French emphasis is on eyes, est and largest professional OF- ..... h' h esome respon­

...s op Jo n F. Dearden of De- ..lbI·lity That's h 't' gathered that every Brazilian theU this is what Rio will stress. . ganization for persons engaged Vo't' 'd t of th N . '" . I W Y I IS nece9-

I, presl en ~ ~tIonal sary for editors of Catholic neW9­·woman who is interested' ill The no-lipstick natural look is in Catholic education. The 196£1 Conference ~ Catholic BIsho~s papers and magazines to .be ful­worn by all the young, explained eonvention and' exposition wiD and the Umted. St~tes CatholIc ly aware of what the doctrinebotn girls; the only women who be the NCEA's 66th. Conference; ArchbIshop lako- of the Ch h" i .Disadvantaged Students wear obvioU6 lipStick are the eh . ' . urc IS In every poss­

'older ones. A spokesman said the eonVeD­ vos, aIrman of the Stan~Ing ble sphere -and to make eve". To Get Education Aid! tion theme - "Catholic: Educa­ Conf~rence of O~hodox Blsh- effort to keep abreast of deve:..:

Sandy ,was kind enough C)to tion: Serving &1 'Jl'roubled 80­ ops m the Amer~caS, and. Dr. opments in that doctrine."T,RENTON (NC)-,-New Jer­ give Die II copy of a Brazilian !arthur, S. FlemmIng, presIdentciety" - underlines the rolesey Gov. Richard J. Hughes woman's magazine tbat She bad CIlf the National Council ofCatholic: schools IIllJKl other edu­has signed into law a bill de­ brought with 'her 'too' the States.' Churches, state!i that the book­

.igned to make it possible for eational agenciell have playedThis magazine, Clau'dia,' is beau.. Jet ~as originally preparedarrdisadvantaged studepts to get .and continue 10 play m rel8J'dtifully illustrated aiidi880me­ a' eommonguMe by the Na-" 1\ college education':' what of a cross' between oUr :Me­ tional Council of Churches­

The measure estabiishes a $.1.6 Call's and . sOme of the Paris, Munich See tic Begifll :representing 33 Protestant and' million fund, to be enlargoo .. fashion' JJlagazinesthat, I haw Or.thooox churches--last MarCh. through federal and private seen. Printed' in POrtuguese, it has 'been I'tlvisedto· render,New Regiona~. PBafll , ,grants, to. provide, $cholarships the natioJ11l1 language· "of the .It of grea~r usefulness to Cath­and develop special. training country, it· has 'provided' intel' ­ 'MUNICH (NC)-T~ arebdio-, o1ies, as well 81! to its original programs for students with col­ esting reading for some of Joe"s Jle8dership, the j~oreword stated.eese of Munich and heising willi lege potential coming out. of relatives who are fortunate become fhe first West German -=hools in ghetto areas. enough to be able to read this See to be divided h:r:to distrieta

The training will be given to language. headed by episcopal wears. those whose educational back­ F·rom both the magazines and The plan, Wlbicl1 will divide ground has made it difficult .for the girls I got. the distinct im­ 'Ohe archdiocese mto ~ree dis­them to score well in competi­ pression that Brazilian women tricts each beaded by an auxili ­tive college entrance tests. State are like :women all over the ary bishop, weB announced. Jam . education officials have esti ­ world, interested in fashion and y.ear by Juli1llS iCardin:aJ Doepf­mated that in the coming se­ the home. What did impress me ner of Munidh, president of 1\be mester alone it will be possible about these gilI"ls along with German Bishops' Conference, to provide 500 scholar,ships to their charm was their obvious but eould DOt he implemented those who otherwise would not intelligence---,a refreshing .!hinB until two more 8ux:iliaq lldahop:) be able to attend colleie. ~,. fW,d ~ .~, feJJl~~. . :pere. DlPDed.

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Page 9: 07.25.68

9

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1968

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Calif. College PlansCampus Site Change

LOS ANGELES (NC)-Ina­IIUIC\Ilate Hell" College u ClOIl­tinuiDl its campaign for :tuodis10 eomplete a move froaa "­Boll)'WOOd eampu. to a colle,.CIOIIlPlex ia Claremont. MNDe •.ules froIII. here.

The deciaiOll was diaclCllled .,.Sifter Anita Cupary, who headll• croUP of -ae 400 Im.m.aeWateHMri til. Ilar7 Qun. who fa......-.odenl relorml. A .-aller~01. lillie 1Iun. fa 901' the tradlu-aI...,.. of the Sl.stftbood.

'!'be mo_ .. Claremoet .­p1aruaed .cMIle yean .........1be lIuns becuae lavolved. .. a_troverq with .J&IIl4!tI 1'..-11&cantiIIal KclIItyre 01. Las Aa­__ over the reto,. 1DOvetBeat.

Before a -eutement of. .._trovel:sJ" w. reaebed. ..plaDned ..ave to ClarelltOllt .-lthe future ol I:be 1,100-......eoU<!!le ~ineCI ill doubt. '!1MClaremont Cl<MBplell: will ~pNe a group 01. lndependea&eolle,e:l.

8~ter Anita estimated ...the move abould be comp~bF ur71.

THE ANCHOR­Thvr~., Jvly 25,

11001111111' UU.

OUR l!o-AT IS INWITH

Yes!--

LARGE LIVE

MacLeanls§ UNION WHARF. 'AIRHAVEN Tel. 997-9358 I_l1li1,. \IIIIlIlIlllllllllMlllPM"'MIlIIUIIIMMllIII....IIAIIUIWUfIlIllIW1II1I1IIIWUIU"'PF

ieaM 'reject thb po8Itlon," hesaid: '"'Tberefore, I tbiDk • de­:feDsib1e pqU.tion i:lI this: IlDk ~wiUl people _be ....lqIt -.medianI'M."

.Be emphasiRd. h~r, thatNda~ mwrt be limited Ja.cgpe. ..act and' must proTide• dau-e for 'he CODlICientfOUl_Jeeti_ 01. iDdlridual doctora.

l'a&iIe:' 1IcConaick,. a pI'of_... of -.1 tbeolOC7' at Bel.,.___ Sebool of ~,JfOl'tll A-n., m.. waraed· del.:......... -.e ... eaa.al;rteplate .. occurreaeeI ofabcMiIoa., JIOIt tile 0--'~ wMIe aboriIoa~_Ja.: IteeIi eoadaded .. a poQoa­ow .......re tbat ........... mew _ oW IMr call' 801fttile Ilbortioa,.. tale .Je.git prIMA;.........

At tile ...-.et ., .... add~_ tl"!lP'MlIi_ a statement M-W ..... fuadamental premiaeID tile CatboUe-CbrUtiaa. v...~"B__ 1iJe ... bMic-,":rather lIoComaIet aakl tbetODe of tile major araumentl tillaboriioa proponent. u that JtOtoaly w.tenee • important. butabo tile quality of e:s~tenee. He.-ered til.. areumeDt by ")f_iDe': -rhe qualit)' 01 human lifean depend. OIl respect for exist--,"III MlpPOrt of tbb: poattioaand .. a jUlJtitieatioll 01. the"MDctI1:7 ." hUJnllln life," heeaIIed for a five-point PJIIDaram,:

P!'eW'et!ltaUn medicine; De­YeticMl .. abnormal aDd de­.l~!!"'~ .dUldrea; ElImll\loticm _1JIfpoYeri:r aad the .i{nprovementfill .-ental bealtlt;·1 world ofpeace; I:dueatioo"fbi the reepono.abilit, 01. pareQi:booeL, , .

Legal Step·Tells Nurses Abor~tion-on.Demand

May Become R~lity

SuggestsPriest

Priest Seeks AidFor Handicapped

WASHINGTON (NC)-Msgr.lohn P. HDurihan testified be­fore the House of Representa­tives select Committee on Edu­eaticm and Labor here in favorof a bill providing experimentalpre-school and early educationprograms for handicapped chil­dren across the nation.

He reprerented the MountCarmel GuHd Hearing andSpeech Diagnostic, Center illNewark, N, I., which works withhandicapped people Qf all ages.

Msgr. HQurihan pTllised thework of Congress to aid thehandicapped and said that tbebill in question-H. R. 178Z9­"'reveals .. sensitivity not only,to need8 'of parents and their,children. but also to the adviceof the 'prof~ssionals woo reeom­mended such legislaUQn at the

-.. beginning of this year."AT wee ASSEMBLY: ~lebratedMass fQl' Ca.tho- The bill would authorize the

lie delegates and special gueetB attending the woe general develQpment and implementa-. U -, S-~' t L - ki of tion of eltperimental pre-school

aaeem?lY m .Pl-""""~'. ~'''. 18 seen as Ire SS .peace and early education progranwwas g'lVen. Pnest gIvmg kiSS 18 Fathe~ Roberto TuCCI, S.J., designed to facilitate the mtel­who addressed the assembly. He is editor of the Rome 1eetlJaI. emotio~I. physical an4Jesuit review. Civiita CattJOlica. NC Photo. aocial development of handicap,-

ped children; encourage the par-,~ipationof their parents in the 'development 8nd operation fIIl."

progralW:l; llIlCl' acquaint the'couununit,. '*0 be &erved w.w.:tbe probletlJjl and potenUali'ti_01. such' children.

DENVER' (NC)-A CatboBc-priM lrtlUelIted here a defen·aible lepl step that should betaken by abortion oppDDentl be­:foI'e aborti0D5-G1l-demand be­DOme a reallty.

:ratber Richard A. McCormick,8..1.. $old delegates to \be N...Uoetal Couoeil of Catbolic HW'­_ COII~tion that tiM ioere...Jac tread Ia _7' sta_ toward.l'eued aboriio-. __ .ooa wta,J.d. .. tIIII! Hst -'ep HIIII"U­......en4.

'"I'be, ... ..,..... ~~

.P__~.I.IlI.II._."'IlHllNIIIII.1a:5 DRY ClEANING

I ~~~:~I MoM Cohaftnet SIrNt~ ,....... .22-6161

Accepts TranslationCHIPA.1UNG (NC) - 'l'be

Catholic Bible Comm~ ofIndone3ia bas agreed io accept1be Protestant htdonesi_ Yet­sioa _ the officiai tnm·la&.IlK' the Catbolie Church" k _anoouneed, here b," 7atber c..roe......... lit a _rbbop 01. ...Inclonesiaa Bfble Sod_, •~taIIIt. ecumenical~

CeIIal' Kitchen

H a eellar kitchen Wall P8t't01. your bome plans, 1ben you.can both cook and dine in' eom­tort. Tbe8e kttchens may notIIhow up in H9me Beautiful(most of ,these showpiece. 8l'e

probably tdr-<:onditioD:ed any­WaT) but eooking in 1be' eoolof yOur 'bltSement an really beeajoyed during these "dog" days.

So when, the Jnel'CUl7 elim.m'lmd TOll wilt, get out }'OUt fav­orite "molded salad tecipe. bu7ilGmtrtasty 'COld meat and thiDkicy thoUghts. This is the time toenjoTtbat backyard «rill or~urge on • dinner in • frigidalr-oonditioned ~urant: Youwill have at leut 10 montM a:rear to enjoy bea"" cookinc andbaking ~ for these two trGpkwl_lJ enjo,. a vacatiOll :froIaJ"'Mlr kitchera • much _ po8­_..

The other day I ...._ tftllne.,ute miserable with. --e 1ttlc*"and neck and I .... flo _ mood... doing any baldDc. M7 -.-,.Idnd neighbor aDd .Joe" --.II.... .1olIeph Mello ." .. AD..thOlll' of Pad_ Jtarim. PdRI~ .,.... tbousbtfDl ___'tit mo-. just 1bIrt .-....e:ut ..'MDd. over a~ 1tiueben7,Rrudel eake. It ....... a tie-'Ji&lht t:bat .I 1boucbt 1be ....,__Id. be marect witII ., ......-.

IIletds. and no woman lIhouIdIeel guilty about takin, a bit of• vacation from. cookinc iR thiaunbearable heat. Unless 70U en­joy the role of a martyr. yourfamily will understand, andprobably applaud, your decision.. make mealtime a period of'eold di8bes or outdoor cookery.What, many smart girIll in the

1ll'eIl are doing, is preparing a pic­nic dinner early in the inorning,refrigerating it until late in the

'daT aDd then driving down tothe beach to eat it while hubbTenjoys an early evening dip.

Hot Weather Time to EaseLabor in Garden, Kitchen'I By Joseph and _ Roderick

~ The hot weather is upGIl 118 and even. the most dedi­'_ gardener has di!fieulty keeping up with the ehoroo~ demand some energy .For most of 08 garde~ling eon­lIiBts 0'(. picking dead fiowen off plante" keeping up lrithh lawn and enjoying wIwIt­-.er shade we ea:n fmd. Our­.. the hot Summer JIlOIIltbs• may be a good idea to set~ priorities whieh satiAfy our-...eiences while at the sametime )l;eeping the garden. in, ,-.e' ~ri: of, reaso;nable shape.

It might be a good idea to seta..e lawn mower higher 80 thatthe grass which remains is not~d so, low that it bUl'nll-.del' the, sun. This helps keeptile gr&llS green, does not requireaMlCh raking, and makes it much.-mer to cut. .At this juncture IlIIaO take an additional stePwhich saves a great deal of en­-n, and that is not trimming.Trimming has always been aJab I readily avoid so in setting-..t niy lawn 1 tried ~ keep~ wtJ,ere I. would have to,kim.t,. minimum and It eet­t.inly pays ot1 in bot weather.

.•~NeNA~.~ n~ .tpedal attention.

til bOt ~eather and at'e amonc '.,.tOp prioriti~. I try to finish"~hi.llg bac,kmost 01 my munulIlly Aug. 1 and also try to keeptbeJll. well watered during tD,eIlot iip,el'ls. A litUe doe of tertil­-=r ...l>ol1t ~his time 01..y~,~ ,t.b~m in, ,their lalrtsPl.lrt ot..-o-th before- the coni weathereomes in (I use .. soluble fertil­Me-r which IleemB to produce re­-.Ita).

Watering al80 :rreeeivea ...lriority and is a food eonsdenee~her. There • somethial'about watering which makes a.,..roener really feel be is do1nC.-nething imporliaDt. :My onITIIG1e is to water well and deePl7... hot weather, wben the __... lias a tendency \0 ba:b, I-...u". k7 Mt breU: ap '&be ....Iriol' ,to ,,raleriq ,with a licbtMeiDJ 50,~ 'Ibe .lOll~-.re absorbent. I have beeat.IcI that the bat time to waterItt ill the morn.ing, but for ...el1lll,~~Owork tID7 Ume U~.. than none.

""ying 111 aill • mat ...-.e frui~ Vees aDd rvses espe­.....,.... but this~ ...­~pliDe.Thill is a job wtdda iI .......-y eaSily ooverlooklld bat ...pet of which call have m.u­.... eonsequenees. I a.uaI1J'fIitraT in the earlytwenln&' wbeatile heat of f:be day hall paaaed,.. jWit m.anage to keep ..Jritb tbe job.

The simple answer to theWIlDie thing is to keep at theproen Dn a daily basis witilJllen,ty of visits 10 the refriger­abH', a few respites In the made.-d a 'few llDjOurns in the local.. cream parlor.

.. tile KRehenMelillsa just asked me bow to

.-en bot and I told her H-O-'!'

.. capital letters and I rouIdn't'"we been 1DOre empbatie. At

.. moment, when we're in thelIlutebel; of a record-breaklnc.1leIlt, wave, every<me but evel7­..-e ia: feeling like a limp disll­-e. Unless you're able to JI1eep... air-conditioned comfort or at:• eottage by the sea. with cool­.... breezes blowing oil the~ the cbances are that yoa~ to bed Wed and get up 'tile-.e way,

You have jWJt about enoup~rgy to throw 1b.e c10tbelII in.-.e washer, put the dllIbeti in tilelIishwasber and bead for the~eh. This is fine for tIloee 01._ that are "'cooling it" for tIae••mmer, but if Summer JI!leu.• eootinuM:lCe of. 7OUl" __'IMlitber job, then )'(IU. ClIIl'te­__ off on the 88nck.

III this weather no _ :IeeIIIUie -Unit eIfIleCiaU, Ma.¥r:

Page 10: 07.25.68

10 THE ANCHOR-Diocete of fall R1ver-Thun- Juilv 2:5A 1961 11

Page 11: 07.25.68

fanIoe for.G-UAl.lrL-lUUl-l--­

SERVICE!

Buffalo'Labor

Patbfl' Whalen said modemeommunieatioos will pl;'Ovide themeans for creater linlta&e anumcMae nation'. iostitutIona: 01 hicb­.. leanUng, "OIl a GDe-time, ..aeeded bask.

'"The field of modem oommu­Dleations, stripped 01 9QIDe of itsmu.ory pretensions, still remtIin1a practical and economl~

-feasible way of makiDs 'the ape­eial resouree.: of one instttutioa.immediately avmJa.b1e 10 maD7otht!n... he said.

For this reaaon, Father Whalea.eid, "the coasHo-coaat univer­sib' ~ust be solidly based Qa ap?Ofound inquiry into 'the re­Souree3 of modern l:Ommuniea,..tions, apd tbe reai a¢ bumaaand te<:bnicalliD;litations PII, tbei,r~.. . "

PrelatePriest'

BUFFALO (NC)-Msgr. JohnP. Boland, who died here re­cently, was known as the ~bor

pries:t"' for his pioneering work.. the field of JaborrelatioDtl,

ApPOinted. the ,fi~ chairmanfII. the New York state LaborBelation:I: Board in 1937, Magr•.Boland Iield a "ne.tionllride rep;.....nation for bis work ill labor-reo:.lMioPiI in the 1930's. He lervedOIl the N.Y; state board for five '

, 7e&rs and' was named paSloT 01.... Thoma. Acquinu after hiS:retirement 1rotn the board ill194%. ., Durin, World War n he speot

e1gbt montt.. in Eu.tope doiaCwar relief work and later re­cel.ved the deooration of theOrder of William of Orangefront. Queen Wilhehni~ of 1heNetberlal1dl .. reeoplltioD. of....-...

Ia IN?, at the request ol. GeLDouglas MacArthur the prielItlIpeDt six 1IlOIltJ. in JaplUl all aeonsuItant .. laboI' ontaniu--......

Tbe ao-year-okl IIlOWIiIDOl'.-tor _ri_,,, Ik. Tb_A4uinu parWa. died ia. a fire iatIM reekQr, where he had -en-­..... 1HZ. M81rr. Boland bIIlI--. __ a wheelchair for-- ., tIM 1Mt 19 7ean ot. WII-

OPEN DAILYFOR THE SEASON

CU Rec~or Asks Coast-to-CoastEmphasis for Private Universities

SAN FRANCISCO (He) ­Private universities IIhould be--

e::~BlIi=~:!oves~~t;forees to help I'Olve national •well • toeaJ. probI-, 1be act­ing rector of tile CMboUe Uni­versi!;7 said here.

"ather Iohn P. Whalen saidproblems sueh • urban aDdnual povert,.-, and air and waterpollut[()ll can onl7 be discussedand ~lved on a ea.st-to-coastbasis..

"And that doesn't mean justdiscussing them in Washingtonand fom:mlating prograJD'll un­touched. bT knowing hands." be

""....."It, m",1\S ,poollnl 1be Fe-so~ of tw'O, or ten or 30 in­.rlitutioos, no matter how ,gep­arated geograpbieany, wiihoutcaring whi~ insUtuuon finallygets credit fur a study, .and let­ting all the relevant data beconsidered before reeommenditlgfederally assisted programs."

The priest spoke at III meetingof West Cout alumni of Catbo­~ic Universi,tT presided oYer bySaIl J'nmciseo Mayor Jo.seph L.Alioto, a uaduate of tbe univer­8ity Jaw Aebool.' and J:od J4c­Mabon of NBC, national pred­dent ottbe llDiveniitT. allllllUiassoCiation. -

Stresses ConuDubkatioOllMcMahon announced t b e

opening \,Iof • fund drive in theWe&! for the new $3 million Na_tional Center' for Comlllunica­Uo&. ArtI at'Catbolie Unigersit$'.

Mennonite PraisesInterfaith Dialogue

ESTES PARK (NC) _ Tbepresideut 01. tbe Geaeral eon..feretlce K--..Ite Cb\U'dl de­dared here ia Col0nd0 'IbIIt he__ JMpe la lDO~.---'Dw ,Me... Walter GeriaC otBlocMDiogtoa, IlL, Wll 2,.OOtdeleptel ... 'tile icr -ei...u-'.30tIl ~Id -'ent&ce ...the _.._.___ ha... -......nt

'DaftD~.. pr87er ..eetinpan4 W Catbolk aDd~la¥- .. intedaWI~

Be said tII.e- '"Breat ou1pouriQI'.t. pief'" toUowiac 1be ...-i­utioaI fIl Dr. Mania LutberXine and. Seu. Beberi F. lr-.Ded7 "Will offered. wltbcMIt eoa-tIideI'atioa .. ooior ..

'I1IIlI! Be-.-. .., GeriIlC ..~ _ft a 4hItT til )w,lp.... .... rioIeDce .. blood­tIbed ill. tile wedeL He .-Id the...,01. God .. ea1I.ing .... adiOlltow.... peace -el cited 1MWOI'dI; of \be 1aIe ~ideIlt JobaP. JreDned7, writteQ. but left .......... lit Dallal··· "Wvnk aN--en."

FATHER. IllLAR.Y FB.ANCO

Appoint OfficialOf Prefecture

WASHINGTON (NC)-FatherHilary P~anco, secretary at theApostolie Delegation here, llaIbeen appointed an official of tbebe- Prefecture for EeonomieAlfRira of the Ko'" See under·Bgidio Canlin.al Vacnozid.

Prior to his aAignmeDt at thecIelegation here, "ather Francowu aMistant to Bishop Fpl10n 1._Sheen at tile natiOOal offiee of1M Society lot the Propagatioafill the Faith. -

He abo bas served as director_ 'the board -of Rural MissioD.Kaauine. Be "as • C'OPtributorto the New Catholie Encyclope­dia an4, -. eJ[pert _t the SeooadVauean CounciL

Pather Fnmeo, 3G, was bon.ill Ital7 of AJDerican p~'1"IlomM. aDd Maria Franco ofBrooutville, If. Y. Be was edo­eated in tbe United Stat.ea: aM.IUb', ....... _ ordained ill RoaM__ Ie5Ii.

Atter ordinatkla. he nud:led. at1be Pontifleal Laienm Unh"er_alU' -and at i"ordham Vniveniv"JIf_ y orit,. _bere lie WU aWllnl...... a muter' of an.- liep-ee b:l -..eiolocT. He recefVed a dodorate.. .-creel tIIHIot7 from *beLa......

t 2 THE AHCHOR-Di-Q'C4tM off.R River--n.un., July 25,1961

Wicker'sPractical

Book IllustratesPolitics Theory

By Rt. Rev. __. __ s. Ke-edy

You might presume that a book entitled JFK and LBJwould be a study and comparison of the incumbent Presi_dent and his predeceB90r~ But what Tom Wieker, chief ofthe ,Washington bureau of The New York. Times, has writ-ten under that title (Morrow. -$5)" is an inquiry into the In discWlSing Kennedy's pro-influence of personality and posals in education, he touchescircumstance on success vir -. Catholica' request for assist­failure in high polilical offioe. -anee to non-public schools, 10He copfines himself to two 81*" 'then HEW Seeretary Ribicoff'sejfic ,issues in - ·swggestioll that something bethe brief presi_ done to meet this, and 10 thedenqy of John President'" adamant refusaLP. ~~nn.edy, He feels that as the firstand to one in Catholic i.p. the presideneT, andthe longer ten. especially after the eampaip.are ,of LyndoD declaraUons of absolute inde-B. Johnson. pendenee <1f the bishops, Ken4

The fir a t ned,. could not have done dit-lIE~lion, tagged ferently. But perhaps he did"K e nne d y paint himself into a oorner pre-L ~s esC OD- eipitately.uess," begins Demo-w•••ade""by recapitulat- The sectiOll on J"ohnMoa.Jug the view of the presidency (""'Jotm.on Loses Bia CarlSen.whieb Kenned7 espoused~ .us") upeoa with a lle.eriptioaIUs election. The P1'esident" lie 01. hitl entering the White HouaRid; "''must aboVe an be tile' ~t the fifl¢ time as President.ebief -exeeutiYe la every 1eDSe' It wDf the nun,. mOnlln' afteref the word. Be m.ust be pre-- the assaSlJinatkm, and there .......pamd ta excise the :ful1est pow.... treat uneltatness as to whether.,.a of hill office." This he ia- ' the tral'lsiUOIl would be orderly.tended to do "to Jet thia cowt- B Wall. 100-. demonstratedtry moving again," -reaJ. mastery at a critieal time.

There follows· an abrupt !IlbIft ' And. he wu to 1:0 on' 10 fiBte two men, each approaebiDe tbe top-DloOISt office eltception-.eo, Who' were already COngrea, ally ",ell, to get _ tremendou.-..etera-ns when Kennedy ... --liberal pt'OfI1UJl through Con4.tin ill school: Sam Rayburn. peas. and te -.in the presideIlCTeben speaker 01 the HoWle, and "iD. 1964 hy a phenomenal mar_Howard Smith, then eha~ ,m.e#. ttte House'. Commi«ee -. But Ill'. Wicker _ lohn8oa.Mules. ... ~tinc foot 011 the downwanl.

Rayburn was~ _ PIIth the Sacla7 afte.. Itea..all-powerful tlpre ill the BOOM 1IIedy"! ....ination and bdonand would see to it that.. the slain Prelident bed 7« be-.KennedT program lOt tbrougk. b¥ried.But tbl! CommJuee _ awe. y~ 0. =ra..1Iad. aecwnula'- P'-' powen .. tbJlt _, Iohnson. DOlIdlI!!r-., itA own over tbe yeIll'S,.... l'ed ....tIl HeIuy cabot LodeI.the crafty, crwtJ"" 1Iltn~ ...bUaador .. Soutll Viea..._tive Smith would DIe u.-.. ....retunaM. te I'ePOrl. The .t_the utmost _ • to 1II-wm1,.., _tion tbere wu -'-err 'W.. _liberal prosra-. Lodee lfU.lrtmaI'bed it. 10ma-...Co~0...._ feteful wonu were, "I .. "

Fot the ~oval of Ulia..... .,me 10 10M VietBam. I .. M4.tGCk, it Wall dedded to aue.pt toial, to he tile PresideDt wM.. enlarge the membersbip el ... Soutbeut Asia .0 the ..,..,the committee, llDcI1bas eln:u-.. China went."..ent Smith's .-utoer:aey. TIae Mr. WleIr.er~ at COftIiII-move, "'alii made. It suooeedeII. ..bIe 'lencth, into the *k- !be boatbiac ., lIOfUl 'Y~AU should $ben ha_ bee- P'OUDd and. IIIe meaniDll" of" beJaaL It .... aot a part IlII .,.lIn06tb n.ilin... tbe IremtedI" ooaunitment. He ",v1ew1i ate earl!fullJ' COIIIidered. policy. A.proPOSale. history, the development, .. few mon.tbI laier, Amerte.

But the outeolPe was otIaer- DlOde of tbougbt and judpteqt. troops, seat ia larger aumben:wise. Why? There are two ele- tile val_ aDd. ideals 01. tbe .... the a\'OWed JMU'POR ."menu in the ezplanatiOll. wllidl ne.. PraideDt. Tbese di8poeed. pardin, airbus, and notbinIMr. Wicker proffers.. b.im to a course which, JIr more, ~ i ..... l .. e ....

In the tim piaee, he ..,.., , Wicker believe&, Kennedy eouId pound. eombat.Inote was expected of Kem.edJ' and would biro,..., avoided.. "l'errlWe TnIC11"than. he rould ever deliver, He What that COUI'Se would beWon the presideDCJ' by the sJ.i..m- did not immedlatd,,- beooIne ap.. ThUi W31 eIJC&1aticn stumble« Third Volumemest of margins. The vote faith- parent. This was beoause J"ohn- lillo, wUb di~j.JouI effect ia-fully mirrored. a divided COWl- _ was intent 011 gettine evel7_ temationally and. doiDe:,ticall7. WASHDfGTOIf (NC) - Tbetry. ODe IUIder -one great Demo- The Great Soelet,- progna VA JIbboIW Committee Hi' :k-

Also, he had • Con~ fIl eratie tent'" and scoring a _ down in nrina, the eredJ- 1IIileIlical and ImerreliliOUI M.even more conservative bent- ~bing viet0J'7 in 196C. Dur- bllity gap tawned, the PreIi- tun IlDd ~ U.s.A. HatlODm.than those in the E1senhower me that etmpaign, Goldwater denl'a prestice pllllDllleied., __ e-rru.ttee .t. 1be LuUM:r.a

r:;~li~:g~Ur;:::"';i3= -ruo: =:;~~-= -- ~~~---~-~_ -_-:::"~~a~.:r=-__-"ency, but, given tbe e1eetI_ eli.quIeted and 'frighteDerrl Ilk, Wick.. __ -rile --..I.a4lbenDII ..... CMb-

,.- b bad ~!be' . . -..... .. DI.I,...:resu _, l! __, where- peop e. ~ ter:riblf: - perbapa tneIe _ ,withal to deliver. 'hakIa o.If trutb. '- that tbe .... tbat~

Fatal~ JotuYon, aays Mr, Wldter. ..... ia 1915 was BOt. eftIa ... ___

Secondly, be lIlade fatal er- "",,"t too tar ira Bean:h Glf eGIIl_ Mdt 01. a deliberate,~irotS in the handling of the tint seDllUS, w.. twguanledl,. dGlriIIr dear'" lJeeD. poliey, wbk.* ....two pieces of 1egislatiOJl. Which ia. b.ilI ontory, probabJ..J __ boklb" aeeepkd neceB3U7 ~be .backed: _ new" miJWn._ veyed to Hanoi the idea ~ ••• It waa onl7 1be irlteaplwwage law and federal ·aid to ed_ 1:bere would be no large ~ OIl peI"SOrl&lib" andd~ncation. For each he took a de- Aaaerieaa intervention,'" It ... not tile master)' OIl _termined s\and.. IUrely Mid _ mucll • ... .ver event but the 7ieldinl ~

But Uten, aecordinc te 1Ir. people. choice to instinct."WiC"ker, he too quickly &ffered. But in !be COU'l'8e of the ea- It .iii aot •. Wicker'S irltea­damaging compromise in order paign, the Tonkin Gulf ineidc:a& tiort .. indiet Xenned7 ....iD !IOften the OPPOSition... The ~rred, and Johnson JIOUCIIl .I0tms0n .. peculiarlT~eompromise fa each inStance and. got from CoPgree. !be ree- _ erueiaJ. point., bUt .. pI'eIIIIlItproved fatal. In Mr. Wicker"a olution whieb would later 1Je and. illustrate a theory • til.pinion, principle was _baa- _ coolruveraially used, til.. how politica aetualJ..J .-orItI. Ilkdoned and the respect of the :to. r1l CoGgressiemal eoadi- • _ \I'erJ" 'Oberine iDteIpreta­Congress .as lost.. Keru1edT denee. tioa, The rertder puU dow-. ~CIOuld never tb('reafter deliver Shortly after .Johnson's ...._ JDlportant book impresaei W... ius caln»aign promises. pratiorl. fGt Ail .ft.rIt full team, Alilt at all extWaratecL

Page 12: 07.25.68

....-

THE ANCHOR-Jersey to Study Fiji Islander Visits Fall River Parents Thurs.• July 25. 1968

low to Permit 0/ Tf»O Maris! Mis3i([J)llJary Sisters '!Louisiana Senateloan of Books

TRENTON (NC) - A billl "'i was 00 impre..qged with the self-giving of the American Si-g,tem who were dQi'l1g ~efuses to Hk~~p to permit the state 1Jo lend 80 much for my people thaJt I thought the leaS't I could do was serve my people too." Perrish Schoc~s \textbooks and other instruc­ '11hua Sister Mary Cecilia of the Marist Missionary Sisters modestly explained her vo­tional material to students attending parocblal lJdlools bas· been introduced in 1lhe New Jer­sey State Senate.

State Senator Frank Guarini of Hudson County, said his measure ill patterned 8ifter the New York law recently upheld by o01e U. S. Supreme Court. Private ISChoois operated for profit would be exi:luded from participating.

Books to be looned wou}(i be the SllIIlle texts used in public ISChool districts. An exclusion against books of II religious na­ture is written iow the measure.

Dim Outlook Lend'ing districts would be re;­

imbursed by ~e state at the rate of $10 for grade school students and $15 for those in high sohool

This is the second year a text­book loan bill bas been intro­duced in the legislature. A sim­nar bill died in the Assembly II year ago W\hen It failed to get out of committee.

Observers see tittle chance of IlCtjon on the measure this year . because the Republican majority is cool to aid prog'rams benefit ­ting parochial and other private schools. Earlier 'this year it cut back the scboolbusing program enacted a year ag4l.

lay Carmelites Plan Convention

DENVER (NC)-one thousand American and Canadian lay members of the Carmelite Order will meet at Loretto Hights Col­lege here Aug. II to 11 for the 17th national conference of Lai Carmelites and Scapluar Co~

fraternity members, according to Father Howard Rafferty, O. Carm., national director.

The convention theme will be -rhe Lay Cennelite in the Post-Conciliar Age," V(ith, em':' phasis on remodeling the fOnsti ­tutions. which guide' the Lay Carme)j,te chapters throughout the U. S. and Ca~ada.

Archbishop James V. Casey of Denver will keynote the confer­ence, speaking on the "Univer­sal call to Holiness."

Lay Carmelites - individual's who follow the CarmeUte rule while engaging in the apostolic life and spirit of dedicated Christ.ian5-"-were founded as an Olganization in the 13th century.

There are presently some 30,000 members in over 150 chapters throughout the Unitecll States and Canada. :

APP06mlt Catechists P~rmamlel1ltr' Deacons

DOUALA (NC)-~ght candi­dates to serve as permanent dea­eons in the DoUala diocese have been chosen from married men who, are now ca,techists, Bishop Thomas Mongo of Douala an­DOunced here.

PQrish priests first selected II

Dumber of catechists who, they felt, were qualified for ordina­tion as permllnent deacons. The diocesan council then chose the eight from among these.

Because the Cameroun diocese does not have the means to pay them a salary, the new deacoJUl will have to work at other jobs in order to earn a living.

The Douala diocese has 135,~

000 Catholics out of a total pop­ulation of 365,000. It bas 00 priests, but 17 of the 34 parishes in the diocese are served by only one priest. There are 750 cate­chists who aid the cle~gJl.

¥"-"

OOIbion. A native of the Fiji Islands of the South Pacific, Staltes for two YOOY8 to com­plete her high school edu­cation. Last week she was in Fall River visiting Mr. snd Mrs. Peter J. Levasseur of St. Roeh parish, parents of two Marlst Sisters serving 'in South Soos missions.

She does not expect to ~turn

to the states, but she is taking with her happy, memories of her American friends. "I was beau­tifully received," she said, in perfect English. "T'lle warmth and friendliness of Americans is like that of ,my own people."

Sister Mary Cecilia found American high school customs e far cry from the simple ways of her own people ."When I saw the boys and girls driving thC'ir cars to school and smoking, I was very su~prised," she said. But she hastened to add that the students "took me as one of their own," and that she was made to feel veJ;y wel~ome.,

The religious, will e~bark on • three year teacher training eourse when she returns to FiJi and will then, specialize"in in­

, structing islanders' in home eco­nomics. "I had: intended 'to take G \ boJne economics course here," she sai'd, "but" I !loon realized that what I would learn in an American Coll~ge ,would ~ f;ar beyond the needs of my people, who still cook ~m !>pen.fir~s:and

need instruction in basic mat­ters of cleaniness and nutriti~n."

To Minnesota In August Shlt~r Mary Cecilia

will leave the ~~rist provincial house in Walth,am to begin her homeward trek. After a stop in Minnesota to visit the family of another Marist Sister, she will fly to Hawaii .and from there will sail to Fiji. The boat trip will take a week, she 8lIid.

The Levasseurs ilhorougbly en- ' joyed their. guest Jirom Fiji; they said.· "She even showed .Wl one daughters are Sister Margllerlta,of the native grass sidrt,dances," woo entered the community in 8lIidMrs. Levasseur. Her two 1948, and, Sister Mary Jovita,

who followed her sister in 1957. Both are graduates of Jesus­Vatican '.' Answers Mary Academy in Fall River.

Sister Marguerita, aiter IIItalian Officia~ stint of caring for lepers at Ma­,kogai, Fiji, is J1()W prep3J'1ing toVATICAN CITY (:HC) - The become a registered nurse atVatican City daily has answered

Italian Prime Minister Giovanni Leone's denial that his govern­ Council of ChurcheSl ment acted unilaterally in with­holding Italy's tax agreement Strong for Unity, with the Holy See from parlia­ UPPSALA (NC)-Tbe reun­mentary ratification. Ion of the church Cllf Christ w

, Leone had told padi~ent that still a far-off goal but the Chris­he will not continue the govern­ tians attending the fourth gen­ment's attempt to gain ratificao eral assembly Cllf tile Worl411 tion of an agreement exempting Council of Churc~8 have con­the Holy See's stock dividends cluded a 16-day meeti,ng here !rom the withholding tax. in Sweden with a strong com­

11oillaterall Omiiy mittment to seek the Wlity of L'Osserva4;ore RomlllDo YePlJecI: the whole church more deter­"In the pr~sent ~, twe minedly than ever.

powers linked together by good In the wake of the assembly, relations have Concluded _ which brought more than 2,OQO .agreement ~t' ~ ~lid,' even elected delegates and partici ­though it bas not yet been eom-. pants from more than 200 Chris­pleted by ratificatioo. . . tian churches, there was left

"In such II situation, 1Dterna.. behind a wide swath of docu­tional practice riaqunres that if 'ments, statements and projectS, there is anything to be Changed all calling for m- renewal of in the agreement, the -~o Pal'­ Christian life and am active in­ties proceed by' mutual WldeJi'oo volvement with the whole world. standing. That haa not taken place. '

"The competent Iiauan min­ LEMIEUXistry restricted itsell1' to ~ 'Com.­munication,' as tlne prime min­ PlUMBING & HEAliNG, INC. ister said, ll'J'litbout then taking Sales and Service into account ~e remarks which fior tJomestle presumably were made i:n tllnis end !Adustrlz.l :!ldvance n<JItic-,e. 013 laurners

"This procedure can only 00 995·163]decribed as 'unilateraL' A mm­ 2283 ACUSHNEl AVENUE pIe notice, in ia,ct;, deserveD lOO NEW BEDFORD '~ll' Dames~..;, '1'

. ~

! ..;

'I l

0 1

r

! ~ '.

I

SOUTH SEAS VISITOR: Sister Mary Cecilia, 8.M.S.M., native Fiji Is'lander, showtl South Seas s<>uvenirs to Mil'. and Mnl. Peter J. LevaS@eur and Miss Irene Levasseur of St. Roch parish, Fall Riiver. Levaaseul'S have twQ daughtel'S ill Sister Mary, Cecilia's oommunirty, -the Marist Mi~ion Sisters.

she has been in the United BATON ROUGE (NC) .... Supporters of state aid ~ parochial schools now have to look toward a speciallegi90 lative Session scheduled' ,foil September after their latest· bin sustained a near-fatal blow iIa the Louisiana Senate.

A bill which would enable thtl state to contract for secular ed­ucation was returned to the ca).. endar by a 22-15 vote. The man­euver means that the bill's sup­porters would have to have 2G votes---e majority of the 39-man sehate--to even have the biB consider~ on the floor.

The measure-sponsored ~

New Orleans Senators Micbael O'Keefe and William J. Guste-. would have to have won pas­sage in the Senate by July IV if if> were. to have any chance in ~

current session. Members of the Lo:tsianll

branch of Citizens for F4:1uca­tional Freedom, seeking state aiel for p,arochial schools, havt' be­gun considering the possibUitieil of having Governor John J. Me-: Kiethen include such legis'ation' in the September special ~ssioJlil ~a "

Three May Close

Earlier in the session, a 8im­,Har House bill authorizing 'di ­I'ect sta~ grants to students iIli non-pu,blic schools, failed 'on twe floor tests. The Senate meas\lftl would have' given the depart,.. menf of education the autbori1;,y to contract for education in pJi,.. vate schools in an amount not te exceed 25 per cent of the cost per pupil in public schools.

O'Keefe charged that the de-> privation of state aid to privakJ schools is unconstitutional ~ cause "the state doesn't have the riglbt to force a child to accept learning from the public school teacher only."

Opposing the bill, Sen.':s. B. Rayburn of Bogalusa, La., saidMater Misericordia Hospital, "1 just can't stand here and sefJAuckland, N.Z. Sister Mary Jo­up another field of educationvita, already a nurse, is siation­ when we can't even support thtJed at a leper colony in the South , one we have."

Solomon islands. Rep. Edgar Mouton of Laf­Sister Jovita is expected home

atte said: "Three major schooJafor a visit in ''two or three and 2,500 students will be dump­'years," said her mother, "but we ed .into, the pu,blic school system.IF),may never see Sister Marguerite

again," she added. The missionary Sisters are

~mbers of a family of 10 chil ­clren of whom Miss Irene Levas­ BLUE RIBBON seur is the only one still a:t home. lAUNDRY

Knights of MafltCII 273 CENTRAL AVE.ROME (NC) - Count Ugoc­

oione Croffa has been elected Grand Prior of the Sovereign 992-6216 Mili~ry Order of Malta, better kJllOWJl as the Knights of Maita. NEW BEDFORDHe succeeds Raimondo del Balm ~ Pr~nzano in this post.

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Page 13: 07.25.68

••

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., July 25, '1968-

JBishop Leads J Continued from Pa~ One furidical or non-juridicalty.pe -., structure." ~ Tbe cardinal reminded coun­till members that at their first meeting on June 5, 1967, ,he had .plained that papal directives .rovided that existing councils HUNGE:R.. .... a diocese "retain their own

, .ffice and competence," and ~ ,uired the bishop to see "that -.ell diocesan councils are coor-. <ilinated in the most suitable 'Way by means of an accurate indica­tion of. competence,' mutual par­ticipation of members,' joint or ilUCCessive sessions, and other :.ways."

Assnst by Advic0 'The decree on bishops of the

GSec:ond Vatican Council, the car...; ,moal continued, "urges the bish­lDP'to' dialogue with ,his priests, I\l!specially about pastoral' mat­!iers,' 'for the sake of greater liervice to SQuls,' and identifies Cb~ council" of pr;ests as an in­,8trurnent for such dialogue and as ;one' of the'institutions which $Ollaborat,e with ,the bishop." ,

, "The'" council," the cardinal' emphasized, i'is to' assist the e·~.only ,.,.b~sp:op by. ad:vi~e-advjce .11Vhio!l. ,.;, .,,', ',_ ,~ . ~ a consultative .val1-l~,.iJ;l ~a~ , ' , .. ,~ 'Il wo'rd to' most Americana.~l-s :relating to the needs of pes':' , :" .,1,',. <, • , , ! Itbrai work 'and .ine good of :the' ", (Jiocese and ~fOT' the sake', 01., ,; ':.' :\',. ", - ,.,','t

. ,','. :.l·'6Jreater s,ervice to S9111s." " " "

....~o assist ~he. bishop br .ad- '.':' .. , ''rice in the administration of the '. .

. " .~diocese," the cardinar' ctmtim.ie~·.,,'" "'obviously cannot mean to sub­,SJtirtute for the bishop nor to .as­sUnie the bishop's administra­tive responsibilities. The assist-Emce by advice must be di~ted 4lowards the needs of pastoral :'llV,Cilrk 'and th~ good of the, dio­~Ile, and the ultimate' objective is .to promote greater service to lIOUls." .

Not a 'Profession' , .. ,"The advice .of ,the 'council,"

the cardinal, reminded its, mem­bers, "must be within the frame­work of sound theological and. turidkal 'orientation in keeping .'with the Church's true character and tradition. These cannot ·be ignored or displaced with c0n­

temporary and transAtory;, so­ ,.i do-psychological developments. lfloee-thinking novelties, or Wl­tried theories. , i,

"The advice of the counell must respect and epe~ate witb­in the limits of existing .Chureb Jaws • • • The bishop cannot .act ,

I •,OIl advice which is not accord­Iing to the law to which he 18 !.,cubject. The adVice must pro­

_..ote the observa'nce 'of laws, afid. j:.'must respect the rights of in­

I"'viduals, which are derive4 Try living on o~ a ~unoebowt of 110e._ ~;~m and safeguarded by the ... \law." . . tom.tlmes,every other .,.

Quoting statemen1S of Pope .. : 1'wo hundm million peop,le'1n-lndla'doI:Paul VI that the ·~priesthoocl-18

nOt a simple ecclesiastical 91­ Throw your weight arOund aHttte,iice," Cardinal Krol said: "These 'iby 'maklng a ,,1ft 'JoJhe ltaMnQ 'oI,lthe wotld..perennial truths need reaffirma­tion in view of a trend among namo'tl.'="'= I ••• an articulate few to speak 4lbeut 'professionalism' and other as­ ,addrMMI ,I pects ·and attributes which apply lID secular life."

"The priesthood,It he said, oteannot be considered a 'profe.. THE MISSIONS NI!EIJY01URH.LP Ilion.' It is a ministry."

IN THa, SUMMaR T(.ot· Cardinal Krol Gets 'Honorary Degree ....~_IIIIIiII_ .....__ IALV'AT'ON ·ANDllftVI'IAlilrTHI '¥~'!!!11~,_!!!III.~~ ...... • LOUISVILLE (NC) - .Tohn Cal'dinal ,Krol of Philadelphia .... - ­"­ . . ::.

was the recipient of the fitrst Iaonorary degree awarded by 1lhe '1'HI SQ~IET]f:~OR.rHE PltoP~aATJ1P~:~F,"Ef4IDI.~wly combined Bellarmine-Ur­

-~

.lifte College here duringtbe ,

~'Y~G~,TO_• i en n i a I convention oftbe Knights of. st. John, of wbieb .'I'I/lr Rlfk1.~~ 1"•.0'''-. ." '''''''IlIghIa-..-,1ts __m~d~:--.e.;.i!l spiritual supervis01l'. ,-;' c" .. ' /fIatIattsI.l"ncw OB DIDcaIM.DIJw:l-. . ' ,lbip." ' , • .. . $661'l1d1 AM1f16 _,-, 168North JIIlbt'"- .'.. ,. :

The cardinal, who received 81 " '" .Mlwr04.N~r~~~ ',~ '''~~.MM!CJ~:' ' IhM:ror of Letters degree fr_ " . ,Ihe college, ·was also made II "'Kentucky 'Colonel" by ·Gov.'· , ~ , .

".owe,.B. Nunn of Kentue!q.. .. , •

Page 14: 07.25.68

~, ,"~J

",., "I'

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 25,1968

Newspaper Circulation Up, That" of Maga.zines Down.

NEW YORK (NC)-Cireulation of Catholic newspa­pers in the United States advanced but that of Catholic, mag'azines in the United States and ell/nada continued to decline during 1967. The staltistics were disclosed in the 1968-69 edItion of the Cath­ ing advertising-including mis­olic Press Directory; publish­ sion, devotional and other spe­ed here by the Catholic Press cialized ~agazines-total circu­AssociaJtion. The directory is lation increased from ,15,289,635 the official media reference last year to 15,834,305, despite a guide ';0 Catholic newspapers; decline in the total, number of magazines and diocesan directo­ magazines from 256 to 252, the ries in the U. S., Canada and the statistics showed. West Indies. It contains details Off-Set on publication staff personnel, The directory shows 98 of the circulations, advertising rates, 142 U. S. Catholic newspapers

.etc. (69 per cent) are now printedIn the U. S., total circulation by the odffset process, an in­

of the five national newspapers crease over last year of five is 1,506,532; total circulation of papers.the 126 diocesan newspapers is 5,060,637; and total circulation of the 11 'newspapers published in Clergy Figures. languages other than English is 218,741, the directory reported. Drop in Spain

Total circulation of all news­ MADRID (NC) - While the papers at the beginning of 1968 Catholic population of Spain was 6,785,910, an increase of rose, the number of dioCesan

last figure,43,000 over year's priests, seminarians and ~ordina­the statistics showed. tions dipped in 1967, the new

Decline Spanish Church Guide has' re- ' Catholic magazine circulation ported. TO AID HANDICAPPED: Hearings to authorize preschool and early education

in the U. S. and Canada, contin­ In some parishes the ratio of programs for hand,icapped children were held by tht House 'of Representatives subcom-. ued to decline last year. ~~=s: 1:: a~aJ~;I~ 6~~~~:~~: rnittee on edJucatiOIl. Abcomong ~t'htee0Se hatt;ending wDere, left to right; Rep~ :JI)om!nick V. D~

James A. Doyle, CPAexecu­ in others it was one for every i~ls of New ersey, BU :mml' C aIrma~; r. James Gallagher, A880cIate Commis­tive director, who released the 500. sumer, Buteau of EducatIOn for the HandIcapped, Depmiment of Health, Education and directory's statistical analysis,

Other data'revealed that·.'1. "Welfare; Rep. John H. Dent of Pennsylvania; Miss Nanette Fabray, film and TV starii said that among general Catho­lic magazines which accept 'ad-­ per cent of the diocesan clel;'gy. and Msgr. John P. Hourihan, Executive Director of the Mount Carmel Guild, Newark,

is under 40 years of age andvertising, total circulation .de­about 10 percent is older than'clined in 1967 from 7,059,596 to 70.5,973,867. The 1968-69 directory Urge More Meaningful. Meiss for Deaf

lists 94 magazines in this cate­ With the Catholic population: gory, which is 14 fewer than in of Spain at 31.3 million out of 1967, Doyle said. 32 million Spaniards, there are' Priest Prefers Flexi bility to Conformity

Among magazines not accept- 25,906 diocesan priests, 66 fewer than in 1966, and 9,969 Order TOLEDO (NC) - A group of 1961 stgn language manual Supporting these priests Wall

priests, bent on making the 'which sold out at 10,000 copies, priests, an lllcrease of 237 in the Nanette Fabrey, singer-actress. year. Ordinations decreased by Mass more meaningful to the said there is no "Webster's dic­ who was the chief banquetS'even Cardinals

o deaf and hard - of- hearing, tionary" of the sign language, speaker.73 to 716 in 1967. agreed to meet soon in Buffalo, and no clamor for one. The priests at the sessionsThe seminaries, which haveIn New Posts

a revamping, N. Y., .to lay plans for achieving The convention developed a asked for thorough re-evalua­been undergoing their objective.VATICAN CITY (NC}-Pope difference in positions between tion of the organization, itshad 7,535 students, 200 under,

'Paul VI has named Luigi Cardi­ the 1966 total. The 1'1 priests, under the the "oralists," who generally are structure and role. A committee nal TragUa, Chancellor of the leadership of Father William professional educators and ad­ was named to work on an agen-

The statistics for practising da for priests' sessions of theHoly Roman Church; Jean Card­ Bisky of Baltimore, were among vocate doing away with use ofCatholics again varied accordinginal Villot, prefect of the Con­ . 50 priests who attended the hand' communication by the ,next convention at New OrleallLl to area, from 20 per' cent in the

gregation for the Clergy; Fmnjo weeklong session of the Interna- . deaf, and the "manuals" who in 1969.southern regions to between 75

Cardinal Seper, pro-prefect of tional Catholic Deaf Association advocate the sign language. Real Brotherhoodand 90 per cent in the north­the Doctrinal Congregation, arid here. The 17 agreed to meet in Several priests, who strongly '. Matters of interest to thecentral part of the country. Ap­Gabriel Cardinal Garrone, pre­ Buffalo in September or early opposed oralism, said their ex­ priests here included hierarchyproximately 20 per cent of thosefect of the Congregation for OctQber. Some 500 delegates at ­ perience is the great majority relationship, ecumenism, lay di­who died during the year did so'Ca,tholic Education, to be mem­ receiving sac­ tended the convention sessions. of deaf cannot master lip read­ aconate, the ne'w St. Francis dewithout the lastbers of the Council for Public ing to the exclusion of hand Sales Deaf Missionaries, whotaments. Discussions disclosed t hatAffairs. signs. will open a - motherhouse in

some see the problems for the August in the Galveston-Hous­The Pope also named Maximil­ deaf grounded in terms of a ton diocese.ian Cardinal de Furstenberg, 'CommunityNow'. liturgy that would permit use Name Firsti' Laymanprefect of the Congregation for "Father Springer, founder oj( Eastern-rite Churches and Giu­ Springer, C.S.S.R., of Bellaire, the new community, said two

of common signs. Father C. J.Interfaith Paper sseppe Cardinal Beltramo and Tex., advocated; deeper involve-·

College President deaf nuns will be the first mem­KANSAS CITY (NC) - A

Carlo Cardinal Grano, both of ment as well- a change from WEST PATERSON (NC) bers. He said nuns of the new new .kind of newspaper joining' community would, engage inthe Roman Curia, the Church's European concepts and forms James J. Gallagher of Upperreligious and community. con­

central administrative offices, to lost on people of the Western Montclair, N. J., has been named various works among the deaf, cerns has launched its public

be members of the Congregation president of Tombrock College; and that the headquarters fordrive for subscriptions. and sup­ hemisphere, even the speaking

tWo-year liberal arts institu­ the St. Francis de Sales Mission­for Bishops. people. aport. tion operated here by the Mis­ tiries is Bellaire, Tex., 7(401.

A printing of 100,000 copies, to For example, Father SpringerB;itish Ask Faster sionary Sisters of the Immacu­ In a workshop report Fatherbe distributed mainly through suggested it would be better for late Conception, the .first Cath­ Thomas Buyers of Buffalo re­Aetion on Unity churches and synagogues in the the American Jllentality in the olic layman to head the college. 'ported the deaf are well minded

. - Kansas City area on both sides prayer at Communion if the toward ecumenism. , ' . LONDON (NC)-A.poll car·'> of . the Kansas-Missouri state words "under my roof" were Gallagher has been executive director of the John LaFarge The deaf have very few prej­rJe~ out by. t.he CatholIc Hera~d, ijne, is planned for the inaugu­ . changed to "even into my

natIOnal BntIsh newspaper, d~s- ral issue Aug, 16. Institute, a New York study and udices. Perhaps this is due to theheart." He also suggested theclosed that 40 per cent of Its dialogue center for conferences fact. of the limited number they"Lord be with you (I • '" Andreaders think that the Church The weekly ne~spaper will on . interracial and ecumenical can talk to. But among the deaf,with your spirit" be changed tois dragging tts feet on the sub- b~ called, Commumty Now. It affairs, for the past two and regardless of race or religion,"Christ live in you (I (I (I Same toject of Church unity. Only 15 WIll be edIted by Albert De Zut­ one-half years. you will find real brother~ood."you, Father." Father Springerper cent think that matters have ter, a 13-year. veteran of the advocated flexibility, rathernow go e too fa newspaper busmess and most 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111II111l1Dn r.. recently editor of the New Peo- than what .he called initiative.;.

The poll, answered by nearly pIe, Kansas City-St. Joseph di­ destroying conformity. 4,000 readers, shows that 68 per ocesan newspaper which was Father Springer, who wrote a ,cent prefer Mass in English and 'suspended May 31. ~MANUFAcrURERS 30 per cent want it in. Latin. Spearheaded by an i£ter-reli ­ . NATIONAL BANK

Younger peo~le, ~,ged 16 to gious group * men,and women, Benemerenti Medcil - of BRISTOL COIJNTW44, a.re most· solIdly In favor of both laity and clergy, Commu­ OTTAWA (NC)-The Bene­.English. They voted nearly. 80 nity Now will be the first news­ merenti medal has been con­

per cent in favor. Paper of its kind, according to 90-DAY NOTICEferred by Archbishop Emmanuel , its. originators. Its religious ori ­ TIMEelarizio, apost~lic delegate UIIsrCleli-Arab Aid . entation .will mt' across major Canada, on Benoit Richard in NOW, OPEN

VATICAN CITY (NC)-Pope' recogriition of his 22' years oftaith lines~Protestant. Catholic ACCOUNT ,I

and JewiSh.Paul has sent medicines ,and ' service to the apostolic delega­ "PAYS. • • Interest' Compoundec!l foodstuffs to people along the It will deal with community tion of Canada.' Richard began . aU,arterlySuez Canal who have been de­ issues and problems m the light work in the delegation under prived of their homes ,or liveli ­ of the common and various' in­ Archbishop Hildebrando Anto­ Offices VI'!: hood by last year's Israeli-Arab terests and values of all reli ­ niutti,' now Cardinal Secretary

NORTH' ATTLEBORO MANSFIELDwar and the subsequent bomb­ gious groups, DeZutter said. of the Congregation for Reli ­ings and clashes. 112id.. gious in Rome. 1IIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllillIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllJIIIUIIIIIIIIIlllUllllllillUlUuUIIlIilllili1111I1Il1I11I11I1I1II1l1I1111II()

..

"

o

Page 15: 07.25.68

. '\ THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs., July 25,1968

Br@~&u®1f .A@W@~@li'®ffi~@[J1)1?U[J'i)t1!J@1?U@[J'i)d

Impr@v~Dlfi)®[[i)li' (Q)~ (C@\l'Ou@~u~ $~lfu@@~$ DAYTON (NC)-One of the

mation's top authorities on Cath­(\)lic education said here im­provement and enrichment of Cath~lic schools rather than. the <:;Iuesbon of whether to contmue them, should engage the atten­tion of school officials and edu­~tors in the years ahead.

Brother ~~thony E. Wallace, 1r.s.~., aSSOCIate secretary of the secondary school department, National Catholic Educational Association, Washington, D. C., ~ld a meeting of educators the

• Questi~n of. continuing Catholic education was answered by Vatican Council II. ~e cited the. c~uncil's Dec!a­

ratIOn on ChrIstIan EducatIOn which, he said, reaffirmed "the munense importance" of .the Catholic school system "in the mcumstanct:s of our times." He

The Parish Pc'il1lrade

<lilUR lLADY OF ANGEILS, lFAlLLRlIVIER .

Preparations are complete for lj)arish . observance of ~e feast Gd Ou·r Lady of Angels, to be held from Wednesday, .Aug. 7 (llirough Sunday, Aug, 11. Band music, booths, food, games and lj)rizes are scheduled and a spe­eial k(ddies' day will take place from 5:30 to 7 Saturday, Aug. 10. 3~. MARY. WORTON

Today through Sunday the Jl)arish will hold its seventh an­nual bazaar and beef barbecue nt the center on Route 123. The public is cordially invited.

A "giant midway" will open ot 6 tonight, featuring 25 booths, llood and refreshments. Amuse­ments ami rides for children will be headed by pony rides. Music will 'be by Custer's Last

". Band, led by Ray Sigman. Tomorrow night chowder,

<dams and clamcakes will be· oorved beginning at 6 with take­out orders available. Also on the menu will .be pizza, com on the <Wh, linguica, hot dogs and bamburgers. Music by the Vel­Yet Dandelions will start at 8.

Events will begin at 6 again .... Saturday night with a bar­becue featuring cook-it-yourself Portuguese style beef. Wood and charcoal barbecue pits will be available and entertainment will be offered during the meal. A fireworks display will take' "place at 11 Saturday night. or in case of rain at 10:30 Sunday

· might. 'Sunday's program will begin

at 1 in the afternoon with the ·midway.. and prize contests for ehildren ages 4 to 12. A live­stock auction is scheduled for at with pigs, pullets and rabbits mI' sale and fru1ts, vegetables and other foods also available. The Dakotas will play for danc­,ing at 8 and a drawing for val­uable prizes will take ,place at 10:30.

Co-chairmen"of the event are John H. Drane and AnthO"'f' 'Pires.' .

,HOLY NAME. I'ALL RIVER

Contemporary music wiltac­:iomp'any 11:15 ,Mass Sundai .morning, July 28. liT•.JOHN BAPTIST.

· 'I:ENTRALVILLAGE T~e Ladies' Guild will hold a

Ioo<i sale in the pa~ish hall fol­· lowing all Masses this Sunday.

, The unit plans a lobster sup­~r Saturday night Aug. 10, also

- m the hall. Mrs. Philomena De ·Costa,aJ;Ulounces that sittings' will be af 5:30 and 7. Tickets ,Ire available' froin guild mem­wrs or' may be reserved by ta1ling Mrs. Loretta Potter at 136";2367 after 5 o·clock.

spoke at Ii national workshop on 'Catholic education conducted by. the University of Dayton.

Quality. of Personnel Another speaker, Sister Mar­

cella Anibus of Blessed Sacra­.ment Schooi La Crosse Wis. said the key to self-devel~pment is freedom,' "the spontaneous creativity .of the 'human person to realize himself."

"Catholic schools" she said "must educate. for""uncierstand~ ing not indodrir;-ation' self ­kn~wledge not memori~ed re­call; for fr~edom, not docility."

In his talk on renewal and the future of Catholic secondary education,~Brother Anthony said the Catholic school' system has the' personnel capable of pro­gramming and developing edu­cational structures to upgrade and enrich schools.

'''Let us realize the quality of the pe.rsonnel· .available, . the dedication and good will,/,J>f the persons with whom ~e-' work, and above all, let uS. come to realjze that we must ~l}ke wide' and more intelligent Use of this personnel and of the people of the parishes' and communities we serve," he declared. .

The NCEA official said that "contrary to what we read in some popular journals, or in the. statements of persons who. do not use valid educational re­search, . our Catholic schools have made a considerable con­trihution to our American· way of life and certainly to the strength of the Catholic church in particular."

Catholic education has been for 'the American heritage "an incalculable source for growth and enrichment," he said. In the present period of criticism and candid analyses "no true educator" fears or expects to' avoid critics, he declared.

"The bombardment ... which has occurred during the past 10 years has convinced us that the' past has produced worthwhile monuments in the field of edu­cation and that the weaknesses attributed to our' system are not" any different from those evi­denced both by public education and by other private systems," he said.

J1"AITH AND ORDER: Father Walter J. Burghardt, 8.J., left, of Woodstick, Md., and Fathe:r Raymond E. Brown, 8.8., of Baltimore, were among nine Datholics named to the Woz:ld Council of Churches' Faith and Order Cornmissioo at the recent wee general assembly in Uppsa3.a, Sweden. NC PhGtt>.

!Q)@uun@$ (6/}u@li'®® LLn\l'lhHl!J(Q]lJ'ilnQ~n1l 'lPli'~~~\l'®

'¥I@$ N@~n (6©~~@[h,@O"@\l'©[i'

ROME (NC)-Charges by a Soviet newspaper that the vice­rector of. Rome's Lithuanian Seminary was a nazi collaboJ:8­tor in occupied Russia are "abso­

'lutely untrue," the rector of the college has asserted. .

"All this is built upon noth­ing," said Msgr. Ladislaus Tul­aba, of an accusation in the So­viet youth newspaper, Komso­

"molskaya Pravda, that· Msgr. Zeno Ign,onis had been a nazi collaborator and had blessed

. troo.ps who committed war crimes.

"Msgr. Ignonis went to Russia no.t to fight but as a chaplain, W help the suffering and the dYing," said Msgr. Tulab3.. Msgr.· Ignonis-the name has been shortened from Ignatavicius­was away from Rome at the time.

"He even has testimonials of' gratitude from Russians.-

Msgr. Tulaba said .that, whelll

Prelate Endorses Work on Eye.B~nk NEW ORLEANS (NC)~Areh­

bishop Philip M. Hannan of New . Orleans has pledged his eyes to be given at death to the South­ern Eye-Bank here. He formerly. made a pledge to· the Lions' Eye-Bank in Washington, D. C.. and has transferred his pledge because of his new location.'

"I am. genuinely: pleased ~ state my complete endorsement of the' work of the Southern Eye-Bank, and to encourage cooperation with its program for· the restoration Dfsight by means. of corneal ttansplants," the archbishop said. "The .do­nation of one's eyes - - '•. is a most commendable work of .

merey. and will be the means of bringing, light to many who must otherWise spimd their days in darkness." ()

Archbishop ~annaD. urged' more people topledgetbeir eyes in view· of .the comstant waiting list cf patients for the" "miracle operation" in· which a scarred or cloudy cornea is re­placed by a healthy one. He noted that any eye, regardless of the age IX visual power of the donor, 18 suitable, aDd ibat the identity oftbe donor and recipient is kept eonfidentiaL

The SoutherD Eye-Bank III largelY. supported by 1:be 'Loa­,wane. Elks AssoclatioD.

the Germ!lIls advanced into Rus­sia, -they allowed two Lithuanian priests to go there. Msgr. Ig­nonis, wh,) spoke Russian, was sent by h~s bishops, Msgr. 'Tul­aba said.

German forces occupying , Lit h u ani a gave Lithu­

anians a 'C hoi c e of 1abo r camps ·in Germany or police work in oecupied Russia, Msgr. Tulaba said. Msgr. Ignonls act­~ as a ehaplain to men in such police work in the neigh­borhood 'of Minsk in White Rus­s1a, he recalled.

Soviet uttacks on Msgr. .Ig­nonis are '''not new," .Msgr. 'T:ul­aba noted. :Ele ascribed them to Soviet antE~gonism toward the LithuaIlian ,COllege. 'in Rome and to Msgr. Ignonis himself "for writing a ~b(lok on 'Soviet 'per-se­cution.

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• :Makes'ea1llng·~_.No PllSW"gooey taste. Helps ctleck "denture breath". Dentunlll tha'~flt are ·essentlal to. >health. .See ynurdentlst ngu!arly.GeH"ASTEETJ:I at,au drug ClOUD:teill.j

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Urge Uo~o H~me

Fo~ C@[lfd;na~. WASHINGTON (NC)-U.s..

Sen. Vance Hartke of mdiQlZMll said the United stateD shQuW. offer a permanent home m abU coontry 'to Josef Ca.~ Mindszen'ty, primate of Jlhm.. :gmy, who has been in refuge at the U. S.•embasSy in Budapest since 1956.

Sen. Hartke noted in an inter­wew here ,thatCarilinal Minds­'zenty ,is 76, 'his health is not good, and ~hehas been reported to ,be deeply depressed.

The senator, who returned 11'1e­cently from London, said he .has taken some action within gov­ernment circles toward ·extend­ing an invitation 'to the cardinal to come here, but declined to discuss these details.

Sen. Jilartkealsosaid he d!d '!!lOt know how the :cardinal would re1qKlnd tJi> :suchan .invi­tatiQn. He ·declined tO~ElC"'.J1ate :on ,how ,Cardinal Mindszenty ·eould be :moved from the 1!J. So ,embassy and brought to th~

(country without interferen~ Dsr the Hungarian 'communist cov­,eriunent.

. In the 'Past, the cardinal M9 refused to leave Hungary, al­-tho~gh the Vatican .has eJq)ress­ed hope he would go to Rome if the Hungarian government would .Permit him to leave. He .remains under a life sentence, imposed in 1949 on charges all: espionage; black market opera­tions and anti-:state activities. .He was freed from prison in the 1956 .Hu~garian uprising" .ancll since has resided at the U. S. embassy.

~@W Apfi'@$D@@rrufl' DETROIT (NC)-George Ba­

tyko of Pittsburgh was elected supreme president :of the Greek Catholic Union by delegaties tlll> the "organization's 30th conven­tion meeting here. He replaces

. 'Stephen M.Tkatch, who served in that 'capacity for Qle past M 'years,

'1

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NEW aiD,FORD I 363 SECON·D· ST~ "FALL' RIVER, MASS. I­ "'iHSTI~UTIOH for ':SAYLUfGS iiUltUWlllllllllllUUlIllIIllllUlIlllIllIlIlIllllIlllIIlIlllHlllllllWUllllltillBllIIIIlI1UIllllnlmlillJllllllllllll1IIIIIiii

o

Page 16: 07.25.68

THE ANCHO~-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., July 25,1968 " '7

USS MASSACH'USETTS OHicial State, Memoric:al to the ·13,000 Bay Stote heroes '. who lost their lives during

World .Wfjr U.T- DOW' anchored' at Battleship. Cove, .Fall River

Set aside 01110 dG}~ d'u.ing the Summer to Vi$it this Great Sftip.

An .ideal one-day prolcc:t for' the various playground. groups througho'ut New England.

o

* North Africa. - Nov. 'U.9.u * leyte -Jan. '!l945* *_.

* GilbeFt Islands"": Nev. -Doo. 1943 * Luzon - Jan. 1945"'Big Mamie-'.rld not losa one man «1$ a result of enemy' <lKltion. The * Mal'Shall. Mend - .!Ian. -lieb. ~943 * I"'!'O JimCll- feb. - Mcu. 1945 . . /Massachusetts earned 11 ba"i~ sitars. * Asiatic Pac. Raids - feb.-May »944 * Okinawa-Mar..-June 1945 fOIl the fOllowing actions:

, "'­

* Western. New Guinea", - ApriD U944 * Thire!! fleet Raids - July-Aug. 1945

* Wcs. Caroline Is. - Seps.- Oct. U944* *

'lhis MessageSpOiJ1s~,edby The Following Individuals' and Business Concerns

Dn The Diocese of Fall Rive,. o

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WORKERS UNION It. A. McWHIRR COMPANY '" SULWAI\f.S MOONEY AND COMPANY, INC. "M'IlWHlIIIIWIIIIIIIUlliIlUWlIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!lIUUlIIUllIlIIlJIlI!llUllUlWllllUIllItDlIllIll1llllIllll1lIJIllIll1llIIllUUlIIIIlIIIIIII1IU111111111111111111!ll11:JI!lllllllllll1WmlllllllllllUl1l1IU1l11l1l11llllllllllll!lIlIllUlUlIIlIIlIlIIlllllllllllllitllllllllIlllllIlIlIlIIllllllllWllllll/Illllllllllllllll:mJJlDllll

Page 17: 07.25.68

" THE' ANCHOR-D!.oceseof Fall River-.Thurs., July 25, 1968.18 . . ! .

"

SaysC~~Hri~a~ismDom',inate~

Colaianni's 'Catholic Left'., -

By Msgr. George G. Higgins'

Father AJ.berl D9ndeyne, long-time prof~~r of p1oit­I9SQphy a.t Louvain Universi1ty, observes in arec~nt sym­posium on Vatioan II's Pastoral Constitution of. the Ohurch in the Modern' World that many contemporary OathoHcs' are allowing themselves to ' . become obsessed by the past rightly or wrongly, 'Ihappen to failures ood mistakes of the think that the· shoe fits the Church. "Such a state of- af- Catholic Left very snugly. .

By clericalism I mean, In this fairs," he says, "gives occasion case, an excessive, not to say to speak of a kind of inferiority obsessiVe preoccupation with eomplex. Ever- the clerical or hIerarchical as­lasting bother peets of' the Church. Mr. Cola­about particular' Ianni undoubtedly thinks that ahortcomings in he, of all people, has 'no sucl)., ·the ,Church is preoccupation. Indeed he says just as unhealthy· a~ much repeatedly ,In '.the as uncritical tri- course of "The Catholic Left." umphalism .... OIl Nevertheless a reviewer can In the last an- not be expected to -read an au­alysis, unhappy thor's mind. He has to go by lamentation over what the author says in cOld' the past serves black print. And the cold black merely. to pre- print In "The Catholic Left" vent us from says to this revIewer that· Its reaching the heart of the prob- author, In spite of his frequent !em in the present." protestations' to the contrary,

I have no doubt that in many thinks of the Church most of the Qvant gai-de circles'this little texercise in post-conciliar can- time in terms - of bishops and, <lIor will be curtly dismissed as to a large extent, of pri~sts. Mother typical 'example of old Everybody Out of Line line clerical conservatism at its That he also happens to think .worst. ' that bishops, with exceedingly

Angry Dissatisfaction few exceptions, are a miserably The fact is, however, that· stupid lot, who by and large are

l'ather Dondeyne, whose cre- reluctant to join the human race dentials as an anti-triumphalist and are not for taking the Gos- . lire impeccable, has long since pel seriously, Is presently be­demonstrated in a .series of bril- side the point. ' !iant books that he is strictly. The point is that Mr. Col'ilian­his own man and is no more ni just can't seem to get' them "'clerical" in his outlook than off his mind and that, Instead many of the younger priests and. of telli l1g us what the Catholic . laymen who h~ve only recently Left has done or proposes to do matriculated as certified critics to clear up the intolera,ble mess Qf the Establishment. that the bishops have allegedly

As a matter of f-act, I would made oj things, he prefers ,to lillY that the Father 'Dondeynes spend the better part of his time eM this world are significantly talking about the mess Itself. Urges·,E·och. ~eligi()n Find Role in Crisis less clerical in their outlook Moreover, in spite of the. fact 'than the James ,-Colaianni, for th!'t he tells us on page 20-that example _ Mr. Colaianni being the members of the Catholic - = ~Says Theo~ogy Sometimes 'Fick~el1 Nervous' the most recent American mem-' Left are well aware of their ber of the loyal oppos~tion to own individual imperfections, MUNDELEIN (NC)-A Wood­ Chu~ch 'for Today and Tomor- degrees and kinds of violence, in publicize in book form his angry he n~ver gets around to reveal- stock College theologian told re­ row." . order to replace the .present sys­

_ dissatisfaction with the way the 'ing In the next 212 pages the ligious superiors here in Illinois . F'ather Clarke told the partici- tern, judged corrupt beyond re­mitred ones In our ranks' are. nature or the extent of these im­ that each individual Religious ~ri·ts that the current crisis in call, with a new one.

perfections. and commqnIty must find his or secular society "stems from the Particular Identityeomporting themselves in the . On the contrary, he leaves the post-conciliar Church. it> own "identity and role ... ambivalence (If our Western cul- "Fourthly, there is what I

Unanticipated Charge Impression, on balance; that al ­ veithin th~ total response of the ture, based' on scientific and would term the 'hippie' ten­else' themost everybody in 'Church to the current crisis' of technolo~ical .conquests, and dency, which by a conscious dis­At the risk of being immortal- Church-starting with the bish­ humanity." allied to libel:al democracy. engagement erects on the fringe

ized (if only for a week) in ops, of course-:-is demonstrably C

"There Is and must be room "This society offers, on the of present society a protest, atNCR's "Cry Pax" or in John out of line except the members for the greatest diversity of life one hand, the promise and par- once gentle and militant, on be­Deedy's counterpart column in of the 'Catholic Left and those styles and of services to the hu­ tial fulfillment of a' better life half of the person and of per­The Commonweal, I would ev~ "fringe" Catholics who presum­man community," he said. The for mankind, but ao}so tragically sonal community."/ItO so far as to say that Mr. Cola- ably are thought to be potential theologian, F·a·ther 'Thomas E. poses, in thE' very' process, a Father Clarke said there areianni's new boOk (The Catholic candidates for membership In

Left: The Crisis of Radicalism the club. Clarke, S.J., gave the key~ote serious threat to the human values and limitations in all in the Church, Chilton Book Co.. Tricky Business address at. the 11th annual as­ person and t() genuine human four of these. reactions, and that

. Philadelphia, $5.95) Is the most sembly of the Conference of community." religious communities have In derical book I have read in the' Over against'these two groups, Majo.r ~uperiors of Men There are lour current reac- the past related themselves to past two or three years. which are admittedly a small (CMSM). tions to this Crisis, he said. the life of the world and of the

minority in the Church, you The assembly at St. -Mary of . "First, an optimistic ·profession- Ohurch in ways similar to allMr. Colaianni will probably have what Mr. ColiliannI calls Dot be taken aback by this par- . the ,Lake Seminary here, alism, which identifies with -the four current tendencies. ticular criticism of his exceed- the "archconservatives" and brought together some 200 system, and which Is confident "Each indIvidual and com­ingly angry tract for the times. . "arehti-iumphalists" and tht!ll major Religious superiors and that present HIs, however seri- munity," he added, "has the task

In fact, he seems to have an-' "the great mass of inertia,' the, bishops to 'discuss ."The Rele­ ~us, are really growing pains iOof f~nding a particular identityticipated it, for In the opening pillars (as distinguished from 'vance' of. ReligioUB Life in the man's inevitable conquest of the/' and role, according to this four­sentence of his Epilogue he says' the archpillars) just sittiitg . good life based on science, tech- fold possibility, within tt:te total that "Anyone who would at- around waiting for nothing to nology and political democracy. response 'of the Church to thehappen.'" .tempt to celebrate signs of au- dor. Candid criticism of the ec- "Secondly., l''Cformism, which current crisis' of humanity.thentic witness I would have thought that the -Christian in a clesiastical' establishment is per- seeks within the present systeinThere' is and must· be room forbook called The Catholic Left 9{)okesman for a ·group .which, fectly in order.. to correct' its inequities. . the greatest diversity .of life ahould be aware of the probable' we repeatedly' . But, to way of thinking,are reminded,. my' "Thirdly, r,ildicalism which styles' and of services ·to the _nsequences: exposure.to the takes the Gospel'very seriously there is a vast difference be­ oaUs for revolution of .various human cOmmunity.­eharges of simplistic' thinking -much more seriously'· by, far tween candid criticism, on the and oversensitivity." than the bishoPs, for example-,- one. hand and obsessive criti ­ .......... .~ That's a ·fairly incisive way"of would be extremely reluctant to cism on the other. Mr. Calaian­putting it. Add to this list of an- get involved in this tricky and ni's type of .criticism, .in my: ticipated charges the unantiei- very unevangelical business of opinion, falls within the latter pa~d charge of "clericalism" sep~~ating the sheep' from the category.. . .' and you have this writer's reac- goa... in such a facile manner.'. To repeat the words of Father tionto "The Catholic Left" In Obsessive 'Criticism Dondeyne, whichlll were quoted • nutshell: Be that as it may,' I . have' above, I, find" it· "just as. un-

In Cold Print stated my' negative 0 reaction to healthy. as uncritical triumphal-I have raised the charge ·~of ,''The·,Catholic -LeW' so candidly ·ism.",- .. - '

clericalism in this context not because "I' assume .that . that's " Mor~ver'I ~think it will- serve," 110 '. twit. Mr.. Colaianni: - who what Mr.. Colaianni would want, 'M, Father., Dondeyne has· sug-' presumably thinkS of,himself as .. me to' 00, he being 11 brutally , .. gested in' another context,. to being. an 'Implacable enemy·., of·:, ca,ndid' 91an ·in hi. own rigM. ~.~'. -prevent· us from reaching to the clericalism, in .·.·all· ita""many . I . am not angry abOut the."heart'"o! our present problem"":':

,ah86)e5 and fonns-but because" . book, nor .do I object to its· cao- .' 'more's the pit7~ ,

o

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Page 18: 07.25.68

19tHE ANCHOR-Thurs., July 25, 1968

Cite~ lP@ssibi~ity

Of Ncew 'Theo~ogy, UPPSALA (NC)-Theologians

over 30 who approach all prob­lems as though they are only -variations . of old problems" were criticized here by a Swe­dish Lutheran delegat~ at the fourth general assembly', of the World Council of ChurcheB (WCC).

" -rhere are new problems,' however, and the point is lost if

. you'do not dare to see the dras­tically new in our situation. The

~ assembly must face this very fact," said the Sewedish theo­logian, the Rev. Krister Sten­dba!. He is currently teachinG at Harvard University.

Speaking on the situation o:f the Church recently to a pa~ecll

Festival Hall at Uppsala Uni"er­sity, the Lutheran clergyman ~

dared that Christians can all HIGHEST PAID ATHLETE:· Pele, the Brazilian 80ccer super-star, gets set to d~ limger regard nuclear weapOn8

We through a deflender for the Washington Whips in Washington, D.C., 88 Pele's ~ . as being only larger versions of{

JRC Announces Plans for Relief

.To Biafra MILWAUKEE (NO)

Plans to create an· ad hoc Jewish Relief Commi1Jtee tlo avert hunger in Biafn were nnnounced at Marquette Uni­versity by Rabbi Mare H. Tan­enbaum af New York, national director of mterreligious affairs of the American Jewish Com­lJIlittee.

Speaking at a Summer insti ­tute on Judaism a¢ the Jesuit university, Rabbi Tanenbaum indicated that steps have been taken to help organize a group of Jewish rabbinic aDd lay lead­ers to mobilize food and medlcal supplies, as well as financial resources to aid on 8 humanita­rian basis the viclims of starva­tion and the Nigerian civil war.

Rabbi Tanenbaum reported that be has begun conversations "lJritb a number of Jewish men who are food-producers and manufacturers of medicines and that they hove indieated a spoil ­

taneous desire to make a 1rigDi­fieant contribution thrOugh .. 1os, BNZil, team appeared OIl Daltionwide TV. Pele, whose full name is Edson Arantes de' ecmyentional weapons. organized .Jewish agency to tile ~, is the world's highest paid athlete, earning more 1lban' $340,000 a yeaF. -New communications media.relief of the Nigerian and Bial­ :He Pbotc. atelUtes and electronic possi­ran peoples. bilities may demand new polit ­

Cooperative EIfori ical structures," he said. "In suclaRabbi Tanenbaum also paid a situation, it is important not

tribute to the World Councll oi Pete Puts on Dazzling Soccer Display to be frightened into holding 0111Church (WeC) and Caritas In­ to old fashions.... Living tra.­ternationalis, international Cath­ dition means a way to' change.Sports Idol Spent Childhood in Slumsolie charities organi~tion, foJr Through it the Church buildJJtheir "moving and impressive bridges, Even 11 new theologyWASHINGTOW (NC) - The eaught the Scotsman's words tn­ DOt only makes him a sports idoX

8barp gazes of 20,000 spectat01'8 side them.response in making available may be created by the new situ­relief to the Biafran victims or !D his native Brazil. He is a

ation.the war." were on the soccer field where glimmer of hope £Or many .nTheir conversation w~ inter­

He expressed the hope that 22 players shoved, pushed and poor Brazilian boy whO w~uldrupted when a rumbling from -rheoretically, the theologi8M whatever food, medical and jostled for a ball under a broil ­ hope to gain even some smallthe crowd indicated something !lave finished their talks Olill other supplies and money win ing sun tnat turned their uni­ was happening on the field. fraction of that wealth and fame. Christian unity. Now we have be raised by. Jews during tbe forms sopping wet. The 27-year-old Pele first be­ to accept the consequences. next few weeks will be «:ban­ A few moments later the gazes No. 10 was nudging the baD. came a soccer sensation at 16 which is what our young peopltl nllled through a cooperative ef­ of the socce~ans became weld­ forward with a gentle tap Ifrom when he scored four goals in his demand." fort with the WCC and Caritas. ed into Ollie gigantic stare. All each foot. A silver crucifix hang­ first professional game. He had

"Apart from the valuable eyes were on the dark figure of ing from a chain around his neck spent his childhood in the slums, IJYmbolism of such an interfaith III player who wore the number glittered and danced from bW practicing soccer by making a HOr1l~r Archbishop

movements..collaboration in _humanitarian 10. ball out of a wad of rags. In the stands an elderly Scots­ MIAMI (NC)-Members of thili::ervice on an international With a catlike stride, he pick­ Prayer Tradition Latin American oonsular co~basis," he said, "time is a critiCal man had time off from his chores

at:the British Embassy. He turn­ed up speed. First he dribbled In Brazil and the rest· of Latin . bere have honored Archbisholl>faotor and both these great the ball through legs of one op­ America ,soccer is often the onlyChristian bodies, as well as the <ed and spoke to 8 young Turkish Coleman F. Carroll of Miamll ponent. Then he dri:bbled th~

student from Harvard University avenue leading out of the slums with a plaque in recognition 4lf ...Internatio~l Red Cross, bave ball through the legs of another and £rom a life of miserable the prelate's service to thethe facili ties and the personnel citting next to him. defenseman. poverty. . Church, to the community 3nl!!l10 see that aid reaches the Biaf­ With a burr that could be nul people in the most reliable beard three rows back, the Scot No. 10 feinted to his left, At a press .conference here, to the Latin American people.

.Ghouted, "The JI1()n's a mas­ throwing a third defender off the day before the soccer match,and expeditious way." ter-r-r, .tl complete master-r-r." stride and out of position. That the Santos team was presented

was all No. 10 needed. He to the news media. The teamThe young Turk, in a EuropeanCouncil Asks Repeal gesture of agreement, put his' leathered the ball with a shot wore rnod.est grey suits witb the

(!Irms akimbo and balled his that bounced off the !face of the elub's emblem on the breastOf Abortion Laws goaltender who fell to the ground pocket. Since they spoke ,little,hands into .fists as th~ugh he

WASHINGTON (NC) - A trying to recover the ball. It was English, they did their best to Presidential advfsory council too tate. A teammate for No. 10 be friendly with perfunctory bas recommended the repeal of Delhi p'reUate Flays' smacked the loose ball into the smiles and handshakes. laws making abortion a crime, goal. The next day, n few minutes and recognition of the full legal Crime and Violence before game time, all the San­Eights of illegitimate children. NEW DELHI (NC) - An In­ tos players gathered in the lOck­Glimmer of Hope

The council, headed by former dian archbishop has warned That was the beginning of the er room and clasped hands in III

Sen. Maurine Neu'berger of Ore­ against an increasing tendency end for the Washington Whips, silent moment of prayer.- It is gon, was appointed by President here in India to indulge in "vi ­ who eventually were defeated by a tradition that they have never .Johnson to suggest ways of im­ olence and crime" at the slight­ broken. No pictures or newsmenthe Santos club o£ Brazil and proving the status of women. Its est provocation. their invincible No. lQ-.Edson are allowed, and the team is re­lI'eCOmmendations ~re proposed Speaking at a National Crime luctant to publicize it.Arantes de Nascimento- better by various citizen. study groups. Prevention Week program, known as Pele.

Mrs. Neuberger said the rec­ Archbishop Angeio Fe.rnandes of Pele didn't score I!l goal an·ommendations did not reflect Delhi noted tbat. riQting,. a~Jl

day but he was involved in allaovernment policy;' but were, and destruction of .li'e and prop­made public to "stimulate CQD_. erty seem w have.. become . .tl three of SantOs' scores ',either etructive discussion On contro­ "pattern." .. ... by an assist or by being f6uled

, and thereby setting 'uP 'Q goe1'Yersial topics ~d. point the w87 Citing riots. c~~ .by lan­for his team. .to .needed programS." . guage disputes. ~ro\1ghout· the

. The council propoSed draftiD, country; the "butchery" in Ran- . ~ele earns annually a salary . • model law .that would give · chi, Meerut and Allahabad and ,of more than 341,000 tax.,free dol­, cre~ter recognition ~ the prop­ the desecratiort 'of ·ChriStian. lars from Santos. It is estimated·

'erty rights ~.. married women; churclies in Orissa and Kashmir, he doubles that figure through· 'mClude VolUntarY' separatlob' .. · the" Delhi' Arclibisliop., asserted .' endorsements and private m-' «rounds for divorce,' aDd allow · that today'a' mass" culture is ;vestments..His wealth and lame women to establish their own mark~ly predatory apd Will domicile for all purposes. Siz continue as long as promient .

,'1 ltatea DOW eive women that large-scale culprits con,tinuallY '~ew Fac,lI.ylIight. . escape pJrOSeeution and; politi- .Boston College announces ap-'

.....dans eourl corrupt elements pointment of 72 new· facultYN C d who finance their campku.gris.,.. members. for the coming aca'"

ew usto ian . Another daJ)ger in;' these·. demic"year: four full. professors, ROME (NC)-Father AlfonsO changing times, the Anjhbishop : 14 associates;, 22 assistan.ts;,

.' Calabrese, O.FoM.. has been added, is a ten~encyto }lcquite' .".27 instructors; and .five lectu~~.'" . '.,1

elected. Custodian of· the Holy two ,seta of.. ptln'ciples: tbeoreti- The full professors are· iDr. E,v,- . ", Land, succeeding Fa4her Lino cal ones which 2re prear-:ped and, .... e~tt "C. .Hughes, Sallford .'~..... j" Cappiello, O.F.M.. He is 158th professed; and practical Ones, in Katz, Dr.,Ed,ward M., BrQ.Q~s and,.•

ill B .• line of F.ranciscan '.Custoo- .the·light· of~which men: JCondpct'J~es E ...Ri$a:t;:d. 'rheir fie!d$ , dinns-regional superiors-ex-' their daily affairs. Gr\!idually, '. ar~. SOCiology, .lllW,. ge<lPhysics tending back to the time Of 'St... the .archbishop declared/:the sit;- aitd!b~si,ness admi"istr;ition, J1Il­

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Page 19: 07.25.68

. Tt1~ ANpfOtt""""Dioce" ~fFail ~iver:-~~.! July 25, 1'~' ,. , .. '.. '. ).. .. -'.\', i \ :.. ... . '.' . t .! - U,rges Medical" Set.GoIMarriage. Cou.•. , . '" '! .... ',,' '.~ , :.-,

. O~A (NC)-.,.A. bal~cing out of. the "medic81 schOOl curric- . ulum to include ,course work in' marriage, fainily'liVing and ,h.timan sexuaii,ty' is being advo­cated here by the director of the Lincoln diocesan Family Life

,Bureau." . Father Nol'lbert J. Vim Greuna

sven has also proposed that the Catholic medical schoolcUr'rlc':' ulum melude' lllCoUrse. m. the,

I theology '.' 4Ii. marriage Wbidl would reflect current thinking. . , Tbe Nebra~:ka priest spoke, at

the C~ightOll University '~1l-' terence on SE,x Education, }'1Im­

. ily Plannmg and Family Life Counseling for faculty members of catholic·' medical schools seeking to -improve their course offerings.'.

'. Father.. Van GreunSVen feels curriculum change. should 'be'.. . , ......

made·after jl medicalschoo1 .. ,tablishes a Bebavorial SCienee Department.

F'or piaoucing Pb¥siclaDlllo particularly. m tile obstetrical­gynecological field, be suggested

. opportunities ~r continuing eli­'ucation in. medical schools and ·the estblisltment of a marriage

_and familY: life counselor fa ~ -Ph,Yslcian'a: offioeo ' . .' . .' ,"

EARN' MORE '! "1

"

DEAD IN .POLAND: Rev. Adalbert Szlclanny, right, .. assistant ,at St. P.atrick's Church in Fall River, died unex­-'-'ji)OOtedly while visiting his native PoIand and was buried·

'IDhursday in GrodzikJi-Gorne. He is shown w~1;h his classmate Mld close friend, Most Rev.Wladyslaw Rubin of Vatican !City, secretary of t4e' Synod of Bishops af th~ Chu-reh, and.a visitor on several,·occasions to see F~her SzklaJ;lny iin this Diocese. '

Continued"from Page One n~s. of fellow 'displaced pel' ­. ' iPether was of slight build and sons in the. 19'1O's. · ~ith a genial and· witty .manner . ,.A, Pro-BudaI co~ceJ~brated · llbat gave no indication of the Mass. will be offered for' his

I!iUifering . he· had undergone soul on Friday morning at 1~ ill ijuring the years when· he him- " St. Patrick's ·Church. Survivors,

'. f111f was in a.Russian prison . in Poland, are a brother and " · IIllIDP' and a priest serving. the. three ~isters...

::;"

~ Diocesans Support Congress "', Of Religious Education.

More than 170 priest8, religious and laity of the ·Fan , River Diocese are among' early registrams for the. 1968. .

, N~ England Congress of Religious Education, spOnS:Qred · by .the C<mf,i-aternity .af· Ch~istian Doctrine. ,With "The World in Our Hands" as. its. 'mm , , : ucation materials' will b~' 00 'Itheme, the meeting is sched- . haQd during the congress .to'dis.. ;' .led for the- we-ekend of Aug. .~p~a>:. ~~ir o~~ririgs. . . .. lt3. at' the Uniy~ity .of. : 'Parents and.educatorsattend~ Bridegport in C:;:onri~,ii~ut.. :.. ing.:the congress willalso,p,arti-

The congress is open ~ aU .cipate in 'nightly infonnal ·~talk­~ths arid to aU involved ip. the .ins.'~ Delegates.. from '. the Fall, education of youth, or. a!iults, River, dioc~se.have procured a,.· Over 7000 teachers and, pa,rents large lo~nge at th~ University of

· are expected to attend the thr~- Bridgeport for use as a .disCus.,. . ~y meeting. sion center during these meet., . Rev. Gregory Baum, theolo- . bigs..

· ~an from St. Michael's. College, Registrations for the congress Toronto, is keynote speaker for .. are· being accepted· by the

. libe assembly. Other general ses- . Bridgeport Diocesan CCD. Ac­'~on speakers are Rev. John Mc.,. . ,commodations are available at

. '\'!l:all, S.J.of Boston Coilege and, : 'the University of ·Bridgeport irhomas Klise, 'producer of con- for $19.50 per person for the temporary audio-visual materi- weekend. This fee includes also Rev. Joseph C. Gengras, co- . lodging for two nights, all meals ordinator of Special Education from Friday noon to Sunday for the Archdiocese of Hartford, noon, and registration fees for will head a separate program general sessions, seminars and alealing with religious ,education special programs. ~ exceptional children. Rev. Joseph Powers, Diocesan

Other speakers will include . Director for the Fall River CCD, Bishop James Shannon, Auxil- announces that further infonna­iiary Bishop of St. Paul, Minn.; tion and registration materials ]Rev. Anthony Scillaci, O.P., of may be had by.calling the Dioc­Fordham University, a specialist esan CCD Center, 446 Highland. in visual arts and the film; Rev. Avenue, Fall River, telephone Eugene L. Smith of the National 676-3036. \Eouncil of Churches; and Miss <i:'hristiane Brusselmans, author and catechist. Over 35 speakers Composes Prayer in all will conduct seminars and GAgainst RaciCII~n$1Mworkshops in the course of the illongress. LONDON (NC),--John Cardi­

nal Heenan of Westminister has Informal Talk-lIDs composed a prayer against rac­

ism dedicated to St. Martin deAmong topics to be covered Porres, . 17th mulattom seminars are Graphic Arts century from Peru known as the "Mir­and TV; Group Dynamics; Ecu­acle Worker."menism; Liturgy; Freedom and,

Conscience; Adult Education; The Dominicans at their St. €atechetics for Elementary and' Martin Missions center, Hawkes­High School; The Crisis in Faith; yard Priory, Staffordshire, in and Renewal in Religious Edu­ northwest England, are circulat­cation. More than 50· publishers ing a first printing' of 10,000

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