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The CHOR , fall River, Mass., Thursday, April 6, 1961 $4.00 po, YQa, ,Vol. 11, No. 14 @ 1967 The Anchcw , PRICE lOe Somerset Pastor Marks Jubilee in Priesthood Rt. Rev. MHgI·. Augusto L. Furbado, of St. <John of God Church, Somerset, in June will 'join a select group of priests in the Diocese of Fall River who have 50 years or more of service in the vineyard of the 1601'<1. To commemorate the golden jubilee of Monsignor Fudado, the parishioners of ti'he Somerset Church are pianning a testimonial to their \l)eloved shepherd on Sunday, Apr,n 30 in the Venus de Milo !Restaurant, Swansea. A special Mass of Thanksgiv- fng will be offered by the jubi- l'Jar'ian earlier on the same day. Monsignor Furtado, son of ebe latc Antonio S. and Maria E. !Loeal Furtado, was born May 5, 11892 at Castillo Branco, Fayal, Azores. Following studies at the Seminary of Angra, he was 01'- lJaincd June 7, 1917 by Most Rev. Manucl Damasceno da Costa in the Cathedral of Angra. Hc scrved on the seminary lbculty for three years and came flo the Fall River Diocese in (September, 1921. He sel'ved as at St. Michael, Fall lltiver until April 1928 when he established st. John of God :parish, Somerset, which he still Appeal Drive Clerves. Sincc the erection of the Som- ,Ready to Go lR'Set parish in 1928, the popula- fl(.()n has grown from 700 to the The 1967 Catholic Chari- ]ptesent count .of 2700. ties Appeal in the Diocese Monsignor Furtado is a Pro- will start officially at 3 aynodal Judge of the Matri. lDOnial Court of the Diocese. day afternoon when 109 par- The jubilarian served for a ishes will send representatives- 4I\Ial'ter of a century, 1921 to lay and clerical-to the 'kick-off' l!841, as the editor of Novi Dades, meeting at Jesus Mary Academy lIbe only Portugues.e Catholic auditorium in Fall River. Turn'to Page Two Bishop Connolly and Raymond U. Kelliher, lay chairman, will address the parochial represen- tatives who will include parish Give Priests chaitmen, pastors and assistant pastors, parish trustees and committee members. Own Work ''The importance of this meet- ing cannot be overstressed. It SALZBURG (NC) - Re- could be simply a nice gathering. Eieving priests of non-priest- But there is so much to be done tv functions would go a long in the field of charity for our way toward increasing vo- community that we cannot let ceations and solving the problem the great opportunity become M clerical shortages, an Austrian simply a social event," Kelliher IlIlriest of the Salzblll'g diocese said. decla red here. "If this "age of the laity" is The priest said there would to be worthy of the opportuni- llJe no lack of priests in Austria ties and means we have to fii work that was unrelated to provide in all areas of human the pt'iestly office and to clerical· need, we laymen must take up fllraining were undertaken by the spirited leadership we have liuch persons as graduates of inherited from our spiritual l3usiness schools or even ordinary mentors. elementary school gt'aduates. "I am particul81rly desirous He said that if this were done, that each parish be pricsthood and its require- by a large group of laymen who ment of celibacy would be more are anxious to provide the dy- attracti ve to young men. The namic leadership the 1967 Ap- k<Ulling of a priest, he said, is peal deserves and needs. If IIlOt directed toward such func- The Special Gifts section of flions as bookkeeping, typing, the 1967 Appeal wilD. be con- correspondence or work which ducted from. April 24 to May 6 li:ould, and should, be performed and the Parish phase from May laypersons. , to 17. u. S. Bishops Facing Busy Chicago Week WASHINGTON (NC) - The Bishops of the United States will meet in Chicago OK! Monday, April 10, for the fil'st semi-annual meeting of the National Conferenee of Cath· olic Bishops. More than 200 cardinals, archbishops and bishops are expected to be pres ent. Traditionall)r, the .bishops met once a year in Washington in November. With tho formation of the NCCB last November, however, it was priests, religious and lay persons longing to the Pope alone, th. to assist responsible Church au- Vatican Council invited national voted to meet twice a year thorities on parochial, diocesan conferences of bishops to propoS4 until the U.S. bishops have and national levels; candidates from their areas; implemented the various decrees of the Vatican Council. _ Changes in diocesan and Resignation of bishops, e3- For the first time in U. S. provincial boundaries; pecially the care of bishops upo!J Church History, the meeting will retircment; be held ,under an elected presi- _ Nomination of new bish- _ PI' ie s t s: formation on dent, Archbishop John F. Dear- ops. Though this is a right be- priests' senates i'n the '1arioWl den of Detroit, president of the dioceses, social secul'ity and sal- NCCB. aries; For some time to come, there- fore, thc bishops will meet in _ Distribution of the clergy: Washington fo/ five days, Mon- looking to the possible transfer day though Friday, in the week of clergy from one diocese to in which November 15 occurs. another and even from one They will also hold a three-day country to another, to meeting, Tuesday t h I' 0 ugh acute shortages of priests in cer- Thursday, during the second tain arcas; week after Easter and this last meeting may be held elsewhere _ Canon Law: this commit- . than Washington. tee is to report concel'l1ing the The work of the NCCB is car- possibility of fulfilling the Sun- ried on. by some 40 committees day Mass obligation by attcnd- but the work outlined for Chi- ance at Mass on the preceding cago this year will deal mostly Saturday; with reports by special (ad hoc) _ Deacons: a report on the committees. Rome meeting for the establish- Matters to be dealt with in ment of a permanent diaconate Chicago is to be given to the bishops _ The establishment of inter- and debate as to whether a per- diocesan offices, through which , manent diaconate is to bc intro- appropriate resources in two or duced into the U. S.; more dioceses would be pooled _ Books:. the requirement in order to deal more effectively for advanced approval for books with certain projects on regional and other pubiications dealing and perhaps national levels; with Church matters is to be The establishment of pas- reviewed; toral councils composed of ARCHBISHOP DEARDEN Tum to Page Six - Music Changes on May 14 Outline Choir -Congregation Roles The Holy See's Instruction on Music, issued March 5 and effective May 14, two purposes: it is partly an exhortation to congregational singing and an effort m clarify the role of choirs and trained singers, explained .Rev. Frederick R. McManus, di- rector of the secretariat of the Bishops' Committee on the Liturgy. Because much of the lengthy instrllction-69 at;ly singing a,t all. It also retains pected for a high or sung Mass sections-is quotation and the technical' classification of is explained as: the sung dia- exhortation, it is possible to solemn Mass, sung or high Mass logue of priest people, the miss the i.n d i cat ion s of (Missa cantata) and the recited Sanctus and the' Lord's Prayer, change and progress. The major or low Mass. the "presidential" prayers of the development in the di'scipline or The minimum singing Turn to Page Twenty regulation of church music is the gradual'lessening-almost to the point of extinction-of the ar- tificial'line always drawn be- Hits Abuses l Irresponsible tween the sung liturgy and the spoken liturgy, between the Criticism of Priesthood high Mass and the' low Mass. True, the instruction does not ATLANTIC CITY (NC)-A priest said here that un· say simply that each part of the corrected abuses and "irresponsible" criticism are equally Mass be sung or spoken as 'the destructive to the image of the priesthood. Father Louis occasi'on and the capacity of the participants suggest. Instead, the J. Luzbetak, S.V.D., made.the comment in an address to the various 'possible degrees of a National Catholic The long wait endured by more or les's sung liturgy are de- al Association convention on many priests before they are scribed, .with almost complete "Vocations in Time of Con- given the full responsibility oil flexibility. pastors. fusion: The Impact of Un- First, the instruction retains The round of "unchallenging carefully the distinction between certainty and Criticism." He is tasks" that take up most of a executive director of the Center the fullest form of sung liturgy priest's time. for: Applied Research in the "in which everything that de- "Restl'ictive features" of many Apostolate (CARA). mands singing is in fact sung" U. S. rectories and chanceries. and the simplest form without Noting that criticism "is a two- Inadequacies of training and edged sword," Father Luzbetak formation, and lack of in-service urged what he termed "objec- educational programs for the tive" criticism of the priestly clergy. life. He said such criticism But in addition to "respon- should take account not only of sible" criticism of the priesthood. the defects in the priesthood, 'but there is also the "irresponsible" 'also of the fact that most reli- kind, Father Luzbetak continued!. gious orders and most seminaries As 1m example of the latter, he have welcomed responsible criti- cited press "obsession" wi th the cism and profited from it. problem of celibacy. "Celibacy is one of the topics Father Luzbetak acknowl- most open to sensationalism, dis- edged, however, that some abuses MAY, 1-11 in thc priesthood still need to be lJuised anti clericalism and biased corrected. Among them: Turn to Six
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Clerves. Sincc the erection of the Som­ exhortation, it is possible to solemn Mass, sung or high Mass logue of priest ~l11d people, the miss the i.n d i cation s of (Missa cantata) and the recited Sanctus and the' Lord's Prayer, ATLANTIC CITY (NC)-A priest said here that un· al Association convention on many priests before they are ~GR.A.L.FURTADO way toward increasing vo­ community that we cannot let voted to meet twice a year ties Appeal in the Diocese sections-is quotation and , to 17.
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Page 1: 04.06.67

The CHOR

,

fall River, Mass., Thursday, April 6, 1961

$4.00 po, YQa,,Vol. 11, No. 14 @ 1967 The Anchcw , PRICE lOe

Somerset Pastor Marks Jubilee in Priesthood

Rt. Rev. MHgI·. Augusto L. Furbado, pa~tor of St. <John of God Church, Somerset, in June will 'join a select group of priests in the Diocese of Fall River who have ~iven 50 years or more of service in the vineyard of the 1601'<1. To commemorate the golden jubilee of Monsignor Fudado, the parishioners of ti'he Somerset Church are pianning a testimonial to their \l)eloved shepherd on Sunday, Apr,n 30 in the Venus de Milo !Restaurant, Swansea.

A special Mass of Thanksgiv­fng will be offered by the jubi­l'Jar'ian earlier on the same day.

Monsignor Furtado, son of ebe latc Antonio S. and Maria E. !Loeal Furtado, was born May 5, 11892 at Castillo Branco, Fayal, Azores. Following studies at the Seminary of Angra, he was 01' ­

lJaincd June 7, 1917 by Most Rev. Manucl Damasceno da Costa in the Cathedral of Angra.

Hc scrved on the seminary lbculty for three years and came flo the Fall River Diocese in (September, 1921. He sel'ved as ~istant at St. Michael, Fall

~GR.A.L.FURTADOlltiver until April 1928 when he established st. John of God :parish, Somerset, which he still Appeal Drive Clerves.

Sincc the erection of the Som­ ,Ready to GolR'Set parish in 1928, the popula­fl(.()n has grown from 700 to the The 1967 Catholic Chari­]ptesent count .of 2700. ties Appeal in the DioceseMonsignor Furtado is a Pro­

will start officially at 3 ~on­aynodal Judge of the Matri. lDOnial Court of the Diocese. day afternoon when 109 par­

The jubilarian served for a ishes will send representatives­4I\Ial'ter of a century, 1921 to lay and clerical-to the 'kick-off' l!841, as the editor of Novi Dades, meeting at Jesus Mary Academy lIbe only Portugues.e Catholic auditorium in Fall River.

Turn'to Page Two Bishop Connolly and Raymond U. Kelliher, lay chairman, will address the parochial represen­tatives who will include parishGive Priests chaitmen, pastors and assistant pastors, parish trustees and committee members.Own Work ''The importance of this meet­ing cannot be overstressed. ItSALZBURG (NC) - Re­could be simply a nice gathering.Eieving priests of non-priest­ But there is so much to be donetv functions would go a long in the field of charity for our

way toward increasing vo­ community that we cannot let ceations and solving the problem the great opportunity become M clerical shortages, an Austrian simply a social event," Kelliher IlIlriest of the Salzblll'g diocese said. decla red here. "If this "age of the laity" is

The priest said there would to be worthy of the opportuni­llJe no lack of priests in Austria ties and means we have to fii work that was unrelated to provide in all areas of human the pt'iestly office and to clerical· need, we laymen must take up fllraining were undertaken by the spirited leadership we have liuch persons as graduates of inherited from our spiritual l3usiness schools or even ordinary mentors. elementary school gt'aduates. "I am particul81rly desirous

He said that if this were done, that each parish be rE~presented

~e pricsthood and its require­ by a large group of laymen who ment of celibacy would be more are anxious to provide the dy­attracti ve to young men. The namic leadership the 1967 Ap­k<Ulling of a priest, he said, is peal deserves and needs.If IIlOt directed toward such func­ The Special Gifts section of flions as bookkeeping, typing, the 1967 Appeal wilD. be con­correspondence or work which ducted from. April 24 to May 6 li:ould, and should, be performed and the Parish phase from May ~ laypersons. , to 17.

u. S. Bishops Facing Busy Chicago Week

WASHINGTON (NC) - The Bishops of the United States will meet in Chicago OK!

Monday, April 10, for the fil'st semi-annual meeting of the National Conferenee of Cath· olic Bishops. More than 200 cardinals, archbishops and bishops are expected to be pres ent. Traditionall)r, the .bishops met once a year in Washington in November. With tho formation of the NCCB last November, however, it was priests, religious and lay persons longing to the Pope alone, th.

to assist responsible Church au­ Vatican Council invited nationalvoted to meet twice a year thorities on parochial, diocesan conferences of bishops to propoS4until the U.S. bishops have and national levels; candidates from their areas;

implemented the various decrees of the Vatican Council. _ Changes in diocesan and • Resignation of bishops, e3­

For the first time in U. S. provincial boundaries; pecially the care of bishops upo!J Church History, the meeting will retircment; be held ,under an elected presi- _ Nomination of new bish­

_ PI' ie s t s: formation ondent, Archbishop John F. Dear- ops. Though this is a right be­priests' senates i'n the '1arioWlden of Detroit, president of the dioceses, social secul'ity and sal­NCCB. aries;For some time to come, there­

fore, thc bishops will meet in _ Distribution of the clergy:Washington fo/ five days, Mon­ looking to the possible transfer day though Friday, in the week of clergy from one diocese to

• in which November 15 occurs. another and even from one They will also hold a three-day country to another, to mee~ meeting, Tuesday t h I' 0 ugh acute shortages of priests in cer­Thursday, during the second tain arcas;week after Easter and this last meeting may be held elsewhere _ Canon Law: this commit­

. than Washington. tee is to report concel'l1ing the The work of the NCCB is car­ possibility of fulfilling the Sun­

ried on. by some 40 committees day Mass obligation by attcnd­but the work outlined for Chi­ ance at Mass on the preceding cago this year will deal mostly Saturday; with reports by special (ad hoc)

_ Deacons: a report on thecommittees. Rome meeting for the establish­Matters to be dealt with in ment of a permanent diaconateChicago inclu~e: is to be given to the bishops

_ The establishment of inter­ and debate as to whether a per­diocesan offices, through which , manent diaconate is to bc intro­appropriate resources in two or duced into the U. S.; more dioceses would be pooled _ Books:. the requirementin order to deal more effectively

for advanced approval for bookswith certain projects on regional and other pubiications dealingand perhaps national levels; with Church matters is to be

The establishment of pas­ reviewed; toral councils composed of ARCHBISHOP DEARDEN Tum to Page Six ­Music Changes on May 14

Outline Choir -Congregation Roles The Holy See's Instruction on Music, issued March 5 and effective May 14, serv~

two purposes: it is partly an exhortation to congregational singing and an effort m clarify the role of choirs and trained singers, explained .Rev. Frederick R. McManus, di­rector of the secretariat of the Bishops' Committee on the Liturgy. Because much of the lengthy instrllction-69

at;ly singing a,t all. It also retains pected for a high or sung Masssections-is quotation and the technical' classification of is explained as: the sung dia­exhortation, it is possible to solemn Mass, sung or high Mass logue of priest ~l11d people, the

miss the i.n d i cat ion s of (Missa cantata) and the recited Sanctus and the' Lord's Prayer,change and progress. The major or low Mass. the "presidential" prayers of the development in the di'scipline or The minimum singing ~x- Turn to Page Twentyregulation of church music is the gradual'lessening-almost to the point of extinction-of the ar­tificial'line always drawn be­ Hits Abusesl Irresponsible tween the sung liturgy and the spoken liturgy, between the Criticism of Priesthoodhigh Mass and the' low Mass.

True, the instruction does not ATLANTIC CITY (NC)-A priest said here that un· say simply that each part of the corrected abuses and "irresponsible" criticism are equallyMass be sung or spoken as 'the

destructive to the image of the priesthood. Father Louisoccasi'on and the capacity of the participants suggest. Instead, the J. Luzbetak, S.V.D., made.the comment in an address to the various 'possible degrees of a National Catholic ]~ducation­ The long wait endured bymore or les's sung liturgy are de­ al Association convention on many priests before they arescribed, .with almost complete "Vocations in Time of Con­ given the full responsibility oilflexibility. pastors.fusion: The Impact of Un­First, the instruction retains The round of "unchallengingcarefully the distinction between certainty and Criticism." He is

tasks" that take up most of aexecutive director of the Centerthe fullest form of sung liturgy priest's time.for: Applied Research in the"in which everything that de­ "Restl'ictive features" of manyApostolate (CARA).mands singing is in fact sung" U. S. rectories and chanceries.and the simplest form without Noting that criticism "is a two­ Inadequacies of training and

edged sword," Father Luzbetak formation, and lack of in-service urged what he termed "objec­ educational programs for the tive" criticism of the priestly clergy.life. He said such criticism But in addition to "respon­should take account not only of sible" criticism of the priesthood.the defects in the priesthood, 'but there is also the "irresponsible"'also of the fact that most reli ­ kind, Father Luzbetak continued!. gious orders and most seminaries As 1m example of the latter, he have welcomed responsible criti ­ cited press "obsession" wi th the cism and profited from it. problem of celibacy.

"Celibacy is one of the topicsFather Luzbetak acknowl­most open to sensationalism, dis­edged, however, that some abuses

MAY, 1-11 in thc priesthood still need to be lJuised anti clericalism and biased

corrected. Among them: Turn to Pa~e Six~llllIllIllltlllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllIlUtIlUII"IIUIlr.;

Page 2: 04.06.67

1 , ,~.~es Alta.r .BQYs2,

THE ANCHOR-Diocese, of Fall River-Thurs., April 6. 1967 ~ . "

Says Attacks on CIAOper~ti'ons Bewilder Accredited Dip~omats"

WASHINGTON (NC)-Diplo­ correspondent reporting, from mats accredited here have said Vienna a year later said the privately, and without attribu­ : -ne tactics "failed miserably" tion, of course, that they are be­ in the Austrian city. "Most mem­wildered by the recent public bers of the American delegation attacks on certain operations of earned the gratitude of their the Central Intelligence Agency. countrymen and of the free Noting the penchant Am~ricans world," he declared. , have developed for self-accusa­ , Counteract Propaganda tion, one of them said "masoch­ A Scottish Catholic who at­ism" is the word for it. tended the Vienna meeting de­

These men, WiSI) in the, ways scribed it as "a spectacle of ha­'of the world, point out that the tred," and reported that he was CIA is supposed to be a secret knocked down and kicked ,into operation, designed! to offset the unconsciousness when he took work of similar organizations in sides with a group of American' other countries. anti-communists..

An NC News Service writerSince much of the controversy had ,this interesting obsel'vationrevolves around funds made to make about the Helsinki "fes­available to U. S. student groups tival" in 1962:j- y the CIA, and particularly to

"The presence in Finland offacilitate their pall"ticipation in American groups like the Yaleyouth "festivals" h\~ld in Vienna University Russian C h 0 r us,and Helsinki, it is interesting which nightly serenaded theto recall the climate that pre-­Finns on their main streets withvailed at the time of those meet­

,American folk songs, and, theings. 'exhibition of art and culture en­'Failed Miserably' title~ 'Youpg America Presents,'

NC .News Servic£' special cor­ did much to counteract commu- , , respondents quoted in the Cath­ . nist propaganda. '

olic press at the tim.e reflected a "The communists cried foul,'widespread convictilon that the although the Moscow Circus World .Youth Festival held in happened to be in town and,Vienna in 1959 and the one held on the last day of the f~stival, in Helsinki in 1962 were organ­ Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin was ized by communist:; for propa­ paraded through the streets in a ganda purposes. In fact, the final bid for 'peace and friend­meetings were frequently re­ ship.'''ferred to as Communist Youth DirtY Battle Festivals. At the time, the two striki~g

The Reds: it ,was known, had defeats 'handed to communist poured millions of dollars into . propaganda in Vienna and Hel­staging these "festivals,'" and sinki were regarded as minor one held in Moscow in 1958 pro­ miracles. Not many people knew duced demonstrations that were how they came about. Now, it is great propaganda victories, for revealed, CIA backing made it world communism. possible for American groups

And yet, an NC News Service to take part, and to do the job they did.

In the current hullabaloo, theMoss Ordo' Washington Star has asked, e~i­

FRIDAY-Mass of previous Sun­ torially: "And What, precisely, day. IV Class. White: Mass are we guilty of?" It answered: Proper; Glory; no Creed; "Why, of using our wits and :preface of Easter.. Two Vo­ available means ·to compete in a tive Masses in honor of the battle just as real, -dirty and ' Sacl'cd Heart of Jesus. permit.:. deadly. serious as" any shooting. t~d:, Glory; no Cre~d; Preface " ..r in, which 'we oould be en­9f the Sacred. Hear;t., .' gaged,.

SATURDAY - Mal;s' of the "Confronted by .a~ .adversary Blessed Virgin 'for Saturday. who threw the full power and, IV Class. White. Mass Proper; wealth of the state into the ef:" Glory; no Creed'; Preface of for t~ mold and control world

k Blessed Virgin ],\faJ:Y. ' 'Of)mion, we did n'otabandon tne SUNDAY-II Sunday after Eas­ field'to them." .

ter. II, Class. 'Wltlite: Mass ~ro' 'Glory; Creed; Preface 4}f Easter. ' ,. , Necrology

MONDAY - MasS of previous APRIL 14Sunday. IV Class. White. Mass

Rev. Louis N; Dequoy, 1935,Proper; Glory; no Creed; Pastor, Sacred Heart, Ne: Attle­Preface of Easter. ' boro.TUESDAY-St. Leo I, Pope,

Confessor, and Doctor of the APRIL 15 Church. III Class. White. Mass Rev. Christopher G. Hughes,Proper; Glory; no Creed; Pref­ D.D., 1908, Rector, Cathedr~l, ace of Easter. Fall River.

WEDNESDAY-Mass of previous Sunday. IV Class. White. Mass APRIL 16 Proper; Glory; nil) C~eed; Rev. Arthur E. Langlois, 1928, Preface of Easter. On Sick Leave, Denver, Colo­

THURSDAY - St. Hel"menegild, rado. Martyr. III Class. ned. Mass

APRllL 18'Proper; Glory; no Creed; Pref­Rev. Hugh B. Harrold, 1935,ace of Easter.

Pastor, St. Mary, Mansfield. Rt. Rev. John F. McKeon, P.R.,

1956, Pastor, St. Lawrence, NewfORTY HOURS Bedford.

[{)~VOT~O[N AlPRlIlL 20' Rev. Edward F. Coyle, S.S., ,

April 9-0ur Lady of the 1954, St. Mary Seminary, Paca Immaculate St., Md. Conception, Fall River.

St. Boniface, New Bed­ford.

[IDo [IDo ~(!!J~~O~(Q][lj) ~ ~@[lj}ffiApril ] 6-St. Paul, 'l'auntom.

St. John the Baptist, Fall IFlLP 1NJ1E~fQ\Il.I}{IOAAlE River.

46'9 I.OCUSll' Sl~1E1E1l'

'lFA1I.1I. ~IVIER. MASS.THE ANCHOR Second Class Postage Paid 'at Fall River, 672-3381

Mass. Published every Thursday at' 410 Highland Avenue, Fall River. i'fass.• 02722 Wilfred C.' .' James ~. bf the CathOlic Press 01 the Diocese of Fall RllIer. SUbscription price by m~i1, postpaid . DlTiscolD Sullivan, :.1117'. M.DO per year. '

I ,,'" I

. i, .:"1 . 'I

,

. l\ '\;, ' .' .c~~_•.•,~,,,,,,,.,.,,,,,",,,,,,,,~c{<,",--,.:.. ....,_.~,~,·,,,,,_ VOCATION BOOKLET: "Presenting Your Priests

and Brothers" is a new book to provide information on all the orders of priests and Brothers working in the Arch­diocese of San Francisco. The plan, is to present copies personally to every rectory, convent, school, CCD and other' Catholic instituMons and send a copy to every public school" counseling department and 'library. Above Father James McKay studies page proofs. NC Photo.

Papal Prayer for Jl'ocatwns

., HYANNIS

., HARWICH PORT , SOUTH YARMOUTH

­DOANG:·8~AL·AM~S JNCOR.~R.ATli:O

"0 Jesus, Divine Shepherd of souls, who called the Apostles to become fishers of men, now call the ardent and generous hearts of our youth to make them Your followers and ministers. Let them shore Your thirst for that universal redemption fo~ w.hich You doily renew Your Sacrifice upon the altar. 0, Lord Jesus" 'always

. living to make interc~ssion fqr us', extend our horizons te;> .. the entire, world, , where, so ,many brethren make silent supplication for the light. of ,tr,uth and the ,warmth of love, so that answering ,Your: call, many young men' may prolong here Your mission,' edify Your Mystical' Body. the Church, and become :the salt of theeorth and the light of the world'. EX,lend,'OLord,.Your Iovin'g. 'call to many pure and generouschearted young women; that' they mClY grow in their desire for evangelical perfection and may' dedicate 'themselves r.o the service' . of the Church and their Reigh~rs who so 'desperately need such assistance anti charity. Amen."

,I Fu'tu:re Priests' : 'VATICAN CITY (NC)-PoPfj

"P~ul VI told 5,000 altar and choir b,?yS attending an international congress in Rome that the Church looks to them to fill the future ranks of the priesthood.

The Pope received the 5,000 Pueri Cantores, in Rome for the organization's second interna­tional congress, in 81. Peterll Basilica.

"It may seem to you at times that the liturgy consists only o:l'1 small things--postures, genuflec­tions, bowing, etc," he said: "But remember the words of Christ. He'who is faithful in small things will be faithful 1l1so in big things. Nothing is small in the liturgy if we think of the greatness of

·Him.to whom it is addressed'." Then, turning to the subject of

religious vocations the Pope de­'elared: '''Now we will reveal 00 you one of our anguis.hed' con­cerns.

"In the face of the immensity of the task posed by the modern world ·to be evangelized, we

, sometimes ,ask ourself, 'Where and· how can we find enough Religious to meet the needs?' , "Take care that you do not

.. disregard and do not leave' un­, "answered the voice which callo

you. Pray with fervor that Chri~

ma:- choose among your ranks many to. continue His priest ­hood." '.

,\

.• "1':'"

-, ·t-:;ROOKLAWN" t!' I' . • , •. ' ..' .

I ,

"O::UNERAL HOME. INC. ,11. Mllfce, ~OY ~ G. LorraIne RoJ

, . , " Rca.r laFrance •

:' FUNERA~ 'DIRECTORS .r''/"

, 1~ lrvingt.on Ct" ,'" ' .995-5166

New Bedford

Msgr., FlUrta,d~f Continued from Page One

newspaper in the Diocese. General chairman of the testi ­

monial is Antone Benevides. Serving as secretary and treasu­rer ,are Catherine .Quintal lUld Irene Souza. .

'Co,..chairmen of the ticket committee are - Manuel Rapoza and Ignacio Andrade.

JEffREY Eo SULLIVAN WauaelJ"flU Dome

550 Locust Street FaDn River, Mass.

. 672-23911

]Rose E. Suliiv31Il Jeffrey E. SunIiv3n

(0)' fP.?©{J)} fP.?[}{fE

I?MlTfJel?~O f){}@rrrtiJ~

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3 Urge Cooperation Between Social. Medical Service in Care of Aged

ST. LOUIS (NC) - A much­needed stronger aligoment be­tween medical and social ser­vices was the dominan1; theme here at a three-day Institute on ¢;are of the Aging.

The institute, which drew 200 l1elegates from 30 states, was 'ifue first to be co-sponsored by ~he National Conference of Cath­0lic Charities and the Catholic Conference of Services for the Aging of the Catholic Hospital Association.

Spokesmen said it was prompt­ed in great part by Medicare legislation and the need for the two organizations to form a com­bined program of services rele­vant to increasing care for the aging.

Points stressed by the speak­0rs included:

Many current services to the aging deal only with'~deficits,"

Guch as poor health and limited income. Not enough planning or action is geared to developing the potential of the aged person.

A "continuing gap" between research and practice is prevent­ing persons from living outside of institutions and is costing lives.

Despite a firmly-based! eco­nomic program for the elderly, the, aged poor will remain in American society.

A "new type" of elderly poor is possible, as more and more workers find themselves forced to receive social security pay­ments at an earlier age and at reduced benefits.

'Fota.R Ca.re

The most frequently mentioYle& problem, however, was that the elderly person can easily become nothing more than a statistic, that dividual with unique needs-and potential. ,.' .

· While many speakers warned of this danger in light of neces­sary paperwork and classifica­tions ' required for Medicare participation, the same caution

·was given for welfare and social service workers.

Msgr. Lawrence J. Corcoran, secretary of the National Confer­ence of Catholic Charities, called fur a professionally-trained so­cial worker to be part of every nursing home' staff.

Where such workers are not employed, "total care" of the aged might never occur, he said.

West Point Graduates Association To Honor Cardinal for Sell'Yice

WEST POINT (NC)-Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York will receive the 10th annual Syl­vanus Thayer Award for out­standing service to the nation £rom the Association of Gradu­ates, United States Military Academy.

Gen. Cortlandt Van R. Schuy­ler (U. S. Army, retired) asso­ciation president, said the pres­entation ceremonies, highlighted by the brigade review of the eorps of cadets in Cardinal Spell ­man's honor, will take place Sat­urday, May 6, at West Point.

The award is given annually to an outstanding citizen of the United States whose service in tile national interest exemplifies personal devotion to the ideals expressed in the motto of the J 'ilitar~' Academy: "Duty. h~mor,

rountry." 'OutstandiDg Service'

The award is named in honor of Sylvanus Thayer, an 1808 graduate of the Military Acad­emy, who nine years later be­came its fifth superintendent.

The award includes a scroll a~d a go!e medal featuring a bust of Thayer with ijle inscrip­tir-; "The Sylvanus Thayer Medal awarded by the Associa- .

Archbishop Dwyer Raises Salaries

PORTLAND (NC)-Archbish­~ Robert J. Dwyer of Portland has raised the pay of his priests by as much as $65 a month, and gI.ven salary increases to teach­ing Sisters and convent house­keepers.

The raises will give pastors $175 a month; associate pastors $135 and chaplains, $150. Priests teaching in diocesan high schools will start at $135 a month and receive annual raises of $5 11 month to $175.

Teaching Sisters will get $10 raises to $110 a month and con­

tion of Graduates, United States Military Academy, for outstand­ing service to the nation." The reverse side bears the coat 'of anns of the Military Academy.

eardinal Spellman will have his name inscribed on a memo­:ial plaque, which includes the names of the recipients since the inauguration of the award in Washington Hall, the cadet din­ing hall.

'Indomitable SlPihrfit', Other recipients of the award

have beel' Dr. Ernest O. Law­t'ence (1958), John Foster Dulles ('1959), Henry Cabot Lodge (1960), Dwight D. Eisenhower (1981), Douglas MacArthur (1962), John J. McCloy (1963), Robert A. Lovett (1964), Dr. James B. Conant (1965), and €arl Vinson (1966).

The announcement of Cardinal Spellman's· selection . for the award notes his long service as

· archbishop of 7;ew York and as military vicar for' Catholics in the U. S. armed forces, and re­calls that I' e has' visited mem­bers of the U. S. armed forces overseas for 16 consecutive Christmas seasons.

"By his pf;rsonal efforts,. un­flinching devotion to duty, in­domitable spirit, and inspira­tionalleadership, Cardinal Spell ­man has exerted a tremendous beneficial influence on' the armed forces of the United States, both overseas and at home."

Lay Administrator ~ SUPERIOR (NC)-8t. Joseph's Hospital here is the second Cath­olic hospital in Wisconsin to op­erate under lay administration. Robert P. Aspatore will assume the post of executive administra­tor May 1, and Sister M. Ursula will remain as associate adminis­trator. St. Anthony's Hospital in Milwaukee is also under lay ad­ministration.Yent housekeepers will get $25

l'8ises to $125. The Oregon prel­ I

ate also introduced a 10 cent per mile mileage payment for cars -.eel in parish work. NEED

Distributing CompanyUniversity Theatre JANITORIAL AND

atruction of a new theatre for the WASHINGTON (NC) -Con­

MAINTENANCE SUPII'UES Catholic University of America _ EDWARD LEARY, Prop._speech and drama department is P. O. Box 1081 Fa" RiYer, Mass.expected to begin late this Tel. 674-8826epring.

HOLY FAMILY RECORD BREAKER: Steve Lawless, Holy Family High basketball luminary from New Bedford, established the Boston Garden scoring record for high schoolers when he scored 52 points in his team's victory Qver Chicopee High in Mass. State quarter-finals.

Ponder Joint School Catholics, Episcopalians Explore Idea

Of Co-sponsored Junior High ATLANTIC CITY (NC)-Cath­ pupils from both schools. Initfal

olics and Episcopalians in West discussions have' centered around Memphis, Ark., are exploring a private non-profit corporation the possibility of co-sponsoring which would not be under con­a private junior high school trol of either church. which would offer religious edu­ The committee discussing the cation for both faiths and relieve plans is currently studying the the teacher shortage faced by possibility of obtaining a grantCatholic and Episcopalian or grants for construction of the schools in the city. school, with operating expenses

The school proposal is still in to be met by tuition. the "exploratory stage," Father The committee foresees reli ­William A. Beck, superintendent gion being taught in the school of schools for the diocese of Lit ­ on an elective basis by represen­tle Rock, stressed, but he ex­ tatives of the faiths of the pupils.

-pressed hope that it m.ight prove

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., April 6, 1967

Issues BuUetin On EcumernJ~~m

VATICAN CITY (NC) - ThEil Vatican Secretariat for Promot­ing Christian Unity has released the first issue of an information bulletin on developments and news in the field of Christian unity.

In an introduction to the 25­page Information Service, the head of- the unity secretariat, Augustin Cardinal Bea, S.J., wrote:

"The time has come to keep the Church at large - episcopal conferences, ecumenical commit­tees, ecumenical publications, in a word all·who are working for the cause of unity, as well as others who may come to .do so -regularly informed not only of the secretariat's work but also of work of general interest being accomplished by bishops and or­ganizations within the Church."

Cardinal Bea invited the va'­rious groups involved to send in ideas and news to be used in future, issues. The service will not confine itself strictly to ac- . tivities of the secretariat but wi~l publicize other activities in the ecumenical field, including those of non-Catholic Christian bodies.

The service will be issued "as occasion indicates."

College Associates To Honor Durante ~. MARY'S (NC) - Jimmy

Durante, a topline entertainer for more than 50 years, will re­ceive the 1967 Genesian Award from the Saint Mary's College Associates at a dinner on April 27 here in California.

The award, named after the patron saint of performers, is given annually to a prominent show business personality for "outstanding service to humanity through the performing arts." Dennis Day, Jerry LewiS, Bob Hope and Ann Blythe are past winners of the award.

the answer to "keeping religion in the schools" in West Memphis.

He said that the study, which was originated by the lay school boards of St. Michael's Catholic parish and Holy Cross Episcopal parish, has been given the ap­proval of both Catholic Bishop Albert Fletcher and Episcopal Bishop Robert Brown of Little Rock. \ .

St. Michael's church currently operates an eight-grade 'school but is facing a teacher shortage. Father Beck explained that the school cannot obtain a sufficient number of nuns' to staff it and although lay teachers have proved most acceptable the cost of salaries is becoming prohibi­tive.

Private Corporation The Holy Cross school cur­

rently has six grades and wished to add two but it is also facing financial problems.

The proposed new school would provide seventh, eighth and ninth grade education for

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••

4

I

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., April 6, 1967

DDcce~(1J!l1 .VOIl.n~h D~recto~s Hear P~)f<£:~@~@~O~frD AAo[)l)O~li'®IT' d. [?l[fO®$fl'~ _

WASHINGTON (NC) -Some 80 diocesan youth directors from various parts of the United States heard a psychologist, a minister, and three priests speak on YQuth's influence in modern society at a two-day symposium on youth here.

Dr, Alexander Schneiders, a pr-fessor of psychology at Bos­ton .College and the l1uthor of many articles. on teenage prob­lems and mental health; Father Paul Hritz, assistant professor of theology at St. John'o; College, Cleveland, and general editor of a ·propose'" new elementary school religion series, and Jesuit. sociologist Father John L. Thom­as, were among the speakers a~ th~ meeting,

:Ak; included were the Rev.. John S. Wood, executive director of the Department of Youth Min­istry and executive secretary of the United Christian Youth Movement of the National Coun­eil of Churches in th,.~ United States, and Father Joseph T. Mc-Gloin, S.J., author and youth counselor.

Ylmth Segregated Father Thomas pointed out

that "youth" changes every three or four years, and that it is very hard to make meaningful gener­alizations about such a rapidly 'changing group. He said that ev­ery generation receives the' Christian message an,~w and

The Parish Parade

ST. MATHIEU, FALL RIVER

Diane Mathieu, chairman, ~as announced that the Parish CYO will sponsor a cake sale, Satur­day afternoon from 2 to 5 and Dn Su'nday morning after all the' Masses. Beans will also be on sale at the' event.

ST. JOSEPH, FAIRHAVEN

Members of the Sacred Hearts J Association are requested to ,m~ke a half hour of adoration tomorrow. the First Friduy. The unit will' meet at 7:30 Sunday night, April 9 in the church hall.

. The program will be featured by a wig party to which all

. women ·of the parish al'e invited.

ST:- MARY'S CATHEDRAL, FALL RIVER

The Women's Guild announces the Rev. Francis A. McCarthy Scholarship, w hie h will be awarded to a parishioner who is a grammar school graduate or currently attending high school and standing in the upp(~r half of his' or her class. Applications will be available at the )'ector:r about April 15 and musf be re­turned by May 15.

ST. JOHN· BAPTIST, CENTRAL. VILLAGE

The Ladies Guild announces a rJmmagc sale to be. held from 9 to 1 in the parish hall on Sat­urday, April 8 and Saturday, April 15. Chairman is Mrs. Jobn Costa.

ST. JOSEPH, FALL RIVER

The Clover Club Choill' will sing at the 11 o'clock Mass Sun­day morning, April 9.

Registration for first gmde in the parochial school will be held in the school office from 9:15 till Doon each Sunday of April.

The parish council will meet at 7:30 tonight in the school hall.

HOLY NAME, FALL RIVER

An afternoon Mass Is cele­brated at 5:15 each weekday.

The parish council will meet at 7:30 Thursday night, April 20.

must examine it carefully. He noted that the' present gen­

eration of young people is· chal­lenging basic elements of moral theology and questioning "our whole way of looking at the world."

Father Thomas said that youth has been segregated from the adult community by ~. attendance at school, anli-:l:bat this has created' a gap between .." youth and adults. He said that young people do not like being spectators, and that. they want· to take an active part in society.

Cliches About Love Father McGloin said that

young people know a lot ·of eli ­ches_ about "love," but they ·do not really know what it means. On the positive side, he said that youth has honesty, enthusiasm, energy and.a need for challenges.

Father McGloin also said ·that adults should not treat youth as a 'separate culture or -make things too easy for them. 'He criticized the view that young people should "be kept busy," saying this is the way adults 'es­cape from themselves.

He said that it is most impor­·tant to make youth understand that they must still follow a cru­cified Christ, and that life is not' easy.

Father Hritz spoke on the change in the Chu-rch from the Reformation to' the Secon'd Vat­ican Council. He spotlighted growing nationali~m, changes ·of political and economic structures due to technolQgy,and develop­ments in 'communications, edu­cation and psycholOgy.

He commented on the :gr-owth of personalism and the -desire for intelligent worship, and said that Vatican II called on the Church to work in this new world.

Church, Youth The Rev. Mr. Wood suggested

that the churches have failed young people by not being con­cerned with the problems which youth considers' important. He said that the church might ·be defined as "that which lives in the present with hands stretched to the future," and .added that youth also fits this definition.

Both Dr. Schneid~rs.andFather Thomas emphasized that the be­havi :al sciences have ·been ne­gl ~ted by the Church in the past. Father Thomas 'stressed that, although seminary training has undergone many changes re­cently, seminarians are still not receiving much education in fields such as sociology,psychol­ogy and economics.

He said that 'young people must be trained to see problems as they' involve all, of society, since "in an ongoing society' all things hang together."

Requests Coupons Mrs. Henry J. Grego, 7610

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TAUNTON BOOK FAIR: Leaders in the book fair conducted at St. Anthony's School, Taunton, were: Sr. Mary Hortense, S.U.S.C.; Mrs. Theodore Aleixo, school librarian; .Mother Claire Edward, S.U.S.C.; Sr. Eugenia Margaret, S.U.S.C.

Teacher Pay Hikes Chicago Fund Raising \Drive Aims to Provide

. Better Salary Schedule for Educators CHICAGO (NC) - Archbishop

John P. Cody of Chicago has an­nounced initial contributions of more than $3 million andalloca­tions of $11.4 million in the $40­million fund drive started last January for over-all renewal of the .archdiocese.

General solicitations from par­ishes and individuals have not yet begun, he stressed, and the $3 million was received in advanced ·gifts. It repl'esents donations from only one per cent of Cath­·olics in the archdiocese with the general fund drive not due to begin for another month.

Fringe Benefits Principal allocation of funds

announced was for increased . teacher salaries and high school construction.

"In keeping with the purpose of Project: Renewal - ·a high quality education for all children in our schools, parishes will pro­vide funds to increase the sal­aries of all the lay teachers in

,our elementary school system," the Archbishol? said.

Minimum salaries, he an­nounced, will ·be raised from $5,000 to $5,400 with medical and

. hospitalization insurance to be provided for all.

Archbishop Cody also reported that all high schools in the arch' ­diocese will receive grants-in­aid to help meet rising costs of

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increased salaries and special classes for remedial work.

Renewal, he said, will permit completion of two new churches and a rectory for the archdi­ocese's missions in Panama.

Other allocations include: Construction of two new New­

man centers, reorganization ~nd 'expansion of' the ~rchdiocese's

CCD 'program, institution ()f reli ­'gious ·education progr.ams for ·the .mentally retarded, oonstruction of one new high school.and reno­v.ation and expansion ·offive ex­isting high schqols, and the 1967 operating budget of Catholic charities.

Priests~ Selrnat~

Pla.,s SemOrl1ar. KEARNY (NC)-A three-daJ

seminar for' .members of the newly elected 44-member' of priests' 'of the Newark arbhiHo­cese is set for Loyola House oil Retreats, Morristown, !from April 9 to 11.

Purpose of the seminar is to acquaint senate members with some of the problems with whicb they' will have to deal. .

VVorkshops have been sched­uled {In pastor-curate relatiori-' ships; attitude of priests in non­parochial work; assignment of priests; retirement; laymen in the' apostolate; formation. and education of priests; lay partici ­pation in the liturgy; and sick and incapacitated priests. . The senate also organized, a personnel practices committee 'and a committee to review' t~e format of the annual priestS' retreats.

Ecumenism Nudges Into Tournament

WASHINGTON (NC) - Ecu­meni-sm -dribbled its way into the 12th high school basketball tournament sponsored by the Knights of Columbus here. . The only high school tourn~y

which pits opposition on a na.­tionwide basis was held this week at Catholic University of America gym here. For the Ifirst time a team from a non-Catholic: school was' included, Robert :1. Dwyer, tournament director, all ­nounced. The team is from Dwight School, a New York pri-. vate institution. .

Others in 'the eight-team field were: Mackin, Washington Catb­()lic League champion; DeMatha of suburban Hyattsville, Md..

. tourney defending champ; St. Peter's of New Brunswick, N . .1.; Northeast Catholic of Philadel­phia; Mount Carmel and DePaul Academy from Chicago, and and Cathedral High from Tren­ton, N. J.

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5 THE ANCHOR'-Texas Prelates Mexicalt Senoritas at F'airhaven Academy Thurs., April 6, 1967

Back Workers' Becoming Affluent English Linguists Gir's SupportUnion Rights

AUSTIN (NC)-The Cath­olic bishops of Texas have i&sued a statement support­mg the right of farm work­ers to form unions and urging national legislation to pmtect this right.

The bishops said that "among the basic rights of a human per­son is the right of freely found­ing associations or unions for 'Working people" and that all should have the right "of freely taking part in the activities of these unions without risk or re­prisaL" ,

The statement was issued at the conclusion of a two-day meeting of the board of directors of the Texas Catholic Confer­ence. It was approved by the bishops of the 10 Texas dioceses.

Farm workers in the Rio Grande City area of south Texas have been on strike since June, 11966, and their efforts had been endorsed previously by Arch­bishop Robert E. Lucey of San Antonio and Bishop Humberto Medeiros of Brownsville.

The statement issued by all ftle bishops of Texas follows, in part:

'Critical Controversy' "Every citizen is aware that

in Texas, as elsewhere in the United States, there is a critical eontroversy between farm work­ers and growers. It is high­lighted by the importance of agriculture to a sound American economy and the plight of pov­eny stricken fann workers whose suffering has recently be­gun to stir the conscience of America.

"The American economy in 'feneral is prosperous, producing both good profits for investors and high wages for workers. Fer the most part the economy oper­ates within a framework of ben­eficial legislation and enjoys a high degree of organization at every level among employes and employers alike. The same can' lIIot be said of agriculture, how­aver,

'Without Reprisal' "We the Catholic: bishops of

Texas, would remind farm work­ers that among the basic rights 8f a human person is the right of freely founding associations or unions for working people. These

'unions would be able to truly represent them and to contrib­ate to the organizing of economic Ifie in the right way. Included is the right of freely taking part in the activities of these unions without risk or reprisal.

"In view of the present de­pressed state of farm workers and the need for organization in order to bargain effectively in economy and to rear their families in frugal and' decent eomfort we say that they have a duty to form and join unions or associations of the type men­tioned Ill ••"

Unionists Sponsor "

Training p'rogram NEW YORK (NC)-The As­

ItOciation of Catholic Trade Un­ionists is sponsoring a training program in the techniques of leadership and their effective tie in community action.

The 12-week program began March 28, and will include two !lessions a week, focusing on an­IJlysis of the structure of insti ­tutions, investigative and re­lIearch methods, and several as­pects of social problems and so­dal action.

The poverty program is a ma­. jew. topic of study, and profes­lJionals in poverty work are among the featured speakers. bSimiIar programs are planned lIor other New York areas in the filAture.

The winsome trio arrived at Sacred Hearts Academy February 1 from Mexico City. . N@w Josephina .and Rosa Maria Leroux and Gloria Gonzalez are settling down to learning t~ fluent EnglIsh they came here to acquire. Last weekend, however, Spanish took over brIefly as Roymundo Aguirra, 22, arrived in Fairhaven to visit his three attractive cousins. The young man, a recent graduate of the University of Mexico, will begin a public relations job with a brewery when he returns to Mexico City. First, he took a brief vacation to 'see where his cousins will be spending the next year.

His reactions? "It is very pretty here."

The Leroux sisters, Josephina, 19, and Rosa Maria, 17, and Ray­mundo's other cousin, Gloria, 19, all are high school" graduates. Rosa Maria has completed the first year of her three-year ele­mentary school teaching pro­gram. Josephina completed three years of college preparatory work after high school and Gloria spent an extra year studying English.

Now all three are concentrat­ing on English.

They heard about Sacred Hearts Academy, "It is very famous in Mexico City," Roy­mundo said, from friends who had studied here before them.

The trio had traveled before. "They were taken to Europe," a nun at the academy explained, "but this is the first time they ever traveled alone." .

Their families put. them on a plane in Mexico City and Acad­emy nuns met them when they arrived in Boston.

The attractive students, quiet spoken and well mannered-al­though they all sparkle' with animation-will stay at the acad­emy until November. During the summer months, Gloria ex­plained, "we· will go' 1.0 camp· ia . Kingston."

Why would Meltican students travel so far tG learn proficiency in English? "Because· the Eng­lish is very good in Massachu-

Lutheran Adyocates One Bapti'smal Rite

NEW YORK (NC)-The presi­dent of the American Lutheran Church has proposed that Chris­tian communions, including the Catholic Church, adopt a com­mon Baptismal rite.

Writing in the Spring issue of Una Sancta, a theological quar­terly, Dr. Frederik A. Schiotz of Minneapolis said there is little difference between the Roman Catholic and Lutheran services in the actual administration of Baptism.

"If Baptism is commonly re­garded as the door of entrance into the Church, the sacrament by which we are born 'again and become members of the body of Christ, what should stand in the way," he asked, "for finding a common rite of administration."

Dr. Schiotz, president of the Lutheran World Federation, feels there would be an "improvement in communication" between Lu­therans and Catholics, if some of the symbolism surrounding the' administration of the ceremony in the Catholic Church were dropped.

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QUARTET OF. COUSINS: Josephina Leroux, 19, Rosa Maria L.eroux, 17, and Gloria Gonzalez, 19, of Mexico City, all EnglIsh students at Sacred Hearts Academy, Fairhaven, show yearbook of their new school to- their visiting cousin, Roymundo Aguirra, 22, also o-f Mexico· City. .

setts," one said. The- others nodded· agreement.

Spoken English-, they have dis­covered since they arrived, is "very difierent.. from· book Eng­lish and speaking English all day is very different from speaking it only during a one-hour class.

However, the nuns at the acad­emy feel the girls have pro­gressed remarkably ill' the- two­months· they have been in Fair­haven "aad we are- learning Spanish, too," one nun· admitted'

fer one of the first times Jft memory, Mexico City "saw snow two· time;" he- said.

The- visitor irom Mexico City returned home- Monday. He was taking with him, he said, "good reports" to·the Leroux and Gon­zalez- families.

With him he also took the Spanish language. .

.lI'osephina, Rosa Maria and Gloria now are immersed again in· "all- day English."

Boys' Protests LOS ANGELES (NC) - 'l1le

boys at Loyola University, who have staged a running protest against campus restrictions and "free speech" policies for the duration of this school year, found some unexpected friends in the girls at the smaII-475 students-Immaculate Heart Col­lege 15 miles away in Hollywood.

The friendship was expressed in the current issue of "Com­ment," Immaculate Heart's fort ­nightly student publication, which devoted most of its four­page number to demands for "reform" of controls at the Jesuit-operated university.

The Loyola boys' demands in­clude permission to establish a beer pub on campus and to per­mit girl visitors to the dormi­tories and swimming pool. They also have complaints against other aspects of university ad­ministration, dining hall oper­ation, and what they claim are restrictions of "free speech."

The Immaculate Heart girls in an editorial stated that "Loyola seems to be operating under the same old mystique that went out with girls' convent school educa­tion. Catholic students come to a college or university looking for a center of intellectual activity uninhibited by the restrictions Catholic society would place around individual humavn growth."

Laymen Preach BROOKLYN (NC)-Two la,.­

men preached the diocesan priests' day of recollection in the Brooklyn diocese. William Frain, professor of sociology at Ioolll College, New Rochelle, N. Y., and Daniel Coogan, chairman of the modern languages department at Brooklyn College, spoke- 00 "What the Layman Looks for io the Priest." Both have been lie­ti-ve in the lay apostolate.

with a broad smile. One of the more exciting

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Page 6: 04.06.67

THE ANCHOR":"Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., April~, 1967

With Love . When Pope Paul was gathering materi'al for his latest

encyclical-"Populolum Progressio"-he put into the file ' .a note explaining its scope: "It is not a treatise, it is not a le'sson, and therefore must breathe Christian love . . . . It must be resolute and determined to orient the Church and the world." And in another note in the file he said, "There is need for the earth as a whole to be exploited thoroughly and rationally. When this is not the case, there is something wrong that must be remedied."

This, then, is what the encyclical does - itJ.orients the Church and the world. Reasoning closely, weighing every word so that it carries the correct meaning and connotation, presenting the several sides of compleJt is­ames in brief words, the Pope has presented to the world what could well be one of the great documents of the eentury.

He speaks of all those things that are needed for man's complete, development-his aspirations, his respon­sibility, his role in the community, the development of' civilization in the community, progress of man and the community, the seale of values that must guide both. In this process he speaks of property, violence, reform, literacy, family, growth, population problems. (How un­fortunate that hatdly was the text released when many people tried to twist his words in this regard.)

The Pope in this encyclical then speaks of the human , race as a whole and its oneness and development, with references to trade, world fund, international agreements, nationalism, racism, the young.

Almost every paragraph of the text is food for study and thought and, ahove all, application. Different portions

.' will apply in diffel'ing degree to different areas of the , 1\'orld. But every portion is cause of concern fpr all. Be­,cause every part of the encyclical is filled with Christian concern for men. '

And, in this rE-gard, the Pope has done what he set out to do-to present an' orientation of the Church and the world filled with Christian love. ' '

Mercenaries Nor Propagandists The Pope has, asked that the entire Church observe

this coming Sunday as a World of Prayer for Voca,ti<ms. The Church seeks vocations in a far different way

from the manner in which any other group looks for work­ers'. As the Pope has said, vocations are not "paid mer­cenaries," nor are they "professional p:r<>pag,andists." There is no entering this vital work in the Church for money or security, nor any looking for a return on, an invest­ment of time and energy and talents.

True, there must be a realistic presentation of what the life of a priest and brother and Sister entails. There must be projected thEl true image of the one who works, ex-,

, elusively and whole-lheartedly for 'God and the family of God.

But the one who would serve God and the Church in this 'Way must be a person who has had an insight into the high­est definition of life. Such' a person must understand the Gospel and feel the duty to serve the Church-Christ in the world-and to do this by a personal contributio,n and a carrying of the cross.

This is Pope Paul's definition of avocation., It is, then, more than a merely human position and

It must be presented in more t~an merely human terms; And so, the request for prayer~.

One with a vocation has a view that is both vertical:""" to God- and horizonW - toward the 'children of God here on earth. 'Love of God is the impelling foree to serve

, meIiand bring them closer to God. Such a J.ll.otive is super-' iiatiJral. How' is it instilled iiltO, the heart of a 'Dian' or ~Qman? By God. And these things are asked, oiby' GOd in prayer. '

®The·ANCHOR OFFICIAL NEWSpApE~ OF THE DIOCESE OF FALL RIVER

Published v.:eekly by Th,e Calholic Press of the Diocese of Fall River 410 Highland Avenue

Fall River, Mass. 02722 675"7151 PUBLISHER

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

GENERAL MANAGER ASST. GENERAL MANAGER Rt. Rev. Daniel f. Shalloo, M.A. Rev. John P. Driscoll

MANAGING EDITOR Hugh J. Golden

,Dives and Lazar"s?

Import Peopl~ P'lI"iests, Nuns Amdl AII'c!llll)ishop Ryan

IhlJild Alaslka Archdiocese ANCHORAGE (NC) ~ Alas­

kans, they say, have imported ltverything from soup to nuts in order to convert their state from the last North American frontier

, into a rich, cohesive community. They also'import people. One

of the most famous was the state's first archbishop, Arch­bishop Joseph, T. Ryan, the Albany, N. Y., priest who moved from his job as head of the

, Catholic Near East Welfare As­sociation to head the newly formed Anchorage archdiocese only a year ago.,'

But despite his New York upbringing, Archbishop Ryan quickly took to Alaska's ways.

First, he reached a little south, to Victoria, B. C., and brou'ght in Bishop Remi DeRoo to conduct an institute for priests of Alaska at Anchorage's Captain Cook Hotel. The institute drew more than 50 priests and, unlike insti ­tutes in other dioceses, received considerable coverage in the daily press.

Contemplative Order And as tpe institute started,

two nuns left Anchorage-after making plans to send some Sis­ters !>f their order back to Alaska. When they do arrive for good, the Anchorage archdiocese will then have six orders work-' 'ing there.

Interfaith Clergy Fo'rm Associ~tion

WASHINGTON, (NC),,-,A ,Catholic-Protestant merger on the clerical ievel, took place in Maryland's P r inc e' George's County near here when. the for:'

,mer, (Protestant) ,Ministerial Un­ion dissolved itself arid joined with 'Caiholi~ clergy to forni' Ii new association. ' '

The Rev. Wendell R. Turner, Jr., pastor of University Chris­tian Church, College Park, Md., is president of this new as yet unnamed body. Father Louis W. Albert', pastor of St. Mark's Catholic Church,' College Park, is vice president, and the Rev. Lawrence Harris, Jr., assistant at St. M.atthew's Episcopal Church, Hyattsville, Md., is secretary­treasurer. , Catholic priests of the Wash­ington area also belong to inter­faith clerical groups in the Dis­trict of Columbia and in nearby Virginia.

, One of, them will be-not sur­prisingly - the Sisters of the Presentation of the Blessed Vir­gin Mary of Albany, who will do "whatever work the archbishop feels we can do best," a~cording

to their superior, Mother Berna­dette. Mother Bernadette left three Sisters here to find out just what that might be.

The other order will be the Sisters Adorers of the Precious Blood, whose superior, Mother Rita Mary, traveled frorri Port­land, Ore., to Anchorage, to com­plete the purchase of property at Fire Lake-some 16 miles north' of Anchorage-and establish six Sisters to look after construction of a monastery. , Their job is already deter­

'mined. A contemplative order, the Adorers of the Precious, Blood in Anchorage will pray "for the success of the work of all the priests and Religious ill the archdiocese," said Arch-' bishop Ryan.

Denounce RacismIn Elections I

MlLWA'l!KEE (NC)--:"F!>ur re.;. 'ligious ,groups' have issued a' joint statement here denouncing the introduction of racism bito ~ Milwaukee school board elections. .

The statement, issued by the Greater Mihvaukee Council, of Churches, the' Catholic Interra­cialCou~cil,of. Milwaukee, the ~lwaukee Je~sb Council, 8!l4 the United Church Women of thti Milwauk~e area, criticized "some ' candidates" but did not name in­dividuals. ' . 'lbe statement said that, ,"ma­terials ~fstributed by sOme can­dilJates appear to be'designed'to create fears concerning the presence of Negro citizens in the schools of the city of Milwaukee and 'their aspirations for full im-' proved ,educational opportunity. , "The neighborhood school and

mass bussing' issues are a legiti ­mate concern of the community," it continued, "but some candi­dates have misused these issues as transparent appeals to racial fear arid prejudice. In fact, no candidate has suggested ,an end to the neighborhood school sys­tem, nol' has mass bussing been proposed to achieve racial bal­ance in the schools."

Chicago Meeting Continued from Page One. '. YMCA/YWCA: a study edt

the relations between the Chureti and, these organizations wiI1 probably be made here;

• Celibacy: the mat,ter cdJ celibacy for priests is not e!IlJot

pectet:t to be discussed since thJB is a matter which may be cODoo sideyed at the Synod of Bisholll' which Pope Paul VI has calle4 to meet in Rome, Sept. 29.

• S y nod Representativeso Though the U. S. bishops m. elect four representatives to tbtt Roman Synod of Bishops 8epoJ terober meeting, the election will not take place in Chicago sinecl such an election is to take place only after the agenda of the meeting is made known. TbJIlI has not yet happened and the election will have to be put ofIl to a later date.

• USCC: The further reOE"o ganization: of the United States Catholic Conference - formerlBj the NCWC-will also be dis-o cussed;,

• The establishment of a na­tional office to cooperate witll the Pontifical Commission foI! Studies on Justice and Peace.

Scores Critics Continued from Page One

reporting, in which wild hypot&­eses, mere guesses, and, outright prejudices are presented as UIF

questioned facts," he said. "There are far more important

aspects to the priesthood that might and shQuld be reported ill these challenging post-conciliU: times than celibacy," the priesll declared.

"The celibacy-obsession is, Dq! doubt, an over-reaction to a f()lloo mer taboo topic; but over-reac­tion, to my mind, is poor joUl'-! nalism," Father Luzbetak said.

"My main objection to thei handling of the celibacy contro­

• versy is that through wrong em­phasis more important aspects of the priesthood have been pusheci into the background."

Seminary System Another favorite target of "u,..

responsible" critics, according Uti Father Luzbetak, is the seminaJ'Y, system. He cited a recent maga­zine article which, he said, ga~

the impression that priests and religious are the "unhappieldl people on earth."

"I have no objections to repo~

ing shipwrecks, plane crashel' and derailments-but to repod them in such a way that people would feel prompted to make Old their last wills and 10 seek Ex.. treme Unction before boardihli • . . 'would be something leu than objective, honest reporting.II Father Luzbetak said.

"Most ,ships, airplanes and trains--like most priests and Re­ligious-reach their destinations,

' and the journey is usually quite enjoyable, 'otherwise' theN

, ,wouldn't be ,BO ,many travelers.-Father Luzbetak said thai

much' of, the currerit confusion iia the Church is the natural resUlt ~f, the' rapid' changes that have taken place, .especially since u.e Second ,vatican ,Council.·

Jesuit P'sychologist To Receive Award

NEW YORK (NC) - Father William C. Bier, S.J., will be pre­sented the annual award of the Academy of Religion and Mental Health at the academy's annual meeting in Boston, April 18-1'.

Father Bier is chairman of the psychology department at Ford­ham University here-a post be bam' held since 1958. He is beiDl! honored for his work in devdo opine. cooperation between .... forces of religion, medicine ... the behavioral sciencea.

Page 7: 04.06.67

\ I I ,~, •

TlfE ANCHOR­ 7Canoe T~Pt" Is Scientific .Project Thurs., April 6, 1967

,For Energetic Cheryl McCaHrey Pressure Forces .. Of Cassidy" '.High in' TaullJton

Canoeing is a 'relaxing pastime for most teenagers, but Bus Bill Heoa-ingsfor Cheryl McCafftey of Bishop Cassidy High' lin Taunton, TRENTON (NC)-New Jerseypaddling the' Taunton River won her first prize in the Gov. Richard J. Hughes has school's annual science fair. To get firsthand information asked the state Senate education for her project on'riyer pol­ committee to schedule a QIJe-day

Cassidy held i~ second pow­ public hearing on a controversiallution, reports felloW student der1?uff derby with Coyle recent­ bill to expand school bus serviceAnne Silva, Cheryl canoed Iy. Stang chessmen David Fer­ for private school students.the river for 30 miles, taking reira, Kenneth Texeira and Mark The Hughes request was a pictures where pollutiQn ~ntered Sylvia scored III 5-1 victory over startling tl,lrnabout. Since, intro­the water. She then took water Prevost. Sister Anne Dolores, duction of the bill with hh(sup­samples to the LawrEm,ce ~xper- S.U.S.C., head of history at SHA port in January, the governor

" ,'[ment Station where, s~e., ob- Fall River, will travel to the land had been adamant in his opposi­.. lrerved testing and., analysis,~ro- of the cherry blossoms this Sum­ tion to. public hearings, claiming

., cedures. mer as the recipient ~f a Ful­ that the principles behind' the The teenager's interest !-a, water bright grant, foIl" study in Japan. bus legislation were well estab­

,pollution began when .•she' ,read She'll study Asian history 'at lished and that hearings would an article chsllenging. youtill. to Sophia University in Tokyo, then produce more heat than light. clean up America's waterways take a two week tour of South-, But mounting public pressure for themselves and their lIuture east Asia. from civil rights and religious lIamilies. IHlQlre, ThQlIl'0 groups, coupled with an impend­

To better understand the sub- And a "Baby Day" was fea­ ing committee stalemate, led him ject, said Anne Silva, Cheryl tured recently at Dominican to change his mind on the ad­took a course on water resources Academy, with seniors and vice of legislative leaders.

Scheduling the public hearingat Bridgewater State College. freshmen, juniors and sopho­not only represented an about­Next year she'll further her sci- mores exchangilllg lunches. At face by the governor but wasentific interests when she enrolls Mt. St. Mary preparations are also a departure from tradition.at UMass as a biology majo11'. underway for a Mother-Daughter The measure - similar to oneNew Membell'\i Communion breakfast, to follow which died in committee a yearAt Bishop Stang. in : North 9 o'clock Mass Sunday morning, ag(}-()riginated in the Assembly,Dartmouth, 33 members have April 16 in the school audito­which ordinarily would havebeen accepted into the National rium. B rea k f a s t reservations held hearings had they beenHonor Society, 14 into, the Na- close Monday, April 10. National considered necessary.tional Business Honor Society. Honor Society students at Jesus­ SENIOR OFFICERS: Senior officers at St. Anthony . In passing the measure 41-11At an induction ceremony Presi- Mary will visit area public high High, New Bedford, are, seated from left, JacQ.ueline Sauve, early in March the Assemblydent William Muldoon" empha- schools Thursday and Friday, divided along party lines withsized the theme of "A Time to May 4 and 5. And the NHS has vice-president; Marc Camara, president; Laura Gobeial, the Republicans protesting theGrow," and Rev. Patrick: J. instituted a prize for the mem­ treasurer; standing, Roger Gaudreau, treasurer; Elaine failure to hold hearings. PressureO'Neill, sup eri n ten d e' n·t of ber best exemplifying the ideals Lamontagne, secretary; Robert Desrosier, treasurer. from Governor Hughes had led!IiChools, conferred membership .of the organization. A monetary to its release from committeepins and cards. award, it'll be for the purchase "-

F I v e rentgious communities without hearings.Top scorers for Sacred Hearts of textbooks foil' the next aca- sonnel participated in a school Academy, Fall River, in a na- demic year. library workshop at Feehan had representatives at Feehan's tional math exam were Eileen High School. Among speakers annual Vocation Day program,

and the guests included four are preparing for their annualFrederickson, Paula Lennon and College Acceptances was Rev. Joseph P. Walsh, S.J., Linda Pomfret. Also at SHA, a . Latest news on the college ac- librarian at Connolly High in Sisters of Mercy who were Fee­ dance that will have as its theme

"An Adventure in Paradise."junior high school department ceptance fro n t: At, Prevost Fall River. han graduates, the !former Shar­will open in' September,' making High: Guy Morin has received a Sports News on Foley, Diane Courcy, Donna The Monsignor McKeon De­

Gamache and Kathleen Sullivan. bate Society -will hold a cake salethe academy among the first in $2,200 grant from Rollins Col- SHA Fall River has so far this on April 14 and 15, the proceedsto offer an integrated Iege; and d a Following Vocation athe area Emond Tremblay Day,season met and defeated Mount,

Program covering grades seven $1,100 awar. d f rom PC. Cassidy, DA, Stang, New Bed-Career Day held the spotlight of which will be used to under­

write the many expenses arisingthrough 12. At Cassldy: Catherine Cham- yesterday at the Attleboroford, Dar t m 0 u t h , Fairhaven, from the tournaments that theDances, Dances pagne, Salem; Kathleen Masse, school, with students choosingB 'd Taunton and Somerset in volley- debating teams enter.discussions of various occupa­Juniors at Dominican Acad- rl gewater and Hofstra; Lorna b 11 h'l P t b b 11Prunier, waiting list at North- a; w I e revos ase a tions to attend. On Saturday, April 8 the De­

emy, Fall River, are anticipating ,players are preparing for the bate Society will send teams toThey're turning dramatic ata dance this Saturday at St. eastern; Linda Seekell, waiting season under the new direction of three different tournaments onFeehan as well as in Taunton.Anne's Auditorium.' Its theme: IJiS~ at BTridlgewater; Richalie Douglas Baxendale. Guy Morin different debate levels. IncludedThe Attleboro students haveSpring Carousel. 0 nson, ruesdale H 0 sp ita 1 and Bob Gallant head the Pre­ in this tight schedule is a varsitychosen to present "Meet Me inDances are in the ·spo·.'''-l.t at School of Nursing; Linda Seekello.u"". and Anne SUva, SMTI; Judith vost team. St. Louis." Dates are Thursday, crebate tourney at Eastern Naz­SHA Fall River too; where the' Keefe, Trinity and "New Ro- DA volleyballers have -won arene and an intermediate tour­April 13 and Sunday afternoon,senior class has elected· licom-, . games with Stang, Taunton, New. ney in' Lawrence.April 16.

I,

representatives to th & th t': Ido, PondvIlle and Taunton Vo- Th '11 b 't d f' St .. e U eas 'Catonal' Donna Maguire ,Alb'r ey e presen e pr: . . 'ern Mass. Student Councills con- t M' '. B' b .·.'Ni· tt - Jacques Women'!! Guild in Tllun­

vention Wednesday, AprU'12 at us agnu:s,. a: ara, a ?S, ton on Tue,sday, April 11. Nauset and to the Ma:;s. 'St.u~ent ~alv~ PR~ll~a, D-l. aul PMachm~ _ But English is important as ij: Jolly·good!Councils convention in May at L~r~ ;~ e.c~ ~r;:;.;I ,e~ry, an well as French right nOW at Wellesley College. Ca$!iidy's.ll'ep- In a Ivelr s, ':, Cassidy, as. students, practice resentatives include Nancy Kel... . 1I1N Day, ;' '", English accents for the CaSsidy­ley, Sharon McMahon',' .June, The annual UN 'day at Salve, Coyle production. of. My Fair Masi, Mary Mogan;: 'R~mary Regina College at~rac~ed,repre- Lady, 'which will be presented McKenna, and Mary Berube. sentatives from most' Diocesan Thursday t h II' 0 ugh. Saturday,

Dominican Academy wm send highs. Discussed were the World April 13 through 15 in the Cas­Sharon Andrade, Elaine Sene- Court, the Arab-Israeli dispute sidy auditorium. And a faculty­ebal, Debra Lay, Lynda Raposa. and the Vietnam war. student council supper meeting Diane Ratte and Beverly Stinton Over 150 librarialls, :$c'hool ad- is on the agenda Tuesday, April &0 one or the otbeJt' ,oonclave. ministrators and gUidance per- 25 .for the Cassidy SC. .

· mittee to plan its prom. Kathleen. chelle; Janet McCarty, Manhat- B df d d I C . tanville; Barbara Mattos at e or, an ost to ase, SHA At Prevost the Christian Youth · Corey is chairman,. 'aided by Bridgeport, from whence she's and Dartmouth. Movement plans a banquet for 'Francine Miranda, heading the also received a $200 gran(and a Cassidy's volleyb'all team re-, 'Saturday, JuneS to wind up the refreshment department;: Kath- $1000 loan. ' .. ,' '. ports victories over'Mount and year's activities; and the school'

'leen Baldaia, decoratiOnS; and New Bedford. paper, MlJple Lel1.f,. will ch,mge, ' .. Nancy Brogan, tIckets.' . 1. At S~A Fall River: Holly Cut- And Feehan's baseball team" administration with its' next is­;. " "In Any Language':"Mj'lOad" ting, already the recipierit of had its firstgame,against.Provi­ sue as junior staffers ~take over' was the theme for· a.· father- scholarships to Emmanuel and dence Country Day,. while the from seniors ·to gain experience'daughter dance held in the· Fee- New Rochelle, has been awarded track team is -preparing to meet and, add seniors, to give themhan cafeteria for juniors.: and a $4000 grlllnt Jirom Trinity. Coyle. a rest!·'seniors. Also on the r~:1 agen- Kathleen. Medeiros, .glee , club AA Speakers JH[oly Family' ,· da at the Attleboro. school was president, and. recipient .of a

h 1 · f . ' DA girls heard' talks bY" mem-' CoMmittees'of the Jun'ior claSs.' an alumni dance for the: aiums. sc 0 arshIP rom, BU" has also .... '. ' . and present juiors and'lfeniors.· been notified ,that·.sb~'s::been bers of Alcoholics Anonymous, Proceeds will benefit the Senior', granted a scholarship i from.' the who spoke on the misus'(\ of alco­

.. ,' Reception in June. . - . Hartt College of Music..in 'Hart- hoI. Junior and senior sodalists '. Up com i n gat"' J'esus-Mar:f'- ford,Conn. , , ' . at the Fall River school heard, ..•. ~cademy in Fall River:1s a.Bat:.· At Jesus.,l\'Iary.:··Victoda: 'Go- the ~rogr~m a~ part .of .aseries...

tie of the Bands td ».. "held' to-" mez, Grace DownS Aif':Academy; . of diSCUSSIOn,S 'on drInkmg, sex " morrow night from 7 J:h~, Dress': Lucille ,Phenix, Mertimack';': Mi-:, . and ~rugs. Also ~t l?A, 'So'me ~o

'H.\· will be casual, says:chairmafi'··· chelle Dufour, KatharinE! Gibbs;'. thesPdlans . madetittlh~I~Plde~U!thln t",., ':Elaine Dufault wh:o;lr'b~'~ided;"'CharlotteDube, SMl'I,;!':1 ;"': apro UClOnen .e.u' '~Y:~~ e ..

.... . in her chores by Monlq,u"f G;oy':,':: At DA:EHe'¢tt Gauthler':and :1~onth," Ill. vocatIonal presenta­

"." e~!e. Proceeds. viri~l, :~~r~ase'" N~ncy Grimcats~i, 'iuc; '}!~laine tlOI~:S, french Week at JiVrA, with SClence lab eqUIpment. . Fisette, UMass. th F I Cl b " h: .. ~. M·f C'd' M' hI' e l,'~nc'l U .spOl1sonng,sucLastly, the· P revos! Jumor ore rom assI y. IC e Ie t· ·t· kit· d" . 1 . 'B' h d w.... ' '.' ac IVI les as s s an sing-a ongsprom has been set for Friday, oUC all', . .estern Kentucky d'l ' ." . May 19 at Stone Bridge Inn. State; Virginia Fornal, Ceniral a~Y'kit d' f t I

0 . Student Counci.1s 'Connecticut; M a, r i e Willette, th' s an ~ong es ,~e ,a sf Lon

Nasson Colleg . ]L' d . ·F·d.. . e program or mem.,.ers 0 e ·Various schools are sending . . e, .10 a, ~~_elr- C etc Ie. Francais .at Cassidy.

WEAR Shoes That Fit

"THE FAMILY SHOE STORE"

John's' Shoe Store 43 FOURTH STREET

Fan River OS 8-!, ,,1 ~

Page 8: 04.06.67

8 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., April 6, 1967

Writer Finds Coat-Making Very C9mplicated Job

By Mary Tinley Daly

. Robert Browning's admonition, "A man's reach should exceed his grasp," is, we've found,. applicable to woman. At least to thiS woman. When my favorite, teacher, Mrs. Vera Filiberti, who had led a group of us through the fas­

einatingrealm of millinery, possessor, of pattern, coat mate­was persuaded to organize a ,rial and a stubborn pride, I'd elass lin tailoring, my name, 'have bowed out then~ndtAere ,-, like that of Abou ben Adhem, and bought a coat. 'led all the rest' in sign-up. Which Stitch? Knowledge of Goaded by that stubborn, but sewing was, of 'silent pride, I persisted, taking course, a prere- notes in class and spending hours qui s i tOe. No and hours in homework, consult ­problem fot: this ing a sewing" book to keep up brash would-be - with classmates who already tailor! Hadn't were familiar with tailor tack­pajamas and ing, pad stitching, swing stitch­bathrobes, baby ing, catch stitching, stay stitch­elothes, evening ing,' stab stitching and all the gowns, eve n rest. II 1 i p c 0 v e r s , As a trial spin, before cutting . emerged from into expensive wool, we all made, the faithful old up' our coats in cotton, a pretty sewing machine? Even coats-up printed cotton, at Mrs: Filiberti's to size eight, that is. suggestion, one to be used as a

So my seams didn't always housecoat. And of course, psy­match? Stitching veered a bit chologically relaxed, that house­leeward now and then? Stripes coat went together like a dream! VET NOW lRlESIDE.NT: Cuba's oldest living Spanish-Amer­and plaids slightly askew? Cord- Wool coat finally assembled

ic-an War veteran, Charles C. Leuthold, 9(i, completes his'ing escaped nakedly every once and fitted, inner and interfacings in a while? Shucks, nobodY'd secured, roll of collar meeting application for resident status in the U.S. with the aid of ever notice. even oUr little red-,headed teach- Dominican Sister Mary do' Porres, of Miami's diocesan

'No? , er's perfectionist standards, came , As our girls grew oWer, I took the lesson in buttonholes. Here's at face value their solicitous where I could hold my own, hav­"Mom, that's too much work for ing made hundreds of bound you" when I'd offer to "run up" buttonholes: just sew a square a little something or other, never patch on the outside, cut imd Iluspecting that perhaps my hot- pull the material through and off-the machine products left there you are! much to be desired in the world There you are not, according of haute couture. Perhaps, too, to Mrs. Filiberti. That system this led to the girls learning to mak'es a heavY,'bulky hunk. Pa­Ilew for themselves ,quite com- tiently demonstrating her method mendably, and quite early. that results in exquisitely perfect

So, with bland naivete and the specimens, she gave us printed confidence of the neophyte, I directions to take home and brought my back-bedroom dress- study. Study I did, making lit ­maker techniques into a class of erally dozens of sampies until expert seamstresses, Tl~ady now they came out perfectly, every to advance to the skilled art of ,sample buttonhole, Finally, with tailoring. 'Twas like an old ,plug 'scissors in hand, prayer on lips in a field of thoroughbred race- I cut into the coar'itself. 'Twas horses. awfuli O.K., more practice,

Among ,Experts couple of hours more practice. Everybody else nodded know- Every sample turning out beau­

Ingly when Mrs. Fililoerti ex;., tifully, courage returned to take plained the intricacies of how we up my coat and cut Another would go about consb:ucting a fiasco, and a weeping button­finely tailored garment: First" hokr. ' we'd '''London shrink" the wool Li;,e Job's comforter, the Head with a wet sheet, we were to of the Holise suggested, "Just get block· the front of coat to con- out-size buttons and nobody'll form to the body and tailor- know the difference." baste it over our ham. What to do about those glar-

Ham? Mrs. Filiberti'showed us ing errors? I didn't know, but her own firmly packed, sawdust- my patient teacher did. She took filled oval and gave us a pattern the coat home, mysteriously re­for making our own hams (a made the two botches and pro half-day's work visitinl' a lum- duced the final precision-perfect beryard for sawdust then the third. Ileemingly endless task of pack- Now the course is finished, so

is the coat and at least one stu­in;!hen she took our measure- dent has had a liberal education ments, not the usual three- and a humbling experience. numeral dimensions of glamour Only one drawback:' never gals, but a detailed survey: from ,again will I be content to be a bump at back of neck to shoul- slQPpy, back-bedroom seam­

stress!der tip, shoulder to elbow; elbow to wrist, and all the· way down. Yikes, this was becoming an en­ Agency Plans Mental gineering feat! Had I not been Health Program

,JERSEY CITY (NC) -'TheIllinois See to Close Mount Carmel Guild, social wel­fare agency of the Newark arch­Seventh Grade School diocese, will administer a new

DANVILLE (NC)-The\ short­ mental health program being age, of, teaching Sistllrs ' .. will sponsored by the city with the cause the closing of the seventh help of a $40,000 grant from the diocesan grade school in the dio­ New Jersey State Department cese of Peoria this June. of Health. '

The school, St. JOSllph's in Dan:ville, will close because of Called the 'Health Education the withdrawal of another teach­ Leadership Program (HELP), ing Sister, 'Father Frank J. Faul­ the project is designed to ac­stich,pastor of the parish, said. quaint citizens, civil, workers,' needed washing instructions.

"The employment' of another students and the underprivileged True, even the novice in the ,lay teacher for' a s~all school with mental health problems and ,- 'laundry ·knows that a blend of makes the ,operating costs pro­ teach thea'how _cope with ',' ':r:ayonand linen is in all proba-,

" mbitive/' he, added.- ~em:. ' , .. biliti washable, but, 8uchthings

Spanish' Center. Leuthold, a Swiss native, became a natur­alized American citizen, but lost his U.S. citizenship when he, chose to remain in Cuba and marry a native, girl there after'the Spanish-American War. NC Photo.

~PMA2fROf.l}~~ FABRIC CARE

The rush of preparing for Easter is over, the colored eggs have long since gone the way of school lunches, the chocolate bunnies have been devoured, and

" that lovely, Easter corsage still 'reposes in ,the refrigerator but more as a me­'mory than any­thing else. The difficult prob­lem facing mothers after a dress-up holi ­day, such as Easter, ,is how to get the afore­mentione,d chocolate bunny, the raisin sauce or the re­mains of that tasty ice cream cone off the children's Easter clothes. "-

No matter how careful we are or how mltticulou,s our offspring (and believe me, no one in my hou'se fits in the latter class) an accident invariably happens and that sparkling spring dress' has lost' its 'sparkle. ,Then the ques­tion arises, just how, should this spot 'be taken care of so that the item of clothing looks as good as it did on the rack in the store?

Save 'll'ags One recent suggestion that I

read urged the woman of the house to save all the tags off new I

garments and keep them handy in a recipe file container in her laundry area. This is quite a worthwhile suggestion, as I Can never remember whether the tag on that suede coat, said hand­washable or dry clean only.

The orily drawback .is that manufacturers often tag a gar­ment with only its material con­tents and negl,ect. the, much­

as water temperature, drying In­structions and pressing, hints would add to the life of a gar­ment and the nerves of the laun­dress. ,

Children's clothes, no matter how lovely, should be purchased with an eye on the ease of care rather than the appearance. True Susie may look darling in that lush pink turtle neck jersey but when the color runs in the ,. washer and the size shrinks in the dryer Suzie looks more'like, a waif than a darling. .

Durable Press Many of the new garments are

coming along with tags labeling them "Durable Press," and this is a definite step in the right direction for play and work clothes. Most of the better brands carry a line of this wrin­kle free material in a blend of 50 per cent polyester fibers such as Dacron Fortrel and Kodel, and 50 per cent cotton or rayon. ,

These clothes keep their fresh appearance for the life of the garment if they are washed in shorter wash' and spin cycles than ordinarily used in the laun­

'dering of cotton clothes and dried in a much shorter drying period.

Of course, like many "miracle" laundry discoveries, Durable Press has its drawbacks. It seems to attract oil' stains that are all but impossible to remove, altera­tions are very difficuit because of the permanency of the creases put in the garment by the press process, and garments must' be well made because any puckers or creased seams will not iron out; ~

Therefore, no matter how many miracle fibers and cloths the chemist comes up with, the housewife's laundry problems are not completely eliminated. There is nothing left for us 'tel do but to l;Isk science tel discover neater children.

Nuns Announce Exchange Plan

GREENSBURG (NC) - The Sisters of Charity of Seton HiD. Greensburg, Pa., and the Sisters of the Holy Family, a Negro community of New Orleans, wiD

,start a program of teacher­exchange In September, 1967.

The "program is designed te bring about racial integration at the faculty level in the Catholic elementary schools of the tw. communities. .

Four pilot schools in the Pitt&- ' burgh d.iocese and four in the New Orleans archdiocese will re­ceive their exchange teachers iii time for the' opening of school.

The exchange, teachers will live with the receiving cbmmu­nity and serve as regular faculty members. '

The project has the approval of Archbishop Philip M. Hannam of New Or.leans and Bishop John J. Wright of Pittsburgh.

Pian to Close Texas Cai'holic Nursing School

BEAUMONT (NC)-The Hotel Dieu SchoQI of Nursing, operated here since 1807, will close Aug. 6, because of economic pressure and more advanced academie needs.

Sister Eymard, hospital admin­istrator; said the present senior class will graduate 1;>efore the closirig date.

Other students will be ac­cepted at St. Mary's School of Nursing, Galveston, Tex., or other accredited nursing schoolD without loss of credit.

Page 9: 04.06.67

.j;J'~~.

'l7H breflll Jor RtDtlem A'ffWricu

Azale1a f For'sY.thia Combmne S,pells Spring for Columni~t

By Joe and Marilyn Roderick The art teacher in the school where I teach recently

gave a sixth grade claSs the assignment of painting their interpretation of a "Burst, of Spring." As I walked around the room looking at the children's work, I was impressed ft)y the large number who

And although we don't oftenthought of Spring as graBS think of them as sucl!l, corn and trees and birds. Given a syrup, maple syrup, honey and piece of paper and a brush, molasses must also be blcluded I[ am sure that I would hl.'ve in an'y list of sweetening agents. thought of Spring in Bome form These can be used as a substi ­af yell,ow. . ',', " . tute for the granular variety in

To me Spring is daffodils, 'cro- many recipes and are a boon to cus; .forsythia and alyssum. Re- the: cook whC) opens hel' sugar gardless' of personal interpreta- canister and finds it as bare as tion; hoWever, there 18 no ques- Mother Hubbard's cupboard. &ion that yellow is an important This recipe makes a delicious va1't· of the Spring landscape. cobbler that uses brown sugar for

This year I plan to accent the its caramel flavor, yellow of forsythia with an Apricot-CarameU Cobbler azalea which blooms simultane- 1 can unpeeled apricot halvea t:)usly with it, the azalea mucro- 2 teaspoons quick cooking Dulatum. This azalea is one of tapiC)Ca the earliest blooming varieties Jf.J cup brown sugar ·and has large lavender flowers. I tablespoon butter or Alone, it is pretty, but planted illl margarine front of a yellow forsythia the 1 tablespoon lemon juice combination is incomparable. 1¥l cups flour

This azalea is quite different Jh cup sugar ~rom others of its species in that 2. teaspoons baking powder it requires neither an acid EOU % tablespoons butter en'

nor shade. It will do tolerably margarine well in alkaline soil and can be Jh cup milk planted in the full sun. It is Dot ¥z cup brown sugar affected by wind, so it may be Yo! cup water planted at the top of a rise or in 1) Combine first 5 ingreaIients, an unprotected location and still the apricots, tapioca, brown survive. sugar, shortening and lemon

I first saw these used exten- juice and bring to a boil, stirring alvely in a planting in Bridge- constantly until the mixture be­water" where they grace all comes very clear. island iD the center of town. 2) Put this warm fruit mixture Here they are very effective but into a :-; quart baking dish. Ilre planted alone and lose some 3) CC)mbine the flour, sugar .f their force in not being and baking powder sifting to­planted in combination with for- getber. Cut into this the 2 table­•ythia. Their true effect can be spoons of shortenin.g \uotil tbe envisioned by ,thinking off. a mixture resembles eoarsa meal. planting of lavender grape hya- 4) Add the milk aU a~ once to einth around blooming daffodils these dry ingredients and stU' In tile Spring. The combiaation only until all particles aye moist­of lavender and yellow isperf~ct ened. for the garden. 5) Pour this batter ,over the

These plants have become hot fruit mixture in the baking more and more popular in thia dish and bake in III 4250 oven for area and may be found in almost 20 minutes. any of the nurseries. Only one 6) Combine the ¥z ccp .brown thing should be kept in mind sugar and the water, bring to a when planning their use. They boil and boil one minute. Spoon are usually quite small when over cobbler and continue bak­1I01d but they do grow to a height iog 5 minutes mOJ'e, en five feet and better in five to Serve with whipped! cream or Ih years. So give them room. iee cream.

ID the Kitchen Sugar Substitutes When it comes to having II 1) In a recipe that calls for

.tWeet tooth, I certainly must ad- one cup 0Jf granulated sugar, you mit to being the most addicted may substitute one cup of brown in my house. One of the reasons sugar. This results in a slight I enjoy baking so much is the flavor change, as brown sugar simple fact that I love ~tQ'" in gives what I feei is a butter­rany form. A dinner without des- scotch type of taste, but the con­i1ert is to me like corned beef sistency of the finished product without cabbage or church with-· would remain the same. Mit a sermon. It seems as if a 2) In the same recil~, if you necessary part of a meal is miss- had neither granulated nor ing if my repast ends w.ith the brown sugar, 1 cup of either entree and, as I have often men- molasses or honey could be used tioned, among my criteria for 11 only you would have to add lh 100d restaurant is the size and teaspoon of baking soda to the ((uality of its dessert list. list of ingredients and use 1f.l cup

This sweet tootb bas ~n a less of whatever otilt!r liquid the part of my life as loog as I can recipe called for. l\emember and among my memo- 3) In another type of recipe, lies of the Second World War' where 1 cup of corn syrup was are my attempts ~ wheedle- called for and you didn't have it, enough rationed sugar out of my you could use 1 cup of granulated mother, grandmother, and any sugar plus l/.icup of liquid. .tller relations available to mix A sweetener that I find indis­lIP a batch of fudge. I'm sure I pensable on my kitchen shelf is 8quandered many a month's ra- brown sugar but I do get very lion on that C)fie fudge recipe that irritated when I go to use it and Yery often turned out to be a find that nothing short of a fiasco, but even if I had to eat it sledge hammer will soften it. with a spoon I finished off every There is now on the market a lnst bit, even .to scraping the pan. type of brown sugar that doesn't

Now there doesn't seem to be harden, but if you have the regu­any sllortage of sweetening lar type, one solution to the agents, although the' Cuban situ- pro1;llem is to keep it in the re­awon did create a bit of llluctua- frigerator where it will be in a tion in the price level for a while. moist atmosphere. Some cooks Grailulated sugar, confectioners' advise us to place .1 piece of Glugar and brown are stacked .in bread or a cut apple in the­abundanoo on OUI:' grocerS' brown .sugar canister, but I pre­shelves just waiting to b:2 t!I'~-' fer the refrige.rator solution. (Of fornlcd: into mouthwatering· course, after a while ql}e's r~frig-goodiell. erator gets to resemble Fibber

NEW· KICK - SPELUNKING: In Spring a young girl's fancy turns to thoughts of ...spelunking ...cave ex­ploring. At least that's the case with Lynn MasUda, A. Da­

tive of Hawaii presently enrolled at St. Louis University, as she prepares to join members of the local Grotto Club in an adventurous trip under earth. NC Photo•

Happy Life jewish Professor Enioys Teaching

At Boston College BOSTON (NC) - A Jewish

pr{)fessor descri bed here what it's like teaching in a Catholi4: oo11ege.

"It's a happy life," said Dr. David Neiman, first of the Jew­ish faith to be named a full pro­feSSM at a Catholic college. He also has pioneered teaching in the theology of a Catholic col­lege. .

Dr. Neiman got his teaching baptism at Boston College here and now also has ben retained by Fordham University in New York. Both are operated by the Jesuits.

"I had qualms at first," Df Neiman said. "1 felt there mjg'B~

be some restraining atmosphere, some dogmatic attitude toward Biblical studies, .but I was very pleasantly surprised to find an absolutely free atmosphere."

Tilt! professor comes from Con­gregation Beth EI in Suburban Sudbury which, lacking a temple

McGee's cwset if you store everything you're advised to store in it.)

Well, no matter what sweet­ening agent you employ, treat your family to a fabulous dessert and be prepared for the compli­ments to fly.

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Dr. Neiman said the onl7 thing Boston College demaBdsof him "is that I be true to the prin­cipals of reliable scholarship."

"I have· every opportunity to study and do research in addi­tion to my teaching and I am encouraged in. every possible way," he· said. . -

The Jewish professor, whose students include six candidates fur the Catholic priesthood, gives courses ill the Book of Genesis.

Those on the go

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THE ANCHOR· 9 -Thurs., April 6, 1967

Nuns to Conduct Exchange Plan

GREENSBURG (NC) - ,The Sisters of Charity of Seton Hill here in Pennsylvania and the Sisters of the Holy Family; a Negro community of New Orleans, will begin a faculty ex­change program in September, IfJ67.

The program aims at achieving racial integration at the religious faculty level in the Catholic ele­mentary schools of the two sys~ '.

'tems. Four pilot schools in the Pittsburgh Diocese and lour' illl ' .. the New Orleans Archdiocese will participate in the program.

The exchange teachers will live with the receiving religious .

. community and will serve as reg­ular faculty members under the existing administration of the school. The project has the en­thusiastic support of Archbish9P Philip M. Hannan of New Orleans and Bishop John J. Wright of PittsbuJ·gh.

Student Volunteers Work in Appalachia

WASHINGTON (NC)-Fony.. four lay and Religious graduate and undergraduate students, rep­resenting most schools and de­partments of the Catholic Uni­versity of America here, devote(!! their Easter holidays to VISTA service in Appalachia.

They received the IO-day as­signments to posts in Kentucky and West Virginia. Community Action projects are carried on in groups of three or four An small town or hollows, under direction of resident VISTA vol­unteers.

DI Past Regents The Past Regents' Club of the

Daughters of -Isabella will hohi its bi-annual luncheon meeting at 12:30 Sunday afternoon, April g at Beacon Street Motor Hotel, Brookline. Miss Barbara O'Brien, home economist for the Bristol County Extension Service, wi.ll ,speak on Food Sense and Non­sense.

Novitiate Benefit The Friends of the Presenta.

tion of Mary Novitiate will c0n­

duct a cake sale on WednestlaJ'. April 12 from 9 to ·4 in th~

foyer of St. Anne's Hospital, Fall River.

Mrs. Leodore Salois, president has announced that Mrs. Raoul Goyette will serve as chairmap of the affair.

Page 10: 04.06.67

• ••

10 THE ANCHOR-Thurs., April 6, 1967

msc@!f<d1w'~n{ Turns BI@~kandWhite' For Conve[J1tion

ATLANTIC CITY (NC)-At­lantic City sits neal' the head of a long sandy -island, separate.d from the New Jersey mainland by seven miles of brackish Ilwamps, 120 miles Houth of New York City and 55 mj]es southeast of Philadelphia.

And for four daY~1 after Easter it was. almost totally inhabited by 20,000 of the"nulls .who com'­prise the backbone of the vast Americim Catholic Hclioolentet~ prise.'

For the eighth time in 64 years: islanders prepared for the tidal wave of Religious attending th~

annual' cOllvention of the Na­tional Catholic Educational As­sociation. NCEA conventions here are exceptionally well at ­tended since one-third of the nation's population lives within 500 miles; 40 mil,lioIl are within 300 miles.

Nuns :Were ,everywher:e; Most, Ilound iJ,l, body, scul'l'ied. along the boardwalk faster than school

, ~hildrtm escapin'g for' Christmas vacation: 'Others, 'l~onfined to erutches, had ·to be C'ontcnt' with

.t. II mere "brisk pace. . . ,., ',' . . ",. . They':were of every age, size,

' , .d' 'h' b·t" k" , t' th IIhape. an a I . nown 0 . e

" .. , Cathoii<; Sislerhood. 'A few of . the 'J)'lore" mOdei'n.r11.1ns sported.,.... "( th .·t . t ,Ilome..~ .. ~ mos.~. ~ IS all' os. 'ture'qua'lityand'success of'Cath:' . " ~~n, a,t • the Sh~lbtlrn~, Hote~ 'olie' higher education will be the .:N.ames Cath.···QI.ie

J

L' h h . d' . C1'l Ica e elmInant o· the u- .

d.. SInce, Llln~n Rl;'ssell s~ayedthere lit the turn of the centUl'Y.

Enjoy Respfite At dawn they soaked up the

mist from the sea. At noon they eould be' heard arguing amiably

'. with local, innkeepels over the price of a bowl of fruit salad. (Although thel'e is no rule that Ilays they have:to, nuns on con­vention. always eat large fruit salads, for lunch.)

At·night,di,ning at some .of the finest restaurants and hotels in town,. they showed 110 aversion to morc substantial fare.

For these. Sisters, the NCEA eonvenl;ion wa's mole - than a chance. to .. compan' notes. on" Catholic education. It was all opportunity' to renew old ac­qua'ln' t'an'ce's' a','1d to' enJoy a mer-:.

I' ': itedand~n some case.s..:....much­

neede,d respite.. '

ing Catholic-educator. Then they' assembled into smaller gl"OllPS to attend some of the 50 or more meetings that occurred here each

.day.

Farm Workers Win In Vineyard D~spute

SAN FRANCISCO (NC)-The . National Farm Workels Organ­izing Committee has b(~en certi ­fied as' the representative of workel's at the Christian Broth­ers' Mont La Salle Vineyard in Napa County.

Selection of the NFWOC was established through a cross-card­check conducted at the State Conciliation Service office here. The check of the sign2tures on the winery paYl"01l against the union membership established the NFWOC had a sufficient ma­jority of members to establish it as the legal,representative of the workers, in accordance with Na­

. tional Labor Relatio.ns Act rules.. Agreement for the' cross-card­

check system was reached at a meeting at which Bishop Hugh A, Donohoe of Stockton IJ1'esided. The check showed the union had more than 50 per cent of the workers on the winery pil~'roll.

BI-LINGUA{.- PRESS: The Catholic Center of Hong Kong has a well-equipped press department which publishes two weekly newspapers: the Sunday. Examiner in English . 'and Kuang Kao Po in Chinese. At left is Father Alan Birmingham, S.J., editor of, the Sun-day Examiner, and at right Father John Cheng, Hong Kong diocesan priest who edits the Chinese paper, talks with one of his lay assistants. NC Photo.

Suggests Merger of Catholic Colleges Edue,at.or Stresses Coordinated Planning.

'ATLANTIC CITY - Catholic lection of instiutions, not a sys- have 'resulted 1 in' 'local region'.at' colleges arid i.miversities must - tern," the priest. said that the and national patterns of Catholic coordinate their activities even' "basic isolation" of one religious higher education with no unify­to' the poiJlt of. rn:ergingin order order from another and the opel'- 'ing rationale. . '. . to assure their continuation',the atl'onal a t presid.ent.of St. Louis Univ.ersity u onomy among prov- . Retain Identity

' inces of the sam!l. r.eligi,ou.s or.del'said here. ,', .... 'In' some'cases, this weakness-" "I ani 'convinced that the most coulp. be overcome through such ·t··l d·t·,· '. f" f" 'Ch'ureh '.'C'ounel0... ';relatively minor"" structural

degree to wiiich institutions in": volve. themselves in. coordinated COLUMBUS (NC)~Roose"elt· planning....' Father Paul C; Rein- Carter, a Catholic layman, has ~rt, S,J., stated. been appointed. to the staffs of . For the' weaker. Catholic' col- . -the Columbus Area Council of

leges, such "coordinated pla'n­ning" might even involve their loss of identity through merger with other schools, he continued.

Fath.er Reinert urged the col­leges to proceed from the convic­tion that '~wha't most contributes to the development or' Catholic' higher education is what ulti ­mately determines 'what is\best for each- institution' not vice: versa." , ,

. Unnecessary Drain ". Addressing the 64th annuai convention of the National Cath·~. 7" . •

olic.· Educ.atio.. nal' Associat.ion.',F' th R' t' . " at e~_, ,el;el ga':~~E~reliml-

Churches and' the Inter-Church Board for Metropolitan Affairs.

The Council .of - Chul'ches is all-Protestant; but - the Inter-Church Board includes the Co­lumbus Catholic diocese among its]3, member - denominations. Although they are,' distinct 01' ­

ganizations, they have had the same director, the Rev, N. lI. VanderWerf," a- . Presbyterian' minister, since "Jan, 20.

Caj·ter will take up' fulltime duties as church-comm'unity co., ordin'ator and assistant to the Rev,' Mr. VanderWerf: for' both'

. organizatipns. He Will' be the first Catholic to hold an' execu­

na ~_._~epor on..an., spon-. tive post in the Coiumbtis Area They were serious 3bou.t. their.: s.?red s.tudy whlch,~lll be pUb- C 'I f C , I h d 1 t S . Th ttttl .ounci 0 hurches. 'Carter a

work, too: Once each' day. they',: .. l~ ~ ~n a e ,u~mer. e ~ y Negro, is now employed as'.. a filled' the huge ballronmof. At- ,- wIll no.,te ,maJor weak.nesses .ofC th 1 h h d t f news reporter for station WBNS- ' lantic City Convention Hall for a 0 ,IC ~g er e u,ca"IOn, c~lIe. TV in Columbus. a major addl'ess by an outstand- o.f whl~h, It f?ul~?~ IS orgamza­

tI~~al Insulal'lty, '. He is an active member and .. The unnecessaQ' dram on past' president of the Catholic

manpo,wer and moneJ:' r~sulting Interracial Council here in' Ohio from senseless duplication of and a member of St: Thomas programs and facilities must be parish, the YMCA and the Co­corrected," Father Rcinert said. .lumbus Leadership Conference. "Institution'al coordination would enable us to accomplish much more than the iSQlated efforts so typical of the past."

Noting that Catholic higher education in America is "a col­

./'

Anti-Desecration ATLANTA (NC)-The Georgia

Council of Churches, the Atlanta Jewish Community Council and the Catholic archdiocese of At­lanta have joined in support of a bill which would make it a felony to desecrate any house

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' shared .facilities, Father Reinert said. He added that cooperation of this type is now bein'g utilized by more than 40 per cent of Catholic j·nstitutions. " _ A second step, he suggested,

would );>e mergers with retention . of identification. Father Reinert

said that. this move is being con­sidered by three Catholic col­leges in Los Angeles, and pre­dicted that it might emerge as the' ideaf'pattern, . . -'Finally,' the educator sug­

gested,' coordinated planning 'might 'mean actual.mergers, with loss of identification for some in­stitutions and cl'eation' of some new ones,. .

Father Reinert said that such a mel'gel: is now under consider­

t· b L' . St'a IOn . y . eWls and -, .Francis

Defers Decisioh To C~ose SchooE

ATLANTA (NC)-ArchbishoD. Paul J. Hallinan has anouncecll that an earlier decision to close Drexel Catholic High School has been deferred for' further study. It had been announced that the six-y'ear-old school, which h<Dfl 156 Negro pupils, would be closed in June' because of low enrollment and financial diUi.­culties.

The archbishop's latest a&o nouncement, which followell meetings with parents of chil\­dren .at the school, said a fi ncnll decision on the school's futuD'41 will be announced today:'

The entire question will 00 discussed prior -to the decisiol/ll at a meeting of the archdiocesan board of education, parents of Drexel pupils, and the .arch­bishop.

Announcing the deferment oj? the decision on closing to Drexel pupils, Archbishop Hallinan said\: "There is only one basic criteriz for judgment in this case-the best education possible for aU students, white and Ne~ro,

"Mistakes in judgment can be made on all sides of any dis­agreement. But only if this cri ­teria of excellence prevails willi the Catholic Church and thfl 'com~linity' of Atlanta be prop­erly served.

·"If we have made mistakes in closing Drexel, it will be neces­sary to ,correct them. But if fur­ther studies . indicate that .t~ school cannot· retaiJi its excel­lence· because the small enroll ­ment does not allow for a prop­er diversity 'of courses, etc., thE decision may turn out to be the tight one for' the students, Fur­ther investigation will show all of us the 'right answer."

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Page 11: 04.06.67

Archbishop Cites Private Schools' Public Nature

ATLANTIC CITY (NC)­The nation's Catholic schools, rather than being called pri ­vate schools, should be call­~d "free public schools," Arch­bishop Celestine J. Damiano, Bishop of Camden, N. J., told a group of Catholic educators here.

They ~arn that name, he said, "because certain citizens, using the i r God-given inalienable rights, have chosen.to ·educate their children accorqing to their conscience. They are ,public 'be­cause any system that caters 10 seven million is rendering a pub­]ic service to the community and to the nation."

Our society, he said, has taken s parochial view of schools.

Quality Education '''We have gotten to the point

that we refer to the Catholic schools as 'our' schools and the public cshools as 'their' schools." The same thing has also hap­pened to the public school people who hav~ made a similar mstinc­tion, .h~ said. "

"In a pluralistic l?ociety, both systems, ,,$hould bespeak the partQership and concentrate on quality, e,d~cation,for: :every child regard~l;ll?S of, the, sc.J:lOl)~ he at­tends," he said.. " ,. .

"Gradually, this has been the case in ·national and"'state legis­lation for the past .de,cade."

"It is imperative ,that the peo­ple of- ·the private schools recog­nize that the public s~hools be": long to all of us," he said. "Like­wise, the general public must recognize the' importance and in­fluence of the private schools because they have stood as a monument to freedom as e:ll­pressed in our constitution."

Future Leaders ,"The government on local,

state and 'federal levels cannot be blind to the role that these private school citizens play and will cOlitinue to play in the fu­ture destiny of our country.

"The federal government in particular has a very serious ob­ligation and is deeply concerned over the quality, the standards of excellence that all schools im­part to their studel~ts,

"In the distribution of funds and a'ids they ca'nnot discl"imi':' nate. and overlook the cxistence and importance of the students who have chosen fl'eely to tlse their loighls to be educated ac­eOI'ding to theil' conscience.

"Some of the futuloe leaders, business and professional people as well, many future citizcns of this country will have come from these fl'ee schools," he said.

Catholics in Te~as Hit Abortion Change

SAN ANTONIO (NC) -Two Catholic organizations have taken public stands against : proposal to liber::llize the state's aboltion laws.

The Texas C::ltholic Confer­ence, the organization of the state's Bishops, issued a public staterilent that it is "definitely opposed to the abortion bill."

The Catholic State League of Texas, meeting in Austin, also' passed a resolution expressing that group's "unalterable opposi­tion to any bill * * * that would in any way liberalize the abor­tion laws of Texas."

A bill has been introduced in the State Senate which would permit aboltions to preserve the mental or physical health of the mothcr" to prevent the birth of • defective child, and in cases where pregnancy results from rapc or incest. Present law pt"r­mits abortions only when the mother's life is in danger.

1.. , i

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CAI>PING AT ST. ANNE'S: Bishop Cmnolly gives the traditional cap 'to 36 stu­dents at St. Anne's Hospital· School of Nursing, Fall River, on the completion of their period of. pi.'obation~

Central~ Seminaries for Men and W'omer. Pr.,posal Comes' From Illinoi's Maryknoller

ATLANTIC CiTY (NC)-Cen-' but it would be a .risk "wen .wome~," he a'dded, "then it has iral seminaries' which would of­fer joint training courses to fu­ture priests, nuns and lay work­ers have been proposed her-e by a psychologist.

Father Eugene C. Kennedy, M.M., of the Maryknoll Seminary at Glen Ellyn, IlL, cautioned the annual convention of the Na­tional Catholic Educational As­sociation that "the world will simply not be saved by men and women separately." ..

Worth the Risk For this reason, and because

ppoille training to Sel've the Church must learn to work to­getlH;r, seminaries and. Religious houses should give up the tradi­tional isolation of the sexes, he asserted..

In joint training centers, the Maryknoller continued, more students would leave to mar~y,

Manchester Bishop, Heads IEducators

ATLANTIC CITY (NC) Bishop Ernest Jo Primeau of Manchester, New' Hampshire, will serve another year as presi­dent general of the National Catholic Educational Association. He was reelected at the conclud­ing session of the four-day an­nual convention here in New Jersey.

Father Robcrt C. Newbold of Warwick (R..I.) and Father Wil­liam H. Conley of Bridgeport were the two New Englanders chosen to serve on the seven­member 'board as vice presidents general.

The ]968 NCEA convention will be held in San Francisco, starting Aploil 15.

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ST. LOUIS (NC) ~ Historian

THE ANCHOR-Thurs., April 6. 1967

Appec ~ De~o~ion

On Fede~a~ A;d DAYTON (NC)-Dismissal (lJf{

a suit challenging parochiaill school pupils' participation in II program authorized by the Ele­mentary and Secondary Educa­tion Act of 1965 will be appealecll by Protestants and Other Amer­icans United for Separation ofl Church and State.

The POAU had charged that 11

section of the act providing foli' the use of books and library ma­terials by parochial school I:>upilo was unconsti lutionaI.

The suit was dismissed in U. S. District Court in Dayton by Judge Carl A. Weinman, who held that the plaintiffs lack standing to maintain court ac­tion. He cited the caSe of Froth­ingham vs. Mellon (1923) as the "leading case" with respect k> standing.

That decision stated that Q

taxpayer's "interest in the 0 •moneys of' the treasury . W

comparatively minute and inde­terminable" and that "no basis iD afforded for an appeal," by rea­son of one's status as a taxpayell'.

The POAU had attempted it> characterize themselves as some­thing other. than mere ta,xpay­ers, the court noted. The rulln!? held that "the basis of theili' amended complaint is the! samtl as Frothingham's - that fcderaR funds are being expended in 811l

unconstitutional manner ancll such expenditures deplcte the federal treasury to the ultimate detriment of &he hldidvidu2i! plaintiffso

$1 Million Library JERSEY CITY (NC) - st.

Peter's College here has opened the O'Toolc Library, a $1.7-min­lion building which is the fil's1i step in a $lO-million dcvelop­ment pl'ogram being undertaken as the Jesuit-operated college nears its 100th anniversary.

worth r'unningo" , . . T,hose ,wh~ rem.ained, 'pe said,

would "make a much better in­, formed response to the' gift of

iCelibacy." "The great efforts at improv­

ing' s~mi])aries al1d houses of training as authentic models of the Church itself provide the' logical and sensible setting for dealing intelligently with the re­lationships of the Church's men a?d women," Father Kennedy stated.

"If the Church is men and

to be that way during periods of preparation for the apostollite as well."

Father Kennedy also suggested the 'establishment of small par­ishes for 'which seminaries as "real Christian communities" would take pastoral responsi­bilityo

This should be, he said, a "fully developed" responsibility and not the "playacting" at priestly chores, which he as­serted, is common in some sem­inaries.

Henry Steele, CommageJ: has been named to receive .thefirst a/lnual W.ilma and R~swell Mes­sing, Jr. literary aW,ara, Julian 1. Edison, presidcntof the ,Asso­ciates of the St. Louis University L!braries, has. announced.. . The award is given to 'an ,au'­thor "making a distinguished cpntribution to the world. of lit ­erature as perpetuated through the printed' word." Presentation of the awal'd will be made April 30 at a meeting at the Pius XII Memorial Library here.

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Page 12: 04.06.67

12 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., April 6, 1967

Nuns Relate Experie"ce In Island Mission Work

By Rt. Rev. Msgr. John S. Kennedy A couple of new books describe the work of two nuns

8tationed on Iarge, densely populated islands off the coast of great continents.' One of the islands is Taiwan: the other is Manhattan. After reading the books, one wonders which assignment' is the clinics. There is up-to-date more bizarre. The books are equipment. There is even the An American Nun in Taiwan prospe.ct of a hospital. by Sister Mary Paul and C~ Needless Repetition Edmund Fisher '(Doubleday.' As to most of these improve­$4,95': 501 Franklin Avenue. 'Car- 'ments, they came' gradually and den 'City, N. Y. with transitional phases. Take n1 531) and transportation. Fiq;t there was Manha,ttan Mis- walking. Then a bicycle was ac­sio~ by Sister' quired; it had formerly been 'the M_a ri e Lucita bishop's. This was succeeded by (D 0 ubI e day. a motorcycle, and ,Sister Mary

.$ 3 . 9 5; 50 1 Paul has been told that her mo- . Franklin Ave- torcycle riding ended the local IllUe, G a I' den taboo against women's using' Cit y, N. Y. such, a machine. The ambulance 11531). Sister was originally a jeep, ingeniously Mar y Paul's - converted. name be for e . The -community has grown. A she entered re- sister surgeon' is completing her ligion was Gloria Joan Watts'. training. Five hundred patients She was born in Illinois, in a are cared for each week at the Methodist family. clinics: And Sister M;ary Paul

She became a Catholic after seems perfectly happy, so far attending Catholic schools. Her away in many respects from her ambition was to become a doc- beginnings ill; Decatur, Illinois. tor, but,her first year of ('ollege Her story is told here in pedes­was scholastically poor. She trian fashion, with some needless went to nursing school, and after repetition. But the story itself is graduation" moved on to Mar- unusual enough to hold one's in­quette University to get a bach- terest in spite of the rude prose elor's degree in public health. and' the loose organization;

At Marquette she met a Chi- lust when the telling is at its Dese nun whose community had most lackluster, one comes on a Buffered decimation undelt' the piquant detail. For example, ·no Communist regime, with the Chinese or Taiwanese admits to remnant taking refuge in Tai- illness or seeks treatment during wan, Miss Watts had alI'eady be- the two-week celebration of the

oR come interested in lay mission- New Year. To do so would be to al")' work and in China, and now insure 'illness for the whole year. decided to volunteer for two Series of" VigneUes Tears' service in Taiwan witlll the If most Americans will find the Our Lady of China nuns. people of whom Sister Mary Paul

Decides ~ S~,. writes strange, a great many Americans will have the same

This decision was greeted with consternation, but Miss Watts opinion of the people who figure carried it through. In Novem- in Sister Marie Lucita's pages. bel' of 1959 she arrived in Tai- Sister Marie Lucita is a native 'IVan, to be greeted by a mother of New Jersey, belongs to the superior who spoke not a word Missionary Servants of the Most of English. Blessed Trinity, and is a social

The motherhouse of the Our worker for Catholic Charities of Lady of China nuns was in the the New York 'Archdiocese. mountains. The community was She works among the poor and all but destitute, and their hnus- ,the unfortunate. Some of the tng was of the poorest, without people whom she serves are Illeat, primitive as to bathing Puerto Ricans, and she was pre­facilities, perpetually' damp, pared for 'such service by three

years in Puerto Rico.overrun with spiders and lizards' tand regularly visited by snakes. Her book is a series of vig-She determined to stay for six nettes. Each focuses on a person

1lIl0nths, no matter what. Adjllst- and a problem. There is the dope unent was not And theeasy. addict, the alcoholic, the prosti- developed greater depth, at work was not only hard but be- tute, the unwed mother, to'name greater length. So, too, with what " ah~ S'set with obstacles. For example, ister Marie Lucita has learned the means of transportation was - Each person is sketched, with about our culture; this she dam walking, and this meant tlnat something of his or her situation" at but never settles on. some house calls required a ten- given. The method of dealing mile journey on foot. with the person and the situa-

People of all ages, with every tion is described. The outcome of sort of illness or injury, were Sister Marie Lucita's efforts illl clamoring for attention, and the indicated, sometimes successful. wherewithal for treating th(~m sometimes not. j)roperly was either totally want- Inspiring Example !Jag l)riri the skimpiest supply. . One feels that this book could

have been much better than it is. .Joins Communib The subject matter is interesting

When: the six months' trial and important.' The work on period was up, Miss Watts was which the author is engaged is of aU for staying on; indeed, she prime significance t4> anyone was all for joining the comm\J- concerned about people aod nity of Our Lady of China. about our society. Her experi-

Naturally, there was doubt ence is rich, her observations about her vocation, and" more- shrewd, her example inspiring. over, there was the problem that But the treatment is once­no non-Chinese had ever before over-lightly. The style is deter­Bought admission. But the fir!lt ,minedly bright, sometimes arch. anniversary of her arrival in It is well t4> indicate that the Taiwan' found her about to be plight of the' unfortunates of admitted to the novitiate. whom we get glimpses is not

Things have changed gr.eatly utterly hopeless. But there is for the nuns since Miss Watts anguish here which is' not al ­became' Sister Mary Paul, and' lowed to speak grgimingly as it this largely through the gene- should. There, is digging 'below rosity of Americans, both people the surface which'requires to' be at home and servicemen sta,· done. tioned in Taiwan. The elements for a substantial

'rhere is a new, "modern moth·. book are available, as is clear erhouse. There is a se.ries' of ReVii." from 'skimming 'alhisionS"to ..the

Holsum Bread is that good!

Plan to Share Rare Volumes Of Theology .. :,

CLEVELAND (NC)-Jrn­auguration of a pJan for Jin­ternational sharing of rare

'theological volumes was an­nounced here at t he annual convention of American Catholic Librar:ians. '

Father John J. Alhadef, S..J.. director of the newly formed Catholic Microfilm Center, told the convention that a team of 30 theologians, librarians and mi­crofilmers will fly to Rome '. June t4> work on the center.a

- first i~ternational project.

The group will select, micro­'J film and make- available to

i.,", ,- :: -, "American scholars some" 5,000,' ';~.~' ,~,"~ _hard-to-find theological volumes /- '" .~'!- which make up the nucleus of ,I ",', :.1 the center's John XXIII Memo­

!"::"'>- \:,.t-.--rial_!-ll;lrary. Cooperating will be il' ,. ' 't major theological libraries from , "' • ' :. '~' throughout Europe and tile

PAPAL PASTORAL VISIT: Schoolboy pronounces his 'welcome to Pope Paul during the Pope's visit to a parish church in the Roman suburbs. NC Photo.

Kindness and Care Message Makes Strong Impression Oln Russian

Fisherman Treated at Alaskan Hlospital ANCHORAGE (NC) - He

didn't understand the language but the message 'of kindness vansmitted by the care he re­ceived durin'g his long weeks of recuperation at Providence Hos­pital here has made a strong im­pression on Vyacheslav Hohrin.

Kohrin, 20-year-old Russian fisherman suffered a serious kidney injury while on his traw­ler off Alaska's coast. First, he was taken t4> Griffin Memorial Hospital on Kodiak Island and then flown to Providence where be was treated by a urologist.

Protests BleSSllIllfr

Not only the language barrier made t~ hospital strange ..

reaso~s-why these people are in such predicaments, others to 'the d ' d d 't' '

0 S an on s which a personin the author's position must observe. "

One ;would like to see these in

Hohrin. Operated by the Sistel'lll 'of Charity of Providence, the hospital has many religious sym­bols in evidence and prayers are recited morning :and evening over a broadcast system.

Shortly after his arrival, Hob­rin made it clear that the reli ­gious symbolism did not impress him. A Russian-speaking Pl'iest atteJDpted to give him a bl~i~ but the young fisherman prG­tested bluntly, "I am • Russian. I have DO Ged."

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He said the CMC project was "the first American initiative of its kind" and has "as its on1T aim to promote the worldwidi sharing of scholarly resources."

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Page 13: 04.06.67

Testimony Before_ Subcommittee Brings Cuba Back into Picture

WASHINGTON (NC)-In the dropped in the waters of an In­midst of all the concerns about ·filtrated harbor and later pick~d Vietnam, something has hap­ up by a boat whose "papers are pened here to jerk national at ­ in order." tention rudely back to the threat ... Sooret MisslRes communist Cuba poses in the Elaborate tunnel systems haveCaribbean and all Latin Amer­ been carved out of Cuban moun­ica. tains, to secrete missiles, arms

Testimony taken less than a and stores.month ago by a Senate subcom­ There are Russian-built mis­mittee on internal security has · siles in Cuba.been made public. It contains A Cuban-Russian. high-seassuch observations as these: ·fishing fleet operates with s0­

Military activities have in­ phisticated electrical gear. Rus­creased notably in Cuba since · sians command many of thesethe "Russian-managed" Tri-Con­ vessels, and Russian crews aretinental Conference was held in 'integrated with Cubans.Havana in January, 1966. The Cuba receives arms fromconference established Cuba as Russia, Czechoslovakia and Bel­the "forward base of subversion gium, and in turn has sent armsagainst the Free World," it was · to North Vietnam.reported at the time. Cuba has sent co'mplete SAM

A witness, who had been re­ (ground-to-air missile) units totained in a Castro ministry until North Vietnam by way of Al­last year because of his useful

g~eria.knowledge of the sugar indus­

At least 17000 Africans-Con­try, reported seeing 4,000 Rus­golese or Somalias - have re­sian officers at one camp in the ceived training in Cuba.Province of Havana.

'Papers in Order' Former IDipnomats Some 20,000 Cuban-controlled One witness, who had been

guerrillas are believed to be in Cuba's ambassador to a half­Peru, Colombia, Ecuador, Chile dozen different countries before and Venezuela. Peru has been Castro took over and now lives chosen as a headquarters for this in Panama, said Latin America guerrilla operation, because it "is being converted into a" vol­borders on five Latin American cano." . countries. Witnesses before the subcom­

"Counterfeit" boats are used to mittee included persons who left infiltrate Cuban-trained guer­ Cuba as recently as t.he end of rillas, arms and supplies into last year, persons formerly livingLatin American countries. These and working in Cuba who utilize are vessels built to pass for fish­ their special backgrounds as ing boats perculiar to the harbors "Cuba-watchers" on the perim-­of a particular country. eter of that country, former Cu­

Arms sealed in rubber contain­ ban diplomats, business and pro­ers and placed in lobster pots are fessional men, and others.

Family Dialogue Within Churrch Council's "Revolutionary' IdelCJ

WASHINGTON (NC)-Poten­ "Shared responsibility requirestially the most revolutionary not merely the participation in idea of the whole Second Vati ­ programs decided upon by some­can Council is a system of "fam­ one else - but shared decision ily dialogue" carried out within making as well," to the full ex­the Church, the executive direc­ tent that theology permits, Work tor of the National Council of emphasized.Catholic Men said here.

This dialogue, "carried out with honesty, wisdom, good will, mutual respect and trust," can CORREIA & SONSgive the Church a new dynam­ism, Martin H. Work, declared. ONE STOP

Work was guest speaker at SHOPPING CENTER Dunbarton College of Holy Cross - Television _ Furniturehere for its second annual lec­

- Appliances _ Groceryture in memory of Mother M. Rose Elizabeth, founder and first 104 Allen St., New Bedford president of the college.

997~9354The Vatican Council laid the foundation for the "apostolate of public opinion in the Church," Work noted. "The chapter on the laity in the Constitution on the Church states in essence that the SAVE MONlEY ON laity not only have the right and duty to preach and teach, but that they, like the whole Church, YOUR Oil HEATI received gifts from the Holy Spirit. ~ _ .... A~ WYman

"Bishops were admonished to ~t- 3-6592 listen to the laity as an obliga­tion of their office and to judge CHARLES ·IF. VARGAS their value," Work said. "This

254 ROCKDALE AVENUE led ... to the need for structures of dialogue in the Church so that NEW BEDFORD, MASS. the lai ty could be heard in an orderly and intelligent fashion."

Dialogue Structures This will not only "reduce

apathy and frustration but, most of all, it will help guarantee the continuing relevance of Chris­tianity no matter how fast, or in what direction the world moves."

Work identified pastoral com-­missions, parish councils, and new forms of university and col­lege boards of trustees as among the "structures for dialogue" within the Church.

But he sa:d that the layman's DeW role of "co-responsibility" for the Church "requires more than mere structures of dialogue. It needs new structures for· the exercise of this shared responsi­.wlitoY in aIIostolic actioD.

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., April 6, 1967 1~

Stresses WomenDs Role In Scheme for Peace CINCINNATI (NC)-The Sec­ to love, and her role in the wounds, the comforter in distress

ond Vatican Council has raised family has been well established and disappointment, the sharer the sights of Catholic women through the centuries: "She is of joy and sorrow, the peaceco from their role in their own the first teac,h~r, the healer of maker." families to a role in the world But, Miss Mealey continued" family, Margaret Mealey de­ the council, through its Decree clared at the College of Mount ,Parishioners Vote on the Apostolate of the Laity,St. Joseph here. has given "a basis for our con­To Retain School

The executive director of the sideration 6f the role of womanNORMAN (NC) - ~rhe mem­National Council of Catholic in the world family, according to

bers of St. Joseph's parish in thisf" 'men who received the col­ the Church's directives."Oklahoma community havelege's Mater et Magistra award, Reminding that Pope Paul Vl!voted to retain their six-gradesaie this means that Catholic' has said "development is the newparochial schoo~ by l!- 2-1 margin.women must "face our Christian word of peace," and has created!

responsibility to assure that the In doin~ so, they turned down a Pontifical Commission for basic political, civil and human an alternative proposal by a Studies on Justice .and Peace,rights which are fundamental to group of parishioners to establish Miss Mealey said Catholichuman dignity are soon the lot women "fit into this scheme fora broadly expanded Confrater­of women everywhere, indeed of peace" in three ways "as indi­men and women." nity of Christian Doctrine pro­ viduals, as citizens of an affluent

God's unique gift to women, gram with a full-time profes­ " 1 Be: memb~rs 01 '" Miss Mealey said, is the capacity sional staff. world order."

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Page 14: 04.06.67

14 . 1 "

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., ApriJ 6, 1967

,.":':Praise$ 'Wo,.,d and, Worship ".Re'ligion 'Textbook"S'eries

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

I recently, hadoco~sion ,to review a new series of re­ligion textbooks for the ,elementary grades, Word and Wor­

. ship, by Father James 'J. Kilgallon, Father Gerard P. ~eb­er, and Sister M.' Michael O'Shaughnessy,. O.P. (B~rtzlger

Brothers, New York). As a- an unfortunate one. D~. King is long-time beaul'eaucrat who still alive, and it is always dan- . has had practically no expe- gerous to use living p~ople as riencewhatsoever in 'the field examples.. of catechetics, I am not qualified The . autho;s note, ho~ever; to appraise this s(:ries, from the that t~ey don t want the ~hl1dren p e d ago g i _! to thmk that you can t be, a gal point of Christian until you are dead. view. On the On the othe~ hand, the m~n's other hand . I 'very name stirs up such passIon am pleased' to in .people that. it prevents a r~al recommend it pomt from bemg calmly consld­very enthusias­ ered. tically from the New Treatment point of view of 'rhis particular lesson has been

changed. The focus is not on Dr.Catholic social teaching~ T his King, but rather on the issue of

civil rights, bringing out the new series of idea that all Christians, of what­-religion ever color, who seek rights for .textbooks others by' peaceful means are is very practical llllld down-to­ showing bravery.earth in its presen,tation of the Mention is still made of Dr. social teaching of the Church. King and his picture (a smaller

It meets head-im. even the, one) is still in the text, together most controversial of present­ with a picture of the by now day social and economic prob- famous old Negro woman who lems. , sat in f~nt of the bus in Ala­

That is to say" it deals directly bama.,.and very pointedly· with' issues Actually, the lesson is now, like slums, poverty. peace, and, a ,stronger one. It is one whick above all, the whoneyast issue the authors are prepared to stand of race relations and! civilqghts. by at any cost. '

Meet Issues lH!ead-on They feel that if we fail to The authors are tl-yingto help strive with all our might to give

form Christians who V\1.iUlive in children in Catholic schoolll the 1970's, 80's and! 90's, when Christian attitudes on such is­conditions will be quite different sues as the race question and from what they are now, no mat­ civil rights, we might just as ter whether we like it or not. well quit calling our schools

They feel that th(:y would be Catholic and stop pretending betraying the childr.en and their that we are really giving them parents if they used the' ostrich religion in religion classes. technique and talk'l:d only in Use Sleezy Ta,cties vague terms about Roving one's If the series, or this particularl!leighbor. bOok, is turned doWn on this ill­

They have met. these ,issues sue or on the grounds that it'. bead-on, both in the text, in 'the too "controversial," let its critics learning activities, and in the art PQ'nder what sort of future work (which they b~lieve to be Christian adults they will have as important as the text in teach­ been responsible for forming or ing and forming attitudes). not forming.

Specifically, they sh()w chil ­ , Already there is a small, high­airen of different ra:ces playing ly active and vocal group formed

.. and working side by llide,'.laugh­ in one Archdiocese secretly iDg together, etc. (It is hard to, working to have the ,whole se­believe, but there have been ries banned in the parochial cases in which mo(thers have schools of that See,. ..' pasted other' pictureu over the They are ,quoting sentences out faces of Negro children.) of context and resQttil,lg, to other

Unfortunate ]Exumpne sleezy ~cti<:&, in,o"il~~. ~ givethe impreSSIOn tliat the, :liVholeFinally there is the lesson, in series teaches civil disobediencethe third-grade book "We Follow and preaches socialism ratherJesus" which has already created than Christianity.quite a stir and 'will probably

The authors, for their part, be­continue to do S()~ lieve .that the whole matter ofOriginally, the lesson was the' Christian's.; ,commitment tocentered on :Dr..,M~~ein',.i.ut~er Christ as He Eixist5. in tills world •King. He 'was· used ill\;.a lesson' is' the issue~ Thei~0I11d~ke toentitled "Christians. alre'Brav.e:" see 'it hit "hard: and 'head~on." IThe point was thai'iblis man' re~ agree with ,thern,~mpl~tely.fused to resort to violence while

at the same time .'s'eeking/ f\m human rights for,~~Il" pepple,' Anno~nce.O',Ot:dry:

The whole PQirit:wa;,. QraV:~ty.

There were expreSsions" which ,Contest Wlnri,~'rs", were subject to misunderstai)d-' WASHINGi9N~':'(~9)":;Ab~y lng, especially whenta'fieit 'o\it 'of from Massachusetts' arid a girl context-e.g. "Dr. King is like from Texas have received four­Jesus" - Le. he is brllve - and ~ar scholal'ships to Catholic col­that the Holy Spirit helps him leges as winners of the 13th an­in his work-Leo obtauning jus­ nual' national oratorical contest tice by means, of love and non­ sponsored, by th~ National Cat~ Violence and pra:Yel'.: <', olic youth Orga,nization Feder~

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Page 15: 04.06.67

Be Professor Gets Philosophy Award NOTRE DAME (NC)-Father English province and the author

Martin e. D'Arcy, S.J.. British of a number of books on philo­philosopher, has received the sophical and theolo~cal subjects. Aquinas-Spellman award from The award was presented dur­the American Catholic Philo­ ing the three-day annu.al meet­sophical Association at Notre ing of the American Catholic Dame University here for out­ Philosophical Association whose standing achievement in Catholic general theme was, "The Nature philosophy. of Philosophical Inquiry." Some

Father D'Arey, currently vis­ 800 persons attended sectional Iting professor of philosophy at meetings dealing with the vari ­Jeswt-nm Boston College, is a ous branches of philosophy. fo:rmer provincial of the Jesuits'

Taunton Boolk Fair Four hundred attended a stu­

dent book fair at St. Anthony's S c h 001 auditorium, Taunton. Speakers included Sister Eu­genia Margaret,S.U.S.C. of Sa­cred Heart School, Taunton; and Sister Mary Hortense, S.U.S.C., head of the English department at Bishop Cassidy High School, Taunton, who pre­sented a literary travelogue. A large arra.ngements committee was headed by Sister Claire Edward, S.U.S.C., principal of St. Anthony's. -

THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., April 6, 1967 15

Dewart to Address Press Convention NEW YORK (NC) - LesJie

Pewart, author of the widely­discussed book on current theol­ogy, "The Future of Belief", will conduct a general interview with members of the Catholic press Association in Toronto May 16­19.

Dewart, whose views have provoked both acclaim and dis­sent in recent months, is asso­ciate professor of philosophy at

St. Michael's College of the Uni­versity of Toronto ,and an editOl' of the theological journal, Conti ­nuum.

As a speaker at the press con­vention, he joins such other im­portant Canadians as Marshall McLuhan, the communications theorist, Bishop Remi De Roo of Victoria, B. C., and Douglas Roche, editor of the Westem Catholic Reporter.

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Ie THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Aprit 6, 1967 _

Unification of Resources Needed in Latin Lands

-From "SociaU RevoluUoD in the New Latin America"

lEdited by John J. Considine, M.M.

Discussing Christian participat.ion in 'national planning lor Latin America, Rene Otero writes: It may truly- be said that the idea of planning for the development of Latin America was born of the conviction that 19th century economic and political liberal­ economy in general has experi­ism was unable to generate enced marked growth, particu­economic and social growth larly ouring the last two decades. at the rate required and that But serious crises have fre­

quently arisen during this de­, do achieve such growth it be­velopment, the solution of which<tame evident that the need ex­was to slow this trend,isted for plan­

It has been noted that growthIlhing the unifi ­has been uneven among the va­eation of avail ­rious social sectors to the extentable resources. that most Latin Americans havelIn many of SECRETARY: Msgr. Jo­enjoyed only a limited share ofUte world's fi ­its benefits. Moreover, if we seph B. Gremillion, a priestnancial centers, observe the high rate of popula­ of the Diocese of Lafayette,especially in the tion, growth which is present La., is permanent secretary1l1nited States, precisely among the least fa-­ahis reaction of the recently establishedvored classel! of society, we shallwas thought to Pontifical Commission forfind that year after year thebe a manifes-" number of, the unprivileged Studies on Jllstice and Peace. tation of an ex­grows at a faster rate than that NC Phototremist outlook

CIlalling for intervention by the of the beneficiaries of develop­state in economic and social ment. Prayer for -RainUnder such _circumstances the.processes of the nation, and it was supported neither by gov­ ne-ed to institutionalize the plan­ Proves Fruitfulernment nor by entities which ning and programming of devel­eould serve as possible -sou rces of BREWARRINA (NC)-A Cath­opment becomes apparent as a· financing for development. requirement for any sound eco­ olic bishop in this "western divi­

It was not until the United nomic policy and for obtaining sion" of Australia could echo States had experienced the se­ with conviction Louis XIV's fa­financial resources, This effort vere economic and l>ocial prob­ culminated with the holding of mous remark, "After me-the !bems accompanying tine economic Deluge."two important inter-American allepression of the 30's that the meetings. Bishop Douglas Warren of

The first of these two wasllmportance of a central'authority Wilcannia-Forbes came here to exercising some supervision of the meeting of, the Committee attend the opening of a new rec­eConomic activity was recog­ of the Twenty-one at Bogota in tory at St. Patrick's Church. This Bired. September 1960 where the mem­ vast hinterland had been in tlie

The depression brought about ber countries of the inter-Amer­ grip of an IS-month drought that a radic,al change in popular and ican system signed the Act of dried up lakes and watercourses etfficial attitudes in the United and cost the lives of thousands ofBogota which constitutes "a total States leading to -greater partici ­ sheep, a main source of income.eHort to- raise the standard of Iltation by the federal govern­ living and social conditions of Bishop Warren asked the con­lIlent in the management ()f the gregation to join him in oHeringthe peoples of the hemisphere. econoffiie process and! illuminat­ The second was the extraordi­ Mass for rain. flog the need for initiating pm­ The results were startling. .AsJnary meeting of the inter-Amer­grams for development and 80­ the bishop and his entourage leftican economic and social council <eial welfare to alleviate the con­ at Punta del Este in August 1961 the church in their cars rain dition of the impoverished where the Charter of Punta del threatened, and they hurried to

Este was signed establishing theJIlasses. beat the possible storm. They Reatistie View had proceeded 17 miles when theAlliance for Progress.

This evolution in 1he concept Punta Del Este prayers for rain were answered sf the role of the state in eco­ It is worthwhile to recall that ':""by -a deluge. Illomic and social development as in the Charter of Punta del Este The bishop and his party be­applied to Latin America signi­ appears the requirement "that _came hopelessly mired in thick fies more realistic view of comprehensive and well con­ mud. Forced to sleep in the carsa Latin America's problems and of ceived national planning of eco­ overnight they were rescued the the urgency for cooperation in nomic and social development next day. the economic and so<.'ial growth aimed at the achievement of self­.f the nation with greater em­ sustained growth be carried out Name First Layman Ilthasis being placed on muHl­ in accordance with democratic nateral action. It was understood, principles." To College Post 000, that the best method of In this regard it should be PORTLAND (NC)-Dr. Louis achieving rapid and sustained noted that since the Act of Bo­ Charles Vaccaro, 36, will be' the economic growth and providing gota _ the interdependence be­ first layman to hold the position general social improvement for tween social and economic de­ of academic vice president at the Ute people was to carry on this velopment has been firmly ac­ University of Portland in 'Ore­activity, whether und(lrtaken by knowledged as an accepted prin­ gon, Father Paul E. Waldschmidt, the public or by the private sec­ ciple by all the countries of the .C.S.C., president, has announced. \'lor, within a well defined frame­ inter-American system . Vaccaro is doing post-doctoral work which could Ix) financed . We may say, then, that it is an work with the Center for the ~nder conditions suitable to the oHicially accepted principle that Advanced Study of Educational lrituation of each country. economic growth and social de­ Administration at the University

The communist ponicy insti ­ velopment in Latin America will of -Oregon: His appointment is \luted by Castro shortly after his be accomplished more rapidly one of several changes at the assumption of power _was un­ and more effectively through na­ university, conducted by Holy doubtedly a factor hastening the tional and regional development Cross Fathers, where control is acceptance of these principles planning. being transferred to a lay board. Ilong supported by politicians and This principle will be even -He will replace Father Michael economists in institutilms repre­ more widely accepted as experi­ O'Brien, C.S.C., who will direct aentative of Latin America. ence -accrues to the agencies re­ the university's foreign study

Crises Brought Planninc sponsible for assistance in the program in Salzburg, Austria, Another important factor in preparatio~ of this planning. next year.

(lhe determination of Latin America to insist on planned eco­Il'Omic and social development :was that the Latin American .. "You Can Whip Our Cream, but

You Can't- Beat Our Molk!t)Bishc\? Foul1lder

eLEVELAND (NC) - Bishop Your Gull Hill Route Ma,-, is Clarence G. Issenmann of Cleve­land- is one of three men who in­ Always at Your Service! eorporated the BetteR' Homes

FOR HOME DELIVERY CALL 998-5691for Cleveland Foundation to provide housing on a IlIon-profit basis for low and middlie income families, families displ2ced from GULF HILL DA~RY urban renewal areas or as a re­ so. DARTMOUTH, MAS$.BUlt of government action.

Unrest" of Laity A Healthy Thing THE HAGUE (NC) - The thorlty or bishops. He added that

"unrest" in the Dutch church is the bishops' authority could a healthy' thing stated Bishop never be undermined by giving Gerard De- Vet of Breda, Hol­ the laity the full exercise of their larid. The bishop said that he particular responsibilities in the knew that Europe was watching life of the Church. the signs of: ferment in his coun­

-try. But he maintained that these The bishop said that "secret" activities were desirable in the management of ordinary dioc­

. light of the Church's history in esan and interdiocesan affairs ill the Netherlands and the strong no longer possible in the Neth­democratic leanings of the Dutch erlands, and he expected the people. same development in other

countries. He commended thisSpeaking of the moves of the situation; because, he said, thelaity toward change, the bishop Second Vatican Council encour­said that the Church in the aged "open" episcopal adminis­Netherlands shared the aspira­tration as sound and democratic.tions of the universal Church to

be truly Christian, the people of He also warned that, unless God. real responsibility is shared by

The bishop said he could not the laity, suspicion and distrust understand why the desire of the by the faithful and the world -laity for recognition of their will not be abolished and dia­importance in the Church should logue within the Church will be be taken as a -threat to the au- impossible.

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"WHAT CAN I DO ABOUT INDIAl"

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_for your fevorlte saint. we'll erect a permanent plaque asking _prayers for your loved ones, If you build a parish In '67 as your once-In-a' lifetime mission gift. . . • Write Monsignor Nolan for details. a Archbishop Mar Gregorlos will write person' ally to say where he'll locate It If you enable him to buy ($978) two acres of land 8S a model fann for a parish priest. RaisIng his own food, -th, priest can teach his parishioners how to In· orease their crop production. (A hoe costs only $1.25, a shovel $2.35.) ­a In the hand. of a thrifty native Sister your 11ft In any amount ($1.000, ,$750, $500, $259, $100, $76, $!SO, $26. $US, $10, $5, $2) will fill empty stomach. with mHk, rice, fish and

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Page 17: 04.06.67

EpiscopoI Bishop Outlines St,eps For Ecumenism

JACKSONVILLE (NC)­An Episcopal bishop outlined a six-step program here for improving ecumenism be­tween Catholics and other Chris­tians.

Speaking to an audience o£ Catholic laymen and women in Bishop Kenny High School here, Episcopal Bishop Hamilton West of. Florida emphasized:

"In the first place, you can realize that the question for this day and age is, not which is the true Church, but how can the Church come true « '" « There is l:I lot of hard spiritual work ahead for Roman, Orthodox, An­

r glican and Protestant."

Forget Enmities "A second thing that you and

I can do is forget the enmities of the past, whose ancestors per­secuted whom and for what rea­sons, and concentrate on the future. Forget the human sin on all sides that brought about our divisions and concentrate on the virtues that will work for our unity."

"A third thing we can do is lor each of us to work as hard as he can to make his own com­munion as strong as he can. I want to work as hard as I can to make the Episcopal church a strong, powerful, pure, true ser­vant bf the Lord. You should do the saine for the Roman Church."

"A !fourth thing we can do is distinguish between things essen­tial and' things non-essential. Ceremonies, the way you stand, sit, kneel, cross yourself are non­essential. Vestments, candles, linens, books are non-essential. The Holy Scripture, the Creeds, the sacraments, the historic episcopate, these are essential and these do not change from one generation to another."

, 'Unity, Uniformity

"A fifth thing we can do is to distinguish between unity and uniformity. We do no want to make you like us, and we hope you do not want to make us like you 0 4> 0;. No one wants to be uni­form with everyone else, but we would like to be in' unity with alL" .

"A sixth thing we can do is to open our hearts and minds to the Holy Spirit, who wills the Church to be one. We hope that you will look at us not as we are, but we hope that you will look at us through the eyes of Jesus Christ and see us as we can be. ,

"And we should look at you through the eyes of Jesus Christ and see you as you really can be. lt is we who have separated the Church, It is the Holy Spirit, Who, working through open hearts and willing hands, will make the Church visibly One" Holy, Catholic and Apostolic."

Bishop West said his. appear­ance was to repay the courtesy of Catholic Archbishop Joseph P. Hurley, bishop of St. Augustine, who addressed the 123rd annual dinner of the Episcopalians in Florida.

Ecumenist Endeavor For Common Bible

BERLIN (NC) - Under the IlJ)Onsorship of the Protestant Mld Catholic Bible Associations, German Protestant and Catholic Scripture scholars met for the first time to work on translations of sections of the Bible.

The common translation will tirst be used at services in which both Protestants and Catholics participate, and will also be rec­ommended for radio and tde­*ion use.

I

• rtf ANCHOR- 17 Thurs.•. April 6, 1967

Const!l'u(bff $hrine Of Mo~~rC)rru@~~~s,

SAULT STE. ~ARIE (NC)~ Construction is scheduled to be­gin here shortly on a Shrine of! the Missionaries-a 21O-£00t bell tower, three times the height oil apy structure in the city.

The $660,000 shrine, which is being constructed to help com­memorate the 300th anniversary of Father Jacques Marquette. S.J., pioneer and missionary, willl be topped by· -an observation

TOP ORATORS: National winners of four-year college tuition scholarships in the an­nual oratorical contest sponsored by the National Catholic Youth' Organization Federation in Washington, D. C., were (left) Bren Ortega, Houston,and (right) Paul Buckley, Bos­ton. Alan Spitzer (center) presented to each winner a set of the New Catholic Encyclo,:, pedia on behalf of the distributors of the recmtly published 15-volume reference work. NC Photo.

Bishops' Stand Jibes With Encyclical Cites Government's Birth Control Role

BRIDGEPORT (NC) - Pope Paul's treatment of government's role in birth control programs in his latest encyclical does not warrant "any major change" in the position taken by the U. S. Bishops at their annual meeting' in Washington last November, according to Bishop Walter W. Curtis, episcopal advisor to the Family'Life Bureau of 'the U. S. Catholic Conference.

"The Bishops had in mind in their statement tine documents of the Vatican Council," he said, "and the encyclical did not modify this.

Threat to Freedom "The American Bishops were

concerned at the time to remind the government that it was not the government's task to promote contraceptive programs as public policy."

In his encyclical "On the De­velopment of Peoples," Pope Paul said that "It is certain that public- authorities ~an intervene (in attempting to check popula­tion increase), within the limit of their competence, by favoring the availability of appropriate information and by adopting suitable measures, provided that these be in conformit)' with the moral law and that they respect the rightful freedom of married couples."

In their statment last Novem­ber, issued at the annual me'et­ing of the U. S. Bishops in Wash­ington, the Bishops warned that government birth control pro­grams, 'especially when they are· tied to welfare and other aid, are a threat to the freedom of indi­viduals and families.

Bishop Curtis' comment on the encyclical came at the end of a statement on the Pope's treat­ment of family life and demog­raphy, in which the Bishop com­pared the Pope's statements with those made by the Vat.ican Coun­dl.

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"Pope Paul," he said, "has un­derlined clearly « * * a basic need of today's world, namely, a humanism open to the values of the spirit and to God who is their source.

Individuals' Problem "Among the essentials for this

true humanism is the family * 0) * It is in dealing with the family that the Holy Father speaks of population problems. It would be unfortunate to treat the popu­lation problems only in the larger sphere of nations without recognizing that fundamentally it is a problem for individual families." " The encyclical, he noted, is not "significantly different" from the Vatican Council's, treatment of population problems.

The Pope's comments on popu­lation were hailed by a number of religious and civil leaders in the U. S.

Praise Papal Stand Rabbi Jacob J. Weinstein,

president of the Central Confer­ence of American Rabbis, ex­pressed the hope that the Pope's statement "gives hopeful promise that the other plans for economic order and universal justice will not be frustrated."

Dr. Alan Guttmacher, presi­dent of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, called the encyclical's statement "a very

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Father James McHugh, direc­tor of the Family Life Bureau of the U. S. Catholic Conference, said the Pope "seems to be focus­ing on a new dimension in re­sponsible parenthood * * * can­ing on spouses to fonnulate an understanding of their responsi­bilities in the light of the re­sources of the family unity and with regard to the demographic pressures of the over-all society."

Father McHugh also noted that the Pope has warned nations not to concentrate on population control at the expense of other necessities of development,

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Page 18: 04.06.67

I •

THE ANCHOR-Dioc8$eof Fall River-Thurs., April 6, 1967

LIBRARY WORKSHOP: Library workshop at Bishop Feehan High School, Attleboro, attracts over 150 participants. Left, Feehan student Eileen Mournighan registers delegates, from left, Mrs. Pauline Beaudoin, St. Jacques parish, Taunton; Ralph Labbe, textbook representative; Moth­

Acad'emy Issues Drops Compulsory Courses· in ,Religion Proposes College Scholarship list Scholarship' PlanWisconsin College Inaugurates New PolicyMerit scholarships for the com­ TRENTON (NC)-,-A bill to ing school year based on en­

J provide state-aid scholarshipsWAUKESHA (NC) -Mount elude, religious 'requirem:ents in ence in the quest for knowledgetrance examinations &nd seventh covering college tuition costa'St. Paul College, here in Wiscon­ special programs of the college and truth;" he said.and eighth grade marks have above $500 has been introducedsin has announced a new policy such as in our seminary program, "Church ownership of a col­been' announced by Mt. St. Mary in the state Senate~under which no religion courses or in our theology major pro­ lege facilitates the presence ofAcademy, Fall River. The program is' designed toor religious exercises' will be gram. Apart from these special the Church at the center of the'Winner of the Mother McAuley assist fi.nancially needy studentscompulsory for students. , instances, the policy represents institution in order to offer itsGuild full tuition scholarship is who do not qualify for other our stance in the current re­ wisdom and its worship for thoseArlene Ann Harrington of St.. The policy wa,s enacted by the· scholarship programs, accordingevaluations and realignments of who freely desire it. The witnessDominic Parish, .Swansea, a college board of directors on rec­ to Sen. Jeremiah F. O'Connor ofCatholic higher education in the of the Church in institutions ofstudent at Brown Junior High ommendation of the faculty. The Bergen County, sponsor of thepost-conciliar Church." public education; as for example,School. Also a student at Brown board stressed: bill. .

He added:. through the Newman Club, tendsJunior High is Jacalyn Kate "The primary object of the The scholarships would be for"In our judgment such realign­ to be minimal and to be confinedHodge, of St. Michaj~l's parish, . college has academic freedom as' a maximum of $500 a year; lessments as the laicization" of Web­ to the outer fringes of the entireSwansea, winner of a partial its corollary and excludes forced if total tuition is under $1,000.ster College, Webster Groves, meariingful enterprise of highertuition grant from Mother Mc­ compliance either in religious Mo., can "~nduly weaken the education. There would be no limit on theAuley Guild. belief or religious practice. influence of the Church in number of thos~ eligible for as­

Carol Ann Vasconcellos of "Church ownership, however,Mount St. Paul College will have higher education." On the other sistance, except that they qualifyOur Lady of Health parish, Fall provides a more central positionno required religion courses or through need.hand, he sai~ changes of gov­River, and SS._Pettirand Paul for Christian witness and areligi9us exercises for students, ernance in college boards of di­ In practice, the bill would school, is the recipient of a full greater potential for effectivelywhether Catholic or non-Cath­ rectors seems to skirt the real benefit mostly students at pri ­tuition scholarship from. the Mt," influencing the values of stu­olic'." . vate institutions because the ma­issues involved. dents. ' St. Mary Academy Alumnae'

Influence Values jority 'of sta~ institutions haveCurrent Re-evaluationS "The religious affiliation pol­ t~ition costs below $500.Association. A partial I:rap.t from Burden on Student

er Celine Teresa, S.U.S.C., principal of Sacred Heart School, Taunton; .. David Dunn, librarian at Morton Junior High School, Fall River, and a workshop speaker. Top right~ ..Sister Mary Victoria, R.S.M. of St. Mary'lll

. .Bayview, uses shadowgraph to 'illustrate her talk on book purchasing.

!£IlIIlIIlIIlIIlIlIIlIIIIIlIIlIIlIIlIIIlIlIlIlIlIIlIlIIlIlIIIIlIIllIIIIUllnllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll11I1111,!:since it is in this area that her ....." Seek Intervention SAN ANTONIO (NC) - A children confront some of thedeeper understanding of Judaism i IncreCJJsethe Use i . basic problems of human exist-In Hospital Strike on a person-to-person basis will.

the alumnae has gone to Carol The college is conducted by "The Mount St·. Paul' policy,icy, of Mc:>Unt St. Paul, CollegeSilva of Santo Christo, parish, the Society of the Divine Savior, while it guarantees a central..comes to grips with the centralFall River, and st. Louis school. the Salvatorian Fathers and· issue. It is based on the premise position for the Church, is in fun

Honorable mention in the ex.a Brothers. accord with the cherished posi­that the college, as a college, is. aminations went to Madeline Father Gabriel Stapleton,' tion in American.life of freedom'an institution of. the temporalMeMaire, St. Jean Baptiste par­ S.D.S., . college president, com­ of inquiry in as much as it placesorder in virtue of its legal char­ish and' schoQl; Denise Couture, mented: the burden fol' free a'nd .respon­ter or incorporation for the pub-Notre Dame parish and school; "I wish to make it· clear that sible' decision Upon the student.. lic interest. The college as suchAnne Coilington, SS. Peter and the policy is designed for the Although we have arrived at thisis not an agency of the Church . Paul. parish and school, all Fall. college' as such. It does not pre- and cannot be likened analog­ policy independently, we have'River; and Susan ~anchester

ously to other modes of Church been heartened by recent schol­and Theresa Blanchette, both of arly articles which lend supportlife such as the parish.Holy Ghost parish and school" . Texas Schools Stort to our vie~s," he added."Nevertheless, the Church hasTiverton..

~ ,a high stake in higher educationJewi~h Programs'

CLEVELAND (NC)--A clergy begin in May 'for six schools of committee has petitioned the the 'San Antonio archdiocese. Cuyahoga County Commissioners. Under this experimental pro­to intervene in the strike of some gram laymen from Temple Beth' 300 employes at the county­ El here will go to Catholic owned Sunnary Acres Tubercu­ schools to explain the. meaning losis Hospital. of Jewish feasts to parochial

The workers have been on school children. A second objec­Strike since Feb. 20. The strik­ tive is to give youngsters 'in ers, mostly Negro' non-profes­ Catholic schools ·an insight into sional workers, are seeking Judaism as the root of Christian­union representation but the ity. hospital board of trustees has declined to meet with union rep­ll'esentatives. MEMORIAL CARDSMsgr. William M. Cosgrove,

These cards are made on the finest satin pastor of St. Henry's parish here, finish, double weight portrait paper with and the Rev. Thomas Chapman, the photograph of, the deceased on the front

si~ and name date of death and prayer onpastor of Tabernacle Baptist the back side and Just the right size to fit ehurch, are co-chairmen of the in miSsal or wallet.

We can use most any kind of a photograph committee. The Rev. Mil". Chap­ . or snapshot of your loved ona to print on CHEVROLET

these ca rds. " man commented: '~One would PRICE OF CARDS WITH PHOTOthink that in 1967 the right of

employes to form a wnion, to 25 for $10.50 have that union recognized by 50 for 14.50 their employer and to have it Mass. Resident Add 3% Sales T8K

A SAMPLE OF THESE CAROS WILL BEbargain "for their wal,es' and . SENT ON REQUEST working conditions would be ac­ EDWARD LACROIXcepted by all. This is a right, not

126A Frederick St. a privilege-a right that is ac':' New Bedford, Mass. 02744knowledged and.' pro~etedDy

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IUN~;:';:':::N T~. "M3S.1 ~1I!lIIl11l11l11l1l1l11ll11l11mlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIl1l1m~

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Page 19: 04.06.67

Afhletes Turn to BasehoR, THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fan River-Thurs., April 6, 1967 ~9 . "Golf, Tennis ancl Track Red Sox Roofel'!b Multipiy ;~ D;oces~"

'PI'enty of SchooiboyAetion Gibson Wearing Sox Uniform. 'In Four Springtime Sports' Batting Record in County Still Tops

By PETER BARTEK Norton High Coalth

The baseball diamonds, tracks, and golf courses in and around Cape Cod wilJ see plenty of action this Spring as all eight Capeway Conference schools will participate in each of the three Spring sports. Golfers and trackmen have already begun their sessions, ~d the diamondmen are

slated to play their initial contests on Monday, April JlO. Five conference schools win open the seventh season of the Sou the a s t ­earn Massachu­setts Ten n i s Lea g u eon Tuesdaf, April 25. The Capeway baseball loop operates on a home-and-home basis with 14 gam e s sched­uled for each ream. The new Peter league has made Bartek it _possible for Cape schoolboy baseball to be expanded. to where most schools play between 17 and 20 games whereas, in the past, the limit was nearer to 15 eontests.

Allietta Eyes Flag Most coaches are optimistic

l;lbout their prospects and feel the crown is "up for grabs."

Bourne High always has been one of the better Cape baseball Dggregations and Coach Bill Homan hopes to add the Cape­way Conference's first diamond ehampionship to the Cape title his club won a year ago. How­ever, he will find it difficult to replace two fine players, short­stop Jim Prete and catcher Gary Harding. Bob Iwasko and Roe Hadley appear to be the best returping candidates.

Bourne will open the cam­'paign next Monday at Falmouth

,. against" Lawrence' High. Coach , "Joe Allietta has ·three .experi­

tmced pitchers in Paui Igram, Mike Rainnie, and Larry Ferrei­ra ready to lead the Clippers to another conference crown. Law­renee won the ieague' title in football and Winter track in the present scholastic 'year and it is favored to repeat in the Spring' track league. But, Allietta is not Feady to make any predictions about his basebilll club. The vet­eran pilot has nine other letter­men among the 40 varsity and junior varsity candidates, in ad­dition to his pitchers, currently working out which provides the nucleus of a team Allietta feels will better last season's 9-9 rec­ord.

Indians Have' Talent Dartmouth High skipper Kevin

CadieUx has 32 upper classmen and 15 freshmen trying out but only two experienced. pitchers are in the fold. Bob Thornley

'and Tony Abreu, according to Cadieux, will have to carry the pitching burden unless he can find some strong arms among the new candidates.

Catcher Mills Davis who let ­tered as a freshman is back for his fourth season behind the plate, along with second base-llI!lIan Bob Santos, shortstop Paul Dutra and third baseman Bob Cordeiro all experienced infield­ers. They should give the Indians o ctllid defense which Cadieux hopes will get the club over early season hurdles until the hitters catch up with the pitchers.

'll'll'lMllIllllllenn Area lBIllllsy Dartmouth will open at Old

Rochester where Coach Ronnie Normand has his boys preping for the initial contest in the school parking lot because of the poor drainage from the Bulldog's

. field. Dennis-Yarmouth at Barn­stable and Wareham at Fair­haven complete first game en­counters.

The conference track teams which met for the first time yes­terday, resume competition next Wednesday in the second of seven league meets. Wednesday's action pits Dennis-Yarmouth at Barnstable, Falmouth at Bourne, Wareham at Dartmouth, and Old Rochester at Fairhaven.

Barrow and Blanchard The conference golf schedule,

like baseball, is on a home-and­home basis with 14 matches booked for each club. Golf is a sport which has gained more prominence in the last decade and it is slowly beginning to filter its way into the interscho­lastic sports scene. The Capeway Conference is the first league in the area to recognize golf as a major Spring sport and to or­ganize a program for all league members.

Two of the best young golfers in the state will be seen in con­ference action' this season. Howie Barrow of Fairhaven and Wayne Blanchard of Dartmouth are probably the finest dub swingers to be found on any schoolboy squad and their presence installs the Blue Devils and Indians as co-favorites to will the league crown.

The home courses of the con­ference teams are Dartmouth (Allendale), Old Rochester (Res­ervation), Fairhaven (Elmwood), Wareham (Wareham Country Club), Bourne.. (Pocasset), Den­nis-Yarmouth (B ass River), Barnstable (Hyannis Port), and Falmouth (Woods Hole Country Club). ' . , . .

League matches .are scheduled' for' Mondays an,d T,hursdays. Today's'matches'Jfind Barnstable at' Dartmouth, l1'airhavtm at Bourne, Old' ~ocheste~ at Pen­nis-Yarmouth and Falmouth at Wareham.' The docket for Mon­day lists Falmouth at Barnstable, Bourne at Dennis-Yarmouth, Wareham at" Dartmouth and Fairhaven at Old Hochesftk

Two TenJIJis Brackets Unbeknown to . .l)1any area

spOrts enthusiasts, tennis is also a major Spring sport for 10 Southeastern Massachusetts high schools. On April 25, the South­eastern Massachusetts Interscho­lastic Tennis League begins its seventh season.' 'fhe league is divided into two divisions-Divi­vision A, large schools and Divi­sion B, smaller schools. Top Division schools include Durfee High of Fall River, New Bedford, Taunton and Msgr. Coyle High of Taunton. Division B consists of Msgr. Prevost. High of Fall River, Fairhaven, Dartmouth, Old Rochester, Barnstable and Lawrence High of Falmouth.

The league, with 12 matches, is organized so that a team com­petes twice against schools in its own division and once against school::;. in. the other bracket. Each contest cOJ1sists of five matches, three singles and two doubles, thus a team must win three of the five matches in order to win the overall match.

Whalers !Favored New Bedford has cropped tile

league championship each of the previous six seasons and is !fav­ored to do likewise this year. Amazingly, the Red and White

BY JOE MIRANDA The Fall River Diocese will

have a representative in Major League baseball this year.

John Russell Gibson of Fall River, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Gibson of 44 Conant Street, 55. Peter and Paul Parish, will wear a Boston Red Sox uniform in the American League.

Fall River residents are very familiar with Gibson's accom­plishments and climb to the Red Sox varsity, but other members of the Diocese may want U> ac­quaint themselves with their rep res e n tat i vein the Big Leagues. '

At 27 years old, Gibson is a catcher, has 195 pounds on his 6-1 frame and last season was chosen as the outstanding catch­er' in the International League when' he helped lead Toronto to a playoff championship.

Russ.. started playing baseball at Maplewood Park at a very young age, played in Fall River's first Little League and for St. Williams in the CYO Grammar School League as a small fry,

Two Brothers, Wife, Son Gibson is the second of three

children, he has an old~r'brother .Jim and a younger brother, Paul. Russ is married to the former Virgie .Johnson of California and they are the parents of a four­month-old son, Greg.

The Bosox catcher earned a chance to make the Big Leagues last 'season when he batted .292, had 50 runs-batted-in and nine homers in 110 games. Russ' av­erage and HR total were the highest among the present Red Sox catcpers.

Leadership Shown Gibson's leadership qualities

w~re brought into view during 1966 when manager Dick Wil­liams, who was also promoted as head manager' of the Red Sox, named Russ as a coach.

, Gibby, signed with 'the Red Sox· in 1957 following his gradu- , aUon from Durfee High School and, was assigned to Lafayette Indiana 'in the Class D 'Midwest League; after a brief stint, with Corning, N. Y. in the' Class D Pony League. He batted' .315 in his first' professional season. .

The 'Fall River catcher moved to Waterloo in the same Midwest League the follOWing season, guided· his mates to a champion­ship and ,earned a promotion to Class B. '

, Russ hit .272 and .knocked' in 40 runs for 'Raleigh in the Caro­lina. League and the following campaign hit .299 to lead his Raleigh teammates in hitting.

In 1960, Gibson began hil!l fourth seas~n under manager Ken Deal and although his team !finished last, Russ hit .285, had seven homers, as many triples, eight doubles and 50 RBIs.

of New Bedford have never 10Gt a league match to date.

Among the outstanding court­men in the circuit are Alan Goldbery ofNew Bedford, Taun­ton's PaulWray and Coyle War­rior Tom Quigley.

~~mIl~~QD~ "WMBDNG lJ, ~IEA'ii"DNG. DINI<e.

;::; Sales ana Service

~J. \' =- for Llomestic '. . .~ ana Inaustrial

JII Burners 995-1631

2283AC~~HNET AVENUIE . NEW BEDFORD

JOHN RUSSELL GIBSON 01" }'A I...L RIVER

The 1961 campaign saw Gib­ joyed a good Spring training M son with Winston-Salem of the Winter Haven, Fla. and recently same Class B Carolina League poked a three-run homer to lead and he ended the year with a the Sox to a 7-4 win over the .275 .average, 76 'RBI's and 11 Los Angel~s Dodgers. homers. Russ moved to York, Pa.

'Fraining From Urbanin 1962, playing fur the Red Sox Class A ,team under Mel Parnell.. ' 'Gi'bson got his early trairiing Again 1;le enjoyed a good year: .froril coach Luke Urban at.Dur­with 10 homers, 58 ,runs-batted-, ~e~' wnere the F.all River .:Pioc­in and n ,260 .,average in, 120' ',. ,esan' at!lletc played football, bas­games. . . . . ketbaII and baseball.

.Career Takes Shape 'Russ was a member of Durfee'tJ In'1963 'Gibson's 'career was" 1956 New England championship

on ihe uP~wing as he was namedl?asketballtea~ a~d the .. 1957 to the Pacific Coast League all- '. State . ChamplOl1ship basebaMl

, star team after being a major' "club. Gibson was chosen on All­cog for Seattle of the' Class AAA Bristol County teams in all thr~e loop and be earned a chance to '. sports. He was a quarterback m train with the Red Sox at Scotts-, .football and forward on the hoop dale, Ariz. ' te.am.. ·

Gibson was assigned to Seat- In his senior year, 1957, Russ tle in 1964 and moved with the batted ,545 U> establiSh a high at team to Toronto in 1965 and 1966 Dqrfee and in the Bristol Count.y under Williams, who termed the League and was awarded. the Fall River catcher all outstand- George' Kaplan Memorial Trophy ing prospect and great clutch' as Durfee's be s t basketball hitter. .' player.

John Hussell Gibson got lUs Gibson also played baskeibaUll first real epportunity to make, for ·St. Williams and 55, Peter the Boston' Red Sox this season and Paul's in the Catholic Youth and he has succeeded. Russ en- . Organization's program...........•.........~

e F. L.(OlLlNS& SONS· ~.~

5 = INCORPORATED 1937 :

5 GENERAL (ONJ~.AaORS i ~ D

~ ~Id ~~~~~~~~~ B o 0 o .!lAAAIE$ IXI. <e©w~s, t.IE., iF'~es. 0 o 0 o Registered Civil and Structural Engin~1I' 0 ~, Member Nn" ::II Society. p,ro.f.~s.s:(l"''''' E:lginef"rs 8 ,8 ,1FL'iA~CDS ~. C©Il.ILUNS; J)~., 'ii"~elCls. 8 Ql •'ii"/HOMASi it.' (OHBN~ ,Sec'v· Ei!J ~ ~

• ACADEMY BUILDING ' ~AILIL RBVER, MASS. lfll•&•••••• II _ ••••••••'••• ill II•••••••••••ill. ~• ..

Page 20: 04.06.67

20 THE ANCHOR-Diocese of Fall River-Thurs., Apr'iI 6, 1967

Vatican In s tru ctio n on Music Continued from Page One.

priest. According to circum­stances and the ability of the eongregation, the' instruction adds as minimums: one or more of the sung parts of the Mass, usu­ally called the "Ordinary'! and "Proper"; the prayer of the faithful and, where these are sung, the biblical readings.

The instruction also states tha~

one or more of the more diffi ­cult parts" of the priest, such as the preface, may be spoken with­out singing if he' "doel; 'not have 11 voice suitable for the pl'oper execution 'of the singing."

A kind of ultimate form is reached when all the parts and texts are actually Sling-and this ils the solemn form..

Recited Mass Although the minimum for a

---Sung Mass may not be reached, it is still possible (and desirable) to sing some parts of the Mass in an otherwise spoken liturgy.

Thus, at a, "low N!lass", the song after the Epistle or the Alleluia before the Gospel, the Sanctus, the Agnus Dei, the Offertory psalm or the priests' d.oxology of the Eucharistic prayer-or any combination of these and other parts -- may-be Bung. ,

The instruction also states that ether songs set to texts' not designated as "Ordinal'y" or "Proper" parts of the Mass may be sung at the beginning, the Offertory, the Communion and at the end of Mass,

Important Lessons . , Perhaps it would have been

easier to'suppress all distinctions between sung and spoken ,lit ­urgy, but the technical explana­tion illustrates the present-day problem of going fl'om a rigid and legalistic pattern of regula­tions to a greater and greater flexibility. Two impol'lant les­sons have been taught:

(1) "In 9rder that the faithful may, actively participate more willingly and with greater bene­fit, it is fitting that the format

[Businessmen Be!hind Move to Kill Smut

LOS ANGELES (NC) - The Los Angeles Chambel', of Com­merce has endorsed two State Senate bills aimed at curtailirig smut. ' '

Chamber President Paul E. ][versonendorsed a bill that would make it an offense to possess,

"~repare, publish or pl'int ()bscene matter and another bill prohib­iting distribution of "harmful matter" to children. '

Iverson noted the chamber ad­vocates passage' of clear, concise statutes on obscenity,.! falling within guidelines established by the U. S. Supreme COUI·!.

He said societ)' has a right to protect minors from hazards which, because of immaturity, they might not be able to recog­nize themselves..Restrictions on liquor and tobacco sales are ex­amples of such restrictions, he pointed out. So is regulation of working conditions, he add~d.

"It is just as important and just as right that society protect the development of the mental health and morals of juveniles during their formative years," l>e emphasized. '

Library Service CANTON (NC) - The Stark

County Foundation has awarded a $25;000 grant to Walsh College here in Ohio to support the ex­pansion of the library ,service program at the GOO-student insti ­tution operated by the Brothers of Christian InstrucUou,

of celebraHori and the degrees of participation in it should be, varied as much as possible, ac­cording to the solemnity 'of the day and the nature of the con­gregation present."

The smaller and' more intimate the congregation (wee k day neighborhood or community celebration) ,may not n\'!ed sing­ing at all. The Sunday Mass in the medium-sized or large par­ish church, where the commu­nity. sense may be i~adequate or. remote, or nearly absent, re­quires: as much singing as pos­sible. , (2)' \ Some parts of the, Mass

are designed to be sung and are defective without song. As the vernacular liturgy has alreilCi)' made evident, there is not much reason for the mere recitation of the processional "entrance song" or Intl'Oit several minutes after Mass has begun and after a genuine entrance hymn has been sung.

The Instruction thus urges some form of sung Mass '''for the celebration of the Eucharist with the people, especially on Sun­days and feast days * ... * even several times on the same day." Only in this way can the full sense of the present Mass rite be realized.

What the Instruction seeks is that th.e Sunday Masses, indeed all the Sunday Masses, should have some elements of the "Sung Mass" in the degree possible and appropriate. ,.

Besides' the strong appeal , for a flexible but :definite use

of congregational music, adapted to circumstance ~nd ability, in all liturgical celebrations, the Instruction on Music also lists new features that mark a depar­ture from earlier official Church documents.

Father McManus ou'tlined and ....

"'-

REV. F. R. McMANUS

explained the changes as follows: "Solemnity" of worship is re­

defined. "True solemnity de­pends less on a more ornate form of singing and a more magnifi ­cent ceremonial," the Insti'uction explains, "than on its worthy and religious celebration." This is an echo of the Council's Consti_ tution on the Liturgy that asks for 'noble simplicity.

Existing Masterpieces Existing traditional m u sic

which may be lj. masterpiece but is unsuited to the Eucharis'tic celebration should be transferred to popular devotions and Bible sel·vices.

A setting of the Sanctus may reflect the highest artistic qual­

'ity but be an intolerable inter­I'uption of the tone and sense of the Eucharistic Canon. If it of­fends "the nature of the liturgy

, or cannot be harmonized with

the pastoral celebration of the liturgy," it may still find a place in other services.

Heritage Preserved ,The instructii)Ji develops fully

the need to're,spect and preserve ,the musical heritage' of the past "in sung liturgical ser'vices cele­brated in Latin." Realistically

again .. He may substitute for II

choir and lead the people in smaller congregatio~!1. Even' m. larger churches, his role is im­

. portant' espeCially when the choir is not present.

, DisUncUon Dropped ,

, The old distinction of "Ordi­however everyone knows that. \ nary parts for the people; Proper there ar~ !fewer and fewer such parts for the choir'~ is eliminated. Latin celebrations" the Instruc- 'Both h~ve ,roles in each part. tion suggests that 'in vernacular :. "It,is desirable that the' as­services it is possible to use a, Latin text which has a suitable musical setting fr,om the past. "There is nothing to prevent different, part:; in o'ne' and the

_ same celebration being sung, in different languages."

Concerning Latin Misses the InstructiQn leiwes the que~tion

, to the local bishops. The reason for preserving "one or more Masses in Latin, especially sung Masses, in' certain churches", is never, 'as soine thought, to pre­serve or recreate the bad tradi­tion of non-participating congre­gations. The Instruction's motive is to provide for "large cities, where may 'come together faith­ful of different languages."

Priorities Established "It is preferable that the.Sanc­

,tus' a the co 1 d' g 1 , s nc u m acc ama­tion of' the preface, should nor­mally be su g b th h 1

. n yew.o e COll­gregatIon together WI th the priest"-as the new directions of the Roman Missal expect.

· h' h bThe AgnuS DCI-W IC may e

Schools Achieve Racial, Balance, Archdiocese Reveals Results of S,u..vey

"NEW YORK (N-C)-Approxi­mately 50 per cent of Catholic elementary schools in the 'bor­oughs of Manhattan and the Bronx have racially balanced en­rollments, according to a survey conducted by the New York Archdiocesan Superintendent of Schools, Msgr. 'RaYJllondP. Rig­ney. '

The survey follows,' the prac­tice of the New York City Board of Educatiori by classifying schools with enrollments of 90 per cent or more white pupils as­"Y" schools, and schools falling into neither range as "mid­range" schools. Of the 135 bor­ough schools surveyed, G8 fell into the "mid;-range" category.

Area Composition Comparing the data with in-'

formation produced by a similar survey conducted two years ago, Msgr. .Rigney pointed to a sig­nificant increase in the number of Puerto Rican and Latin Amer­ican pupils in the· Catholic schools. He also indicated a slight decrease in the number of white children enrolled.

"It is evident," he stated, "that our parish elementary schools as neighborhood schools reflect the racial composition of the area in which they are located and from which they draw their pupil en­rollment.

Notes Changes "We regret,", he continued,

"that our increase in the e~roll­ment of Negro 'pupils has not kept pace .with the substantial advance in the number of Puerto Rican and other Latin American

childl'en in these schools., This, however, is due in great measure to the fact that a rather small proportion" less than 10 per ,cent of the adult Negro population is Catholic""

The survey showed that the number of Latin American pu­pils in the schools increased over

the ,two years from 32.1 per cent to 34.9 per' cent in ~arihattan and from 15.4 per cent to 16.4 per cent' in the Bronx. The num­ber of 'Negro children dropped from -12.3 per cent to 11.9 per cent in Manhattan and increased from 4.7 per cent to 5.0 per cent in the Bronx'. ' '

ECUMENISM AND PHILOSOPHY: Dr. Landon Gil­key of the University of Chicago School of Divinity (left), one of two Protestant theologians on the program of the 41st annual meeting of the American)Catholic Philosoph­i~al Association held at the University of Notre Dame, ~hats with Father Ernan McMullin, .center, outgoing pres­Ident of the ACPA and'head of Notre Dame's department of philosophy, and Dr. Robert Kreyche, professor of philoso­phy 'at the University of Arizona, Tucson, and president­elect' of the ACPA. NC Photo.

.,ymns or other kmds of sacredrepeated aS , often as necessary,especially when the breaking of the consecrated bread takes long -should desirably include parti ­cipation by the people at least in

'ludI'Ilg' t·'t h e conc Invoca Ions,"have mercy on u " s. .

Ca~tor Recogmzed " The offIce of !~e cantor ~and le~der of. song ~ or specI.ally

tramed smger IS recogmzed

sembly of the faithful sh,ould participa~e in. the songs of. the Proper (Introit, Gradual, OHer­tory,- f;ommunion * * "') as much as possible, especially through. simple responses (refrains) and

,other. suitable settings." , "The song after the lessons,

whether in !he form o~ gradual or responsonal psalm, has a spe­cial importance among the songs of the Proper. By its very nature, it 'forms part of the Liturgy of the Word. It should be perform­cd with all seated and listening to it-and, what is more, partici ­pating in it as far as possible.

Simple Gradual Th It' t' . 'd th . : ns ruc IOn. provi es e

prmclple for a SImple Gradual as the pat~ern ~or the future and popular! ltturglcal developmentsh ·t k ' , w en 1 spea s of !he people s responses or reframs to the"Proper" of Mass.

. .. BeSIdes thiS, It ackno.wledges

a para!lel developme~t I? some countnes, the subsbtutIon ofh

f h th . song, or t e ree processl?n~l ,chan.~s of Masswhe:;ever thIS IS the la,w!ul custom. ..

Hetammg the tradItIonal use of psalm verses for the song be­t ' th E' tl d G ween e pIS e an ospel,the Instruction adds two provisos if the custoin of substituting hymns for the processional chants is to continue: (a) such

,options must be "in keeping with the parts of the Mass, with the feast, or with the liturgical sea­son;'" (b) the texts must be ap­proved by the respective confer­ence of bishops.

In the U. S. hymns are added to the processional chants (e.g., a hymn after the offert'ory anti' ­,phon) rather than employed .. ·substitutes. '

. Contemporary Styles The Instruction h~s no re~dY

,,'answ,er~becausethere is 'no an-' swer-to the questions raised by contemporary music styles in the liturgy. As a matter of principle, the liturgy should 'reflect and welc'ome contemporary music ' ­whether serious or popular in the best sense-but' the principle had been ignored for decades until the challenge of new ver­nacular texts arose. '

The whole question of 'how to create a' "sense of the sacred" through new styles which are suited to the cultures of the 20th century-apart from "the more important principles" set down by the Holy See-is left to the guidance of the national episco­pacies and individual bishops.

Qualities of Sacred In the past the rule concerninl

the "three qualities" of sacred music was: "sanctity and good­ness of form from which spon­taneously springs its other char­acter, universality."

The note of "universality" ~

omitted in the Instruction, since liturgical music may be as di­verse as are cultures and sub­cultures.

, The Instruction defines sacred music as: "music, created for the celebration of divine worship, which is endowed with sanctity and goodness of forms" or in an­other translation "endowed witlll a certain ,holy sincerity of form."