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Encyclical· Warns All of World's Perilous State PO'pe In Urgent Peace Appeal . , f1{·.·l.· .. -:-'. .....' . ..... I :I i I ..\ t. .I !; ";.' ." , I I -; '> J. i. I '. Sept. 15 and made publIc Monday, Sept. \ I "1 19, the Pope also called on the world's ,\ L';".. [} 1.... 31 New York to appeal for peace before the The ANCHOR lJ.aU Rivell'o Moss., Thursday, Sept. 22, $4.00 per Year Vot 10, Noo 38. © 1966 The Anchor ·PRICE IOc s C·CD,:lmprov¢d Program , . ·By·: Cong'ress PITTSBIJRGH (NC)-The i2th national and 5th inter- congress of the Confraternity of Christian Doc- , fWnne came to a climax here with, three surprises: ' -The <lil;solution of th.e national lay committee of the v Nl'ICAN: CITY (NC).:-Pope Paul VI has appealed to the world's Catholics to 'say Rosa'ry during the month of Octo- ,bel' for the establishment of true peace, the halting of war and the removal of at- titudes which tend to foster. war. .' In a 1,500-word letter dated WD; in favor of a plan. f(»r oogionai groups: ,. -The formal approval 1>1 \5he U.S. Bishops' Committee <til the CCD of a national com- maittee of CCD diocesan direc- lJlm;. -Some gentle but well-aimed t1hiding of the predominance of .dcal presence at a congress (IIjf what is descdbed as a lay _ganization. The dissolution of the nationlhl lbv committee resulted from at .nsensus of the national com- ooittee, which feU that reorgani- lIIIltion was for lay in- College Day October 12 College will SPOl1l· 001' a College Day for all high IIChool juniors and seniors their parents on Wednes- <iay, Oct. 12, at 10 o'clock on the /IIllhool campus in North Easton. Admissions officers represent- {lng 50 Catholic colleges from va- miow; parts of the country wiUll be present and thus give college- minded students and their par- oots an opportunity flo attend! llour half-hour conferences with different college representatives .. W meet Wormally dul'ing (IUs time with other college rep- 1Jesentatives. Students from any schoon. lj)Ublic' or private, are WeICOD1l0 lio attend these sessions witill _ \IIlw.r«e being . fiuence to be felt on the na- tional level. "The national lay. committee just' didn't function," said Mrs. Regis Mullen of Ambridge, Pa., a committee member and tJO-· chairman of the CCD congress. "Ii: was not accomplishing any- thing." The plan is to reorganize ac- cording tQ regions. Regional groups, it is felt, will be able to meet often and be better able to marshall resources to meet CCD objectives. ' Diocesan CCD directors voted to structure themselves accord- ing to the 27 existing eeclesiasti· cal provinces of the U.S. The lay committees are expected W> correspond to these 27 .group· iflgs. The di-ocesan directors vote OR regional directors was formally approved by the U.S. bishops' oommittee on the CCD. Archbishop Joseph of San Francisco, a bishops' mittee member, expressed "deep surprise" that "you have not had such an organization before." Father John Russell, CCD di- rect-or in the diocese of Syracuse, N.Y., was elected chairman pro- tem of the directors committee. Ere said, "There has been a long-existing colloboration vac- uum between the national office United Nations in 1965. He asked that the day be dedi- cated as a world day of pray- er for peace. Weapon' 01 Peace Kaszynski Administrator In Fall River Most Rey. ;Bishop James L. Connolly .has annoullced the appointment of Rev. Robert S. interim administrator 0:6 St. Stanislaus Church, Fall. as admin- istrator of the same parish. The new administnitor. succeeds Rev. Hugo Dylla, the' late retired pastor of St. Church. Father Kaszynski, son the late Chester S. and Genevieve (Kalisz) Kaszynski, is a native of New Bedford. He attended Holy Cross Preparatory. Semi- pary at Notre Dame, Mater Do- lorosa Servite Seminary in Chi- cago, Cardinal O'Connell Semi- n;lry aJ;ld St. John's Seminary' in Boston and. SS. Cyril and Turn to Page Twelve' of the CCD and the individual diocesan director, especially with reference to the planning of national CCD projects and meet- i,ngs, and effective exchange o1C mrormation," The neW Ol'gani- . MY. ROBERT S. KASZYI!lSKI He added that he would participate in such an observance in St. Peter's basilica and said the obser.vance would be "a special ceremony of supplication' " in honor 'of Vi:r:gin Mother of God, the protector of Christians' mld our intercessor for peace." Noting that Catholics pray"· the Rosary during October, Pope Paul said: "This year we call upon all the children of the Church to pet'forI)1 Turn to Page Four All in Diocese To Recite Peace Prayer Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Bishop of the Diocese ... of Fall River, has announced that the following prayer that concluded Pope Paul's encyclical letter on peace, Christi Matri Rosadi (Rosaries to the Mother of Christ), is to be recited throughout the Diocese on Tuesday, Oct. 4. Bishop Connolly added that recitation of this prayer becomes' optional the other days of the month of October. "Look upon all your sons with motherly .0 Blessed Virgin,' Consider the anxieties of the bishops who fear the assaults of evil on their flocks; fathers consider of the families who anguish of so many men, motllters and are worried about their Jot and that of their families and. who are assailed with agonizing responsibilities. CaJm the heartl5 of men at . war and inspire them with 'thoughts' of peace.' Through your may the demands of God's justice, which have been caused by-,sin, be turned into mercy;. may He 'bring mankind back to the peace it longs for; may He lead men to true New: Recruiti'ng Procedure To Halt Vocations ,Drop ·CHICAGO. (NC)-A Catholic youth expert cited materialism, new forms of service, and a "phony" picture' of seminary life as among the reasons why young men do not enter the priesthood. Father Robert' Carson, O. Praem., told the' priests and Brothers representing 53 reli- gious communities at the Mid- west Religious Vocation Direc- tors Association conference here that a recent survey of Catqolic seminaries in. the Midwest showed that admissions have de- creased 30 per cent in recent years. ' .The NorlJertine Father, a high school teacher, asserted that present-day ,vocational recruit- ing tactics are 'unreal to ideal- istic young men, and that new courses ·of action must be found to reverse the decline in voca- tions. The young man leaning toward the priesthood "is much more interested in how he can serve God and his fellow man as' a priest than he' is in recreation in the seminary and the splen- dors of the liturgy," he said, Father Carson went on to re- mark thjlt the young man of to- day must be, told of the active apostolate of. the priesthood, "for talking' about happy times in the seminary is as ineffective as it is phony," ,Among, the factors accounting for this 'distraction from the pri,esthood,. accQrdin: to FatheJr Carson, are "the many exciting new forms of service which, un- like the priesthood or religious state, do nQt· require lifetime commitment." "Young people look with great. interest at such movements as the Peace Corps, Papal Volun- teers, and civil rights move- ments. Youths want to go where the action is, and tqey see much more of it· in these movements than they do in the parish rec- tory," he said. Turn to Page Twelve LaSalette' Feast' Set for Sunday J n Attleboro ' This Sunday afternoon the Fathers and Brothers of La Salette Shrine, Attleboro, will mark the, 120th anniver- sary of the event which gave birth to their missionary order. The Most Rev. James L. Con- nolly will preside at 3 o'clock outdoor ceremonies to include a sermon by the superior and shrine director, Rev. Donald Paradis, M.S., a native of New Bedford. ' It was Sept. 19, 1846 that the Blessed Virgin Mary ap- peared to two shepherds of a remote Alpine villllge in south- 'Xum to' Page

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'say th~ Rosa'ry during the month of Octo­ ,bel' for the establishment of true peace, the halting of war and the removal of at­ titudes which tend to foster. war. .' In a 1,500-word encyc~ical letter dated intercessor for peace." Noting that Catholics pray"· the Rosary during October, Pope Paul said: "This year we call upon all the children of the Church to pet'forI)1 Most Rey. ;Bishop James L. Connolly .has annoullced the appointment of Rev. Robert S. Kas~ynski, interim Turn to Page Twelve

Citation preview

Page 1: 09.22.66

Encyclical· Warns All of World's Perilous State

PO'pe In Urgent Peace Appeal. ,

f1{·.·l.·.. -:-'......' :· ......~._.'f~I :I iI ..\ t . ~~; .~ . I !; ";.' ." S~~ , .\~~' I~ I -; '> J. ~;."j i . I '. i· Sept. 15 and made publIc Monday, Sept.

\ I "1 19, the Pope also called on the world's

,\ !)~l ~~s~~~~ :~l~~~~ss:r~i~~ o~~:r;~~~~ ~~~~~ L';".. [} 1....31 New York to appeal for peace before the

The ANCHOR

lJ.aU Rivell'o Moss., Thursday, Sept. 22, ]96~

$4.00 per Year Vot 10, Noo 38. © 1966 The Anchor ·PRICE IOc s

C·CD,:lmprov¢d Program , .

Mapp~d ·By·: Cong'ress PITTSBIJRGH (NC)-The i2th national and 5th inter­

~merican congress of the Confraternity of Christian Doc­, fWnne came to a climax here with, three surprises: '

-The <lil;solution of th.e national lay committee of the

vNl'ICAN: CITY (NC).:-Pope Paul VIhas appealed to the world's Catholics to

'say th~ Rosa'ry during the month of Octo­,bel' for the establishment of true peace, the halting of war and the removal of at ­titudes which tend to foster. war. .' In a 1,500-word encyc~ical letter dated

WD; in favor of a plan. f(»r oogionai groups: ,.

-The formal approval 1>1 \5he U.S. Bishops' Committee <til the CCD of a national com­maittee of CCD diocesan direc­lJlm;.

-Some gentle but well-aimed t1hiding of the predominance of .dcal presence at a congress (IIjf what is descdbed as a lay _ganization.

The dissolution of the nationlhl lbv committee resulted from at .nsensus of the national com­ooittee, which feU that reorgani­lIIIltion was n~essary for lay in-

College Day October 12 ~tonehmCollege will SPOl1l·

001' a College Day for all high IIChool juniors and seniors ~Ul.d their parents on Wednes­<iay, Oct. 12, at 10 o'clock on the /IIllhool campus in North Easton.

Admissions officers represent­{lng 50 Catholic colleges from va­miow; parts of the country wiUll be present and thus give college­minded students and their par­oots an opportunity flo attend! llour half-hour conferences with different college representatives .. W meet Wormally dul'ing (IUs time with other college rep­1Jesentatives.

Students from any schoon. lj)Ublic' or private, are WeICOD1l0 lio attend these sessions witill _ \IIlw.r«e being inv~lv:~ .

fiuence to be felt on the na­tional level.

"The national lay. committee just' didn't function," said Mrs. Regis Mullen of Ambridge, Pa., a committee member and tJO-·

chairman of the CCD congress. "Ii: was not accomplishing any­thing."

The plan is to reorganize ac­cording tQ regions. Regional groups, it is felt, will be able to meet often and be better able to marshall resources to meet CCD objectives. '

Diocesan CCD directors voted to structure themselves accord­ing to the 27 existing eeclesiasti· cal provinces of the U.S. The lay committees are expected W> correspond to these 27 .group· iflgs.

The di-ocesan directors vote OR regional directors was formally approved by the U.S. bishops' oommittee on the CCD.

Archbishop Joseph ~cGucken

of San Francisco, a bishops' co~n­mittee member, expressed "deep surprise" that "you have not had such an organization before."

Father John Russell, CCD di­rect-or in the diocese of Syracuse, N.Y., was elected chairman pro­tem of the directors committee.

Ere said, "There has been a long-existing colloboration vac­uum between the national office

United Nations in 1965. He asked that the day be dedi­cated as a world day of pray­er for peace.

Weapon' 01 Peace

~r. Kaszynski Administrator In Fall River

Most Rey. ;Bishop James L. Connolly .has annoullced the appointment of Rev. Robert S. Kas~ynski, interim administrator 0:6 St. Stanislaus Church, Fall. ~i:ver, as admin­istrator of the same parish. The new administnitor. succeeds Rev. Hugo Dylla, the' late retired pastor of St. St~nislaus Church.

Father Kaszynski, son o~· the late Chester S. and Genevieve (Kalisz) Kaszynski, is a native of New Bedford. He attended Holy Cross Preparatory. Semi­pary at Notre Dame, Mater Do­lorosa Servite Seminary in Chi­cago, Cardinal O'Connell Semi­n;lry aJ;ld St. John's Seminary' in Boston and. SS. Cyril and

Turn to Page Twelve'

of the CCD and the individual diocesan director, especially with reference to the planning of national CCD projects and meet­i,ngs, and effective exchange o1C mrormation," The neW Ol'gani­

~_Paje~ . MY. ROBERT S. KASZYI!lSKI

He added that he would participate in such an observance in St. Peter's basilica and said the obser.vance would be "a special ceremony of supplication' " in honor 'of th~ Vi:r:gin Mother of God, the protector of Christians' mld our intercessor for peace."

Noting that Catholics pray"· the Rosary during October, Pope Paul said: "This year we call upon all the children of the Church to pet'forI)1

Turn to Page Four

Di~ects All in Diocese To Recite Peace Prayer

Most Rev. James L. Connolly, Bishop of the Diocese ... of Fall River, has announced that the following prayer that concluded Pope Paul's encyclical letter on peace, Christi Matri Rosadi (Rosaries to the Mother of Christ), is to be recited throughout the Diocese on Tuesday, Oct. 4.

Bishop Connolly added that th~ recitation of this prayer becomes' optional the other days of the month of October.

1_~======~'IIIIIIIIIItIItIIIIIIIIIlIlIlIlIlIlItIIlItIIlIItIIlIItIIlIll:I:I:I:I::t11l1"lIlltlll1I1t11111111t111111111111111111111t111111.1I1_~=======_!!: "Look upon all your sons with motherly ~ove,

.0 Blessed Virgin,' Consider the anxieties of the bishops who fear the assaults of evil on their flocks;

-=~=========== fathersconsiderofthefamilies who anguish of so many men, motllters and are worried about their Jot ~_~===========_ and that of their families and. who are assailed with agonizing responsibilities. CaJm the heartl5 of men at

. war and inspire them with 'thoughts' of peace.' Through your in~el'cession may the demands of

~. God's justice, which have been caused by-,sin, be ~ ~ turned into mercy;. may He 'bring mankind back to ~ ~ the peace it longs for; may He lead men to true ~

i"I:I:":::~:'I:::~::I:':~~"I'_'illl""IIIUIHIIIIII"'IHI"'il",l New: Recruiti'ng Procedure To Halt Vocations ,Drop

·CHICAGO. (NC)-A Catholic youth expert cited materialism, new forms of service, and a "phony" picture' of seminary life as among the reasons why young men do not enter the priesthood.

Father Robert' Carson, O. Praem., told the' priests and Brothers representing 53 reli ­gious communities at the Mid­west Religious Vocation Direc­tors Association conference here that a recent survey of Catqolic seminaries in. the Midwest showed that admissions have de­creased 30 per cent in recent years. '

.The NorlJertine Father, a high school teacher, asserted that present-day ,vocational recruit ­ing tactics are 'unreal to ideal­istic young men, and that new courses ·of action must be found to reverse the decline in voca­tions. The young man leaning toward the priesthood "is much more interested in how he can serve God and his fellow man as' a priest than he' is in recreation in the seminary and the splen­dors of the liturgy," he said,

Father Carson went on to re­mark thjlt the young man of to­day must be, told of the active apostolate of. the priesthood, "for talking' about happy times in the seminary is as ineffective as it is phony,"

,Among, the factors accounting for this 'distraction from the pri,esthood,. accQrdin: to FatheJr

Carson, are "the many exciting new forms of service which, un­like the priesthood or religious state, do nQt· require lifetime commitment."

"Young people look with great. interest at such movements as the Peace Corps, Papal Volun­teers, and civil rights move­ments. Youths want to go where the action is, and tqey see much more of it· in these movements than they do in the parish rec­tory," he said.

Turn to Page Twelve

LaSalette' Feast' Set for Sunday Jn Attleboro '

This Sunday afternoon the Fathers and Brothers of La Salette Shrine, Attleboro, will mark the, 120th anniver­sary of the event which gave birth to their missionary order. The Most Rev. James L. Con­nolly will preside at 3 o'clock outdoor ceremonies to include a sermon by the superior and shrine director, Rev. Donald Paradis, M.S., a native of New Bedford. '

It was ~m Sept. 19, 1846 that the Blessed Virgin Mary ap­peared to two shepherds of a remote Alpine villllge in south­

'Xum to' Page ~our

Page 2: 09.22.66

. THE ANCHO'R--'Diocese_of Foil River-Thurs. Sept. 22, .1966 " Stonehilllni,tiat.'.2

\, (

OFF~C~Al'

,D~ocese of Fall River·

Rev. Ro~rt s. Kaszynski, administrator o! St. S~anislaus

Parish,. Fall River.

Effective date, Thurru!ay, September 15, 1966. .

• ".. t" •

Ability Gro~p!ng') Approximately 1200 stude~·.

.have'arrived at St6nehill Colle$) to la~ch the institution's' :1gei acadeD;li.c year.

The freshman class of 400 • eludes a National Merit fin~

ist and is the 'first class to enWr the college under a revise,! C\JlIlo>

ricUium introduced this yelli. Under the new program, which resulted tfrom an academic sel1l­study conducted over the pasa twoyears,each student will cari:f fewer courses but will purs\W) eatlh subject in greater d~pt~, with more' time allotted for m­dividual research critlC:'a:Yand

I ' , reading. ; ,

:': ,.::" ,.Abilib:Gro.q..,.g , ,,:. , j :. 'TakingiidvantageOf'~,

small classes, and "personalized ' relationship characteristic' of ~;

smaller college, Stonehill ·ste=;: dents, starting with the neW' freshman class, will be groupecllDiocesan' Teachers Are Offered in several subjects according te. demonstrated ability. ..fin-Service, .Regular 'Courses ,

In . anticipation of the 196'i7'The Rev. Patrick J. O'Neill,. provided ~or' t~ache~s c~mln.lt opening of a women's dormitory" .Ph.D., Superintendent of Schools, into the DIOcese,or those mt~r- , Stonehill has enrolled a reconl!has announced that In-Service ested in a knowledge of teaching group' of over 350 resident st1la­and Regular Cmil'ses will 'be' techniques. . dents. Approximately 200 W(l'given for the teachers of the Regular Courses WIll also be

, housed in the present men'fJDiocese during the 1966-67 .provided for the teachers at the AFFECTIONATE PONTIFF: Blind youngster puts his dormitory with the balance liv­scholastic year. College of the Sa~red. Hearts, arm around the neck of Pope Paul as the Pontiff draws the .ing in college-monitored apan­The In-Service Courses, to be Rock Street, Fall RIver.

held on Saturday mornings at Philosophy of Education by lad up on his lap at a recent papal audience at Castelga~-' mEmts near the campus prepare­the Academy of the Sacred Rev.' Joseph P. Delaney, M.A., tory to moving into the new

dormitory next year.Hearts, Prospect Street, Fall S.T.L., M.Ed., on Mondays. at 4 River, are: Introduction to o'clock; Contempora~ PhJ1o~o­Modern Mathematics by Sister phy by Sister Celme Rita, VVASHINGTON (NC) - The . must extend to sociaJ structu1'll!S Head of HOSPBtQJB~Barbara Mary, S.U.S.C., M.A, at S.U.S.C., M.A., on Tuesdays at Maryland 'suburbs borderiJ!g the as well as to individual people. '

,PATERSON (NC)-B ish G-~ ,10:30; Science for Elementary 4:.00; Adol~scent P~ychology by nation's capital are among the It must' express itself in publicSchool Teachers by Sister Mary Sister Ann Joachim, S.U.S.C., Lawrence B. Casey has namecllfastest growing in' the nation. policy as well as in personal

Dr. Andrew McBride as directOli'Lucretia, R.S.M., M.S. at 9:00; M.Ed., C.AG.S., on W~sdnesdays Plans for the constantly expand­ charity.Science for the Intermediate at. 4 an~ ~n Introduct~on to En­ of bospitals for the Paterson eM­

ing number of people who live "Love," he says, "must be Grades by Sister Mary Maurice, glish Literature by Sister Mary ocese, a post formerly held bw '

there are too important· to be shown in deeds and iin specificR.S.M., A.B. at 10:30; Music for Hortense, S.U.S.C., M.A.T. on priests. Dr. McBride is directOll'

ignored by the clergy according deeds as .well as in words. If,the Primary Grades by Sister Tuesdays and Thursdays (3:30­ of surgery at st. Joseph's Hos­

tf. a Jesuit priest who is help­ a priest does IlOt act as a wit­Mary Eleanora, R:S.M., M.Mus., 4:45). pital here and a former ArW'4'

ing to make those plans. ness in promoting social respon­ field surgeon.at 10:30; Music for the Intenne­ Fatlier William G. Downing, S. sibility, then by his neglect he diate Grades by Sister Mary . Chaplain to Speak Bishop Casey also Jlamed •

J., is employed by the Maryland becomes a witness' to social ir ­ new moderator of the DioceS8JlEvangela, R. S. M., M. Mus., Rev. Anthony Rocha, chaplain , National Capital Park and Plan­ responsibility." Council of Catholic Men, Fatherat 9:00; Meth~s and Materials at the Catholic Memorial Home, ning Commission as a planning Father Downing fulfills his, Ja~es J. Rugel, and a new di-­in Teaching Art by Sister Mary Fall River, and the Hussey Hos­ consultant. He is helping to de­ social responsibUf,ty working. W1 l'ector of the Confraternity aI.,Teresita,. S.U.S.C., AB. at 10:15. pital, Fall River, is listed as one velop master plans for Mont­ the technical ~md ph;v-sical ,de-:, Christian Doctrine, Father Rich- .The only In-Service Course to of the speakers at the National gomery and, Prince ~orges' velopment aspects of· master: . ani; ,G. Rento.be taught on Mondays is that on 'Conference on Aging scheduled counties, the two Maryland sub­ plans. He brings to his. W9rk,

Supervision to be taughtby Rev. for Monday at the, University of divisions which adjoin Wa:shing- . however, the bX'oadersocia,l~n~Patrick J. 'O'Neill, Ph.D.; at 4 Michigan, Ann Arbor. ton. derstanding of a clergym,m aJKi ' o'clock in the afternoon. , The conference theme is: A fully trained city planner, soCial llCienti1lt. 'r .. ,:

The registration for the "Growing old .in. tomorrew's Fdher Downing sees no 'con;'eourses has set'a high precedent cities", and will be divided into ' fliet between his priestly andthis .year. Courses in Modern three phases. public work. . '. .Math and Science have now , . Concern !for one's neighborbeen given to teachers in all Mas~'Ordo in today's society, he explains,grades of the Diocesan System. , ......:. ".,'

FRIDAY-Emper ,Fti~ay,of Sep­.Enrkhment courses will now be . tember. II Class. 'Violet. Mass. Proper; No Glory, or Creed;': Necro~09Y ,

Women's Retreat .2nd Prayer St. Lipus,,: Pc,>pe , SErio H A retreat· for laywomen cd and Martyrs; Common Pref-' !lev. John J. Donahue, .1944,

the Diocese, will be ,held the ace. '." '.'. ' Assistapt, St. William" ~all SATURDAY -'Ember Saturday' IUve~ ,weekend of sept. 30 at Our Lady

'of. September. II Class. Violet.. . SEPT. z9, ':' ,of Good Counsel Retreat House, Mass Proper; 'No Glory or: Rev ~ ,J. A. Payan, 18~, Found,.. .'East Freetown. Rev.' Walter A.

Sullivan, Diocesan Retreat Di~ 'Creed; 2nd Prayer Our Lady er,. St. Matthew, Fal( IUver.; .: ------,----....of Ransom; ,Common Preface. . SlEPT. 30reCtor, will conduct the retreat. >D~ D.Sullivan I~ Sons

His·'. theme' will be "Christian The Celebrant may omit the.. Rev., John J. Griffin, Pas*or.,. Women in the World of Vatican 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5ui lessons 1963, Pastor, St. Paul's, Taunton. FUNERAL HO'ME' ,,,'with their versicles andn." Reservations may .be made . OCT. Z

prayers appointed for this day. Rev. Joseph E. Sutula, 1961, 469 lC>CUST ST~tEET'with district retJ;eat chainnen The first lesson and the epis- . Pastor, St. Casimir, New Bed­or directly to the retreat house, FAll. RIVI:R, MA,S5;': .... ,

Box' 63, East Freetown.

FORTY. HOURS DEVOTION

Sept. ~5-St. Roch, FalllUver. Sac~d Heart, Taunton. St. Anthony of Padua,

New Bedford. Oct.2-St. John of God,

Somerset. ' Our Lady of the Immacu­

Jate Conception, Taun­ton. '

, nll Alieno. . ,

tIe, however, must be said. ford. SUNDAY - XVII Sunday After ' OCT. 4; OS 2-3381 n'

Pentecost. . II Class. Green. Rev. Stephen B. Magill, 19UI, Wilfrecll Co Jan)es ' E.Mass Proper; Glory; Creed; Assistant, Immaculate Concep­ lIi.i , tdOriscoD 5ulli"ari, Jr." ,Preface of Trinity. tion, No. Easton.

MONDAY-Mass' of previoWl .Sunday. IV Class. Mass Proper; No Glory or Creed; 2nd­Prayer 5S. Cyprian and .Jus,.. tina; Common Preface.

OR-SS. Cyprian and .Justina, Mar­ INC.

'tyrs. Red. Glory; no, Creed; Common Preface.

TUESDAY~S.. 'Cosmas . an d Damian, Martyrs. III" ,Class. ' Red. Mass Proper; Glory; DO

Creed; Common Preface. WEDNESDAY - St. Wenceslas,

Duke and Martyr. II Class. Red. M~ss Proper; Gloty;, DO

.C:reed; CQmmon Preface., , 'Second Class Postage Paid at Fin Rlve'l THURSDAY-Dedication. of St. Mas$. °ubl~el evel) .ThursdaJ ot 41v ~ighlano llvenue -811 Rive, MalIS.. 02722 Michael the Archangel. I Class.

'OJ tIJi> catholic Press 01 the OloteS& CII Fell White. Mass Proper; Glory;Rive, Subscrlptlor. price by Mil. postpaId$4.00 per ,..,. Creed; Common Preface.

BROOKLA'WN,.. FUNERAlIiOM£:, ',NC.'.

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Page 3: 09.22.66

3 Prelate Stresses CeD Program's Concrete Details

PITTSBURGH (NC) ­~fraternit.Y of (]hristian IJootrine per son n e 1 were urged here to pay less atten­eon, "if only for once," to the ingh ideals of the CCD and more ., the concrete details of makin~• work.

'f!he advice came from Bishop IIDhn J. Wright of Pittsburgh in' • keynote address ttl the 12th ptional and fifth InterAmerican eatechetical CongrellS of the tonfraternity.

'l'he Bishop caned Oft CCD WIOrkers to engage in rigorous esamination of "means and in­Ib'uments, the effective use of ear educational, financial and personnel resources for the at-, IDinment of our ends."

He also recommended thaf "e listen with great care to our ~tics, whatever their motiva-Cion and however harsh their Glbictures." In these times it is more important to listen to the .ictures of critics than the tompliments of friends, Bishop _right said.

Lively lFau¢'In His w.fls the first of more than

'a score of bilks to be delivered at the congress. Thousands of delegates from throughout the Vnited States and from several ~reign countries are attending ,('i]le sessions.

Paul Cardinal Marella, presi­C'knt of the Vatican Secretariat itlor Non-Christian Religions, was jilTesent as the legate of Pope 13aul VI.

Bishop Wright's keynote ad­mess had as its theme the mo­'Gron that lively faith, Christo- ' \Wntric and convinced, is the hallmark of authentic renewal in the Church. He stressed to the CeD delegates their responsibil-Wes in promoting that faith.

Christ at Work

Such faith, he said, has for iIts .ject "the dogmatic truth re­vealed in and through Jesus Christ. Its effects are the enthu­rJiastic, untiring good works by ~ich such faith expresses itself, ireely and fervently, but its, sta­bitity and vitality, not vagueClKcitement or effusive novelty, lIilre the proofs that Christ, who alone makes all things new, is at JIIOrk renewing His Church."

Bishop Wright recalled the prophet Joel, remarking that the ..rrent spirit of renewal in the Church has inspired old men to 4Iream dreams ("as did Pope Amn"), young men to see vi­sions, and sons and daughters to prophesy. The validity. of an ..ch insights, be said, derives from their being linked to the Person and the teaching of_us. Bishop Wright continued:

"'The new dreams and visions Include new images, demand DeW vocabulary to relate them,: sPur the' faithful to new direc-, Cions of life, knowledge, love and action-but they all derive their fOnn, substance, meaning and point from the person, the teach­ing, the Church of Christ ­€tidst unchanging, though all else change, yesterday, today, ~ever the same."

PlI'elate's Collection In Public Showing

NEW YORK (NC) - The !'rancis Cardinal Spellman eoin coollection, one of the largest ntrivate collections in the world, :was displayed in its entirely for the first time in conjunction ~th the opening of the new Park Lane office of the, Man­llattan Savings Bank here.

The collection contains 1tT. S. llnd foreign coins, medals, deco­rations and social and civic aiWards collected by the Cardinal

,..., Marrino"er In Son, Salyador

Fr. Breen Missioner 15 Years 'FaD River Native Delegate to General Cb,apter

Two big &Vents occured during the pas t six months for Father John M. Breen, a ....M>aryknoll missioner from Fall River, He was given a new assignment as the first Mary­knolter here in the capital of EI Salvador, and' was elected to represent his fellow Mary­knoll priests from the EI Salv'ador-Guatemala region at the society's General Chapter meeting convened in August. F"3ther Breen had to start from scratch in San Salva­dor, since he had neither ehurch nor uectory. At present ll1e is living in a boarding house until the rectory is finished, say­.mg Mass in the various houses !:n the parish during the week, and in a nearby school on Sun­_.

served in Guatemala "'Saying Mass in the houses,"

he said, "gives me a chance to work for one of my principal aims, namely-getting to know the people and thereby fonning them into a vital, apostolically­oriented community."

The 43-year-old missioner, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. ,Breen, entered Maryknq"ll in lW44 and, upon completion of, his studies, was ordained in 1951. He celebrated the 15th anniver­sary of his ordination on June 9th of this year.

Father Breen left for Guate-. mala, his first mission assign­ment, in 1951. While in that country he served as a curate in Ixtahuacan for two years,· and as a pastor in San Antonia Hu­ista for five years, Soloma 'for seven, and for a year in Huehue­tenango before being assigned to san Salvador in January of this year.

Opened Schools

About 90 per cent of the peo': pie living in Maryknoll's regions of Guatemala are Mayan Indians who speak six different dialects. 'Fo care for them Maryknoll has assigned there 46 priests and Brothers who work in 21 par­isbes.

While in Soloma Father Breen' opened! a' grammar school, a trade school, and a domestic arts school.

AS a delegate to Maryknoll's

Charges University Probes 'Espionage'

'LIMA (NC) - Father Felipe MaeGregor, rector of. the Cath­olic University of Peru, has pro­tested against probes of certain Latin America universities by groups of investigators under eontrlllct to foreign governments.

In the daily,' El Comercio, I'.ather MacGregor said he has repeatedly denounced the use of so-called scientific investiga­tion as a mask for political ac­tivity, refined espionage, and in­doctrination processes.

Father Mac Gregor's "espio­nage" charges followed a warn­ing by the Anthropological As­sociation of America, which told Latin American universities that certain groups of investigators for foreign governments were planning investigations under the guise of sociological studies. The association said iLrefused to accept the designation "scien tific" under which secret inves­tigations are made.

Need Priests , BONN (NC)-From 1960 to

~966, 480 priests in' Hungary died, and only 262 were ordained, according to KNA, the German Catholic News agency. The total IlUmber of priests has decreased to 4,200 of whom 600 are sick Gi' retired and 300 are forbidden to execute their priestly func­tions by the state office for

'\

G~neral Chapter meeting in, over the next 10' years and August Father Breen helped elected the new superior general plot the co~rse of the society and governing council of Mary­

knoll.

, JFAT~ER JOHN M. BREEN, M.M.

Shrine of Lourdes Featured on TV

NEW YORK (NC) - "The BLUE RIBBONShrine of Lourdes," an examina­tion of "the contemporary phe- , nomena of the sacred site," will LAUNDRYbe presented on the "Look Up and Live" program Sunday,' on the CBS television network. 273 CENTRAL AVE.

Filmed on location in France, the program will feature an in­ WY 2-6216 terview with' a woman who claims to have been cured at the NEW BEDFORDLourdes shrine which was estab­lished in 1858.

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Rites in Loreto Close Millennium

NEW YORK (NC)-Celebra­tion of the 1,000th anniversary of Christianity' in Poland will be concluded Dec. 8, feast of the Immaculate Conceptio'n, in Loreto, Italy, it was disclosed here.

The announcement came from the secretariat of Bishop Ladis­laus Rubin, personal representa­tive of Stefan Cardinal Wyszyn­ski, Poland's .primate, who serves the Poles in exile.

Bishop ,Rubin, who maintains headquarters in Rome, currently is in this country and has been attending celebrations in various seCtions of the nation in connec­tion with the millennium.

Through the central committee for the millennium celebration, Bishop Rubin called upon Poles in this country, in Italy and throughout the world to make a pilgrimage to Loreto for the

'elose of the celebration.

After S2 Years DONALD'S HILL (NC)-Four

sisters, members of the O'Hara family and all mother superiors in the congregation of Our Lady of the Missions, met in their home here in Ireland for the first time in 52 years. Mother Mary St. Lawrence has spent the last 52 years in Canada; Mother Mary Desmond traveled from Chittagong, East Pakistan; Mother Mary Joseph from Glas­gow; and Mother Mary Patrick from Dublin.

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Page 4: 09.22.66

4 I THE AI~CHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thurs. Sept. 22, 1966

Asserts ,Nurses .Utnldce;rrp@~dJ8

Have' Few 'Fringe' Benefots By Msgr. George C. Higgins

.. (Director, Social Action Dept., NCWC) "Fiorence Nightingale all of a sudden is sounding like

&niuel'~mpers," the Wall Street.. Journal noted in' the lead sentence of a r~ent front-page article on the econoniiC15 of the' nursing profes-sion. Five' ,veeks . later' The 'National' Observer-which is owned by the same company that publishes the Journal - fea­tured an even more detailed study .of the wage inequities ·whichare prompting nurses to join unions in significant num­bers and even, in a few cities, to go out on strike. Both of

.,these publica­tions-the Wall Street' Journal and The Nation­al Observer ­are avowedly conservative in the i r general _ approach to la'bor problems. .

It is all the nwre 'significant, then, th.at their carefully re­searched articles .~n the -g,rowinl:

,militancy .of the nation's u~der­paid nurses were {)Ompletely

,sympathetic. Indeed they .could ;not have

been more sympathetic to the PlUrses' .cause if they had been

< written by a trade union organ­izer or by a member of the staff of the American Nurses Associa­tion, a professional organization which is providing its members, with economic data and counsel­ing them on collectiye bargain­ing ,techniques so that they can make a strong showing in nego­tiations with hospital adminis­trators.

Conditions Unknown Many Americans are shocked

at the current militancy of regis­tered nurses and are absolutely ,d~mbfounded by the growth of unionization among them. :rhey simply can't believe their eyes when they see Florence Night­ingale beginning to act like Samuel Gompers, founder and first president of the original American, Federation of Labor, whose uncomplicated trade un­

, ion philosophy was summ~d up in the word "more." "

The reason that so many Americans are confused by this unexpected development is very !limple. Not knowing much about the economics of the nursing profession, they have been led to believe, without bothering to look at the record, that nurses are reasonably well paid. A careful reading of the two arti ­cles referred to above will dis­libuse them of this completely mistaken notion.

National Average $90 The fact is that the 621,000

nurses now practicing in the United States are all beine woe­fuliy underpaid. Their national average is approximately $90 a week, and this after three years of professional training and, in !lome cases, decades of experi-' ence.

They. make less than classroom , teachers, who earn an average

of $125 a week, and factory llI10rkers, who average $112 a week.

To make matters worse, nurses receive very few fringe benefits. Few of them are covered under a retirement plan beyond Social Security, and few are paid time­and-one-haIf for overtime work.

Moreover only half of the !'Itates require nurses to be cov­fOred' by workmen's compensa­tion laws and, whi~ some hos­pitals ()ffer discounts to nurses, many get no medical benefits at lin..

Is it any wonder, then, that

' hospitals 'have a tUTIlQver ·in nurses of approximately o6O·.per cent a year, compared with.a 13 per cent turnover -of ,teachers in public schools? .

'lI)ogcatchers Make More' Or is it any wonder that there

is a critical shortage of nurse,s...at the present time - a shortage, which will inevitably 'get worse unless their legitimate and very belated demand for wage in­creases and comparable im­provements in fringe benefjts and working conditions is met without delay by hospital .ad­ministrators.

As ·one experienced nurse from Evanston, Ill., told Don Stilhrum, st!lff reporter -of the Wall Street Journal, "i\¥e're 0011

the fr.ont~e .and we're jlOHtg to stay ,there until4.he opublicre­slizes -that ~.gcatchers Make more money than ·nurses."

E-eal Crisis Tlu! oHlOuntiqg -economic .crisis

in the nursing 'profession is .a 'veritable "revolution," -says 4.Ae chief negotiator for the' Califor.,. nia Nurses Association.' "Nurses have been kicked .ar-ound ~ long in every w.ay," 'he -points '-out, "that .lJobody 'Cver·dreamed -they would do this"':'-i:e., threaten ,to g(, ,out on strike. Well ·they .are doing it now and who.can -blame them? The 'wonder is th.at they didn't 'start their "·revolution" many years .<\go.

In the face of this long -over­due "revolution," some -hospital admin"istrators will probably be tempted to say that nurses' sal ­aries cannot be increased be­'cause that w.ould require·.an 1n­

. crease in hospital costs ata time when the general public is com-· plaining very bitterly that rates are already far too high. .

This traditional appeal to the pJ..lblic's uriwillingness to stand for higher costs is a. completely .unsatisfactory response to the nurses legitimate demands. We have ne right to expect nurses to go .on subsidizing -our hospital costs as they have been deing for so many years.

Nurses' 'Advoeate Dr. John H. Knowles, ,director

of MassachuSetts General Hos­pital in Boston, is one ,adminis­trator who is willing to faee' up realistically to this pr~oblem of rising hospital costs.

A strong cbampionof nurses, he thinks their, wages are grossly inadequate and that, even with a 20 per cent increase, they would still be far too low. When as!<:ed if the public would stand for such an increase, he replied, very bluntly: "They have to. Do they want to be healthy or don't' they? We used to give little more than mother's love and warm milk until the turn, of the century. But times have changed. We give much more, and the 'people who give ( this care ought to be pai'd enough to live decent lives. It's time hospital trustees and ,adminis­trators started facing fads in­stead of going ,around apologiz­ing for rising costs."

Praises Dr. Kno1\'1es This sort of str.aightfof\\l\'.ard

language will not win ,any .pop­ularity Contests for Dr. Knowles, but, in ,my book, it ,does -hi,m

. great credit and shows that --he has the com'age ,of his convic-Hons and is willing to do the job he was hired to do ·instead .of

·asking his nur£,,:s to bail him,ollt by settlin& kJr substandard

~

NCEA POST: Fr. C. Al­bert Koob, O. Praem., has been appointed interim ex~­utive. secre'tary of the Na­tional Catholic Educational Association, succeeding the late Msgr. Frederick G. Hochwalt, who had held the post 'since 1944. NC Phot-o.

,Eucharist Theme Of Dia!ogue

W:A:SHINGTON (NC)-Catho­~ic .and Luther.an theologians 'wHl -oontinue a 'dialogue begun .a 'year -ago' when they meet hCi'e Sept. 23-25 for talks on "The Euch.arist.as'Sacrifice."

The 'thr.ee-daysession will be 'Sponsored jointly by the U. S. Catholic .Bi~ps' .Commission for Ecumenical 'Affairs .and -the U. S.1\.. 'National Committee -of the Luther.an 'World Federation.

The meeting will be ,.a contin­uation -of the dialogue ·begun .at the fir s t formal Catholic­LutQer~m meeting held in Balti ­more in JulY,'1965. The subject then was "What Does It Mean To Confess the Nicene Creed?"

A second dialogue session was held Feb. 10-13 at the Univer­sity of Chicago. Talks centered on the subject "On'e Baptism f-or the Remission of Sihs."

The upcoming ,talks on the 'Eucharist are' likely to produce "somewhat sharper" differences than the discussion of B<:lptism, .according to a repol·ton the February meeting.

Even 'so, the dialogue will be "ill uminatingand constructive," say Msgr. William W. 1,'.IUm, ex­ecutive, director of the bishops' commission, and . Dr; Paul C.' Empie, executive director of the­National Ll,ltheran Counci'l. .

Nameis Six /Bishops' Episcopal Vkars .

NEW YORK (NC)-Six aux­'iliary bishops of New York were named by' Francis Cardinal Spellman to serve as episcopal vicars of various' areas in the archdiocese: ,

.The Cardinal explained the appointments were in. keeping with the wi$hes of Pope Paul VI in his recent Ecclesiae Sanctae motu proprio and in carryi~g out

'. the Second Vatican Council's decree on the pastoral office of bishops.

w,ages. ·More power to -him ,for his

willingness 'to take up tl:le nurses' cause so outspokenly

. even .at the risk of antagonizing some.of his more conservative

'counterparts in the field of hos­pit~l administration'.

Let us hope that the adminis­,-trators of our Catholic hospitals

will be willing to take the s..me risk, come what may.

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Page 5: 09.22.66

••• •

5 THE ANCHOR-Stressem §@cial Traveling N~w Bedford Family Calls Thurs., Sept. 22, 1966

lProblem~ Need Wlfn,([P~~ W([}Tr~d '!HI([)lJ1rM~' ~~@~ ~~~@(.dato@nfast AcU'o@Q1

WASHINGTON (NC~ By Patricia Frands For fOlnr $ees ~U>an social problems are oot new but demand SOlli ­fRons with new urgency iu\ floday's society, an archbishop 1IIld a United States senator have flDld delegates to the 13th Inter­lHtional Conference of Social Work attending special ~Oil" aponsored by Catholie socia! liervice organizations.

~atholics were reminded lti. flleir special responsibility as Christians .to help society fin~

oolutions by Archbishop Patrick i\. (t'Boyle of Washin'gtOR and ehided for their past failuFe to assume this respo{lsibility by SenatlH" Eugene J. McCal1hy GO., MillO.), ~

'"Urbanization in itself is Ilot ~w, as you know so we1l," the Archbishop told the delegates, '"and changes in the patterns of _ban living have been' pre­tJeuted in every age and in all lluman societies.

"But in our times we al'e wit ­I'lessing such a hastening lti. the' I:t3'Ce of change that a new and <rompelHng ,urgency is given to' (til of us to solve the 'tnassive J)roblems of the cities of today."

Peace and Order "'Christianity," he cOl1tinued.

"'f.s 110 stranger. to this task be­fIore you." , .

The city was known intimate­~ by Christ in the circumstances IiJf His birth, His public ministry, and His death, the Archbisho() asserted and the Church must I>peak for Christ in the city of today,

"As 'mankind goes about the I'ssk of reshaping its habitat, as abe modern city takes on a vol­IMne that ealls for new concepts

, and methods, there are certain lIIlChanging truths that must Etever be overlooked," he cen­Ilinued.

"These are the spiritual di­IDensiens &f urban development . IIOd they are essential to the cre­ation of a moral climate of ~ace and order where man c'ai\ JruU'Hl all that is required of hili _man destiny.

Dignity of Man -rhe eity has been made for

lDI.lft, not man for the city. AU of iilts physical and economic ana jitOlitical. dimensions, therefore, must be directed to that larger Il"irpose of promoting the inner and outer life of man, for WhGltl ' it is made. ' ,', .

"The city is not primarily a etl3ce of business, or industry, 91'

government; it is the living or­~allism for the fullest expresion (tf man's capacities. for living and learning, and for serving God."

In ()rder to assure that the' city IJerves man in this way, Arch­bishop O'Boyle said, its renewal must be based on the "unique dignity of man" and the "com­mon purpose of all creation,"

"Made in the image of his @:Il'eator, man must always re­main at the center of things:' ~ emphasized. "Automation, in­Glustrial productivity, urban ex­]ltansion must never be allowed to displace the human goals they 1llre supposed to serve .w

Spiritual Momentum 'He also stressed that as "God

Dntended the earth and aU it oontains for ,the use of man," aU things" essential for decent and i:lappy living-housing, employ­nnent, health services, open spaces for creation, and special' tlamily and social services-must IJe available for all.

In reaching such goals for the <l!itv, Archbishop O'Boyle col1li­mented, Catholic social workers must be "in the front line, (j)f readership."

"You possess," he said, "not

When Alfred E. Couto and Irene Pimental were married at Our. Lady of the Immac­ulate Conception Church in New Bedford in 1944, neither expected to be calling the wodd "home" in another 20 years. But that is what has happened. Mrs. Couto now has set "-p house keeping in California, Brazil, Colombia and Portugal - and within another

, few months she will be head­ing for another country to put down roots again. Their ooluadic l.ife began shortly alter Alfred Couto received a ~egree in engineering from Brown University in 1948, after his discharge from the Army. The young couple, whose daugh­ter Aliita, now 20, was born in Acushnet, headed west to make their fortune.

Mr. Couto worked there for the California Department of Highways until 1953, when he got a new job with Morrison Knudsen of Boise, Idaho, one of the largest "big project" con­sh'uction firms in the world.

Their older son, Rodney, now 15, was born in California.

MOITison Knudsen shifted the Couto. family, now numbering foui', to Sao Paulo, Brazil, where they lived three years while Mr. Couto worked on a hydro-elec­tric project. Mac Couto II was bom there.

Toen the five Coutos'moved to Bogota, Colombia, in 1956.' Mr. Couto worked there on, a, gov­ernment highway project fGr

, Morl"ison Knudsen. More Travel

In. 1959, the family returned home-expecting to settle in the GI'eater New Bedford area. But itchy feet soon drew them back onto the travel path.

For the last six years, the Cou­tos have called Caiscais-a resi­

. dentlal community outside of Lisbon-their home. Mr. Couto as, assistant project engineer for the Salazar Bridge. Anita g,rad­~ated fr&ffi. high school there, tileR traveled back to the United States to enroll in Salve Regina College'. She enters her junior year at Salve this month.

In Lisbon, the three Coutos all attended the same school, "rim by an Irishman, Mr. Anthony McKenna," Anita explains.

They also became well ac­quainted with another group of "real Irishmen, Dominican mis­saooaries who- were at Corpus Christi Ghurch in Lisbon, the English-speaking one that was our parish church."

When they first moved into their home in Caiscais, about IS miles from Lisbon, the family had to travel !pto the city for Mass.

"Then a small chapel was Gpened on all estate in Caiscais and '!Ie could go there," Anita says.

By the time the family re­turned to New Bedford last month, to visit Mr. Couto's mother, Mrs. Americo Couto of 76 Seabury Street, with whom' they are staying, and Mrs: Cou­to's mother, Mrs. Joseph Calou­fa of 106 Tinkham Street, the "Ilew English Mass" was long since familiar to them.

"We had been using English for about three years," Anita

• says. "I think I prefer the Latin," she adds reflectively, "but we were famliar with the new form anyway, so it wasn't something new."

Which Parisl.J? Trying to pin .down the Cou­

tilg' current "parish church" is a far-rangilig operation. Anita, hel' mother explains, was bap­tized at Immaculate Conception

momentum of your faith in GOO. That faith, which we pro­fess here at this Mass, reminds lAS that we are all members of

r"

1­~

WHERE NEXT? Family of Alfred Couto, New Bed­ford engineer, is accustomed to setting' up housekeeping anywhere in world. Couto shows daughter Anita, a stu­dent at Salve Regina CoUeg-e, photograph of Portugal's Salazar Bridge, where he was assistant project engineer for six years.

and confirmed in Colombia. Besides, she says, home after Rodney was confirmed at st. aU is where your family is. She

Lawrence Church, during a New' should, know. She's had a variety Bedford period, and Mac re­ ~ "h6mes" since that wedding ceived 'his first Communion at da-y: in 1944. ' Corpus Sanctus in Lisbon.

Rodney was baptized in Cali ­fornia and Mac in Sao Paulo, LEMIEUX Ml'. Couto injects. PlUMBING & HEATING. INC.

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2-283 ACUSHNET AVENUEfavor Spain. "There's a possi­ WYman 2-5534 bility there," he says, "and one NEW BEDFORD in Guatemala."

Anita thinks it would be g,lItllUlllllnlllllllnllllllllnllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllfl1l1l11HlUllllllll1l1l1llllllllllllmmlllllllllllllUlllIlIIJllilll~

"wonderful" to head for Rome for her Christmas vacation-if ~ YOUR TREAT ~ her family i§ there. The boys- are too busy these days to really ! Extra Special ~ care.

Mrs. Couto? "I don't care as i LIV-E CHICKEN,long as it's out of the country," she says. ~'I like traveling and meeting new people." I 98c lb. ;

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ST. LOUIS (NC)-Represen­tatives of the four Missouri Sees drafted plans for a statewide as­sociation of Catholics to work for the health, education and welfare needs of all citizens at a meeting here.

Fatheff Norman Rotert of the Kansas City-St. Joseph dio­cese, chairman, said the possi­bility of setting up an office in Jefferson City, the stilte capital, was discussed. He said a definite decision was not made, but any eventual decision would require approval of the Jefferson City diocese.

It was reported that some offi ­cials of Catholic groups have ex­pressed dissatisfaction over paF­

,ticipation of Cath~c schools in education programs financed by the federal government. They claim the state department of education has not included pri ­vateschools to the extent possi­ble into the programs.

Officials of Catholic agencies in' dioceses where Catholics are a minority, it was reported, have established good relations with state agencies but have discour­aged action in school programs which might be construed as"a! , "power play." The announce­ment following the meeti'l'lg stressed the cooperative atti ­tude which the group wanted to establish with exisiting groups.

Some 30 persons attended the session. A recommendation that an association be formed was drawn up. It will be submitted to officials of the four Sees for for­mal appro'val.

Heads Conference' OTTAWA (NC) -Mother St.

Paul, superior general of the Grey Nuns of the Cross, was re­elected president at the annual meeting af the Canadian Reli ­gious Conference', women's sec­tion, in' S1. Paul's University here.

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only the competence of YQtAr the :Family of God, and in IRS PAWTUCKET, R.I. INSTITUtiON 'for SAVINGS]j)i'ofessional training;' you have the fulness of the Law must be PHILADELPHIA ~R liven also U1e spid~ rtwe foit' one another,"

i

Page 6: 09.22.66

" THE ANCHOR-Di~e mFan R1ver-lh~rs. Sept. 22, 19666 The 'World's.. Brat ,NationaICOthor.. ,I .

Education Board...Means of Peace' , ---

LOuds Prelate"If misfortunes increase, the dedication of, the people of God should also increase.", This is a Christian reaction ' WASHINGTON (NC) ­to problems. It is true on a world-wide scale' as' it is ,valid Magr. Frederick Go Hochwd on a? personal or family scaie. . ' , ' was ell'logized as ,"the archi­

The family of God which looks to the H;oly Father, for tect and shepherd of the guidance has received this advice from him in }lis latest eatholic 'school system in these encyclical. And the advice is that we turn to the rosary United States for over two deC",

ades" in a statement ad,optedduring the month of October and let this be a practice and here by the National Catholieexercise of devotion toward Mary for peace in the world ' Educational Association exe~

and especiany in East Asia'- , ­ ti-ve board. ' . Commonplace advice~perhaps.· But a, truly Christian . The statement was releas~d bw,

r.eaction to difficulty. The Church has no' special means of, Bishop Ernest J. Primeau ,cd! Manchester, N.,H., NCEA pres->peace to pun out ofa bag 'of tricks nineteen hundred years ident general. , ,

after Christ-just the same means of prayer,and sacrifice Msgr. Hochwalt, who, die@ and good will that He offered. It would be wonderful if Sept. 5, was NCEA executi~

they were tried. secretary and unth iast Januat;v, whim he retired for health rea­' t' sons, was director'of the Educaoa' lnadequn e.. ' , ' tion Department, National Cath..

, There are some strange stat~ments flying: ar,ound in olic Welfare Conference, fGf some of'the country's well-regarded magazines. ,A writer nearly 22 years. ' in one of them, speaking about the sacrifice' of the Mass, The NCEA statement of ~ writes "Once you have had such an experience, you realize '~~a~~lics in'AiD.~ri~, and m­how inadequate was your previous understanding of, tbe deed an of American society, a:ee

I Mass." He is speaking 'of course, of the Mass as' it' is cele- deeply indebted to the ,work Cldl brated now with the full .Implementation'of ',hymns, etc. " the late Msgr.' Frederick G.

, Hochwalt. As the architect aDdWithout a doubt, this is a rich and a pleas-ing experience.' Shepherd of the Catholic 'schooi But is anyone fully justified in~ saying that apy preVioQs system in these United States for

,understaridhig ,of the Ma~ was inadequate? That the over two decades he brotight to mother unitIng her ,sacrifice with that of Christ at the the task a remarkable aggregatePeo'ce Th·rough'Br'o,th'e·rlhoo',d.funeral- Mass 0,f a dead child really did not know the mean:' ' of talents which were to distiD,:.

guish him, paJ;' exce~ence, as ~~ ing of sacrifice as contained in the 'Mass? That the poor Them-e o'f evo Weelc' ,ucator, administrator, inno­soul creeping into ail. early daily Mass at any parish church " " ' . , :"" ~ator" statesman, and' geniDt had a 'less than adequate understanding'of, this cove:Q~nt WASHINGTON' (NC) ~ Saluting the approach fit tM friend to all.

" ' I' ' "In an era of unprecedentedbetween God and HlS peop ~', ,16th annual National Catholic Youth Week, President John­~d growth and change $or. Cathoilie Of course, the meaning of the Maes is an ever-unfOJ,. son declared: "The workof the Catholic Youth OrganizatiOJl education he charted the course

ing richness but it is likewise true tha'j; the knowledge and :is mthe ,highest tradition ~ the cheris'hed id~lals of all and inspired all with his ~onf~ love of the Mass possessed by one's ancestors cannot be Who love this land." :En the dent and optimistic views for ibe brushed aside as inadequate. All too' often, ,those who praise of the nation's youth idealistic and free from bias, future. ' speak and write in this way are speaking and writing for the Chief Executive was', and thus in the best position to "In th:e~~e: :~~r: of both one another and would do well to get' into the streets, joined by Lawrence Cardin;:u demonstrate the fact that broth- priest and educator Msgr: H,och-

G d' I'd' f'nd t t f·-...4- h d th t' erhood can be a reality and eanamong 0 s peop e, an 'IOU a Inn an a many Shehan' of Baltimore, who de- walt was dedicated to the se'" , ~~~to~~~of

.J these people are not bad theologians, have a su,l"nri6- elared: "No segment of,'our na- h b vice of others. In that same spiIit,,1. A~ suc arriers as colol', race, aDd mg~y splendid idea of the Mass. tion ,has a greater interest in nationality.. )}e spared no effort to make 1he

peace than youth, for if. is the Catholic schools truly excellent . '"I commend the National

Nleghfclub MleSSleOn' "'. " , 'T' 0aurn.g tha~ are most affected by and professional so that ,th~ w Catholic Youth Organization for' inight better serve the needs ..

, Rev. Malcolm Boyd is an Episcop'alian clergyman who "No segment, either, is mQre the ..wonde,rful work it, has ae- millions' of young Americans. , ' eomplished, and I hOIl«! that Oaris currently appearing in a nightclub in San Fra:ilCisc'o~ idealistic and free from bias, and "His wisdom, vision, and 'fore-

I f I to be thus is in the best position to young people will meE!t the ehal- sight were key factors in eveJ7f tt· He feels that this is a' i mg p ace or a c ergyman 'demonstrate the fact that broth- lenges of, our times and will significant advance' made .. for this is wh~re people are. A bit of his show, appeared erhood can be a reality and can' lead the way 10 'Peafe'Througia' Catholic edu'cation for 'almost ..

· h d d h .' 'f Bl'othel'hood.' .. , ' on television t he ot er ay an e w~ seen saymg a ew· lead 'the way to peace in spite quarter ofa 'century. Histor;: well-accepted things about civil right~,_a quite safe subject, of such barriers as color, race will note his excellent leadershiP in a nightclub for sophisticated young people. and .natio~ality." .' Interfaith Letl~er and accord him a well-deserved

On I h that h 'Il t te . t the'" CJtes IntentioDS place among the great eduea;.,' e can. ~ndY of°pe , of' eh~ WI). tpenera.ll,m 0 '. d" ':Millio~s of' Catholic ,young. Asks 'for Harnlony. tOrS of our 'country: ' ..

hearts and mm ~s ~~~, . IS , ,IS eners! w~ '. reml~ peOple across the country aimu~ COVINGTON (NC)....,-Ste)lll te, '''The 'impact of Msgr. 'HocII­them' that t)}~ thmgs of God, do have a c~r~m, ~lan~ Ulp'~n: a.lly 'participate in' National' ~prove the pacial 04:1imate ill 'walt's influence will long be fe. their lives. .If so, then-,his nightclul> fltint will "have 'a cer-:· €atholic' Youth Week, which'isttJis northern Kentlllcky,~' by atLwho slia~ th¢~postol~te

"~ tain validity. Of course,-,there is aI-ways' thevi~wthat these: spOnsor7d b~ t~e lIlation~l :CYO.' ,bave. been, taken by pasiOn af of Eid\Jcating. His conCepts of eGo "

'~,pIe c.ou,ld be contact,ed' ~rrieoth. er, w._a.y,-,'tha,,t.., t."he".. ',',ba,r,-.,.: "",~".ed,'T'·h~er,.!itolobe· rvance' th''J'S' , y"ear" ,.~:.., '~o ~ r c:~~rche~:, .here -- Cath~~e, , ~a.ti~~ ane po~i~~' vi~ws. c~,' ' , , '" se - ~ethodist, Bapti!lt an,d'Pl'ellby-. not help bUt~l~..~the~s ~~ , 'tender,for examl>l~, COl,l.1d ~" tal~,eQ ~~n:,~~, pr~yacy,.~~ ,:, s;cheduled' from Oct. 30; feast 'of ; terian. 'l, ' -,' " must make deCISJO~S JD the yea.

~is horne and th~t. he, ,ID .turn, lS~h«l m~ ~ b~~g t~ ,~brist .the King, 10 Nov.' 6. ~-, More than :&,800 eo)ies Of 'an to come. , l~fluen~e of God"mto th~ m~htelu'b and ~l .the ~o:re '~~~~:. ~em~p~ "Peace Through Brotw- b,lterfaith le~er, '~king ,I'8ciai m!~H~~~::g~m~~ri ;:'rnl~~d~~~= , tlvelY,sI!lce he would dO,lt wrtho~t,t~e handI(~ap...of ,3 ~o~~" :er~r;_ Frede 'ck J stevenson ' :barm~ny' in~e Fon:Mitc~n,' ration 'for' 'all' whofoilo.w 'him. ~lla.r an~,~ ~rofe!3~edlY ~.:(menta~.Qutlook.,rh~:re~r~ ~ diiecro~, Youth"bep~rtm~nt,Na~. LakesJ!i~ Park ~rea, ~1',~oJ1h~':. "iie' Church, the: schools'" ihe

, many who wdl ~~, the ,l~g'ltlmate quesbon~whY'I~.ltth,at tional Catholic Welfare Confer., ,~e.ntuclcr, hav~.~el)..maH~~,.", world, ,~iety ,at'. la~g¢ :~':.ail clergyman must .t>e" the ,<inly witness 'to Oh.ri~t; 'the- o~iy: e~ce, of which the CYO Federa-· :. The ,~~~t~rs~,l~t~sth~'~e~bry~: have benefited,from the labOm niissionaryin"theworld? Isn't this the jobalsoO!' the .. ~oriis,~ part, safdthe intentions :~all pnnclpl~$l,o~ racJ~~ ~u~tice of this great leade~.'? " ' ­

' ? ' ,- , " ,' .. " ,",'~' ", ' ': '. ',for, the 1966 week are:, ,-pelp .Negr~s 10, gam a. I~~ ,1 . alty. .' '. ,. " , .- _ ':' "L That all men sense their, ,and respe<:te~ pla,ce as good .t:.Jt­

:J3esldes, maybe the mghtclub patrons JUI"f; d~n t w-~nt dignity as brothers of Christ and, izens; assJml~ate Neg:roes' mto Crusade to' :Help ,, to 'be botheted by a clergyman .invading their recreation 'sons of God the Father. the total society; an,~ al;cept Ne­iJlthis way. It could' even' prejudice them against GOd.' , ";!. That mutual trust among - gro families on' "the' basis~ we ' Foreign Students '

.' <" men and among nlltions increase would a~cept any other famJly," CINCINNATI (NC) - ,Tho~----------;;;.....;:.....:........;.--------_.....:.:......;.;. 'through recognition and support Catholic Students' Mission C~

for God's moral order. . sade has undertaken an interna­"3. arms fro Edwarcll SieglmanThat may fall ,from tional project designed io bene.;.

the hands of men." Heads Bible Uillit' fit. foreign students now in tJilBIn his message, Cardinal She­ country.NEW ORLEANS (NC)-Fath~rhan asserted: ' CSMC units in schools acrossEdward Siegman, C,P.S., ofWonderiuD Work the country have agreed to con­@rheANCHOR Notre Dame University is the

J "It is my sincere hop'e that the of, the tJibute to an emergency lOaDnew president Catholie c~lebration of National Catholic fund. . ' ,Biblical .Association of America.OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF niE DIOCESE OF FAIl.L RIVER Youth Week by our young men The fund, derived from ..He succeeds, F~lther David M.·,~mci women throughout America' CSMC, Legion of Mary grou~Stanley, S.J., of Regis College,.flO !iighland Avenue will fo,cus the attention of ou)," and other sources, is a responseToronto. '

iall River, Mass. 0-2722 675-7151 citizens upon the wonderful , to the limited, but usually criti: ­'Msgr: John M. Oesterreicher,work 'being done by the Catholic eal, need of certain foreign stu­

director of the Institute afPUBLISHER Youth' Organization. dents whose scholarships oJ;' oth­Judea- Christian StudillS, ,Seton ' "Fitting indeed is the theme, er funds do not quite match tileMost Rev'. James L. Connofty;, D.O., PhD., Hall University i J1 Sou t bfor this year - 'Peace Throug~ high costs of schooling in tbe/' .. Orange, N.J., will be vice presi­Brotherhood.' No segment of our 11.S.GENERAL MANAGER ' ASST. GENERAL MANA(';ER dent for the ensuing yeiJlr.nation has a greater' interest in Most of the recipients, 'so fall,rh. Rev. Daniel F. Shalloo, 1tA.A. Rev. Joar. P. Driscoll

.: . peace than youth, for it is the Re-elected secretary, a post be according to the Foreign Visitoaa , young that are most affected by bas held since 1!~48, was Father Office of the National CathollcMANAGING EDITOR war. Louis F. Hartman, C.SS.R., elf Welfare Conference, have'~

Hugh J. Golden "No segment, either is more Catholic UniversUy, Wallhington. students from Africa. '

Page 7: 09.22.66

-; "New' Confraternity Edition:" 'THE ANCHoR-"Dioces4t'of FaD River-Thurs. Sept. 22, 1966 ,7

: "Of :S;ble N'ears Completion NEW' ORLEANS (NC).l:- "Or progress of the translaftiorl at

what woman having ten' drach- the 29th general meeting of the mas,if she loses one drachma, association held at Notre Dame does not light a lamp and sweep Seminary here. . the- house and search car.efully !From Originml Greel!t

, until she finds it?" '.' The new Confraternity ver­· Although few had any idea as sioo, he explained, will be a di­

to the value of a "drachma" rect translation into English £atholics were long .used to from the original Greek, where­hearing this New Testament, par- as the version in use since 1938 able read in the Gospel ~or the was a translation into English third Sunday after Pentecost. of the Duay-Rheims Latin ver­With recent attempts to render lion. ~is and other antiquated Bibli- The rendering direct· from the eal expressions into the' ~odem Greek, he said,' will allow the

. 'idiom, the drachmabeC~ine a. translators to make many .ex­"'dime." . . ,;," ,.. pressions both true to the origi-

The change made tli~ pa.ssage I)al meaning and more accept­Blore clear, but simultane~usly able to the modem reader.

, . .used·a few titters to ~ 'heard The translation, which is 00­.. in the church as the 'co~grega- ing sponsor~ by the Biblical ' .. tion attempted to iniaginttmod- Association, has been underway ~ ern woman calling togeih~'r her for sometime,' and most of the

friei-tds and neighbors to rejoice Old Testa~ent has alreaC::' been' ~er the finding of a lost dime. published. The complete New

Both the mystery caused by Test~ent, Fat her Hartman 8le old and the laughter caused predicted, will be ready for pub­bY the new will be avoided in lication within two years, and the newest Confraternity of liturgical passages will then be . ·TO NEW JERSEY: Rev. M~ther M'ary Leobin, SS.CC., former superior at Sacred Cbristian Doctrine translation of chosen from this· version. Hearts Academy, Fairhaven, will head a new foundation of the Sacred Hearts communityUle New Testament now 'U,nder- He also reported. that non­ at Avenel, N.J. She will be accompanied by three student Sisters who will study in way, according to Father' J.ouis Catholic scholars have aided

nearby universities and be assigne<J'tO CCD work in St. Andrew's parish, Avenel. Mother· 1'. Hartman, C.SS.R.,. secr:etary Catholics in the preparation and ~ the Catholic Biblical Associa- that the new CCD version Leobin has been at the Fairhaven.convent·for 40 years as teacher, mistress of resident

· 't(o~of America. . '. -." . sheuld be a "quasi-common" ~tuden:ts and, for the past six years, .superior. From left, Sister Jane Marie, Mother · Father Hartman :reported ~ , ~itioR of the Bible.' . ".' " ..". lLeobin, Sister Joan Rita, Sister Anne Marie•..

. '. '. ;...

.' ln~ra.Family ,i :Dialogue' Essential Vincentmans Hear . I' First Step' 'for ~f:M,' '¥ember~ ~ .pov¢rty Cure

MIAMI (NC) ~ Dialogue- ,Church's teachings in the S8-. r m. -I . , first between husbalid' ahd'wii'e"': crety' in which we live. . ~Xp~(lUne(ID . :", '8nd then with the childrenl...· :', 'i Treme'ndousChallenge ~'SNYDER (NC)-:'Person­

is the first step for Christian "We have to make our experi-Family Movement members in ence available," .he added. ·"It is --;al hand-to-hand comb,at" can nchieving their 'goal of family most important to listen to the defeat pove'rty, a Catholic· influence on society, the' national ' women who are being upgraded intern~tional relief. expert aecretaries of the CFM told an not only in Rome but in the stated here on Sunday. informal gathering of married .whole world." ',Nei~hbo.r-:to-neighbor respon­eouples here. ,Mrs. Crowley suggested that sibility "will 0 win the decisive

Mr. and Mrs. Pat' Crowley, the CFM has a great opportunity battles in t.he war against want," .....ho stopped here en route to ·to move ahead through the use Msgr. John G. Nolan, national €aracas, Venezuela, to particl-. 9f initiativ~ and positive think- secretary of'the Cathulic 'Near iia:te in the fourth general meet'T,.ing. "Now that the Vatican coun-: . East Welfare Association assured

, , . lng'of Movimiento Fanulia"Cris- iCU,is,over, all of us as lay PeoP!e700 ~estein. New York leaderS ·'tiano, Lati~ American counter,.,,, ,have 3. tremendo,us challenge ~. of the St. Vincent de Pau~ Soci-''" 'Peri of the CFM, sPoke! at th,e,. llIlSwer. the call," 'sbe said.' 'ety.·· , '.' .' .'

. . bOrne of Dr. and Mril~ ~on4.. , ' .. ,~G~ups like you are meetin~: ~ .Re,told',the 133-year-old .Cath., . , .. 1'\ H~alY, ~residents '1-. ,tile Holy every other week a.U· over .the .. oli<: men's group. which is com,- ' , ~uIy~arish CFM ~ ,M.i.¥'f. wOl'ld. They ar~ tl'yl?g to fin~ .' mitted to. personal neighbor.hood

If the husband and. wi,le. have tbrou~ group diSCUSSions, a bet- charity: "More than ever .before, IIOme interest and'develop"some rer knowledge of Christ; Do not Ame~icans are now ready to ideaS, th~n this" win filtet: ;to~ ,1M:: ~raid to use ~;our;,ow,?: initia-:, .~o~·,libOut··yo~r, kind,9f anti- ~

: , ,.~ t~e children,. Pat ~r?.wley, ~ ;tive l.n prog~am~~ng, .. she :urged'. ,:pover~y, war. !thaI! work~,d for. '. it" ~t~~ey, e;X~lalDed•.'If th~ hus'- 'A~' This year s,t?P1C o~ 'which~U .:, l,on, years. It,has,worked through..

iNmd and ~l'e learn to conduct ,eFM . groups. In· the U.S.- Win several ki.nds of. social change • . ,~ d,ial~¢ue w~th one' ari,o~lii! and 'I, ooncentra~e, Mrs~ Cr.ow~eY .ari;,.. ,,' ,][t~ ~~~n~~ p,~1 t~: w.ork a~y,~her:~ ,

~. develop ~ ,in~er~ .. ~~ the, "llOunced, ls .. ClTheFanulY'l?Tlme right now. As Chesterton said of .. , eoml1}unity' _an4th~,~0~1~, the'" of5::hange,'! a program which sh~ .Cbristianit)" i~eJf, it has not yet :,' ehildren will pi$ it up:., "saId offers two challenges: tbep(;en "trie~-enough."

"The' whole tone .'0£ the idea of responsible parenthood,' ·Defeat.Poverty . (':hurch is t~at we have. to work . and .the war. on.. poverty. ' .. ' I' tl edout' ways of tl-anslating the..,. . . Msgr~' No an . recen y. nam '. . '" .." " 01 by Pope Paul VI as preSident ~f .

" the 'Pontifical Mission for Pales­" tine;' 'urged: Vincentians to ~-'23 New Candidates,: 'llfreshmel1°

ucate"Americans to the hazard' 'of poverty·a·nd to offer hope thatAt" Delayed·... Vocatmons'S'eminary .. it "can' 'in fact be defeated in.:

WESTON (NC)-Twenty-three' dentist; school teacher, a letter our own' time.... • sew candidates for tbe' priest-'- . 'carne'r,several engineers and Th'e" assembled Diocesan Cen­

hood are now in residence at ttte otherS from various' occupations tral Council of Buffalo's Vincen­Pope John XXIII Seminary for in tile new class. . tians was specifically counseled Delayed Vocations here as the 'Cardinal Cushing said: "It is to consider self-help technical Institution, only one of, its kind' nO easy matter for these men to . assistance that can help poorill the western hemisphere, be- adjust to the discipline of study people' at home and abroad lib­ains its third year. and, the confinement necessary erate themselves from poverty.

The men, all over 30 years of flo prepare themselves Ifor the "The most 'realistic charity,"age, with an average. age of . priesthood." Msgr. Nolan stated, "is the kind Wl, comprise the third "fresh- Forty-six U.S. archdioceses tbat helps a man stand on his lIIlan" class of students at the lllIld dioceses He represented own f~t. lleminary established by BichaN-. among students which "makes Cardinal Cushing of Boston. it a tme nidional seminary," the

In addition, 36 men are begin- ~rdinal. said. The seminary"is Ding their second year of study', patterned after one in Rome lmd 29 starting their third year.. and was established by the Car­''l'he 29 will receive major orders, dinal after the late Pope John lIkiring the present academic year pointed. out the need .of one and as deacons during tbenext ~ tI.le. western .hemis~he~e. '. ·MONTHLY CH'URCH

'IRImmer will be given pariSh ex­perience. In 1968 they will ~ Methodists' Retreat BUDGET ENVELOPES ordained as priestS; the' fi~ '-vi\LYERMO (NC)-FIfty m~ dass to complete studies.'; . ~ wemen froni the First Metb- .... ~INTEO ,AND MAllEI) . Cardinal Cushing nO~ that odist Church of Palmdale made ~ backgrounds of the 'new: ~.. ' the weekend retreat at St. .An:" Write; Or IPhone 672.1322 4lents are _similar to' ~ "': 'cke:w's Benedictine Monastery

. ~ing classes. He' said' 'Utere llere in this' desert community ., 234 Second Street - Fan River Mle three attorneys,'·.· ..r~· <Ii the' Los Angeles archdiOcese.'

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Page 8: 09.22.66

8 ' lfofE ANC~-Dtoce&e tJf fctft Rhoer-T'hurs. 'Sept: 22~ ~66 Nome Mercy NlM ~ To NGEA Post

WASHING!J'ON (rNC)-Siste1i' 'Mary Edana of the Sisters of Mercy has 'joined the staff of

Books Offer Aid to Long-T~me

Marrrcrages 60n Rock$" the National Catholic Educa­tional Association as director oa ' I, By ,Mar-yTinley Daly special projects in the, elemen­

This column has been asked for comment about "mar­ tary, secondary, college and uni­versity departments. She willlmage on the rocks" 'among Catholic couples, the stagnation 'formulate and administer pro­Of a long-time marriage with its wreckage realized only by grams for the improvement c€

the husl;>and and wife, though probably suspected by the Catholic education. older children. This is a large Sister Edana' was born kiriage should live and prosper; it

France and brought by her pw­order and one we would not was to afford both, the super­ents to America when she wasll>resu.me to tackle without natural afds of the Mass, the nine years old. She studied atsacraments, the sacramentals,1recourse to wise and scholar­ Western Reserve University~prayer and sacrifice, and the~ authors who have studied the eolumbia and Princeton, aF!G'natural aids which are the prac­problems of marriage, particu­ earned doctorates at the Univel' ­tical effects of charity. Religionn.3rly Catholic 'sity of Pittsburgh and the -SOJ'loo was to afford that supernaturalmarriage. From bonne..

point of view which would in­~ purely per­ For the past seven years slicl sure adjustment, peace, and har­conal viewpoint, was principal of St. Josephmony despite difficulties. It wasme based on Academy High School in Titus-,to hold firm to the sacredness ofexperience and ville, Pa., where she also estab­marriage and its benefits, to itscbsel'vation, it lished a city-wide adult educQcounity and stability, when secu­would seem that : tion program.larism would deny them all."ibe good old Four, years ago Sister Edaoo "'ounce Of pre­ . 'Praetical, J!l08itive' worked out an arrangement wiUn wntion" plays the Titusville ministerial assO­A recently published ,book ,by ,IiI\ mighty im­ ciation to 'provide religion teaclil­another eminent Catholic lay­portant l' 0 I e :/'

man, William A: Lynch, M~D., 'THE PLACE': That's what they call the ChicELgo near ers for Protestant youngstertlkeeping family lines of commu­ atten~ng ~ catholic highnication' Open and' operativ4l "A Marriage Manual for Catho­ North Side community center where nuns from five religioU6 School.'lics" -(Trident Press;,New York), ' ;lrom' the very beginning. ' orders volunteer in the evenings to provide a clubhouse for "She descended' on TitusVi""is, as Richard Cardinal CushingA shared, religion, experiences, girls of the neighborhood. Here a movie is, about. to begin, as a whirlwind, a thinker, a ded·says in its foreword, "8 rever­ambitions, ideaS, friends - and

.ent, pratical, a~d' ,real!stic so\Irce while elsewhere in "The Place" girls may be studying Of' 'kated philosopher with a know)..those privately funny family ;edge o:f:tbe human being * * 'Ii $Iof information about the physio; playing or "just talking" with their teenage frieJrlds. NCjokeS when' nobody on the out­ woman who has made a markeal, emotional, and esthetic as- .lIIide knows what you're talking Photo. , here both through' education aDdpeets of marriage. A practical,about-all these.·serve to bul­ 'persOnality," t b.e' , Titusv.~positive book, ~he manual covers'wark a 'marriage relationship as 'newspaper said. ' a wide range of subje~ts relat,ed.ecure}y as' concrete does' a brick wall. Keep those lines of k> marriage, most of them not in eommunicatiOll 0 p ~R a J1r41 the problem area. Makes Debut friendly! A. Scientific" thoroughly read­ 25,000 Cuban Refugees Honor, oUr lady DETROIT tNC)-Father AiJ!le , SuUesMd Boolu; able volume by Father John L~ . At Outdoor Pontifical· Mass Duval, S.J., French composei­

Dr. Alphonse H ..Clemens ifi Thomas; S.J., is ''The American \ singer, made his U. S. tour debut his new edition of "Marriage and Catholic Family," published in MIAMI (NC)-Miami's Bishop The bishop urged the Cuban Saturday' at- the University Cllf the Family," entitled "Desigp for 1956 by Prentice-Hall. A com­ Coleman F. Carroll said devotion exiles to erect in Miami a shrine . Detroit Memorial Buil,ding here. Successfui Marriage" (Prentice­ prehensive reference study OIl 'to Our Lady is a guarantee and to Our Lady of EI Cobre that Accompanying himself on hill Hall, New York) brings this out marriage and the family, it de­ Pledge of a radiant future. ' will "bear witness for years and guitar, l;te sings songs that

, when he says, "The middle-age llt'rveS a place on the library He spoke' to some 25,000 Cu- years to come of your deep love brought him to the top of the problem, a climax to a process shelves of every Catholic family ban refugees at ~n outdoor Pon- as a people and as individuals hit recording list in Paris du.ringof gradual and mutual with- seriously i~terested in making a tifical Mass in Miami Stadium for, the Blessed, Mother-a love the past 10 years.

, drawal which has been going on &uccess of marriag~ and family which celebrated the 50tl1 anni- that has always been strong and Jor many years previously, ill! living in a truly Christian atmo­ versary of Pope Benedict XV's, manifested t h r'D ugh Cl u t the probably due to breakdown of sphere. Its five parts give II proclamation designating Our.' yearl1." eommunication more than to notion of the scope: Minority Lady of Charity of EI Cobre as A small statue of Our Lady of BIG DtYIDEND NEWS I My other cause." Survival in a Complex Society, 'Patroness of Cuba. €harity of EI Cobre, smuggled

I SYSTEMAnC'Developing a closen,ess, a "we The ,Catholic Concept of Mar-' "We sincerely hope the aspi- out of a parish church in, the 5.50% ,-ear SAVINGS:!reeling," as Dr; Clemens de­ riage, Characteristics of the rations and the prayers of the Havana area and brought' to IlCribes it, "can only be accom­ A ril e ri can Catholic Family ,Cuban people, not only in Mi- Miami five years ago, had' a II ONVESTMENT plished if there is much com­ Breakdown, and Programs jor mnibut throughout the world, place of honor during the Mass • 10 }'ear SAVINGS munication, both verbal and Survival. ' will obtain from God, through in front of the outdoor sanctu­Don-verbal * * * By sharing the intercession of Mary, the re- 4 5001 8 REGULAR work, affection, recreation, and We cannot close without men-' ligious liberty that was defended &l'y. , • 10 year SAVI~GS

tion of "The Catholic Family

5 0001

religion, spouses, parents, and so clearly by the ecumenical '£hildren automatically grow to Handbook" (Random Ii 0 use, council," Bishop Carroll said Worry of Bass Riy~~

New York) by Msgr: George A.an enhanced knowledge of one another and to a blending of Kelly, dealing more with the sp;.~~~gt~~s~P;~~~~~s and aspi- fAl§~ TErn~T!H SaW,~fm~S ~@[fi)&

rearbig of Catholic children thanpsychqlogical differences. rations obtain the spirit of un- $~DfP>~ili1ll9J C1I>Ii" ~rrlrD'iJ'@I!l'i!Jll<gJ? "However, the extent of com­ with the marriage partners derstanding which all of us wish Bank By, MailDon't be embarrassed by loose falsethemselves, but a completemunication is limited by such' for today. May they permit the teeth slipping, dropping or WObbllllg We Pay ,The Pos~a!!lle~

book of practical., guidance and · d to k' When you eat, talle or laUlth. Justsharing of external actions. One Ch h t 1urc 0 lye an wor In sprinkle a I1ttle FASTEETH on your 0 SOUTH YARMOUTHinspiration en. an phases ofcan very effectively block off your 'nother country without plates, This pleasallt powder gives a 0 DENNIS PORT family life. ' ·t ·t t remarkable sense of added comfortothers from closeness unless in­ obstacles. May they perml I 0 and security 'by holding plates more 0 HYANNIS

ternal sharing if? added to ex­ Help is available in these and carryon the mission entrusted firmly. No gummy, gooey"pasty taste. 0 YARMOUTH SHOPPING PLlWI" S'" he Dentures that fit are essential toternal sharing. This implies the other texts for those whose mar­ to her by Our Divine aVlOr, health. See your dentist regularly. 0 OSTERVILLE

revelation of one's innermost riage is "on the rocks'! or ap­thoughts, ambitions, goals, senti:' proaching such shoals. safd. /rrr===========~Ge~t~F~A~S~TE~E~T~H~a~t~a~ll~d~r~U~g~c~l);~U~n~te~rs~'=~~~~~~~~~~~~r===!J ments, and feelings, which can best be accomplished by verbal ~1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111!!l communication. Conversing to­ ~ IORV CLIEANNG ~ gether in family life assumes,

§ and §accordingly tremendous impor­tance." ~ ~Q.OR SYORAGIE ~

This is but one aspect. "In the Divine Plan, says Dr. Clemens, I DE~M©fD)Y I "marriage was not intended to be successful without the aid of == ,CLEANERS ==

~ ~'.J'eligion,nothing is more im­ = 34-44 Cohanne9 S9reei =. portant for marital adjustment and success. Religion was to ~ Taun~on 'riA 2-6161 ~

'reach the truths by which mar- . iiillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllF.

!Parents of' Nuns Plan lEuropeanConvent Visit

NEW YORK (NC)-A group of 120 parents of School Sisters (i)f Notre Dame will leave ,here Monday, Oct. 10 to attend dedi­

'cation ceremonies of the Sisters~

new international generalates in Rome.. ,

After a short stay in Rome, the parents will continue to Munich where they will oe -received at the motherhouse of the Bavarian :Notre Dame Sisters.

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Page 9: 09.22.66

•••••••••••••••••• • • •

• • • •

Gard'enerCa'n 'Catalog Seasons By Plant-Induced Ailments

By Joseph ~ Marilyn Roderick There are any number of ways to look at the flowering

l!eaaon. One way is the monthly approach, that is, a simple listing such as June, July, August, September etc. Another mto think of the flowers that bloom M; certain times; for mstance, one might think in word came from alt, which terms of crocus daffodil ta- means water and chocol, which Ii iris and continue thn:ugh m~ant a gre~t noise. The great

p, • . nOlse part eVidently came aboutthe flowenng seasons. ]I am because the drink was beaten beginning to think, however, until it was foamy. that III foolproof system is. III Amazingly enough, eve n eatalog of ailments resulting "though we In North America are from the fruits and vegetables unable to grow the tree that in the garden. Early Spring, ac-. bears the cocoa-bean, the United cording to my system, would be States is the world's greatest heartburn season. This is rhu- manufacturer and largest con­barb time. We have stewed rhu- sumer o£ the products of this barb, rhubarb pie, rhubarb up- bean. In 1765 in the small town side-down cake and rhubarb of Dorchester, Mass. the first puddings, ell of which lead to chocolate mill was built by Jc;>hn prolonged heartburn. . Hannan, an Irish immigrant who

The allergy season follows had learned the business in l;OOn after. Roses are in full England. When Mr. Hannan died bloom and the pollen is flying in 1780 the business was taken hither and yon causing all sorts over by Dr. James Baker and the 01f running eyes, drippy noses company of Baker has been in' I:lnd general malaise. This se~ the chocolate business ever since. oo~ is an extended one, ru@ing Delightful and very nutritious well into the "sore tummy" ·sell- chocolate has become an essen­111m. tial item on our kitchen shelves; , . ~is latter ~ oceasi9ned by -whether in the form of cocoo ~eel1 pears, apples and gene~l\Ill .or in the squares of Wlsweetened ~'VerconsumptiOD of aU frui~ chocolate that are melted for use 'and, vegetables. It is aeeompa- 'in baking such items as the £01­pj~d by statements such as "Well, lowing delicious recipe, given what did Y9U expect? Three me by Miss Alga Klinka of the pears and four apples are too Greek Orthodox Church in Fall much f()r any little girl." Con- River. . . current with this problem is the Double Delight Chocolate Ca.ke hive period. 'It is such a long 2 packages 3 ounce size cre.am .~between tomato· seasonS cheese . " that gluttony is almost pardon- ~ cup of shortening but the red blotches that appear 6' cups of sifted confectioner'11 on the faces of the children oogar (about 1~ pounds) eause a great deal of alarm until lf4 .cup hot w.ater we discover that our. little prob- 4 squares of chocolate, melted !ems have eaten six or seven to- 2% cups of sifted cake flour matoes at a sitting. 1% teaspoons ~aking soda

Now it is finger burning sea- 1 teaspoon salt oon. All the good things from the 3 eggs garden must now be put in bot- % cup of milk tIes for the long Winter ahead. lf~ teaspoon vanilla This. of course, means lots of ~ teaspoon peppermint ex­boiling water, sterilized jars and tract . a steamingkitchen in which it is 1) All ingredients shoUld be inevitable that someone will get:> at room temperature. burned. 2) In your very largest bowl

Finally, we are entering the cream together the crea~ cheese, "bad back" season when' hus- 1fl cup of the shortenmg, the bands realize that all the jobs vanHJa and the peppermint ex­that have been left undone be- tract cause the lawn had to be mow~d 3) When they are fluffy blend or the tomatoes had to be weed- gradually 3 cups of the confec­ed, have now got to be tackled. I tioner's sugar into the creamed ean feel my back beginning to mixture. ache n·ow and by November I Add the lf4 cup of hot water most certainly will have to rest alternateiy to the creamed mix­U for two or·three hours a·day. ture with the remaining three

·In the Kitchen . cups of sugar. Theobroma is the botannical 5) Blend in the melted choco-

Iilame given to the tree that pro- late that has been cooled. duces this delightful flavoring 6) Reserve 2 cups of the abo~

food but we of unbotannical bent mixture to frost the cake with. know it by the name that con- Keep it at room temperature, jures up for·us tastes of delight- however. (I put it in the retrig­ehocolate. Translated. Tbeobrom erator and found it difficult to becomes "food. of the gods," and spread .when the cake was 0001 fellow chocolate lovers agree enough to frost,) ihat this is exactly what it is. 7) Sift together the flour, soda, Where would we sweet fanciers and salt. be without it? Just think, no.1us- 8) Combine the creamed cboc­clous rich chocolate cake, DO oIate mixture that you left in the heartshaped box of sweets at bowl with the remaining- ¥4 cup Valentine's Day, no gooey eboc- M shortening, mixing thorough­&late sundaes and alas none of l¥. my favorite thirst-quenching 9) Blend i1ll the eggs, one at a chocolate ice cream sodas. Even time and beat for one minute. those people who are not avid 10) Add the milk alternately fans of this parti&lar food item with the dry ingredients to the must admit that eating would egg mixture, beginning and end­be a bit dull without it. ing with the dry ingredients.

The ,tree that produces 1be You can use your, electric mixer beans or seeds which give US at low speed for this. eocoa and chocolate has to be 11) Pour into 2 well-greased ...own in a tropical climate with and floured 9 inch cake pans and a great deal of moisture. The bake in • 350° oven for 30 to 35 first mention in history of this minutes or until it tests done. tree and its products was in ~ Cool and frost with the frosting writings of a Spanish explorer mixture that you set aside. woo was with Cortez in Mexico This cake takes a bit of work and observed. Montezuma par- but it is well worth the effort. taking of 11 thick drink made of 10 fact, just writing about it re­ClOCOa beana and vanilla in a minds me that I have II piece golden cup. Chocolate 01' caea- left that I think I'll go down buata] was the name I)f thill and enjoy U with a large glasg _!Ilk QQd it is believed that the crf cold milk.

SCHOJ~ARSHIP AWARDS: At the initial meeting of the year of the Friends of St., Anne's Hospital, Fall River, Mrs. John F. Giblin, Jr., ch'~irmanofNurses' Activities, pre­sented scholarship awards to· Jacqueline' Hebert, Theresa Stankiewicz, Paullette B?,ule, ~rs. Gibl~n, Rita Pelletier..

Defines 'Great. Society' Concerned. With Devel?pment of Mankind.

HEW Offidal Explains :MIAMI (NC) - The "G:reat

S~iety" was defined here as a self-help program concerned with the "broader dimensions of human aspiration" as well as the conservation ~nd development of human resources.

The definition came from t. Jack Fasteau of the U.S. De­partment of Health, Education and Welfare office for disad­vantaged and handicapped who was keynote speaker during a two-day symposium co-spon­sored by the Miami diocese's office of community service and the HEW office.

.Purpose of the sessions, at ­tended by specialists in the fields of education, youth, wel­fare, labor, urban renewal and the Cuban refugee program, was to disseminate information about federal legislation aimed at im­provement of the conditions of

- the handicapped; aged, indigent and dependent.,

According to Fasteau the idea of the "Great Society" is con­cerned with the development of mankind, especially of the less fortunate.

"It was not conceived undei' any duress, such as a depressiolll

Close Church to Aid War On Poverty

RICHMOND (NC)-The Rich­mond diocese is closing a. 13­year-old Negro mission church here 3nd converting the plant into a neighborhood center 10 belp in ·th-~ war on poverty.

The approximate 80 members of. St. Gerard's parish, staffed b:r a Redemptorist priest, will be­eome' members of integrated Sacred Hean parish.

In a letter to parishionc1'll Bishop John J. Russell said the closing is a "step forward in the integration program of the dio­·cese." As a community center under direction of the Diocesan Office for Economic Opportu­nity, the parish plant will pro­vide space for a variety of pro­grams for an persons- in the neighborhood, regardless of race or reli~on. Its program will in­clude adult education, legal ad­vice and consumer counseling.

or time of economic peril," he explained, "but came when the nation was experiencing its highest surge of. prosperity. The undertakil")g was the most unique task embarked upon in man'g history and represents an ex­pression of the compassion and conscience of the people."

Conservation and development of human resources i.s the "heart of the program;' Fasteau pointed out 'noting that this phase is being implemented through medicare, economic opportunity, elementary and secondary edu:" cation, higher education, the Appalachian program, manpow­er expansion, vocational educa­tion, housing and urban develop­ment, and the civil rights acts.

He reminded that "most of this legislation is permissive, not man~atory."

THhE ANCHOR":" "9 9A:

T urs., Sept. 22, , 6..

No.. Attl'eboro D~

'Set Fall Pians North Attleboro Daughters of

Isabella will hold an installa­tion banquet at 6 Sunday night, Oct. 9 in K of C Hall. Chairman Mrs. Richard Beaupre will be assisted by Mrs. Robert Turcotte, co-chairman, and a large com­mittee. Installing officer will be Mrs. Thomas Charron, state :re­gent.

Officers of the North Attle­boro circles for the coming year includes Mrs. Ralph Gilmore, re­gent; Mrs. Richard Gaulin, vice­regent; Mrs. Fritz Gegenbach, re­cording secretary; Mrs. Juliano DiRenzo, scribe; Mrs. Joseph Stanton, treasurer.

A Christmas sale is planned for Thursday, Nov. 17 at the former Sears store on South Washington Street, North Attle­boro. Mrs. William Prew and Mrs.'~Gilmore head the arrange­ments committee.

The regular meeting for Oc­tober .is set for Tuesday, the 4th, at.K of C Hall.. An apron parade will be featured and prizes will be awarded: Mrs. Eugene Martha is chairman.

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Page 10: 09.22.66

.~ _.AHCHOR:-:-Pioc&5~of Fon.Riv~r-Thurs.Sept. ,22, '1?66 . '. ': "., '" . ",' .' ';,' ~

: '.. 'I 'I "' I.

",SELECTING ,SESSIONS' ATP~TTSBURGCCD CONGRESS: Delegates from the Di-DCese' choosing the -interesting sessions of the day; are, left to right: Sr. Joan Louise, O.L.V.M., of North Easton, Diocesan' Super,visor of the CCD; Janet Barbelle, Holy Name Parish, Fall River, ,Diocesan Co-chairman ,of elementary teachers; Rev. Maurice R. Jef­frey, St. Jean the Baptist, Fan River; Rev. Ron~14R. 1'osti, .Our. Lady. of the' Assumption, Osterville; Edward F. McDonagli', No.:lAttle)jo:ro,DiOce.sa~'vice-president of' the CCD.

, 'Publi~ S¢h~Q{'p~'pils,First 'Class ' .',','",Appeal, fo'r', E~uali~y', ).~,~'de·,' 'a.t~"C'CD: Co~gress pifrSB'URGH' (NC) - The Christians must be of ,service to

treatment of public school pupils 'everybod"y.·" '" : .~.. .~ "se~ond class citizens" jn the " In order 'to' do' this job, 'h~ Church was 'scored in two major . ,~said··-'the 'CnUJ'ch', nee'dS'not only addresses at the 12th Nation'al ' .a ";estrueturing,"'but more im'-' and 5th' Inter-American Con- 'portahtly' 'a""reform"'ea meiltai ­.ress of the Confraternity· of:jty that' embraces people ~and Christian Doctrine here.. -their problems·ili.' an ecumenical

F<)tp.er Joseph H. Fichter, 'S.J., 'an'd social way."" , of t~~ ~a:yard Univer~ity School'··:rheatii.tud~~'of our peopie,;' of Dl~mlty, tol~ ~he, ,C?l)gr.ess .. 'be sai~, "have. to. be op'ene<l' up on Fnday that It IS takmg too Dong "for the notion to wear «J1f t~at the boy or. girl who ~ ~~t m the .C::athoh~ schoo~ ~ mdeed a second class, CaUiohc f~Orri. a ki"nd ,'of m~rginal Catho­licfarTiily" -

I" '.' , •.

, Archbishop Hallman :The call for an end to this

J:I~tion was seconded by Arc.h­b'shop· Paul J. Hallinan of At­l~nta, 'Ga., who said the Church must explore all means of 'keep­ing public school pupils "from becoming the Oliver Twists" of' Catholic education. Archbishop Hallinan was unable to attend the Congress imd his address was read, on Saturday to the dele­gates. '

Continuing his appeal for equality, Father Fichter said th'at "we have been almost oversold on -the idea that there must be something wrong with those Catholics who do not pa­tronize the Catholic school sys­

·tem." "Pel'haps," he continued, ,"we

are so overburdened with the responsibility of trying to main­tain and expand the system, that we simply have not had time and money and energy left to look after the growing popu­lation of our teenagers who will never be' in a Catholic high

, schooL" .

Father :F:ichter' also told ,the Congress that the Church;s pro-, gram of religious education nn;'st' reach "outside the ,formal paro­chial system' and Tnto depressed ,llJ'eas." .

He said there is an "old fash­lomia state' of 'mind that con­'stmitly thinks' in terms of the pllrochial." ,

Mission to the World "Vatican II," he contil'lued,

"reminds us that the Church's mission is to the world, and that

.to' include the unwa~hed . and the u~~ant~d' who' like ~s ani" the' ol:>j'~cts, of', Christ'ssolic.itude and the Ch)Irch's service.''' .' ,. . ';' . ' . ' '.,.,. . ' , ,~-In ,~I~. app;;e!'l1: f~r- ,an" e,~d: )0 ' , s~c~nd'clas~ .tr~atmel)t qf· p!-Jb", JiC'-llcPC?d1 p~pi}s,: .-4i~hbishop .Halli/lan called for· "equal con­.cern, teacher quality faciiities and oPllOrtunities to: the pupil wherever he' is found."

All to Use School "Child ,and youth must be in­

st.ructed and formed in the paro­chial school, the school of reli ­gion, or any other facet of con­fraternity education. A propor­tionate budget is essential," he said. "~}.together allowing ·for the existing physical plant, the building must be seen as serving not just the pupils of the parish school, but those in public schools, young adults and the general public."

"The 'second-class citizenship' of the public school student," he continued, "must be replaced by 'the special affection and faithfulness' the Council, calls for." .

One obvious start, he said, "i~ a diocesan secretary for ed­ucation responsible for all re-' 'ligious instruction and forma­tion. 'Another step is the profes­sional training' of catechists. A third is ,a paid full.,.time director

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lor the parish school of religion." , .Archbishop Hallinan, indicated

, that there are "a hundred little .ways we must explore, to keep -these pupils from becoming -the Oliver Twists of education."

Improy.~dProgram for CeD Continued from F~age One

zation will seek to fill that vacuum.'

After all this had taken place, the congress concll,lding speaker, Joseph J. Reilly oJ: Andover, Mass" rose, looked over the

· speakers stage, notE,d that he was the only laymam)ll it (apart from a few papal knights as­signed, as aid~!s to e(:clesfastical,

,'dignitarifes), and said it was hard to imagine' that the CCD was a lay organization.

Th'e speakers stag'e included Paul Cardinal Marella, legate of Pope Paul VI to th~!' cong'ress; Lawrence CardinaiShehan of B'altimore;Archbishop Egidio ,Vagilozzi, Apostolic Delegate in the United States; 3I).d· ascore or

, more bishops and monsignori. Reilly, a director of industrial

relatiolls for a MaBsachusetts cOl)1pany and' the fathE)r' of six children-, proceeded to express :;motheJ: disappointment - that

· il). all 'the' dO,cuments of V~tican -Council II, th~re ,was' only oJ).e explic'it refer'ence Jo the, CCD­in the d.ecree on bi!iheops. ,

He said' pe, was. disappointed , "because of all .the organizations m the" Church, . the, Copfrate~­nity ,of christian Doctrine is the

· one, organization which years, , before the event and' the people embodied. the Byirit 'of Vatica'n, II, of,Pope 'John and of Pope

-Paul.' " ,.'

, He ·called ,the QCD the "char-· :,acteristic ,Catholic orl~anizati()n,

of Vatican II" and' arjgued .that' "m~re 'should be' done for it i"

'make the 'CCD more effective 'j'n · forming othetChrists." "

Reilly , declared . that there "ought to be under' th,e bishops in Washington a secretariat m .Christian education o:r forma­tion, headed by apriest"secreary or even a 'layman, ,where we oould analyze .and, determine

what means, w,hat mopey, what0 communication, what manpowe~ what anything will do the jo~

best, and with a master plan th~

might have some whisperill!ll promise of success."

He said, the American genius for organization should be p~

to work on behalf of the CC:n. . Reilly also urged each Ordn... nary to meet with his diocesal1ii teCD board at least twice a yean' "for communication purposes.'" His' talk received a standing

,ovation.

DeploD"e~ S)niporrtlgJ •At ClefT@)fmen

EDMONTON (NC)-"Snipin~

-at the clergy;' in Catholic peri ­, odicals in Canada and the U. S.

js depored by Msgr. J. A. Mac­Lellan of Edmonton, a veteran' editor.

Writing'to the Western Cath­olic Reporter, Msgr. MacLellallll said he is "profoundly dis­turbed" over the "nlllltipliciiy of criticisms, the priest claime~ came in many cases from irre­sponsible people or from entire-, 1y "unknown sources~ ,

The principal criticisms cite~ by Msgr.MacLellan were pate~' nalism on the part of the clergy:; indifference to 'problems of the

. laity, being ,;too busy to see . them"; poor Serlnons, and pow' pr~aching. ,.,. . .

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Page 11: 09.22.66

, . . lHE ANCHOR-Oregon See Files Thurs., Sept. 22, 1966

Suit for Right '.. ,., Pf1'e~at® [R<.®c~~vesTo Build Church' NCCJ ~wardPORTLAND (NC) - The

lPorthmd archdiocese has NEW YORK (NC) - Francis iiled aeuit against Washing­ Cardinal Spellman of New York

received the Gold Medallion foil'ron County, Ore., charging "courageous leadership in inter­"'legal cWscrimination" for irts creedal relations" at the firsllrefusal to permit a conditional Religious Leaders Dinner of thCi!1lJse permit to build a parochial National Conference of Chris~rn:hool gymnasium and church tians and Jews here. .Dt a s>te in suburban Portland.

The suit, charging violation of Other honorees were.Episcopall Bishop Horace W.B, Donegan,section 1 of Article 14 of the of New York; Archbishop Iako­U. S. Constitution, asserts the

~chdiocese "is deprived of equal vos, Primate of Greek Orthodox protection and benefit of its Church of North and Soutb property rights and its * <I> <I> land. America, and .Dr. Julius Mark, and buildings as compared with Senior Rabbi of Temple Emam.n­the protection and benefit ac"· El here. eorded to other property owners In accepting the award, Cai'~

im said county." . , dinal Spellmap. cited NCCJ fOI! First Denial "its efforts in encouraging mu­

Father Martin Thielen, arch~· tual respect and healthy coR­ell i 0 C e san superintendent of laboration among believers, and schools, stressed that no reli ­ • . : showing the relevance 0);1'

gious prejudice was involved. spiritual principles to modern life." .He said it isJhe first denial since

enactment of the Washington "The success of these efforts", County zoning ordinance, while ~he cardinal said, "has done

much to develop a healthy ecu­churches and schools in ·the' 43 . other applications fr;o m ..

menical spirit throughout Ol1lli'

eoUllty have.been approved. land and throughout the world." Legal action was taken be­

(?ause there appeared to be no·' IlUHicient ioeason· for 'a denial· Minister Columnist of'ronditioned use to the arch-' '. For. Catholic Pqper :diocese, ·Father"Thielen said'... '.~

. ' The archdiocese, ·represented ' CAMDEN (NC)-A Protestanft by Father Thielen, applied to minister will write a regulali' the planning commission last weekly column in the Catholie February for a permit to build a Star Herald, Camden dioces;)Jl $500,000 school-church complex newspaper. . to serve the·· new St'. Thomas Msgr. Salvatore .J. AdamO, Beckett missi'oii near suburba~ ellecutive editor, said the Re,." Raleigh hilJs.. , Paul H. Rutgers, senior pastOli'

The ,commission'. denied the of·the First United Presbyterian'Refug·ees Fete )~suits for 1946 Helpapplication June. 8, after J'esi­ ,Church of Pitman, ~. J,,' and dents Q'f the.~rea went on r.ecord .'urmer moderator 'of the Unitetll Tooth for and against the pmject 'Mark .Ann.ive.rsary of' Escape in Florcia "Presbyterian Synod of New JeJ'>o .m testimony, letterll and peti ­ sey, will write a' column entitletil, tions. . . . .:rAMI. (NC)-A Jesuit priest telegrams to Congressmen and '.1. learned a great deal,"'he ."A Protestant View," beginni»c

lJpbolds AetioD . who 20 years ago aided a group other top government officials. ·said, "about the power of the .with the Sept. 23 issue. Denial was Qased, according of Luthera'n Estonians to gain Newspapers across the nation press and how to deal 'with the Topics wilf cover ecumenism.

ioo the commission, on topo- .entry to this" country was hon­ reported the plight of the }'efu­ government. The' 'way to get .current social questions, and Ilraphical problems, ·insufficient II)red here by the former refu­ gees, Offers of sanctuary came thi/l~s done is not· by parades world affairs.

, , ESTONfAN GREETING: Boston Born Jesuit Father ,James D. Loeffler, now stationed.

in Jamaica, was feted here by a group 'of Estonians whom he ·aided 20 y'ears I ago in obtaining' legal· entry int~ the U.S. when they fled communism. He is greeted by Ca{>t. Walter Rull, whofliloted one'of the three s'mall boats which broilght the emigrants aC,rol;>s the :A,tlal)'tic to Mhimi,in 1946, and three of the women who were aboard the crafts, during an anniversary party•. NC Photo.

Ilccess, and generation of traffic gees from communism who are from ·the Dominican Republic an4.·~emonstrations.but. through Ollto residential feeder streets now United States citizens. I:Ind Venezuela. the prc;>per instrumentalities." that "would not be in the best Father James D. Loeffler, S,J., . Then President Harry S. Tru­ One of the 10 children' of Mrs.DUlterest of. the public 'safety or who formerly served in Jesuit man entered the picture. He in­ Ciltherine Loeffler, now in herwelfare." R~rishes of Miami,and Key We§t,. :,vok~d a 1941 proclamation by '90s. and a resident of Some,rvill~,on appeal to the 'lx)ard ~." fl~w.here from .'Jamai·ca to ~t­ President Franklin D. ·Roosevelt 1\4'ass., Father. Loeffler' also haseounty commissioners,';the plan:' tenq: an anniversary.party gi.ven 'which admitted some 60,000 a sister. 'who is, a. nun. Hisning commiss'ion action was ui'>-. .by.the Estonians. . ,Jewish refugees from naziism. brothers are Fathers Vincentheld. ,He recalled in '1946 when the 'The same rule was"applied to the0 Loeffler,C;M., Balboa, .Canal

The law suit - which also.48refugees arrived here in thtee :eston iillis. . 'Zone; Father 'Paul Loeffler,charges that the permit refusal '. small boats seeking refuge in the . . V:iluabh; Experience

C.M" sp.iritual director at theis "arbitrary, unreasonable, ca- 'u~ited States after' R'ussian Father Loeffler, one of five Major Seminary of. St. Vincentpricious, discriminatory and :communists occupied their coun­ brothers. who became priests, de Paul, Boynton· Beach, Fla.;without relation to the public try. Father Loefller said their said the experience in Miami Father Richard Loeffler, C.M.,interest"-asks that the board of admission to this country at that was a valuable one for him. ' chaplain at Carney Hospital,.county commissioners' action be time was '''a miracle which Boston; and Father Charlesdeclared unconstitutional and couldn't have happened without

5@e Names Layman Loeffler, S.J., Baghdad, Iraq. Histhat the county be enjoined divine intervention." sister, Sister Mary ·Tl1eresa, is aJ1rom interfering with the con- . One of the children in the 11@ IJ=lospi tQJ I Post Daughter of Charity stationed in.struction. group, who were living on their Norfolk, Va.

small boats tied up at Miami . BROOKLYN (NC) - William Flexible Programs docks, was enrolled in the pa­ Kozma has been named to head

rochial school of the Gesu· the department of hospital ad­Replace Obligation .Church, where Father Loeffler ministration of the division of

was stationed. The Jesuit, who health and hospitals of the di­MILWAUKEE (NC) - Catho­lic students at Marquette Uni­ speaks German, went one eve­ ocese of Brooklyn, Msgr. James versity this ~'ear may choose ning to talk to the girl's parents. H. Fitzpatrick, director, an­:l'rom several experimental and lin Despanr nounced.

Kozma will supervise thetraditional Christian renewal A few days later, the young­present four hospitals of the di­programs to fulfill their annual ster appeared at the rectory and

\lniversity religious obligation. begged Father Loeffler to come ocese which will form the nu­cleus of the recently announcedFather John P. Raynor, S, J., to the docks where the refugees Catholic Medical Center ofMarquette president, announced had just received word from the Brooklyn and Quee·ns. He' hasthe change in a special brochure federal government that they been active. in hospital adniinis­stating: "In order to allow a stu­ would. have to leiwe this country: tratiQn since receiving his mas-·dent the creative initiative in "They were in desp'air," said ier's degree in that field fromachieving his personal renewal, the former member of the Bos­(Columbia University in 1949.the university is offering a pro­ ton College faculty. He said the

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Page 12: 09.22.66

I

THE ANCHOR-"l)iocese of FaffRiver-Tburs.Sept..,n,<J966 . \ .... i '12 .." ... ;. -J -~:. : .' ... ~ ,_ .:. '"., .'~ :. • • • ..:", • "1 ',Dotto ChriSt i.lw' t~ ,·

New ~t!)oks Ahout 'Kennedy Prove P~ea~ant Surp'rise$'

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kenned.y Two new books about John F. Kennedy, With Kennedy

lOy Pierre Salinger (Doubleday, 277 Park Ave., New York, $5.95) and The Pleasure of Hi~ Company by Paul B. Fay, . Jr. (Harper and Row, 49 E. 33rd St., New York, $5.95), prove to be' pleasant sur­ which government and pressprises. The reason is that should consider --seriously and the y are unpretentious-,­ resolve sensibly. Its nub is ,uhow Neither writer attempts to a .democracy, - constituted with

the freedoms of the Unitedsay the last word about Kennedy or his administration; each is StateS,' defends itself in a cold content to re- ' war situation aga.inst an enemy main within the which can operate in secret." limits of his This basic issue, he believes, has

, competence. Mr. never been squarely faced. Salinger, as no Mr, Salinger was entirely in one needs to be the dark about the Cuban mis­told, was press ENTERS RELIGION: Miss llecretary

sile crisis until it was approach­ing its climax. But he played an Lucille M. C. Lequin, daugh­

to Kennedy. But important part in relations be­ ter of Mr. and Mrs. Jean L. Mr. Fay's link tween Khrushchev and Kennedy. Lequin, New Bedford, has

The series of perso!1al letterswith the 35th entered the novitiate of thebetween the two was exchanged nearly so well President is not

not through regular channels but Holy Cross Sisters, Manches­known. He ·was through Mr. Salinger and a ter, N.H. A 1962' graduate a personal friend who :first' met Keiinedy .in·the Navy_during Wo-rld ""ar n. The :fi-i~ndship continued right down'oo' Ken'­riedy's death, arid ·Mr. Fay _was Under :Secretary of the' N21vy from 1961 to 1965. ,,;' , :

Sense of Shock Mr. Salinger's. book begins

with im accOunt "of his- learning .of ,.. the President's death' <. on November· 22, 1963. He was 'on his wa~' to Tokyo 'with Secretary Rusk and other" high· . officials when the stunning, incredible news was' flashed to· the plane in which the party was traveling. Mr.. Salinger well describes the sense of shock which seized mil­lions of Americans, and indeed

.-tens of millions of people :throu~hout the world, as the 0--" . ''lunding n·e w s reached Uaem.. -' ­

. :alinger had known Ken­'nedy for some years. He me~ him'through Robert F: Kennedy, with whom Mr. Salinger was serving on .the staff of the Sen­ate's Select Committee on Im­proper Activities in the Labor or Management Field.

When John Kennedy decided to go after the Democratic nom­ination for 'the Presidency, Mr. Salinger worked for him in the pl'imaries. The very day that Kennedy's election was con­firmed, he asked Mr. Salinger to be White House press secretary.

There is nothing very new or revealing in much of what Mr. Salinger has to' say ab: ut the adven,t of the new administra­

,., tion, the comparative youth of its principals, getting used to the White House and so on. This is an oft-told tale, which by now has grown rather boring.

But Mr. Salinger does not drag it out- heavy-handedly. He is tl:ontent to sketch it lightly and let it go. He dwells, rather, on his own work: its scope, its diffi ­culties, its heavy burdens and real but elusive rewards.

Mr. Salinger had his troubles with reporters, and there was 'more than one dust up duririg the Kennedy administration 0 v e r a:harges, by the press, that the government was attempting to 'manage the news.' The charges stemmed from the government's handling of information at crit ­icalpoints in the Cold War: for cexample, during the Cuban mis­sile crisis. .

This question Mr. Salinger treats often ·and fully. Indeed, llae sees it as a major matter

Largest Clas$ NIAGARA (NC)-A total of

615, largest freshman class in its history, was registered at Niag­agara University here in New York. Total registration is ex­DeCted to exceed 2,2OQ.

Soviet courier. How this was of St. Anthony's High School done is described in detail an.d, she will study at Notre Damemakes fascinating reading.

College.'Because Mr. Salinger is wise

enough to attempt no more than Rec , uu"t=rng' PI~n'lJlla White' House press secretary's. . m II U

view of Kennedy and his admin­istration, and, because he has no. inflated sense 6f his 'own' irripOr:.. tance, he' has .produced' Ii .1>ooh:'

, which is never annoying,. never" p,t:etends to .deliver_~ore.than i~ can, and never tempts the read­er to· skip.

Light Touch Mr. Salinger's touch is often

light; Mr. Fay's is almost always so. The Fay- book has a disarm­ing offhand quality; it is like an album of snapshots accumulated over the years and displayed with a running commentary which has none of the formality, of a lecture. ,

Mr. Fay has .produced the book because of a remark Ken­nedy made to him not long be­fore he-died: ~'You'vehad a'neli:­posure of the Presidency that few. people, have ever had. You've got an obligation to write about it."

The two had first met in the Navy in 1942, but 3: friendship developed only after they· had come together in the South Pacific in 1943. Kennedy was "that skinny kid" to his Navy associates, but ,even then some of them were m\l;king book as to the likelihood of his becoming President of the United States.. The reason was that, despite his gaiety, he was concerned about all sorts of national and inter­national problems and organized sort of a seminar to discuss them.

Complete Man Back in the United States be­

,fore the war's end, Mr. Fay'vis­ited Kennedy and his family in Palm Beach, and whe'n, in 1946, Kennedy decided to run for Con­gress, Mr. Fay was summoned from his home in California to help in the campaign. He had a part in an subsequent· cam­paigns, down to the last one. Ap­pointed to a Cabinet position, he was' personally close to Kennedy in the White House years.

His portrait of John F. Ken~

Mdy naturally accentuates the attractive qualities of the man. Mr. Fay was in admiration of these, and never ceased to be so. He considers Kennedy to have been the complete man.

Mr. Fay is a Catholic and has something to say of Kennedy's religion. "Life was full and de­manding and the need for reli ­gion generally seemed remote. But the basic faith acquired as III child in a Catholic family in­stilled in him a total allegiance to his faith that only a real faith beings."

Continued from Page One' ' . There is a declining preStige' of the' priesthood and· religious life among yo~ng men, Father

. Carson indicated. , . . . "Formerly;" the priest was ad~ .

mired as a man of unusual edu­cation and 'culture. This is not so today..As our Catholic people are becoming increasingly well educated, the priest is looked upon merely as a man among men. Frequently, a youth re­gards priests as narrow and not­open'to new ideas."

Regarding the question of materialism, Father Carson said that the prosperity and personal freedom in the U. S. often make the life of the priest or Religious appear unattractive. ,Many youths fear the- restric­

tion of their personal freedom in the priestly or relgious state," ·he observed. .

Vocation directors must rec­ognize that these attitudes exist, and must find new ways of pre­

. senting an appealing picture of the priesthood, Father Carson told the conference.

Fire> KO$zyll'ft$kO Continued from Pafe One

Methodi'Us Seminary, -Orchard Lake, Michigan.

He was ordained in St. MarY'II' Cathedral on Jan. 30, 1960 by 'the Most Rev. Bishop James L. Con­nolly and served for one year as assistant at St. Patrick Church, Fall River, before going as assistant to St. Stanislaus Church onJun~ 12, 1962.

. On Oct. 5, 1962, Father Kas­zynski was named interim ad­ministrator.

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II tbank God ·that 1I have beeD called. to Bel'Ve • the MlIa­sions, or the Ch~rcth througlllout the worl~, !lD8tead or? ollle segmeo\\ of it. It gives one a sense of beiag tr.uly "caUloUc" beeause ODe cares for 11.11. FrOIIll this vantage point one is confronted wWa Christ Olll Calvary, DC» as Be was but as Be Is Dow-4tiU oratlt- , fied. Three classes of mea. rathered beneath His gibbet 011 Golo gatha: three classes of men gatlller today beneath HIs enactfied.

. Body above and below the .3OUl parallel-the antipathetic tile apathetic amd flhe sympathetie. The antipathetic an those who pat Christ to deai:h. The apathetic are the gamblers who "slat and waieheuJ," totally indifferent. The sympathdic are tbose wbe eonsoled: Simon olf Cyrene, the pious women, the three Ma~

JJohn and tbe Roman sold.Ier· who proclaimed C~'s Divilait~.

Today the ant;lpathetic crucifiersare stili numerous. They are n~t only the -Communists but all who neglect their neigb~

all who sin: "Know you not that as often as you sin you crucify Christ anew?" The apathetic also Clln be found in great numbers in all the indifferent who gamble away their lives when they are' often so close to· the impoverished Christ that they can throw their stocks and bonds at Him, prolonging His Redemption. The sympathetic are the millions and millions, not only among the faithful but among the Jews and Protestants who send their little sacrifices to help the famished. Some give as much as lthey. have, like the woman in the tempIE~, others give a-' drink to a thirsty l,eper, lilt:e the soldier 'at tbe Cross, and still others, like the pious womaa. on the waf' of the

.Cross, wipe· clean tbe w~unds of th~. sufferin~ in. mission lanella. . .-. ., "

Canute '1lIlIce 81Uc1, "'If I W: Dl1" ....,. at CaIV...,.~ thev' ·...ould: never.bave·orutiified ChrW."WroDlr! it wOUld hAft been.. DO different.· Christ is iD. I\lrODY uiu the eIld of Ole' world. lV'bM; we do for the pinioned Christ today, erucified in the ·famished. the lePers;' the . iin]H)verish~d. missionaries, tile slum' dweDers"

'. we would hj,ye dOlle fM' Christ ·then.· We walked'to'Go~atIi&' ·that day, 'ancl' the rl)1e that we play is what we do toda7. B'IS' -comfortable' 110 blaDllc the 'Jews ad to blame the' RomaDs, but we are the Jews and we are Romans. Or are we the hob-' women. the Josephs 4ltf Arimathea, the Nicodemases? What we do now for the Body 'of Christ we would have done to Him when Be hung on the Cross. Time ·evaporates. One drama l'bides.

May we invoke' ,·OU as sympathizers for the sake of the cni­cified, the apathetic, the crucifier? We are co-savers of them an. But you ask why we plead. for the poor Christ in the Missions? Because the bun~rY must eat, lepers' must be given sulphone. missionaries must builld and teach each day. The Lord gave YOtl one day of rest a wE!ek; we' give you six days of rest from the needs of the Missiom:. So it is not much bo ask is it? My' deaIl' sympathizer,. wnte' to, me. God Love You!' . ,

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Page 13: 09.22.66

~eport Pf09I'ess For Revised Movie Code

NEW YORK (NC)-AFe­vised motion picture produc­tion eode including a V'OltJ-n­

tary film classification sy-s­tem appeared one step closer tQ reality following a meeting here of the board of directors of the Motion Picture Associatiol1l of America. .

The board issued a statement following its meeting saying the production code had been dis­cussed but no final decision had been reached. It was reported, however, that approval of the revised code was virtually cer­tain.

The proposal for a revised code was submitted to the meet­ing by MPAA president Jack Valenti. There was speculation that Valenti would announce adoption of the new code in an address scheduled for Sept. 30 to a theater owners' convention. here.

General Principles The new code is said to sub­

stitute a set of general principles 101' the detailed guidelines on what is and isn't permitted in movies eontained in the present code.

According to reports, the re­vised document also provides_ that eertain films be designated Hfor mature audiences" ill thetl' advertising and promotion.

Thi& in essence is the approach already adopted by two current eontroversial movies - "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" and "Alfie." Each originallly was de­nied a production code seal ol approval-"Virginia 'Woolf" be­cause of its language and "Alfie" because it treats of abortion­but each was eventually granted a code seal by an appeals board:

It was reported that the MPAA directors set up three committees at their meeting­one to work out final wording of' the revised code, one to investi ­gate the possibility of coopera­tion by exhibitors in enforce­ment of the code, and one to take up the question of obtaining the cooperation of distributors of foreign films in the U. S. in sub­mitting their pictures for code approval. .

Appoints Successor To Msgr. Hochw€ll~t

WASHINGTON (NC) - The executive board of the National Catholic Educational Associa­tion has appointed Father C. Albert Koob, O. Praem, as in­terim executive secretary of NCEA.

He takes over the office of Msgr. Frederick G. Hochwalt, NCEA executive secretary since 1944, who died Sept..5 aboard ship enroute to Italy.

Father Koob, recently began hi~ second five-year term as as­sociate secretary of the NCEA secondary school department. He is a native of Philadelphia, where he served for 19 years in the archdiocesan sec 0 n dar y s<;hools system. He was prior of St. Norbert Priory in Phila­delphia and served on the May­or's Committee on Human Re­lations. He was awarded an hon­orary doctor of education degree ~ La Salle College in 1961.

Rabbi on Faculty CINCINNATI (NC)-The first

.Jewish rabbi has joined tlhe Xavier University faculty hero to teach in the theology depart­ment. Rabbi Alberl A. Goldman of the Isaac M. Wise Temple, will conduct Thursday evening courses beginning Thursday, Sept. 29 on "The Intellectual Development of Judaism as Found in Biblical and Rabbinical Sourcetl" et the Jesuit nnstitu­tiOlIh.

DESCRIBES SUMMER: Mother Suzanne, R.J.M., sixth grade teacher at Notre Dame School, Fall River, tells her class about her e·xperiences with the 'rEAM-UP inner city pro­gram in Washington, D.C. this Summer. This was the second Summer at such work for the Jesus-Mary religious. C

Jesus-Mary Sister' Spends Second Summer

Ministering to 'First Citizens of Church' For-the second year, Mother Suzanne, R.J.M. of Notre Dame Sc·hoo}, Fan River, has

:returned to her sixth grade classroom with much t<> tell her pupils of the way she spent her Summer. Last year and again this year she participa,ted in "inner city" programs in' Washington, D.C. Last Summer's program, known as SEEK, was co-spon80red by. the federal government and. the Wash in g ton Archdio­ . ''1 hopped on the visiting find at home: tin' cans, empty

bandwagon several times, too," ~gg cartons, string, scraps' Qfcese. This year SEEK ex­she continued, "and was again paper and cloth.panded int<> a follow-up pro­ all the richer for these contacts." Music and gym were otherject called TEAM-UP (Training On' the home visits the Sis­ well-attended classes, and ;:)and Enrichment of All for the ters told mothers of clinics and highlight of each week was aMaximum Use of their Poten­ facilities available to safeguard fie1d trip to museums, parks,tial) and once more' Mother .. their children's health. If nec­ and exhibits. Mothers wereSuzanne waa an enthusiastic essary, they pabysat with tots urged to take the same tl'ips asparticipant. while mothers took other chil ­ their children, but a few daysPreceding programs in Wash­ dren to clinics, or took the chil ­ ahead of them, in order to beington and other cities. in which dren themselves. able to share the experiencesa total of 18 Jesus-Mary Sisters At the t h r e e TEAM-UP with them. Here again baby­were involved, a two day sem­ schools, activities were varied, sitters were provided for theinar was held at the Jesus'-Mary said Mother Suzanne. Reading mothers if necessary.. provincial house in Hyattsville,' readiness was emphasized with Parents were considered too inMd., said Mother Suzanne. pre-kindergarteners, a·n d 2rt

Four Sisters worked with ha­ a basic reading course, especial­was a popular subject with allm. the TEAM-UP program, co­ ~ aimed at helping mothers read ages. Here the focus was on sim­ recipes. Following up this proj­operating with religious from 14 ple art projects created out of

G the r communities, special ect, it is hoped· that a Wintermatecials a child eould easilyteachers and Neighborhood high school continuation course

Youth Corps members. Th~ staff will be established for tIDeW@shangton E!eetl'$ mothers.worked wit~ 500 disadvantaged Washington children lllt three "At any rate," says Mother~@l1Illfild~ Memb@D'spublic schools. Suzanne . hopefully, "perhaps

WASHINGTON (NC) -Elec­"All the Sisters felt as I do," the~e mothers with whom we tion of 20 priests to serve on thereported Mot her [)}uzanne, made contact will find a hidden newly-formed arc h d i oc e san"-better with experience and strength when Winter comes, as Clergy Advisory Council haspersonal growth for having their children will in the te-· been announced by Archbishopgiven to the first citizens of the membrance of those wonderful

Church: Christ's poor." Summer days ween we laughed,Patrick: A. O'Boyle of Wash­Home Visits ·ington. talked together, played games

"Our program was geared Eighteen priests will represerrt and read." around reading," said Mother the archdiocesan clergy, and two

will represent religious com­

....E ANCHOR- 13 lhur6., Sept. 22, 1966

See Plans Large !ducataonal TV·

MILWAUKEE (NC) - The Milwaukee archdiocesan depart­ment of education has announced plans to construct the largest private educational TV network m the state of Wisconsin.

The network will be develop­ed over a five-year period in all 235 elementary and 25 high schools in the 10-county arch­diocese. It is expected to be op­

. erational in the greater Milwau­kee area by September, 1968, and in all schools by 1971.. .

The archdiocese of. Milwaukee will underwrite the $800,000 project over' the five-year pe­riod. This will include the con­struction of a studio on a site still to be determined, broadcast

..tower, transmitters, and receiv­ing antennas and converters at each school.

Parishes with schools will pro­vide the necessary in-school! cabling at about $50 per class­room and the. TV receivers, about $150 each.

The programs will be broad­cast at a range of 2500 to 2600 megacycles, a frequency allo­cated for educational use by tilE; Fe.deral. Communications Com­millBion; .

Lutheran on' Staff , .BAD AXE (NC)-New case­worker for Catholic Fami.ly Service is Jean Wedel, a Luth­eran, who will be concerned with child welfare. She is alll alumna of Michigan State Uni­versity.

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Suzanne, "a114 two new features were added. to the SEEK pro­ munities. gram of last Summer: parents ArchbisHop O'Boyle, who call ­visited classes and joined us on . ed for formation of the council trips, and a group of nuns visited in June, said the new council homes. to the end of making "gt;ves wider representation· to personal contact 'with parents." our clergy in discussing prob­

Mother Suzanne's special as­ lems affecting the spiritual and signment was teaching reading temporal welfare of the archdi­to fourth graders, which she did ocese." He indicated that the 1ior six weeks. "I enjoyed every council would have a "consulta­minute of it," she said. tive vote in such deliberations:"

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Page 14: 09.22.66

.:. :' ~~ . .~ ~

i~"'\' • J. ,....

·'THE ~NCHOR-Dioceseof faR River-Thurs. Sep". 22,1966. . ,

Bo@kladerm $frudents 'Offer .: Millte:· ..... ';". ..' ",' , ~ .

Ewa<dl®l7M~e .1([}u@fr .·SumnneQ"~s:· GOlmej .. Ac@d®rri1'WOC V<el@Hr"$ .'!Begun

Bookladen students bound 'to and from school these crisp Fall days give. mute evidencettiatSummer's come and gone once more. But alongiwith scholastic duties, school brings a pleasant renewal o~ :club and sports activities and Diocesan teens are busy'. .' . ..' cking up the threads of' '. ~~w. faces and a new look.await­...1 . .' ::. liig the~ at theopenmgof such projects where th~y ~Ool. Not only did they wel­were dropped last 'Jun~. <>;'CWUe ,a Jiew

Y principal, Sister

At Feehan High in Attleboro.' ,.Mary Mercy, formerly at Mt. St. itVerything points toward .SatiIi../'...lWary· Academy, Fall River, but aay, Sept. 24, when the ~oolb.all;;,,·theyobserved·with.astonishment season will get under wayjVitb!~. ~at'the Sisters of MerCy had lreehan's team meeting TauniOll', <(l~ed new habits during th~ at Haywood Field. Last year ~e=c '"SU:mmer recess. "It's quite:. Attleboro school took "s.~on4;:,change from the traditional· place in the Bristol Cowity~, .J»~,=-k 'and white," said one stu- .' League and students and fac!Jlty .. ·.den~, but added, '$tudent opia­are hoping for nothing less'thanion is mostly favorable." toP rank this year. ,. . ... AlSo new on the Feeqan scene . It's a first for Jesus-Mary· gids ,were "four teachers: Thomas

!)Dd Prevost boys in Fall 'Riyer. Maccarone, science and math; Five Prevost students will lit':' . Ernest Blais, French and, En­«end Latin classes at JMA" wflile '. giish; Sister Maiy 'Oihilda and Chree JMA lassies will venture .Sister Marie Marguerite,busi­Into the masculine precincts ';I)f . Bess, accounting and religion. ~evost for a physics course. The .·.···"':.Some 804 students are enrolled .• JESUS-MARY .LEADERS: 'Leaders' in' student: activities at . Jesus-Mary Academy.,

. pioneers are Kenneth Bi{in,' :'at .the Attleboro school, includ- F II'R' ted f I it Ch I D 1.. ed't h' flames Luddy, Edward McN¢r-' ,in·g. 210 freshmen, 207 'sophs, 203 . a.'. Iver, are ,sea . , rom e:, ar otte uu.~, 1 ,or in: e leo! Jem, school paper,' and acy, Edmond Tremblay and P8Ul'~juniors and'184'lIeiliors; nead'varsity cheerleader; Colette Richard; Missiion Club pJ;'e'sideil~; standing, ThereSa St. Carrier from Prev:ost; a·ti'ci. :·~~,:n.omeroom :a:epreseD~!es'" ri~rre, memory book edito~, and. ~nc~or reporter; Sue Morrissette,' sOdality prefect;' lito­'Yvonne Berger, Ali~J)ulllou~in,:' Homeroom representa!i,:v,es to· ~helle Goyette, basketball caJptain; Suzanne Legarde, l'i'ational Honor Society president; and Susan Lagarde f~fi,1~.Jes,:,,~..:,~e .~eehan student c~un~~lJn-,SuzetteGuilmette, junior varsity "head.. cheerle:wer> , i '; IltIary. .' i.::··.~"· , ": ':':'.:' ·.cl\J.de, for seniors, Pat.rick Blak~ "'.:.:i-

Folk Bible Vigil: ···Daniel Blake, M\cb,ael'~cGrat~":;'1, ',' ,.,

Also a joint effort of the two' Marie Fratoni ·"a·n'd. Robert the Boston Summer School of, Importance of Being Earnest,"'" 'Tests of Educational 'Develop­GChools was a Folk Bible Vigil Blythe. Juniors are' Kathy Catholic Action, writing of a "Golden Boy" :or' "k Patch of ': ment next .week; while' group sponsored by the Prevost Sodal- Grimes, Anthony Gazzola, Mau- constitution, a community Mass 'Blue;", '.", '.;. ,0. -guidance sessions for' freshmen My with JMA girls invited to reen Nolan, David Pelletier and . and we~kly' meetings. A Christ..·' .Also atthe'Attleboroscnool,' . are in progress' luid seniots are

.participate. And the' 'sodaliti<"'WiUiam'Morse; while sophs have mas card sale is planned by the' two" JUne'· graduatE!S, Kathleen already pondering "post· high newspaper, Action, will- be cO- . 'cll'osen 'Kathleen Bolinger, Deb- active sodalists ana. they're also Sullivan' and DonIJta 'Gamache, school plans' under the direction Jssued by the two schools. orah Pestana, Janice Nolan, sponsoring a' weekly hour of entered the Mercy Sisters novi'.. of Sister Mary Frederick, guid­

Prevost's sprightly pap e r .' Carlene Simmons and Ellen adoration. tiate atCumberlandl on Sept. 8. ance counselor. "'The Maple Leaf,". will resume' Brennan;. French cillb members at Pre~ Scholastic Scene '"'ublication this month under the· .. A' music theory course will . vost,have for their 'major project On' thOe' h' l' " t'" F' ·l,OOO-Se«ll11' Church ... th 1 ; . f . t· to th sc 0 as IC scene, ee-,dil'ection of Donald Cummings precede any actual singing for e p .anmng 0 . ~. rIP. e himites will be taking Iowa and, Richard .Desrosiers. Moder- glee. club members at Prevost, CanadIan 'EXpositIon of 1967." , . ".' ., ATHENS (NC) - A church of ator' will be' Gerald Barnwell; . :imnounces B rot h et . Celeste, '..Fernand.Boyer is chairman for . contemporary design, 1a r g e head of the school's English de- . moderator. And Sodality Sum- this ambitious undertaking. New Memoriltll' Han· enough to seat 1,000 persons, is partment. . . ' '. ~ mer projects for the Fall River - ,·Book .. Discussion Club mem- T H Ed being planried for Christ the I,J~ishop .~ee~!1, 8t.ude~ts: h~,. ~ys' .8C.hool included a trip .to hers at Feehlm' are already hard 0: QD10r. lucator" . 'King parish, center for Catholic r.,' •• ' ',' ,,', . ,". ~ ,".', .,.: .' ,c".' . ,",':' .. ;.:,at;'\Y:9r~".~ith·j!JI1ipr~landsen- '·WASHINGTON·(NC)":";"A Do-.... students at Ohio University here.

iors reading "A Bell 'lor Adano, '! "'~nican philosopher 'and' educa'::' .. .. .. r ,

Chicago·:Area''Catholic· 'Colleges',:, ;, :~Enemyq)f. tlIe;f,~Qple," "StatWl\ tor: will be honored! bY'a' me-' .. . . .' Seeke.rs", a?d "Devil'sAdvocate.'! 'morialhall in the $760,000 Ii-.,Ha:ve'RoO'In ,fOr-: ':Mbre'" StudentS " ;'MeanwhHe.<,·fros!t ..and sophs· brary rtow'under'conistruclion at' Where'A' . i. . . 9&R choose "Night Flight," ''The Dunbarton" College here.,·· .

CHICA90 qt9;).~a~~,?~~,an~ ...~. ~ ~I,Iege~age students, .he~ce :'" .' " " ' " '. " ," : " . .GOOD' .NAMS'clther prIvate collegesm tile DOt as many. students are apply.. ',' ~. ., .T~ $65,~ ha,lh'n": be,name4.,-' Chicago area will "have'.<,.!ponh ,ing,"'he said. '. ". ~. "', ',' -, BUSinessman Wins \, for \Fath~rJames C, Kearney,. . lItudents than last year-,a;nd .""." '~~(mdly, LoY~lanow. 'has . p '" P '1' C ,;,<?P~, phil~6Pl1Y prof~~o~"~~.t the, . . <. . . fA:lere is still plenty of room. ' .. " more' room for undergraduates,O~" au s ar,,:: coll~g~.,fr~~U~~7 lIr:'tJ.I~I~ d,eath,.:, .' Means .04:;.: .. ,

Father Robert w.. ·Mulli:gan,.;.. ,since."·a new major .·classrQlim'" : CALCUTTA (NC)-A CalC\1t~: in 1960.. >'.\ '. "" ;.;. ' .. ,

vice president and d~~.offa.c- .. f~~ilifty is opening this Fall,".he:'..ta ,biJ$iness'man won in a raffl~, '. ~,n, 19?~.t~E!p~mun?~a,n ..D,1~tel"" GREA'T, 'DEAC alties at Loyola UniversitY/liaid: ·<~ntinued. . the car presented by Pope Paul. gener:al:... ~nfe.r,~ed on Father,,~ '... , .. · ..IH . .'.'

.. j .; .... 'private institutions in: the ':stat~ .....: .. :'. ~ Lack Money VI to. Mother Teresa, famed ~eli'rn~~·the degree of .MaSi.er of have .9,~00 Place~.llva~\~~l~.;yv~t~ " ~41ally, the ~carcitY'of money~ugos~av-bornhe.ad of the 'Mi.s- S~cred. Theology, ~he,. C!r,der's . GEO ",000 of them In·tlie Chicago"among families of college-bound .' Slonar.Ies.of Chanty. '. highest award.,., area. '.. ." . '. ;,.. .' youth .has forced many students A gIft to t?e Pope ~rom .Notre . .... , '.

Although' the .. enrollment ,at who applied ~ Loyola and were Dam~ ~lumm, the whIte 'Lmcoln ELIECTRICALLoyola as well as that of other accepted to choose to attend.a..~()_nhneQtal ',~.~s used by the

ceolleges is up this year, a com- .tax-suppo.r.t~ .. P~9lic in:i'iiii!Uori', ~P9P~·,p,4iin(·11~s. ~\vi.sit to Bo~;' Cclnt.riacte:trs•. ~~ ..llJination offl\ctors' has helPE;d ~ \.W:i1~r~.tui;tiqIi, ·~~ .. 're~at(y~}Y lo.~,,"' ~ 1?l:lYJ?r.th~~?t:E!m~t~onal EU,cha.- .

,ereate additio~al space, J.l.~ :~\d.:. ,~..-.l,\':a~p'~: MumgaiI'~said he hopes .. :~S~I~,,~?l),~~e~S,lni,l~64,~nd was .. ' . '~"'"

....~~

: '1t ~~..

"First, ~e are experi~ri.ci.ng·a;:' ·1,I11l),ois-will adopt a· scholarship 'glVEmt?:,~?t~er';ft:r~sa to share' 1lemporary decline in the:tiwhbeiprOg~afu:sirhilar to that-now' e~';' . in. ~heI: .'.:~iverS·~V mission' of'

>::,; :,:.:> :iSting· in:. New York and other .1oV;~"';~,," .,:",:.~:: '.::. \~

~OO. Guests Atif~lt~f·"..<,:t~~~~~~a'e;~l~~~~~e:~~tri~~";; Ecumenical' Evening" ... ·:choice.·"1 ~lectin~ their colleg~. .' .. ..,.' .' ,:.~, .... H~ ,. estImated· that Loyollil. COLUI\1:BIA (NC)-8oq:le ,2~;:;.eo·uld·, accOmmodate 500 addi'-'

pers?ns a~tEmc;Ied the. first~ eC'!:".. '.'.ti;C?,nai studen~ .. in the'.colJege .of m~nIcal evemng ever helel m··" arts. '.and sciences, 150 in the this central Pennsylvania·arear. :sehooi at.. businesS administra-

Host to an "ecumenical" .din"·, ··'tioo, and 50 in the ,school of, aer was Father Francis McCul- nursing. . .' )ll)ugh, pastor of St. Peter's par- Other Colleges' ish. Guests included ministers of De. Paul University' had. DO .

the Church. of Christ, the Afri- figur~' .available on 'projected, <l:8n MethodIst Church, the Evan- enr:Ollrilent but Jean'Dervin sec­gelical United Brethren Church, retary·t6 associate registrar'Fred the Presbyterian ,and .Lutheran, J;ledford,.•. was aware of nO'gen­

,ehurches, and a JeWIsh mer:- era!: increase, or decrease from chant. Msgr. William Keeler; 11· last year's 8578 enrollment.: .' vice ch~ncellor of the Ha·r:is;.;·, Rosary C~Uege. expec~;' 5J~ i ,: burg diocese, presented slIdes . ·students; 195 of whom. will, be ;. and ~ommentary on VatiCSlIl. ~men,._and Xavjer:-College CounCIl II. und.ergraduate enrollment is es-

Father McCullough said: on~ timated at 825. including 195. purpose of Jthe evening was to . freshmen. give "fathers· and . mothers an· .: Mundelein College expects, ~ u.nderstanding of what ecwnen- ·total enrollment of 1',340 incltid" ,. ism is abo:u~' so that they can . ing 2'ro freshmen. Both figures

'_~~Jl }~_c~ .~eir ,~d~s." ..ili:."..¥~~~f~~, ~ast year's totals.

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Page 15: 09.22.66

rlf£ ~-9ioceeeof JaIl RiYe)'-lhurs. S6pt. 22" '"' IS~ for World Peace CDatiueed bom Ita8e One the observances through which

these 8J)eCJal ael'Cfses of clew- priests, Religious and laity-and t10n to tile same JD08t BleIlsed especially the innocent in the Vktgtn.", flower of youth and the sick in

In graw tones be immediately . the midst of their sufferings­speDed out the reasons which may be joined together in gen­had lild him to make this appeal: . erous prayer to her who is the

'"FGT we are threatened by a Mother of God and of the mare Imtensive and more disas- Church." trous cal~y that endange1'8 the human famrly, even as a La Sa lette Feast bloody and difficult war is rag­ing particular~ in the areas of Continued from Page One East Asia. So we are urged to eastern France. Six' years· later. eQJltinue even more intensely to in 1852, the La Salette congrega­the extent of our powers far tion was officially sanctioned by peace." . the Bishop of Grenoble.' It is

But'the Pope did not limit his the only male religious commu­reasons for the prayer crusade nity in the Church which owes only to the war in East Asia. in­ its origin directly to an appari­stead he listed a number of other tion. . . things that contribute to the out­ From France" the La Salette brel!k of war and unrest. He . missionaries slowly migrated' to said: all parts of the world, mainly

"Similarly the souls of men because of religious persecutions are deeply disturbed by things. in their native land. In 1892, which all know are taking place they came to' Hartford, Conn. in other parts of the world. FO!!" and established a house. From instance, there are the increasing there, they branched out until :race for nuclear weapons, ·the they now have three provinces' unscrupulous efforts for the ex­ in the United States with head­pansion of one's nation,the _­ quarters in Attleboro, Bloom-' eessive glorification of one's field, Conn., and St. Louis, Mo. race, the obsession forrevolu­ Active in Diocese tion, the segregations enforced, The La Salette, missionaries on citizens, the iniquitous plot..: have been working in the Fall ting, the murder of the innOcent. River Diocese since 1942, when' All of these are potential mate­ they purchased the Attleboro rial for the greatest possible Springs estate which was used tragedy." until 1965 as a major seminarY.

Recalls U. S. Visit It .is now the provincial head­Linking his efforts with those quarters of the Immaculate

gf.. past popes, Pope Paul stated Heart of Mary province. 'be felt he had a "special task, In 1945, the congregation pur­namely that we labor with pa- . chased the Nickerson estate iIll tient and persevering effort for East Brewster on Cape Cod, to the preservation and strength­ house the novitiate year stu­ening of the peace." He recalled dents. In 1953, when the novi­his flight to appear before the tiate was transferred to Center DoeS she'lmow somethingU. N. and his other efforts "to Harbor, N. B., this house waS ward off from men the mon­ used for the college department strous catastrophe which was of the minor seminary and in about to overwhelm them. . 1964, it became a training center you don't...ab6ut Holsum bread? "Now again, therefore, we lift for missionary Brothers. In 1961, up our voice 'with a piercing Bishop Connolly assigned a new cry and with tears (Hebrews 5, parish in Brewster, Our Lady 7), very' earnestly beseeching of the Cape to the care of the those who have charge of the La Salette Fathers. public welfare to strive with . Shrine Opened every means available to pre­ It was in 1953 that the shrine vent the further spread of the in Attleboro was opened to weI-_conflagration and even to extin­ come the numerous pilgrimsguish it entirely." 'who had been previously visit ­

In his appeal to world leaders, ing the facsimile of the La. the Pope warned them to' act Salette apparition site located itA. before it is too late. "We cry to front of the major seminary.them in God's nam.e to stop. Men Through the years, the shrine must come together and work staff has expanded to care fo!!' Hol.um'out concrete plans and terms ill the spirit~al needs of an eve.... ,4

all sincerity. A settlement should : increasing number of pilgrims. ,be reached now even at the 'ex­ The shrine's work is mainly ihe . Pense Of some inconvenienCe or liturgical apostolate centered has it!loss; for it may have ~ be made around the MasS, with sPeeral at':' . later in the 1ra~n of, .bitter tention »eing given to the ~acra:­lIlaughter and involye, great loss. ment of reconciliation. Confes..,

. "But this peace must" rest ,GIl monS are heard year-round frOllil\ :jUstice 'and the liberty Of maD.; .':38 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. daily.. 'JheM__fol'~~a•• " kind and take into account ibe . Other Works , If. S. Dept...AI,lcullure, MIIIlCIbooIl Mo... ...nghts 'of Individuals and ~m:-, munities. Otherwise it· will be lit addition to tile liturgical, shifting and unstabie.~ . . apostolate, some Fathers serve"

Mary as Intercessor as CFM c;haplains. Last;year ~, , " € inema Club w:as started at theTo achieve this desired peace,

shrine,. and this Fail a series ofPope Paul deciared, 'he' Saw four Courses is being offered 0IilBOthing 'better, than for Ctiristians the most important documentsto pray to the Prince, of ;p'eace of the Council, entitled "Vaticanthrough his intercessor, MarY, n at the Grassroots Level".the Mother ,of God, "whom 'we

A new retreat house opened m ' also address as Queen of Peace." the Fall of 1964 with dl staff Gi:The Pope recalled that he had priests and Brothers who con­given to Mary the title of Mother duct retreats for families, highof the Church and. also. that tile school and college students, en-_ecumenical council "clearly re­gaged couples, single men and..ferred to the Rosary, though not women and other groups. Thein express terms" as a satisfac­house has also become the Dioc­tory form of prayer. esan center for the Cursillo'Therefore, said the Pope, let movement. One "cursillo" 0lI'Catholics the world over pray "Little Course' in Christianity"the RoSary that "there may is conducted there monthly. Thisdawn :for all men the light of past Summer, the house hostedtrue peace, of true religious three two-week workshops forpeace also, for unfortunately at J1eHgious Sisten. ' tbe present day not all are pel' ­

miated to profess their J:eligioo fl'eely." Baptism Outdoors

Calling :for a world day of STEUBENVILLE (lNC) - Jim. peace 011. Oct. 4." the Pope told outdoor ceremony was held the bishops: Sunday here in Ohio, when 20

"It will be )'OW' task venerablE youngsters and teenagers wel'El .Holsum .•• brothers, ill keeping with ;pour baptized by Bishop John King commendable l'eligious zeal and Mussio' at Dewly:lounded. st. the bread to bUy I ;,our realization of the impor­ Mark's missiGll _ 88burbaD -tance CIII tbia aDPeal. to preseRbe Cik>lucbl. .

o lll66-THE W. £. LQHG c:o.__,

Page 16: 09.22.66

••••

16 THE ANCH,OR-:--{)'iocese of Foil River-Thurs. Sept. 22, 1966

Lo)%. ~~@croC{ffitJr u 'VI@~@[Jfifr l@Ul)@

Fett®[[ (L~ti~ ,t?krogr®~~ I, Edited by Jolm J. Considine, M.M._

From "Social Revolution in the New Latinu America" - "

It would not be just to say, writes Rafael Caldera, that 1!mtil Fidel Castro seized pOWer in Cuba nobody in the United States or in Europe cared about the future of the nations of Latin America. But it is not an exaggeration to admit that only after the establish­ industrialized ~r rapidly devel­Inent of an avowedly marx­ oping nations simply moved in nat-leninist government on to replace the ancient metrop­

olis. Through commercial trea­that beautiful' Caribbean iii­ties, we were kept chained to· land, major efforts have been the production of raw materials,initiated to study and understand tJlUS assuring the industrial 'na­'the serious tions of permanent sources forproblems posed their own development andIty our social progress.reality; to anal­, When the wars of indepen­yw and inter­dence ended, the new republicspret the diffi ­were overwhelmed by debts con­ceulties 0 v e r tracted to finance the pursuit ofwhich our polit ­liberty. The history of theseical organization loans is fraught 'with pain forhas stumbled; to the nations of Latin Americaformulate plans and with shame for the capital ­fOI cooperation, ist countries who brazen'ly exer­rooted in that 'cised the ignoble art of usury.internation

al solidarity by virtue or' which we are entitled to ask a i'evisiooof 'systems and a readj6sl'me;ll of 'reiations in search of a univerSal .wmmon good. . '. .. Twerity politi'cally sovereign ·entitles, almost all of tfiem lih­el'ated through heroic efforts at the' beginning of the nirieteeri.tb 'eellt'ury, have been stn.igglillg more" than' a century for .tile achievement of political stahility and the solid establishment of 3lII. efficient democratic system,

On February 15, 1819, Liber­ator Simon Bolivar, addressing the legislators gathered at the Congress of Angostura wbich was to give birth to Great Co- . lombia, pointed out the need to seek a government capable of' achielting the greatest possible happiness. the greatest possible social security and the greatest possible political stability.·

The objection, by his OW" def­inition, was not purely of :;t, p&­

litical nature or, ,eVElli. less, ideo,.­logical.

Eight years. later, in a letter addr:essed to Bolivar, his fellow countryman Andres Bello; the greatest Latin American schol­

. aI', the centennial of whose death was commemorated in 1965, 00­

· served tpat "the ~iability of in­stitutions in circumstances such as our does not depend so much 1m their intrinsic goodness as on-' extrinsic supports, such as those ' lent by the personal qualities of the individuals. who administer_ them.':

He added that, with the wounds of the recent war still open the first 'objective was "to establish public order onfGunda­

. establish public oredr 011 foutlQa.,. tions which, inspiring cOnfi­dence, .will make our- devastated fields, our commerce and our revenues flourish anew."

Wea!t lEconomies What a hard task it was,' in­

deed, at a time when the world was overrun by the most unfet­tered individualism, and the Latin American republics, fierce­ly attached ,to their political independence, still lacked the essential economic foundations to set in motion their own devel­opment!

Organized with parallel econ­omies, there had been no inter­change among them nor was there any stimulus toward such. As long as they depended on a decadent colonial empire, the metropolis . was the natural center for intercommunications and thefr market for the raw materials that were theil' only means of subsistence. ,

Their set>aration from the em­pire was attained through the .....ars of independence, but oUAe«'

'1

,The effectS of these debts on our precarious fiscal' structure, 'on our feeble" ~dmiI1isttative morality, on our; political stabil ­'ity and evenoIi' our forinal sov­ereignitywere felt'in many na- . tions of out continent well into the present' century:

At the same' time Iberoameri~

can man, once charged wJth ,his 'bis ,own responsibility,· ,con­

. ·:fr;onted a task of a magnitude ~ompletely disproportionate to his scant resources.

Uncolonized Areas The territory remained large­

ly to be colonized. 'Even today, almost eyery one of the nations of Latin America has gr.eat ex­tensions of land still uiicolonized.

In the case of my country, Venezuela, almost half or Ott£

territory is practically uninhab­ited; in some sister republics 'the' prollomon is even greater.

While the coastal regions of the ,Atlantic, the Pacific, the Carib-' bean and the Gulf of Mexico are densely populated, still the heart. @f the continent is virtualJ<!) un­explored .and beckons to the spirif of adventure offering an 'incalculable reserve of hope,

Yet there are those who, be­lie~e. and dec;lare, in :~he 'f,ace of our demographic explosion, that 'the remedy is to limit the popu­'lation instea'd of undertaking with courage the task of placing t~ world' at the service· of man; there are those, as Paul VI has noted, who wish to remedy the scarcity of bread on the table, not by adding more bread, but by trying to seat ,fewer people at .the taQle.

Tho s e immense territories, with abrupt impassable m()un­

,tains and torrential rivers, Of­fered a 1m 0 s t insurIl')ountable barriers before technology intro­duced the bulldozer and the jeep. These lands were also in the thrall of endemic tropical diseas17s.

Malaria issued a constant warning to man that he should not dare to penetrate them, The an.opheles mosqu~to jealo'usly 'guarded the heartland for the future generations. If we had mines, we lacked the capital and the technology to exploit them by ourselves.

If the fruitful land produced large crops, their processing al­ways remained out of our. reach. Meanwhile the oscillations of the market in the great industrial centers--fluctuating in response to the sacrosanct law of supply and demand-led to commotions in our fragile colonies that were even greater than the convulsive tremors resulting from political ambitions and 1lISurpations lrf power.

PLANNER: "Taking care of decaying neighborhoods,

'housing and people is little more than an application of. the spiritual and corporal works of mercy," says Fr. William J, Downing" S.J., who in addition to teaching city planning, practices hiS .specialty as a consultant to the suburban Maryland COU'll­

,ties adjacent to Washington, D.C. NC Photo.'

Pre'!ate rDeplQres All Vflc~ence , WASHINGTON (NC) -' The

archbishop of Washington cham­pioned the right of people who believe they are being treated unjustly "to demonstrate peace­fully and orderly," but deplored "violence either by blacks or whites."

Archbishop Patrick A. O'Boyle . stressed that every man, black' 01' white, is obligated in C@H­

science to follow the example M the Good Samarita~

"Let it be understood that I a~

not and cannot condone violence either ,by blacks ·or whites," Archbishop O'Boyle' said. "Ac­cording to our laws, people whe­

,believe they are being treated' unjustly have the right to, dem­onstrate peacefully and orderly. But this is a far cry from stating, as one leader was reported in the press to have said,·'It' we .eo not, obtain our rights, we wi·il· burn down the city." ­

"Thoughtful' and responsible leaders repudiate this kind of irreSponsible incitement, a Ii ci stand for demonstrations that highlight· injustice, inequity· and dire poverty, thereby bringing to the Christian conscience the desire-and, more important, the action-=-to eradicate these evils. Every man, black or white, is obligated in conscience not to pass by his neighbor in need."

Penders C!hlaUenge To .Bus lLegaslation

HARRISBURG (NC)-Between 90,000 and 100,000 nonpUblic school students in Pennsylvania' are riding public school buses for the ,second year-while wait ­ing for a court ruling on whether they can .continue to do so.

Legislation enacted last year gives nonpublic grade school pupils living, a mile-and-a-half from their schools and high school students' who, -li ve two miles from their 'schools the right to ride public school buses.

However, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has 'under' ad­visement taxpayers' suits chal­lenging the constitutionality of the school bus law. The suits are sponsored by the American Civil Liberties Union, the American Jewish Congress and Protestants and Other Americans United· fOIl:' Separation of Church -and Sta!4.

'i<eJ1@$ P[j'Da~$t O~f®~§ Ambulance ~®[j'VD(f;® fr@ A~aii ~@ rO$hoo~ers'

SAN ANTONIO· (NC) -The people of Villa Coronado flock­ed 'to the streets to see Father Laurence Murtagh, assistant pas­tor of San Francisco de la Espada mission parish, driving his new­est purchase--the Espada ambul­ance. ,

" Father Murtagh eonverted a station wagon'into an ambulance to serve the poor in: his parish. The sick and injuredl have often had to use the floor of trucks for transportation to :the hospital, Father 'Murt~lgh explained. He added: "I knew there. was, a more Christian way to do ijUs."

Emphasizing the Church's mis­sion to llerve the people by pro­viding physical as well as spir­itual aid, the priest said Gne of the most pressing, needs of his parishioners is an ambulance. The Espada mission,' surrounded by the migrant setuements of

Villa Coronado, is located. om' a main' highway, far from the city's hospitals.

The conversion of the sta­tion wagon into an ambulance involved installation of a 'siren, a flashing Hght,· oxygen, a home­made stretcher and other medi­cal accessories. The State Health Department granted a special li ­cen~ and insurance for the new­ly equipped vechicle. When Father Murtagh raises the, $220 necessary for a two-way radio, be said he hopes to receive calls on the pOlice band.,

Father Murtagh stresses t~t

the ambulance is available 24 hours a day as a free Christian service to poor persons in the area, on both sides of the ~rder. Father Murtagh cited the work

'of the Daughters of Charity nurses at EI Carmen in helping the poor of the mission.

S-T-R-E";'T-C-H YOUR IVIIS$'ID~ D·DL.LAR

TIltE HOLY FAlHEll'S MISSIon AID 1'0 THE DAIENTALCHUACN

!FATHER How can you get more for your mission dollars' ANDREW ••. In EraviperoOT, south India, only $2,100 (the

IN cost of the materials) will build a parish center INOM, and. Ii three·room house for Father :Aridrew . LIKE Pulhenparampil, who lives and sleeps In the

NATIVE cramped church sacristy and has nowhere' to SISTERS, ,teach the children catechism, "Their parents '. MAKES will do all the construction free of cttarge, if. MISSION- someone will give the materials,H Father Andrew

GIFTS GO

FAR

ImoD BA.ft:GNNS

SELF-HELIlt IN

BETHLEHEM

'ADOPT' 'rHIS

DEAf-MUTE

says. ''The job can be finished in five or sHe months." ••• 'nCherupusham, India, ten Holy Family Sisters are getting. ofdb8fore·their time . training chifclten to be India's teaders.tomorrow. ''nle Sisters, too, need a pfacet\) tive-aml $3,100 ,will build it, and completl:t their school itS ,we," It's a special ba~gain In CheruJ)U5ham. a c.ommunist stronghold, wherlt people other· wise would be Communists. • • • That's ,why ;Pope Paul :begs everyone· to share Goers bf~ iings with the poor, We'lf send your gifts In imy lsmount ($100, $50,$25, $15, $10, $5, $2) b 1tflem through the Holy Fattler's office, and we'Uerect a plaque 1ft the native language ask- . ingpl'8yers forever for you a~ v""'c:.;

, ...., ~~10 w'" feed a family of Palesi:llle I<"LI~S fot cme 'mmlttl. In thanks we'll' send you an Olive Wood Rosary from the Holylanrf.

'e' 1'0 enable· refugee boys tit become- s""."uppoft. il!lg.atS~t81's(St. Joseph's trade), salesian· father Uno Russo IABethletlem needs k1mber (totel, cost: $600) forworktabfes, desks, stools. etc. '$38 will buy the tools each boy must I]ave~

".liaf'mute Gttassen sallah, 10 years old, ia iEl8mlngto 'talk' at fa~ Ronald- Roberts· "Boys'Town of Silence" near Harissa, lebanon.

DJOY!1ll.iiketD 'adopt" Goossen, pay Ulls expenses ($10) month.by-month7 We'll send you his picture, and }'4H1 may wrfte to hIm.

: 0 _

IFd.Rr-~~=~=~========_

P1«1aSl!l ~'f4""IL"'=''''''''' ................"''''''...........,...................'''''''-.. return coupcm

with ],Olllf O,MtSV:offerins ~=========~=-

THE CA'lHD,U@ Il'4lllUUt BD;\S'lI' WBLF~1lI1 ASSUCBATID.

NEAR EAST .MIS·SIDNS . IFRAt4CIS CARDINAL SIPELLMAN, President MSGR. JOHNG,'NOLAN, National Secretary Write: CAmcM.IC NfAR lEAsT WELFARE Asso1:. 330 MadIson Avenue'New York, N.Y. 10017 Telephone: 212/YUkon 6-5840

Page 17: 09.22.66

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17 The· Pari~h Parade ST.·FRANCIS XAVIER" ST. MARY'S,' HYANNIS NORTlII ATTLEBORO

The Women's Guild will hold T~ Confraternity of Christian its first meeting of the new sea­ Doctrine School of Education son tonight in the lower church will sponsor a "Deorama" sem­baH. Featured will be a covered- • inar from 4:30 to 8:30 Monday dish-supper, beginning at 7. Ail night, Oct. 3 at La Salette members and prospective mem­ Shrine, Attleboro. Freshman and berS are asked to brffig a favor­ sophomore students in public ite dish. Those attending are also high school wit. be -in attendance reminded to bring their own and tliesession will J"eplace ~ place setting. Executive 'board regular doctrine class for' the' members will furnish a aessert. week.

Installation of officers will Theme ef the evening, to be follow the supper and will take conducted by La Salette Fathers, place in the church, climaxed by will be "Come Alive, You're in :Benediction. Members will then . the Deorama Generation," Head­return to the meeting hall for a ing subjects for discussion will business session at which plans be "Is God Dead?" Mass and a for the year will be discussed. supper in the shrin'e cafeteria

will close the session apd trans-ST. MATHIEU, portation to and from the shrine FALL roVER 0 will be provided students. : The CYO will hold its first A program for junior and meeting of the season at 7:15 senior students will be an­

MOTHER M. AJIlGELINIE

Mother Genera I In New Telfm

Rev, Mother M. Angeline Teresa, foundress of the Car­melite Sisters tor the Aged and Infirm, was unanimously Fe­

elecled Mother General of the 4lOmmunity at its fifth general chapter, held this month at St. Teresa's Motherhouse; Avila on the Hudson, Germantown, N.Y.

M9ther Angeline Teresa has served as Mother General since she founded the community in ]9~. Authorization for her re­

.election was received from Ilde­br.an<kl Cardinal Antoniutti and was read to the chapter by Most Rev. Edward J. Maginn, Apo­stolic Administrator of Alb.any, who presided at the meetinng.

In the Fall River Diocese the Carmelite Sisters staff the Cath­4>lic Memorial Home, Fall River; .and Our Lady's Haven, Fair­haven.

Assistants General Four Assistants General to the

superior were also named at the chapter. They are Mother M.

..Bernadette de Lourdes, first assistant; Mother Mary Bren­.tan, second assistant; Mother M. JIegina of the Holy Angeles,

.third asistant; Mother M. AI­.. oysius, fourth assistant. Mothell 'M. Brendan was also elected. secretary general; and Mother M, Gabriel treasur~r general.

A Chapter of Affairs :followed the elections with emphasis on

,-updating the community eon­stitutions in accordance with di­rectives -of Vatican Council n.·

Fifty-five delegates repre­sented houses of the community in the United States, Ireland and Scotland.

Care of the- Sick

The Wlltite Sisters, have re­

turned from tt.ei, _,nua'

: retreat ~ ':Ire ready to re­

sume their visiting and car­

ing for the sick.

ANYONE WISHING THEIR

AID, CAU

Hoty Ghost Convent

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Foil River-Thur. ~2, 1966

Newm@n' $ Aim of r'~M~~tion

Emphasized by MC[!A Head CHESTNUT HILL (NC} --.:. In an age of unparalleled

speed of change in educatioJl "t.he level of education whicl1 has recently undergone and wiJI eontinue to undergo the most dramatic, even convulsive, change is higher education,'" , d~iared Father M~chaeI P. .the mrect pur~se of the spon­'yalsh, S.J., preSIdent of soFin.g Church is the sanctifiea­Boston Co~Iege, to the facul- tiOJl ·of its members," he said tv at the formal opening of He 2dded that failure to make the academic year. these distinctions causes confu-

Father Walsh, who is also ~ion. in _the operat~on of Cath~lie president of' the college and mstlt~tions ot. hlg~er learnn~g university division of the Na- and]~ the evaluatIon of th~JE tional Catholic Educational As- effectiveness. sociation noted the "mountain- Father Walsh said that movall ous problems" facing American and spiritual formation have MI.

universities in coping with large Jmportant part in the total edun­numbers of students and in cation process, but cited Cardi-. maintaining the i r autonomy nal. Newman's insistence that while' increasing amounts of the primary purpose of a univer­their support comes from "gov- sity is intellectual formation. ernmental and other non-disin- "As Newman clearly stated, our ierested sources." business is to lead men to ~

The Jesuit said Catholic insti- -know!edge, not di~ectly.to f~rge 1ut.ions share these problems men mto apostles or samts, be with all American universities aec:-Iared, in addition to their own unique 'Religion Has Place f1roblems. -rhere is an urgent need' te

"In Catholic academic circleS' J)r4>vide in a Catholic colle'ge OJ. there i6- a soul-searching * * * UI'li\'fl'Sity places where a com­such as we have not engaged jJlJmmily of Christians can oome since the founding of .Cat.holic together in free and open re»­higher education on this conti- gimn; life," the speaker <ilsseriei.l. nent," Father Walsh said. He tlOinted out the Feeeni

'"The Catholic university's pri- g~-o\\·th of departments &f FeU· mary objective is the same as l!l~ 4)J) secular campu~.afl that of every true university- 4""ldence of the fact. that ~ellgJ.OIl the intellectual development of does ,have a place In uruverSJty its student. It is in fulfilling this e~ssrooms. special character that the Cath- Faiher Walsh listed- thn>e olic university is distinguished fUJlctions peculiar to CathoJie from all other organizations and Yfliversities: to move the stu­agencies under the auspices of den's "from I>e9ple who ba:ve tile catholic Church." the4r values by tradition to pee-

Direet Purpose "Ie who have a reflective grasJJ . , on t.heir values;" to be "the plat=E

!he r~nson d etr~ of ~he ~aUl- where the Church does its think­~bc ~nege or umve~slty IS ~ot mg;" and to "present an inle­Jdentlcal or coterm~nous With graf.ed view of the world," bridg­that of the Catholic Church, ing the gap between the sacrOO Father Walsh asserted. and the secular orders.

"'The direct purpose of the Catholic university as regards its

.students, therefore, is the civili ­aation of intelligence, whereas

. Enters' Marists Joseph ArSenault, 12 Worthen

St.reet, Swansea, is among young men entering the 1967 novitiate czlas.s of the Marist Fathers in Rhinebeck, N. Y. After one year, famous for JM>viees profess vows and are stationed at the Marist College QUALITY and Q n d Seminary, Framingham, while attending classes at Bos­ SERViaIloR C&Hege.

DONALD J. EMOND, M.5.W., A.e.s.w. announces the opening of his ,office

for Professional Counselling :,in

Marriage Problem~. Child cnd Adolescent Behaviot:

l _ and Personal Adjustment

Tel. 824-7262 Hours by appointment

- 26 TAUNTON GREEN, TAUNTON, MASS.

SHELL IIPremiumil Heating Oils DADSON OIL BURNERS ,~j)CC1~~

'''-Hour Oil Burner Service ~i:fe ---C~ SHE ~

femous leoding HARD COAL =::.~ ~\1 • JiI, .: HEW ENGtAND COKE ~v.~V~

Tuesday night, Sept. 27. Subse­quent meetings will be held the second and fourth Tuesday of each month. Future plans in­elude a day of recollection, tour of TV Channel Six and a Hal­loween party for October; a rec­reational meeting and a living rosary for November; and a cul­tural meetiRg and Christmas party for December.

CYO officers are Lorraine

Deslauriers, presideRt; Pauline Dumas, viee-president; Deflise Lauzier, secretary; Ron a'l d Gagne, treasurer.

Projects planned for tbe year include a boys' basketball team and a cheerleading corps.

SACRED HEARTS, NO. FAIRHAVEN

Ladies of St. ARne will re­eeive corporate Communion Sun­day morning, Sept. 25 at II o'clock Mass.

Monday, Sept. 2fi, tile first meeting of the season will take place in the church basement. Preceding the 6:30 session, a chicken pie supper will be served. to members.

ST. JOSEPH, FALL RIVER

Cub Scouts will bold a ~k

meeting Tuesday night, Sept. 27. Women interested in serving as den mothers are ~ed. to 0011­

Wet Mrs. Ma.cDonald. The parish adult theology

dass will begin ~i~s for the Fall season at 7:30 Tuesday mght, Sept. 27 in the eighth ,rade classroom of the school.

Christian Doctrine classes for ehildren in grades one through six will begin following ~:15

Mass Sunday morning Sept. 25. Grades seven through. 12 will meet Wednesday, Sept. 28, with Ilrades seven through nine meet­ing at 2:45 and grades }fi

through 12 at 6:4S. Boy Scouts will meet tonight.

IMMACULATE CONCEPTION, FALL RIVER

The Women's Guild announces its installation banquet for 7 Wednesday night, Sept. 28 at the Grist Mill. Busses will leave the church yard at 6:30 for those needing transportation. Guest speaker will be Dr. An-nabelle Melville, Commonwealth Profes­sor of History at :Bridgewater State College. In charge of ar­rangements are Mrs. Ann TW'­lIer, Mrs. Helen Cleaves and MI1'Il. Georgette Laberge.

liT. HYACINTH, JilEW BEDFORD

A testimonial buffet wtll .• held at 7:30 Sunday night, Sept. 25 in the parish ball ill honor elf Rev. Herve· Jalbert, former

nounced at a later date. ST. ANNE, FAI.L RIVER

Volunteers are requested from among parishioners to supervise lunch and recess periods and to assist in the library of the paro­chial school. They may contact Sister Marie of the Eucharist, prineipal.

The Council of Catholic W.omen will SJ)OI1SOr a bowling, league,

.to meet at 6:4:! Wednesday eve­nings at Walko Bowling Alleys,Globe street. The unit will Gold a cakE sale Saturday, Sept. 24 at Edgar's department store, ~ Ilitming at 19 in the mortling.Members are ~uested to bring. donations of pastries or -candy to the store or to contact ctiainnen Mn. Lucina LeBoeuf, Miss Edna Boutin or Mrs. Claire Melanoon if pick-up is needed.

The next council ~ing is set for Monday, Oct. 3 in -the school baH and will take the form. 4>f an ,open meeting for parish women. FaHand Wiflter fasbions will be shown and a musical program"will be offered by Adam Furgiuele.

Thursday, Nov. 17 the couneil . will be hostess to the District C4>uncil of Catholic Women in the parish auditorium. A Christ ­mas party is planned for Mon­

. day, Dec. &. -, " VISITATION GUILD, NORTH EASTHAM

Guild members will reeeive eorperate Communion at 8:00 "'lass Sunday morning, Sept. 25. A chicken pie supper is set for 6:30 Saturday night, Oct. I at Eastham Town Hall. Mrs. James &wRlan, chairman, win be aided by Mrs. John Connors.

A FUmmage sale will take place at the church hall on Mas­sasoit Road beginning at l4)

Saturday morning, Oct, 15. Any­one wishing to donate clothing may contact Mrs. Edmond Hebe~ or any guild ~ember.

HOlLY NAME, FALL RIVER

Christian Doctrine'classes for public school students in grades one through 12 will begin Mon­day, Sept. 26.

Mission' Sessions Rev. !Robert Campbell, M.S.,

and Rev. Joseph (;()sselin, M,S., La Salette Missionaries stationed at the Provincial House, Attle­boro, are attending the 17th an­nual 'meeting 01. ·the Mission Sending SoCieties in Washington.

Poverty iJl the theme of' the convention at which Most Rev. Fulton J. Sheen, National Dir.ee­tor eI. the P~atiOlJ. of. the Faith,. will IDe the ~ ~elF.

pastor, and Rev. Rene- Gautbifl. former assistant. Fell R;yer Guild .... SECOND STREET

. . ~"'''''''h ,...,'~ Wilfred Rousseau win be mu­

ter of ceremonies, Mf'S. Laut-etta Vaillancourt is in charge fII. a

Fall JtiYel' ~ Guikl ... tbe BtilMi will. bold _ tiM ~ eI. tbe IeasOIl Sund8t'

Mll IIYER~ MASS.

l.I,,...,.... 672-4472 GLEN' COAL & OIL CO;, Inc. buffet, and Mrs. DoftakI Payette ~ ill a .1CNJePh'fl 5choN wiJI read an address irJ. tAe ~ _ the WOJDell ef the pan.L

WI, foiIowin. Neary Mod. 8ft,..1Ii .......~

Tel. WY 6-1271 New leclfortf

Page 18: 09.22.66

• •

may still enroll if they get in eouch 'witli their social security ~ice b.efore Get. 1, according 60 ~ Msgr. Harold A. Mur·ray. director of the Bureau of Health 'and Hospit~!s,NaiionalCatholic ;Welfare Conference.

The:" monsignor says all per­lJ9I\S 65 or over before March of fiIliB' year who, because of phys- '\ . ~I or 'mental .condition, misun­derstanding, or misinformation 6liled to sign up before the close Sf the first enrollment period on May 31, are entitled to enroll be­

~"een now and the end of this month. . '

Their protection will begin \he sixth month following their enrollment, Msgr. Murray notes. But if they delay bey.ond Sept. 00, their next chance to sign up :will not come until Oct. 1, 1967 and their premiums will be slightly higher, he added. .

Persons 65 and over are auto­matically eligible for hospital in­surance under medicare. Those who are not social security ben­eficiaries need only give their local social security office proof ~ their age.

But the voluntary medical in­Surance part, of medicare-the' part that pays toward physi­<lians' and surgeons' bills and the eost of many other medical ser­vices in and out of the hospital - is voluntary and the older person who wants this protec­tion must sign up during a spe­&lied" enrollment period.

.For those who. reached 65 be­fore March of this year, the ini­tial enrollment· period ended May 31, with a four month grace period~until Oct. I-for those who missed'the May 31 deadline fIJI' a "good cause."

People reaching 65 on March II. or later must 'sign up in oneof· the three months just before ' the month ,of their, 65th birthday if they want their protection to begin as soon as they reach 65. ' If thEW sign up in ~e month they. become 65 or one o~ the follpwing three months, ,their, protection does not begin until , ~e to three months ·afterward.

Those who delay ,past their' first enrollment period will not ,get anothe:r chance until the ' ,next general. enrollment period,

.;:. -'::ttte last three months of 1967 !I n d subsequent odd-numbered. years-with their coverage be:. ~ giOliing the following July 1.

Of the 19.1 million people ia Gte country who are 65 or over, IIlSgr. Murray said, 17.3 million -more than nine out of io-' have enrolled for,the voluntary Gloctor bill insurance to supple­ment their basic hospital insur.:. ance protection under medicare. About one million others have notified the Social Security Ad­ministration ~hat they did not want the additional protection. The remainder did not give notice either.way. ' , Both those not heard from and

those who originally turned down the chance to enroll should get in touch with the' nearest social security office this month

WASHINGTON (NC) --------------------------------,----------------.,lome elderly people who missed the May 31 deadline :fur signing up for the doctor Wll insl.lrance part of medicare Open Daily 9 A.M. to 1'0 P~M.the Fumiture Wonderland

THE ANCHOR­18 CulturalThurs" Sept:, 22, 1966, PORTLAND ENC)"':-An emer­

gent humanism and',a stronglyC~urch Hospital. developed cultural program are

challenging the dominance ofHead Advises science in the Soviet Union, ac­

-,cording to a Maxyhurst CollegeOn' Medi~@rre nun, recently returned from an

Smart 'Contemporary Design -.Maxi..... S~age Space

• 72 inch Triple Drener wit~ lFramed Mirror

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.lItIftViluell111 illl~@\t 'hi!ml3Jif they wish to sign up for the doctor bill insurance under med­ ,~ ~. @J' 1fUn«»M0 icare, Msgr. Murray said.

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, iProgram Challenging Role of ~5cience In Russia international congress of psy­ countries-to ,attend the eon.;. Mary nun who delivered a paper . chologists held there, gress, in Moscow. The U.s. '1On­ at the congress, said interest ill

Sister Miriam Dolores, of the tingent of 1,000 psycho,logists in­ her "humanistic approach" was college's psychology department, cluded 'several priests. and Re­ symptomatic of "a !leal new was one of 6,000 ·participants ligious, all of whom t;paveled in opening" in the primarily Pavlo­from around the world-includ­ secular clothing. ' Vian emphasis oil Soviet psJ' ­

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Page 19: 09.22.66

High' Sc:hool, E-Ievens ,- O'pen_ ' Sche,dules "on Stmturday;

:By FNd &t~ ~ mgbts 'ltPe getting e.risp, the days, are getti1lfg

shorter; one c&D oecasionally see a tree with turning leaves that dots the coontryside. These things :remind us that Fall is just &round the corner. 1£, <me WIOuld need further remind­lng he would only have 00 . drive by a roeaI high school take the title but I say that they It WQuld not be difficult to will be fortunate if they get by

find the £lthletes preparing tlIil; tough ~~~~~en::::eg

for their opening football game. Not so difficult to pick is Dur­In all likelihood the ebeerleaders fee of Fall River over New Bed­would be found !ord Vocational in Fall River Sat­practicing on urday. Last year Voke finished the school lawn with a 2-7 mark, the best record· and the band in seven years. It had taken the W 4) t:l I d b e IlChool ,three years to win as­marching in the 'many games prior to laSt sea­par kin g lot. son's effort. However, it looks, Yes, football like I) return to old ways for and Falll (the the Vokesters; With only 15 men two are insep- on the squad what is a coach to arable) ore jusi look for? lU'ound the cor- Durfee last season finished in nell'. Without any a poor fourth position. But thifl doubt this sea- is another year and things cer­oon will prove as interesting as tainly look quite different. The last yearB. HiUtoppers have a veteran at all

There are new players, new, backfield positions. Tom Botelho coaches and even a new league QB,' Joe Roque FB, and Carl -the Clllpeway Conference. As Fitzgerald and Tom Doyle at the opening games ~ scheduled halfback spots give the Durfee for this Saturday, what mi,ght squad ~ backfield second to some o.:f ~ outcomes be and DOne. what teams shape up as tl1e pre· Coyle To Be Tested season favorites?

Brlston County League The last county team in a~tion First of all in the Bristol Saturday is Coyle of Taunton.

The Warriors will host oBourneCounty League. Attleboro woo - last year's champs but from all in a non-league .tilt. Coyle had

appearances the Bombardiell'1l one of its poorest records in his­~ry last year and the Warriors

will have a rough time defend-, are determined not to let it ing their crown. The Jewelry City combine lost 18 lettermen happen again. and has only two returning. Thill Last year was a rebuilding one certainly leaves a gapping hole 'and Coach Lanagan hopes to and it is doubtful as to whether reap the profits from it this or not this hole can be filled this eampaign. This opening game

will be a good test for Coyle year. as the Bourne Canalmen have

Attleboro opens Saturday byhosting Foxboro in a non-league' been quite strong in their league. encounter. The Bombardiers fin- tor the past two or three years. tshOO last season with a 7-2 rec- New Bedford High shoots to ord and they lost only their first improve last year's 6-2-1 mark game to Foxboro and last game and to cop the Suburban League to North Attleboro. Chances are title. Outlooks are quite opti· that Ute Attleboro eleven willi miStic from the Crimson eamp start the season ill the same and spirits are high for the m'anner as last year. opening game as the Crimson

Feehan and North Attleboro hosts Rindge Tech of· Cambridge finished seeond aDd third Ie- Saturday. The hOlJle town forces

JIhould be rated as favorites.spectively last year and it' could ' , well be that tl)ese two rivalll' Na~y LeattUe will be the leading eandidates Now that ther~,are,'Ooiy foW' for this season's ehampionship.' teams in the Narl-y Football loop Feehan Higb ot.-Attleboro h,as 11' things are quite limited and all lettermen _ returning from last -teams had to fill the remainder year and '"North has 14. ThUll of the shedules with odd games. both squads are experienced. In some instances te~'are play·

In a pre-season j,amboree last ing opponents they h~ven't facecll week Feehan looked strong de- in 25 years. fensively as Peter Cosgrove, The Narry loop shapes up to Bruce MacDonald and Dave be a race between Somerset and Kirby looked impressive. On ·the 'Case'of Swansea. which: won't be other hand North appeared to settled until Thanksgiving Day. have some straightening out to On the other hand the third. 'do with its defensive unit. How-, place spot between Dighton and ever, North's quarterback, Steve Seekonk will be settled by the' Stack promises to be one of the .second week in October alnd best signal callers in the area. lInost certainly 'will go to

Feehan will host Taunton Sat- .Dighton-Rehoboth. urday. Taunton last year was to . Thus the only Narry game have been a contender; but the Saturday is Seekonk at Somer­Feehan-ites knocked them off in set. No sense "Qeating around the . the first game and they never' bush - it should be Somerset fully recovered. The Taunton 'without much of effort. Tigers have lost the powerful Case will be at Franklin and running backs, of last year but the Cardinals will try to ~ual

have something new in their use their total amount of 1965 vic­of the single wing. Yet, it will tories by winning this one. take more than a new offense if Dighton will have a non-league the Herringtowners are going to game by visiting Bristol, R. I. down the Feehanites. 'In other .games Plymouth-

Stang a Threat Carver is at Bridgewater-North opens Saturday by host- Raynham in the Old Colony

ing Stang of Dartmouth. The League, and Norton at Holliston Stang club last season lost more in the Tri-Valley loop. games (four) than it had lost in In the new Capeway Confer­four years preViously (two). It cnce, which replaces to some de­is this writer's opinion that the gree the old Tri-County Confell'. Stang team wil: be returning to <ence, it appears as though Dart­its old ways this year. mouth High and Lawrence High

The Spartans have lost only of Falmouth must be rated 00 three starters and have a line the pre-season favorites. with beef and a qackfleld with Last year Old Rochester took ' speed., Picking the outcome of the Tri-County championship this game is really difficult. but lost 12 lettermen via gradlll­Many Bay that North is :oin; tG ation 2lld thus will have lI'E­

_,1 • mE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan RMw-lh",s. Sept. 22. ... .' "', .

1,(.

DIOCESAN REPRESENTATIVES AT· CCD CONGRESS: l~ong the thousands,« ,.i Confraternity of Christian Doctrine personnel from the Western' Hemisphere who attend.. ed the fifth Inter-American Congress in Pittsburg were, left to right: Bernard Lofg're~, chairman of Apostles of Good Will, St. John's, Attleboro; Rev. )oseph L. Powers, Dioce- '...

8.:'!n Director of the CCD; Rev. Arthur T. de Mello, Our Lady of Health, Fall Rjver; Sr. Joseph Adele, O.L.V.M.,and Sr. de Pones, O.L.V.M., of the Immaculate Conception Pa.t­ish, North Easton. ­

'Apostolic Delegate Addresses CeD JilTI'SBURGH (NC)-The Ap­ theological speculation." He said, tiOD and learn to appreciate fi'm

sBtolic Delegate in the United "your students need, above all, precious gift of faith, if they States, stressing the "awesome" -the perennial teaching of the do not see the goodness of graCil!responsibility of the Confrater­ Church presented in a fresh, at- , shine forth in their teachers?" nity of Christian Doctrine, cau­ tractive and_ systematic way." h~ asked.tioned CCD workers against The Archbishop said there is He said "the finest catechetical sacrificing "content for method, no conflict between the CCD and manuals, educational TV and thQ!truth for 'novelty, or certainty Catholic schools. He urged co­ most modern teaching aids cal'}for vagueness." operation between the two i~ never replace the persuasiv,?

"Be modern, by all means," promoting their common goal personal witness of a te<lcheli' Archbishop Egidio Vagnozzi of solid Christian education. who is convinced of his Chris­told 5,000 delegates to th~ l~h Finest Guide tian vocation." national and fifth inter-Amer­ In efforts to update the teach­ Archbishop Vagnozzi lided as ican congress of the CCD. "Use ing of religion, he said, the CCD the third quality a "genuine ~­every technique that will make "could have no better guide than clesial spirit" which, hc said, your teaching of the Christian that master of Catholic doctrine, must inspire the catechctical ap­message meaningful, but pre­ st. Thomas Aquinas." ostolate. He recalled St, Paul's serve that message intact." . Archbishop Vagnozzi -said words, "conduct thyself in work

"Prl!dent experiment is en­ Tho mas Aquinas' "original­ as D good soldier of JesUlleouraged;" he added, "as long ity, his extreme sensitivity to Christ." 33 it does not change the content revealed truth, his brilliant in­ Episcopal Approvalof Catholic thought and result sights into the relationship of Archbishop Vagnozzi saltll Iin confusing the student rather faith and reason, and his utter "Catholic teachers obedient an~than confirming him in his faitb. honesty when faced with con­ lciyalto the Church, our mother,"Be informed of modern' the­ flieting opinions, qualify him look with confidence to hell'ological trends but avoid em­ as a solid intellectual example teaching authority which residel'lbracing extreme ideas' which for 'teachers." . . in the pope and bishops," The ' hardly conform with ,the teach­ "The true spirit of St. Thomas, office of teaching the word CllI!,ings of the Fathers and the Ro­ that of a man of faith humbly. God was entrusted by Chri811,BIaD . pontiffs and are rather trying to understand the word directly to Peter and the Apoo- ' based on transient philosophi· of God, will always animate the tieS; he pointed out. "Catecheti.. :cal currents." , true Christian teacher," he add­ ca'l'work therefore must always ~ IArchbishop Vagnozzi askeC! ed " be 'subject 'to the authority arid'"CCD teachers to "remember that The 'cQuJ},sel came in the sec­ conform to the directives of the'your stduents are .~t equipped· .end 'of "three basic qualities" pope" 6lnd bishops," he said:'" " .0 apprecia'te the ,subtleties ol. whH:h Archbishop Vagnozzi said New experiments, new tech­

must characterize CCD work "if niques, new textbooks in cate­it is to be truly' effective in this clietical teaching must not be in­building problems. age of renewal." This second troduced without' episcopal ap.. !In Saturday's games Wareham "qua~ity" dealt with the docrin­ ptoval, he continued. A bishop' ""LWin be' at DartmoUth; and Old al aspect of the CCD apostolate, muSt carefully weigh new pro- ' Rochester will be at Fairhaven which the Archbishop said pOSals by the experts in thllsin tQe inaugurat~on of therCa~- . "should never be minimized.If

way Conference. Wareham has field, be added, but the final de­Teaehers to be Models elsion' is up' to the bishop.:' ','experienced backs and interi~r ,

The first quality was being 'I- '

linemen but overall ean not "spiritually alive." Archbishopmatch the 16 returnees that Vagnozzi quoted St. Paul, Vati ­Dartmouth sports. Also to be I: St.- Francis can Council II's decree 'on re­

fact that Dartmouth is not anx­iaken into consideration is the: Residenceligious, its declaration on Chris­

tian education, 'and Pope Paul , fOR YOUNG WOMENious to repeat ~ast y~ar's 1-:8, VI to underscore the point thatmark and should be hungry. U96 :Vhipple St., Fall River "every Christian, especially theBoth Fairhaven and Old Roeb- ' Conduded by Franciscan'

ester face rebuilding problems. teacher of religion, is called upon Missionaries of Maryto realize within himself the

f>heir liking to be playing outside Fairhaven may find it more to

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Page 20: 09.22.66

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\ .20 ·T+te·ANcHoR~Dioceseof Fan River-Thurs. Sept. 22, 1966

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